Bronwen Lara Wickkiser has written: 'Asklepios, medicine, and the politics of healing in fifth-century Greece' -- subject(s): Aesculapius (Greek deity), Greek and Roman Medicine, Medicine, Greek and Roman, Asklepios (Greek deity)
asklepios has the power to heal He is the qod of healinq (or , and ) health
Kleopatra, Parthenos, Philammon, Asklepios, Aristaios, Teneros, Iamos, Chairon, Linos, are all of them I think ;)
The Greek goddess of health was Hygeia, which the word 'hygiene' derived from. She was the daughter of the medicine god Asklepios and sometimes attendant to Aphrodite, the goddess of beauty and love.
Epidaurus
R. A. Tomlinson has written: 'The Acropolis of Athens in the 1870s' 'Epidauros' -- subject(s): Aesculapius (Greek deity), Cult, Asklepios (Greek deity) 'From marble halls to mud huts' -- subject(s): Greek Architecture 'Greek sanctuaries' -- subject(s): Temples
There is not always just one god for one thing in ancient Greece as some chose to worship local deities as well as the more well-known gods. As far as I am aware, Asklepios was the greek god of medicine and healing and Hygieia was the greek goddess of health and hygiene.
Apollo had 2 child with Athena Asklepios, god of healing
Jason, Peleus, Asklepios, Aristaios and Akhilleus.
Not a Greek name, so it is meaningless in Greek
The offitial name for Earth in greek is Hera
The Greek name for snake is "ĪĪΚĪ" (ophis).