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On the night of the attack, father and daughter swam roughly ten miles through rough, choppy waters to reach the ships. They silently swam among the boats, using knives to cut the moorings and dragging away the submerged anchors. Without anchors and moorings to secure the ships, they crashed together
69:. Hydna was well known in Greece as a skilled swimmer, having been trained by her father, a professional swim instructor named Scyllias, from a young age. She was known for her ability to swim long distances and dive deep into the ocean.
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in the stormy water. Most of the ships sustained considerable damage and a few sank. The resulting delay allowed the Greek navy more time to prepare in
Artemisium and ultimately led to a victory for Greek forces at Salamis.
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In another chronicle by
Herodotus, Scyllias was actually working for the Persians as a diver, recovering a great part of the treasure sunk in the storm before deserting for the Greek side. He supposedly swam submerged from
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is a votive offering of the
Amphictyons towards father and daughter". It is thought that Roman emperor Nero plundered her statue and returned with it to Rome in the first century
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in the
Persian fleet, which he would have sabotaged with Hydna and benefitted professionally from before absconding.
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or a stolen boat, and brought the Greeks information about the
Persian fleet. This story implies he was a Greek
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swimmer and diver given credit for contributing to the destruction of the
Persian navy in 480
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A New
Classical Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography Mythology and Geography
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A History of
Seafaring in the Classical World (Routledge Revivals)
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In gratitude for the heroism shown by Hydna and her father, the
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228:, By Sir William Smith, Charles Anthony LLD, 1878 p.792
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world. Pausanias tells us that "beside the statue of
120:Hydna appears in Elva Sophronia Smith's 1954 novel
175:"Ten Noble and Notorious Women of Ancient Greece"
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81:to Artemisium, possibly using a primitive
158:United States Naval Institute Proceedings
240:A to Z of Ancient Greek and Roman Women
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300:Greek people of the Greco-Persian Wars
61:had moored his ships off the coast of
23:(alternately called Hydne or Cyana) (
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242:. Infobase Publishing. p. 158.
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127:Scyllias appears in the 2014 film
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65:to wait out a storm prior to the
173:Mark, Joshua (August 20, 2014).
280:Women in ancient Greek warfare
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290:5th-century BC Greek people
238:Lightman, Marjorie (2008).
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295:5th-century BC Greek women
180:World History Encyclopedia
160:, Volume 68, 1942, p.662
27:480 BC) was an Ancient
130:300: Rise of an Empire
285:Ancient Chalcidicians
275:Greek female swimmers
50:Description of Greece
201:Meijer, Fik (2014).
67:Battle of Artemisium
270:Greek female divers
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94:Amphictyons
264:Categories
249:0816067104
145:References
45:Pausanias
39:Biography
59:Xerxes I
55:Persians
106:Gorgias
83:snorkel
79:Aphetae
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98:Delphi
21:Scione
102:Greek
29:Greek
17:Hydna
244:ISBN
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188:2016
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