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centaur

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centaur

In Greek mythology, a creature half human and half horse, wild and lawless. Chiron, the mentor of the hero Heracles and tutor of the god of medicine Asclepius, was an exception. Their home was said to be on Mount Pelion, Thessaly.

Birth

Tradition described them as either the direct offspring of King Ixion of Thessaly and Nephele, a cloud phantom he believed to be the goddess Hera, or their grandchildren, the progeny of their son Centaurus and the mares on Pelion.

Myth

Tales of their licentious behaviour included the battle at the wedding of Pirithous, king of the Lapiths, when the centaurs attempted to steal the bride, along with other female guests; and a version of the death of the hero Heracles, when the centaur Nessus, killed while abducting the hero's wife, Deianara, promised her that his poisoned blood would restore Heracles' love if he strayed.

Art

The earliest representations of centaurs (about 1800–1000 BC) are two-headed, and were excavated near Famagusta, Cyprus, in 1962. Some female representations also exist.

centaur

In astronomy, class of asteroid whose orbit crosses that of at least one gas giant planet and whose orbital period is not in stable synchrony with that gas giant, meaning they will eventually crash into the planet or evolve in some other way. The name originated because the first of the class to be discovered was named Chiron, after the wisest of the centaurs from Greek mythology, and by convention all new discoveries in this class are named after centaurs. Most of the centaurs are icy bodies from the Kuiper belt, which will become comets if their orbits are perturbed to take them nearer to the Sun.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
On the same principle, even if a writer in his poetic imitation were to combine all metres, as Chaeremon did in his Centaur, which is a medley composed of metres of all kinds, we should bring him too under the general term poet.
This has been figuratively taught to princes by ancient writers, who describe how Achilles and many other princes of old were given to the Centaur Chiron to nurse, who brought them up in his discipline; which means solely that, as they had for a teacher one who was half beast and half man, so it is necessary for a prince to know how to make use of both natures, and that one without the other is not durable.
Hence those strange monsters in lace and embroidery, in silks and brocades, with vast wigs and hoops; which, under the name of lords and ladies, strut the stage, to the great delight of attorneys and their clerks in the pit, and of the citizens and their apprentices in the galleries; and which are no more to be found in real life than the centaur, the chimera, or any other creature of mere fiction.
 
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