Kentaurides (or
Centaurides) are the
female members of the
Kentauroi tribe, a tribe of
centaurs in
Greek mythology. The most referenced of the Kentaurides is
Hylonome, the wife of Centaur
Cyllarus. Although rarely mentioned in Greek writing, Kentaurides were depicted most often in
Greek art and later
Roman mosaics. The Greek
rhetorician Philostratus the Elder gives a brief discription of Kentaurides:
"How beautiful the Centaurides are, even where they are horses; for some grow out of white mares, others are attached to chestnut mares, and the coat’s of others are dappled, but they glisten like those of horses that are well cared for. There is also a white female Centaur that grows out of a black mare, and the very opposition of the colours helps to produce the united beauty of the whole.
Roman poet
Ovid, in his epic
Metamorphoses, gives a brief description of Hylonome as well.
"In the high woods there was none comelier of all the centaur-girls, and she alone by love and love’s sweet words and winning ways held Cyllarus, yes, and the care she took to look her best (so far as that may be with limbs like that). She combed her glossy hair, and twined her curls in turn with rosemary or violets or roses, and sometimes she wore a pure white lily. Twice a day she bathed her face in the clear brook that fell from Pagasae’s high forest, twice she plunged her body in its flow, nor would she wear on her left side and shoulder any skin but what became her from best-chosen beasts.
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