Cassiopeia, mother of Andromeda,
Castalia, fountain of Parnassus, giving inspiration to Oracular priestess named Pythia,
Castalian Cave, oracle of Apollo,
Castes (India),
Castor and Pollux—the Dioscuri, sons of
Jupiter and Leda,—
Castor a horseman, Pollux a boxer (see Gemini),
Caucasus, Mount
Cavall, Arthur’s favorite dog,
Cayster, ancient river,
Cebriones, Hector’s charioteer,
Cecrops, first king of Athens,
Celestials, gods of classic mythology,
Celeus, shepherd who sheltered Ceres, seeking Proserpine, and whose infant son Triptolemus was in gratitude made great by Ceres,
Cellini, Benvenuto, famous Italian sculptor and artificer in metals,
Celtic nations, ancient Gauls and Britons, modern
Bretons, Welsh,
Irish and Gaelic Scotch,
Centaurs, originally an ancient race, inhabiting Mount Pelion in Thessaly, in later accounts represented as half horses and half men, and said to have been the offspring of Ixion and a cloud,
Cephalus, husband of beautiful but jealous Procris,
Cephe us, King of Ethiopians, father of Andromeda,
Cephisus, a Grecian stream,
Cerberus, three-headed dog that guarded the entrance to Hades, called a son of Typhaon and Echidna
Ceres (See Demeter)
Cestus, the girdle of Venus
Ceyx, King of Thessaly (See Halcyone)
Chaos, original Confusion, personified by Greeks as most ancient of the gods
Charlemagne, king of the Franks and emperor of the Romans
Charles Martel’, king of the Franks, grandfather of Charlemagne, called Martel (the Hammer) from his defeat of the Saracens at Tours
Charlot, son of Charlemagne
Charon, son of Erebos, conveyed in his boat the shades of the dead across the rivers of the lower world
CHARYB’DIS, whirlpool near the coast of Sicily, See Scylla
Chimaera, a fire breathing monster, the fore part of whose body was that of a lion, the hind part that of a dragon, and the middle that of a goat, slain by Bellerophon
China, Lamas (priests) of
CHOS, island in the Grecian archipelago
Chiron, wisest of all the Centaurs, son of Cronos
(Saturn) and
Philyra, lived on Mount Pelion, instructor of Grecian
heroes
Chryseis, Trojan maid, taken by Agamemnon
Chryses, priest of Apollo, father of Chryseis
Ciconians, inhabitants of Ismarus, visited by Ulysses
Cimbri, an ancient people of Central Europe
Cimmeria, a land of darkness
Cimon, Athenian general
Circe, sorceress, sister of Aeetes
Cithaeron, Mount, scene of Bacchic worship
Clarimunda, wife of Huon