abstract
| - Thebe (Ancient Greek: Θήβη) is a feminine name mentioned several times in Greek mythology, in accounts that imply multiple female characters, four of whom are said to have had three cities named Thebes after them:
* Thebe, daughter of Asopus and Metope, who became wife of Zethus, and gave her name to Boeotian Thebes. She is also said to have consorted with Zeus.
* Thebe, daughter of Zeus and Iodame, given in marriage to Ogygus.
* Thebe, daughter of Prometheus and also a possible eponym of the Boeotian Thebes.
* Thebe, daughter of Cilix and wife of Corybas (son of Cybele).
* Thebe, eponym of Thebes, Egypt. She was the daughter of either Nilus, Epaphus, Proteus, or Libys; rare versions of the myth make her a consort of Zeus and mother of Aegyptus or Heracles.
* Thebe, daughter of the Pelasgian Adramys, the eponym of Adramyttium, or of the river god Granicus. She married Heracles, who named Hypoplacian Thebes after her.
* Thebe, daughter of Zeus and Megacleite, sister of Locrus.
- Thebe was one of the twenty daughters of river-god Asopos and naiad Metope. Zeus fell in love with her and
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