Pandora
0 sources
Pandora
Summary
Pandora is a mythological Greek character[1]. She ranks in the top 2% of mythological_greek_character entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,479 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Pandora was married to Epimetheus[3].
- A child of Pandora was Pyrrha[4].
- Pandora is the creator of Hephaestus[5].
- Pandora is the creator of Athena[6].
- Pandora is the creator of Zeus[7].
- Pandora's image is recorded as Ca' Rezzonico - Il vaso di Pandora (Inv.70) - Pietro della Vecchia.jpg[8].
- Pandora's image is recorded as Frederick Stuart Church - Opened up a Pandora's box.jpg[9].
- Pandora's image is recorded as John Gibson-Pandora-Victoria and Albert Museum-2.jpg[10].
- Pandora's image is recorded as Pandora-1879.jpg[11].
- Pandora's image is recorded as Pandora by Arthur Rackham.jpg[12].
- Pandora's image is recorded as Alexandre Cabanel - Pandora - Walters 3799.jpg[13].
- Pandora's image is recorded as Pandora Loison cour Carree Louvre.jpg[14].
- Pandora's image is recorded as Lawrence Alma-Tadema 10.jpeg[15].
- Pandora is recorded as female[16].
- Pandora's instance of is recorded as mythological Greek character[17].
- Pandora's instance of is recorded as literary character[18].
- Pandora's instance of is recorded as protoplast[19].
- Pandora's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 69725644[20].
- Pandora's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 3617157583880633970000[21].
- Pandora's GND ID is recorded as 118789430[22].
- Pandora's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as nb2018018974[23].
- Pandora's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 11967675b[24].
- Pandora's IdRef ID is recorded as 067696503[25].
- Pandora's Commons category is recorded as Pandora[26].
- Pandora's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0622w[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Created works include Hephaestus[5], a Greek deity[28]; Athena[6], a goddess[29]; and Zeus[7], a thunder deity[30]. Things named for Pandora include her box[31], a mythical object[32]; she[33], a moon of Saturn[34]; Pandorea[35], a taxon[36]; Pandora's Promise[37], a film[38], directed by Robert Stone[39]; and 55 she[40], an asteroid[41].
Personal Life
Among Pandora's spouses was Epimetheus[3]. A child of her was Pyrrha[4].
Why It Matters
Pandora ranks in the top 2% of mythological_greek_character entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,479 views/month).[2] She has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[42] She is known by 20 alternative names across languages and contexts.[43]
Entities named for her include her box[31], a mythical object[32]; she[33], a moon of Saturn[34]; Pandorea[35], a taxon[36]; Pandora's Promise[37], a film[38], directed by Robert Stone[39]; and 55 she[40], an asteroid[41].
FAQs
Who was Pandora married to?
Pandora's spouses include Epimetheus[3].