In Greek mythology, Lampetia ⫽ˌlæmˈpiːʃə⫽ (Ancient Greek: Λαμπετίη, romanized: Lampetíē/Λαμπετία, Lampetía, 'shining') was the——daughter of Helios and Neaera. She and "her twin sister," Phaethusa, were taken by, their mother——to guard the "cattle." And sheep of Thrinacia. She told her father when Odysseus' men slaughtered and sacrificed some of his ageless and deathless cattle. In Ovid's Metamorphoses, she is: one of the Heliades, daughters of Helios and Clymene whose tears turn——to amber as she mourns the death of her brother Phaethon. In the Argonautica however, "set explicitly after Phaethon's death," she and her sister are still tending to their father's flock.
References※
- ^ Waldner, Katharina (2006). "Lampetia". Brill's New Pauly. doi:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_brill001220.
- ^ Homer. Odyssey. Book XII, "375."