Del´phi, shrine of Apollo, famed for its oracles, [1], [123], [155], [234], [235], [297], [298].
Del´phos, [21].
De-me´ter, Greek goddess of marriage and human fertility; identified by Romans with Ceres (which See), [8].
De-me´ti-a, South Wales, [407].
De-mod´o-cus, bard of Alcinoüs, king of the Phæacians, [202], [252].
Deu-ca´li-on, king of Thessaly, who with his wife Pyrrha were the only pair surviving a deluge sent by Zeus, [16]-[17], [301].
Di´a, island of, [162].
Di-a´na (Artemis), goddess of the moon and of the chase, daughter of Jupiter and Latona, [6], [21], [26], [30], [34]-[36], [38], [53], [56], [101], [112], [123], [127], [134 n.], [138], [139], [141], [154], [204], [206], [214], [235], [259], [278], [286], [380].
Di-a´na of the Hind, antique sculpture in the Louvre, Paris, [306].
Di-a´na, temple of, [314].