Anigrides

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The Anigrides (Greek: Ἀνίγριδες) were in Greek mythology the nymphs -- that is, the potamides -- of the river Anigrus in Elis. On the coast of Elis, not far from the mouth of the river, there was a grotto sacred to them near modern Samiko, which was visited by persons afflicted with skin diseases.[1] They were supposedly cured here by prayers and sacrifices to the nymphs, and by bathing in the river.[2][3][4] The earliest known attestation of the cult of these nymphs was from the poet Moero in the 3rd century BCE.[5]

The river Anigrus (or Anigros) itself was a small stream in southern Elis that flowed down from Mount Lapithas and the mountains at Minthi to the Ionian Sea. The waters are distinctly sulfuric in character.[5] The river and cave are now part of the thermal springs of Kaiafas.[6]

Notes

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  2. Pausanias, Description of Greece v. 5. § 6
  3. Strabo, viii. p. 346
  4. Eustathius of Thessalonica, On Homer p. 880.
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