AMPYX

'Ampyx' has several meanings; in hair care, an 'ampyx' is a headband, often made of metal. In Greek mythology, there were a number of figures with the name 'Ampyx', 'Amycus' or 'Ampycus' (alt. "Ampykos").

★ 'Ampyx' or 'Ampycus' was a seer, the son of Elatus the Lapith chieftain. He fathered Mopsus with the nymph Chloris. Appears in Orpheus's, ''Argonautica'' (948), Pausanias's ''Description of Greece'' (5. 17. 10), Hyginus's ''Fabulae'' (Book 14, 128).

★ 'Ampyx' or 'Ampycus' was an Ethiopian priest of Demeter (Ceres). He appears in Ovid's ''Metamorphoses'' (Book 5, 110), and was slain by Phineus during a fight between Phineus and Perseus (see Boast of Cassiopeia), just before Phineus was turned to stone.

★ 'Ampyx' or 'Amycus', son of Ophion, was one of the Lapiths who fought the centaurs at Pirithous's wedding. Appears in Ovid's ''Metamorphoses'' (Book 12. 450).

★ 'Ampyx' is an ancestor of Patreas, the founder of Patrae. He appears in Pausanias's ''Description of Greece'' (7. 18. 5).
In paleontology, ''Ampyx'' is a genus of asaphid trilobite from the Middle Ordovician.

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