Teumessian fox

[1] It was said that the Teumessian fox had been sent by the gods (perhaps Dionysus) to prey upon the children of Thebes as a punishment for a national crime.Creon, then–Regent of Thebes, set Amphitryon the impossible task of destroying this beast.He discovered a supposedly perfect solution by using the magical dog Laelaps, who was destined to catch everything it chased, to catch the Teumessian fox.Zeus, faced with an inevitable contradiction due to the paradoxical nature of their mutually excluding abilities, turned the two beasts into stone.In reference to Cadmus, the legendary founder of Thebes, the Teumessian fox is referred to by the elegant variation Cadmean vixen in James George Frazer's 1921 translation of Bibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus),[2] though in the Greek texts the sex of the fox was not specified.
Laelaps (mythology)Greek mythologyDionysusThebesAmphitryonLaelapsthe paradoxical nature of their mutually excluding abilitiesCanis MajorCanis MinorCadmuselegant variationJames George FrazerBibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus)Oxford Classical DictionaryThe New Encyclopædia BritannicaAntoninus LiberalisApollodorus, BibliothecaCorinnaEpigoniHyginusPoeticon astronomiconMetamorphosesPausaniasDescription of GreeceAncient GreekTeumessosBoeotiaApollodorusGaius Julius HyginusPublius Ovidius NasoMetamorphoses in Greek mythologyAcanthisAcanthusAëdonAegoliusAegypiusAëtosAesacusAgrius and OreiusAlcanderAlcyoneAlcyone and CeyxAlcyonidesAlectryonAnthusAntigoneArne SithonisArtemicheAscalaphusAsteriaAutonousBotresCaeneusCeleusCerberusChelidonCinyrasClinisCoroneCtesyllaCycnus of AetoliaCycnus of AresCycnus of ColonaeCycnus of LiguriaDaedalionErinomaErodiusEumelusGeranaHarmothoëHarpalyceHarpasusHieraxHippodamiaHyperippeIctinusLelanteLyciusMegaletorMeleagridsMemnonidesMeropisMeropsMinyadesMunichusNeophronNyctaeaNyctimeneOenotropaeOrtygiusPandareusPerdixPeriphasPeristeraPieridesPhilaeusPhilomelaPleiadesPolyphontePolytechnusProcneRhexenorSchoeneusScyllaTereusTimandraActaeonArachneAristaeusAscalabusAtalantaCalchusCallistoCephissusCerambusCercopesCheloneCuretesCynosuraGalanthisHarmoniaHecubaHeliceHippomenesLycaonLycian peasantsLyncusMegistoMelanippeMelian nymphsMelissaMyrmexNeritesOcyrhoeOdysseusPentheusPhalanxPhineusPhoenicePompilusTaygeteTheophaneTiresiasTitanisTithonusAethalidesAlcimedonDictysEpopeusOpheltesAchillesCharybdisMedusaMulberry fruitSirensWhite ravenCallisteCymodoceCephalus' wifeGalateaLelegesMyrmidonsNepheleSpartoiWeaselAconteusAglaurusAlcmeneAnaxareteAriadneArsinoëAspalisBattusBritomartisCalydonCragaleusDaphnisIodameLethaeaLyco and OrpheOlenusPallasPolydectesProetusPropoetidesPyrrhusAchelousAcheronAlpheusArethusa (Boeotia)Arethusa (Elis)ByblisCastaliaChioneCleiteComaethoHaemusLichasLilaeusMarsyasMenippe and MetiochePerimelePirenePyramus and ThisbeRhodopeRhodopisSangasSelemnusSybarisHermaphroditusLeucippusSalmacisSiproitesSithonAdonisAgdistisAmaracusAmbrosiaAmpelusAnethusBaucis and PhilemonCalamusCarpusCissusClytieCrocusCyparissusDaphneDiopatraDryopeEteocleidesHeliadesDioxippeLampetiaMeropePhaethusaPhoebeHesperidesErytheiaHyacinthusLeucothoeLibanusLycurgusMessapiansMintheMyriceMyrinaMyrsineNarcissusOechalidesPhilyraPhyllisPicolousPlatanusPsalacanthaSalivaSmilaxSmyrnaSyceusSyrinxGreek godsKobalosMestraPericlymenusCumaean SibylHyadesMilk of HeraAcanthaAmethysteOrchisRhodanthe