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Calypso: The Nymph Who Kept Odysseus Prisoner

In Greek mythology, Calypso, whose name means "to hide" or "to conceal," is a nymph best known from Homer's (c.750 BCE) epic The Odyssey for falling in love with Odysseus and imprisoning him on her island, Ogygia, for seven years (or five years, depending on the source), during his long voyage home.

Calypso's name meaning 'to conceal' and her island of concealment fits the LostStrata pattern of myths encoding hidden or suppressed knowledge — the nymph who holds a civilized man captive outside of time is worth reading as more than romance.
Calypso: The Nymph Who Kept Odysseus Prisoner
Source: https://www.worldhistory.org/Calypso/

Original author: Liana Miate

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