Lampad

Mythology

Companions of Hecate, the Greek goddess of witchcraft and crossroads, they were a gift from Zeus for Hecate's loyalty in the Titanomachy. They bear torches and accompany Hecate on her night-time travels and hauntings. Some accounts tell of how the light of the Lampads' torches has the power to drive one to madness.

The Lampads were probably the daughters of various Underworld gods, Daimones, river gods, or Nyx.

The Lampads' Roman name is nymphae Avernales ("infernal nymphs").[1]

gollark: μsec (yay for having an ancient Greek keyboard installed)
gollark: Which is totally high resolution enough to map the entire thing well enough to emulate near-perfectly.
gollark: It's probably easier.
gollark: If you can somehow replace a clump of neurons with a perfect emulation fast enough it probably wouldn't cause a problem.
gollark: It still *works*, but those things cause problems.

See also

References

  1. Adam, Alexander (1814). A Compendious Dictionary of the Latin Tongue. Edinburgh. p. 146. Avernales nymphae, the infernal nymphs, Ovid. Met. 5, 540.


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