
Symplegades - Wikipedia
The Symplegades (/ sɪmˈplɛɡədiːz /; Greek: Συμπληγάδες, Symplēgádes), also known as Clashing Rocks or Cyanean Rocks (Κυανέαι), were, according to Greek mythology, a pair of …
Symplegades | Greek mythology | Britannica
…how to pass through the Symplegades, or Cyanean rocks—two cliffs that moved on their bases and crushed whatever sought to pass. Following his advice, Jason sent ahead a dove that was …
Symplegades | Facts, Information, and Mythology - Encyclopedia …
The Symplegades are the "Clashing Rocks" through which the Argo had to pass in order to enter the Hellespont. They moved randomly about in the sea, crashing together and crushing ships …
The Argonauts and the Symplegades - Mythology - Interpretation
The Symplegades or Cyanean Rocks to which the Argonauts are confronted illustrate a first great spiritual test resulting from deep memories or "knots".
Symplegades - Hellenism Explored
The Symplegades, or Clashing Rocks, were a pair of rocks in Greek mythology that clashed together whenever a vessel went through. Located at the Bosphorus, it was the sixth stop of …
Symplegades - Ancient Greek (LSJ)
The Symplegades (/sɪmˈplɛɡədiːz/; Greek: Συμπληγάδες, Symplēgádes) or Clashing Rocks, also known as the Cyanean Rocks, were, according to Greek mythology, a pair of rocks at the …
Encyclopedia of Greek Mythology: Symplegades
The Symplegades were said to be in the strait between the Aegean and the Black Sea (known to the ancient Greeks as the Euxine).
Myth of Jason and the Argonauts | Greeka
Separated by a narrow strait, the Symplegades were two gigantic rocks which constantly clashed against each other, seldom letting anything pass between them. Heeding Phineus' words, …
Euripides, Medea, line 1 - Perseus Digital Library
1 The Symplegades, mobile rocks that clashed together to crush any ships running between them, guarded the entrance to the Hellespont and prevented passage between East and West …
Symplegades - Jason and the Argonauts
THE SYMPLEGADES (from the Greek "to dash together"); small rocky islands at the mouth of the Thracian Bosphorus, which were fabled to strike together, and destroy ships, as they passed. …