This article duplicates the scope of other articles, specifically Laelaps (mythology). Please discuss this issue and help introduce a summary style to the article.(September 2023)
In Greek mythology, the Teumessian fox was an enormous fox that was destined never to be caught.[1]
^Ancient Greek: Τευμησ(σ)ία ἀλώπηξ (Teumēs(s)íā alôpēx), gen.: Τευμησίας ἀλώπεκος, also known as ἀλώπηξ τῆς Τευμησσοῦ "fox of Teumessos"; Teumessos was an ancient city in Boeotia.
Greek mythology, the Teumessianfox was an enormous fox that was destined never to be caught. It was said that the Teumessianfox had been sent by the...
Teumessianfox in Greek mythology. Youko fox demons in Japanese mythology. Foxes in several Greek fables, including: The Fox and the Grapes The Fox and...
Red foxes feature prominently in the folklore and mythology of human cultures with which they are sympatric. In Greek mythology, the Teumessianfox, or...
by Creon, who had agreed to assist him on condition that he slew the Teumessianfox which had been sent by Dionysus to ravage the Theban countryside. The...
mythological example illustrating this theme can be found in the story of the Teumessianfox, which can never be caught, and the hound Laelaps, which never misses...
Reyna is there with the other Hunters of Artemis to hunt down the TeumessianFox, as well as Leo, since Calypso is now in high school and had gone to...
seduce Herse. The magical Teumessianfox, sent by the gods to punish the Greeks, could not be caught; Amphitryon set on the fox the magical dog Laelaps...
Eos. The name of the dog is Laelaps. The story of the hunting of the Teumessianfox, which could never be caught, and that Zeus turned to stone along with...
Reyna is there with the other Hunters of Artemis to hunt down the TeumessianFox, as well as Leo, since Calypso is now in high school and had gone to...
was first suggested in 1952 and remains widely accepted, but Robin Lane Fox (2009) has criticized it as implausible. Michael Brown, who has been studying...
Near Eastern Contacts with Early Iron Age Crete, 1997, noted by Robin Lane Fox, Travelling Heroes in the Epic Age of Homer, 2008:157; "A bronze tympanum...