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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

FICTIONAL CHARACTER IN DC COMICS
Circe (DC comics); Circe (DC Comics); Circe (comics)
  • Circe tries to take over [[New York City]] with her super-powered allies, art by [[Phil Jimenez]].
  • Circe as Donna Milton discovering her true identity, art by [[Mike Deodato]].
  • Circe steals Wonder Woman's abilities in issues #3-4 of ''Wonder Woman'', art by [[Terry Dodson]].

Circean         
  • ''The Kingdom of Sorceress Circe'' by [[Angelo Caroselli]] (c. 1630)
  • Frederick S. Church]]'s ''Circe'' (1910)
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  • [[Dosso Dossi]]'s ''[[Circe and Her Lovers in a Landscape]]'' (c. 1525)
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  • Circe enchanting Ulysses in the 2012 revival of Martha Graham's ''Circe''
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  • [[Wilhelm Schubert van Ehrenberg]]'s ''Ulysses at the Palace of Circe'' (1667)
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GODDESS OF MAGIC IN GREEK MYTHOLOGY AND RELIGION
Kirkê; Circean poison; Circe (mythology); Circean Poison; Circean; Kírkē; Κίρκη; Cersi; Sersei; Circe in the arts; Cerce
·adj Having the characteristics of Circe, daughter of Sol and Perseis, a mythological enchantress, who first charmed her victims and then changed them to the forms of beasts; pleasing, but noxious; as, a Circean draught.
Circe         
  • ''The Kingdom of Sorceress Circe'' by [[Angelo Caroselli]] (c. 1630)
  • Frederick S. Church]]'s ''Circe'' (1910)
  • alt=
  • alt=
  • left
  • [[Dosso Dossi]]'s ''[[Circe and Her Lovers in a Landscape]]'' (c. 1525)
  • left
  • alt=
  • Circe enchanting Ulysses in the 2012 revival of Martha Graham's ''Circe''
  • upright
  • [[Wilhelm Schubert van Ehrenberg]]'s ''Ulysses at the Palace of Circe'' (1667)
  • alt=
GODDESS OF MAGIC IN GREEK MYTHOLOGY AND RELIGION
Kirkê; Circean poison; Circe (mythology); Circean Poison; Circean; Kírkē; Κίρκη; Cersi; Sersei; Circe in the arts; Cerce

Circe (; Ancient Greek: Κίρκη, pronounced [kírkɛː]) is an enchantress and a minor goddess in ancient Greek mythology and religion. She is either a daughter of the Titan Helios and the Oceanid nymph Perse or the goddess Hecate and Aeëtes. Circe was renowned for her vast knowledge of potions and herbs. Through the use of these and a magic wand or staff, she would transform her enemies, or those who offended her, into animals.

The best known of her legends is told in Homer's Odyssey when Odysseus visits her island of Aeaea on the way back from the Trojan War and she changes most of his crew into swine. He manages to persuade her to return them to human shape, lives with her for a year and has sons by her, including Latinus and Telegonus. Her ability to change others into animals is further highlighted by the story of Picus, an Italian king whom she turns into a woodpecker for resisting her advances. Another story tells of her falling in love with the sea-god Glaucus, who prefers the nymph Scylla to her. In revenge, Circe poisoned the water where her rival bathed and turned her into a dreadful monster.

Depictions, even in Classical times, diverged from the detail in Homer's narrative, which was later to be reinterpreted morally as a cautionary story against drunkenness. Early philosophical questions were also raised about whether the change from being a human endowed with reason to being an unreasoning beast might not be preferable after all, and the resulting debate was to have a powerful impact during the Renaissance. Circe was also taken as the archetype of the predatory female. In the eyes of those from a later age, this behaviour made her notorious both as a magician and as a type of sexually-free woman. She has been frequently depicted as such in all the arts from the Renaissance down to modern times.

Western paintings established a visual iconography for the figure, but also went for inspiration to other stories concerning Circe that appear in Ovid's Metamorphoses. The episodes of Scylla and Picus added the vice of violent jealousy to her bad qualities and made her a figure of fear as well as of desire.

circean         
  • ''The Kingdom of Sorceress Circe'' by [[Angelo Caroselli]] (c. 1630)
  • Frederick S. Church]]'s ''Circe'' (1910)
  • alt=
  • alt=
  • left
  • [[Dosso Dossi]]'s ''[[Circe and Her Lovers in a Landscape]]'' (c. 1525)
  • left
  • alt=
  • Circe enchanting Ulysses in the 2012 revival of Martha Graham's ''Circe''
  • upright
  • [[Wilhelm Schubert van Ehrenberg]]'s ''Ulysses at the Palace of Circe'' (1667)
  • alt=
GODDESS OF MAGIC IN GREEK MYTHOLOGY AND RELIGION
Kirkê; Circean poison; Circe (mythology); Circean Poison; Circean; Kírkē; Κίρκη; Cersi; Sersei; Circe in the arts; Cerce
a.
Magical, enchanting, spell-binding, brutifying.

ويكيبيديا

Circe (character)

Circe is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics publications and related media. Based upon the eponymous Greek mythological figure who imprisoned Odysseus in Homer's Odyssey, she is a wicked sorceress and major recurring adversary of the superhero Wonder Woman. She has been presented variously since first appearing in 1949’s Wonder Woman #37, though her characterization has consistently retained a key set of features: immortality, stunning physical beauty, a powerful command over sorcery, a penchant for turning human beings into animals (like her mythological antecedent) and often, a delight in humiliation.

Though she first appeared as a Wonder Woman villain, Circe would spend the next 43 years as an antagonist for other DC Comics heroes, such as Rip Hunter, the Sea Devils, and particularly Superman and Supergirl, for whom she was a persistent foil (and sometimes ally) throughout the late-1950’s and 1960’s. In 1983, at the tail-end of the Bronze Age of Comics, Circe would be returned to her roots as a member of Wonder Woman’s rogues gallery, and would rise to become one of the hero’s most significant Modern Age foes, appearing frequently in Wonder Woman stories throughout DC Comics’ post-Crisis, New 52 and Rebirth continuities.

Circe has been adapted into several Wonder Woman-related animated TV and video game projects, in which she has been voiced by actors Michelle Forbes, Laura Post and Rachel York.