A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology

Smith, William

A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology. William Smith, LLD, ed. 1890

(Πραξιδίκη), i. e. the goddess who carries out the objects of justice, or watches that justice is done to men. When Menelaus arrived in Laconia, on his return from Troy, he set up a statue of Praxidice near Gytheium, not far from the spot where Paris, in carrying off Helen, had founded a sanctuary of Aphrodite Migonitis (Paus. 3.22.2). Near Haliartus, in Boeotia, we meet with the worship of Praxidicae, in the plural (9.33.2), who were called daughters of Ogyges, and their names are Alalcomenia, Thelxinoea, and Auilis (9.33.4; Suid. s.v. Steph. Byz. s. v. Τρεμίλη). Their images consisted merely of heads, and their sacrifices only of the heads of animals. With the Orphic poets Praxidice seems to be a surname of Persephone. (Orph. Argon. 31, Hymn. 28. 5; comp. Müller, Orchom. p. 122, 2d edit.)

[L.S]