Ctimene
In Greek mythology, Ctimene (/ˈtɪmɪni/ [1]; Ancient Greek: Κτιμένη, /ktiꜛmeꜜnɛː/) was the younger sister of Odysseus, the legendary king of Ithaca.[2] She was the daughter of Laertes and Anticlea, and was raised by them alongside the servant Eumaeus, who was treated almost as her equal. Ctimene was married off to Eurylochus of Same for a massive bride-price.[3] Her husband accompanied Odysseus on his journey from Troy but, like all of Odysseus's men, died before reaching home.
Notes
- Gardner, Dorsey (1887). Webster's Condensed Dictionary. George Routledge and Sons. p. 716. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
- Homer's Odyssey, 15.363
- Pierer's Universal-Lexikon, Volume 9. Altenburg 1860, p. 868. (online copy (German))
Sources
- Odyssey, 15.361–379.
gollark: Alternatively, cross-origin stuff is allowed but runs with separate cookies, caches, etc. to first-party requests, and comes with a "requested from this origin" header.
gollark: Cross-origin fixes: *no* use of crossdomain resources unless the other thing opts in. This breaks image hotlinking and such, which is annoying, but fixes CSRF entirely.
gollark: That doesn't really help with the security issues though.
gollark: Maybe a standard interface for external plugins for access to that stuff, so browsers wouldn't need to implement all the APIs individually?
gollark: I'm not sure what to do about the proliferation of random web APIs. On the one hand, exposing USB and graphics cards and stuff *may* be a bad idea. On the other hand, it is a nice application platform still.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.