Clio
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Clio (disambiguation).
In Greek mythology, Clio (Greek: Κλειώ) or Kleio is the muse of heroic poetry and history. Like all the muses, she is a daughter of Zeus and Mnemosyne. She had one son, Hyacinth, with the King of Macedonia, Pierus. Some sources say she was also the mother of Hymenaios.
She is often represented with a parchment scroll or a set of tablets and is also known as the Proclaimer. The name is from the root κλέω/κλείω, meaning "recount" or "make famous".
The name Clio has also been attributed to:
- Clio Awards for advertising and design
- The car Renault Clio produced by the French manufacturer Renault.
- The asteroid 84 Klio;
- A branch of historical methodology called Cleometrics
- The family of sea butterflies Clioidae.
- The ships HMS Clio (1806) and HMS Clio (1858).
- "Cliology," an offshoot of psychohistory, described in Michael Flynn's essay, "An Introduction to Cliology."
- The American Whig-Cliosophic Society, the debating society at Princeton University
- The Alpha Clionian Sorority[1] at SUNY Geneseo
- Clio, Greece, a small village located in the north of Lesvos island
- Clio Street in New Orleans, LA
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Calliope | Clio | Erato | Euterpe | Melpomene | Polyhymnia | Terpsichore | Thalia | Urania