"Els Anten\u00F2rides (grec antic: \u1F08\u03BD\u03C4\u03B7\u03BD\u03BF\u03C1\u03AF\u03B4\u03B1\u03B9 Ant\u0113nor\u00EDdai, patron\u00EDmic d'Ant\u00E8nor) eren els descendents de l'heroi troi\u00E0 Ant\u00E8nor. A Cirene, on es deia que Ant\u00E8nor es va establir despr\u00E9s de la destrucci\u00F3 de Troia, els considerats anten\u00F2rides gaudien d'honors especials. Estrab\u00F3 cita una obra perduda de S\u00F2focles anomenada Els Anten\u00F2rides (\u1F08\u03BD\u03C4\u03B7\u03BD\u03BF\u03C1\u03B9\u03B4\u03B1\u03B9), on \u00E9s possible que fos explicada la hist\u00F2ria de la fam\u00EDlia despr\u00E9s de la Guerra de Troia."@ca . . . . . . . . . . "Antenorides (Ancient Greek: \u1F08\u03BD\u03C4\u03B7\u03BD\u03BF\u03C1\u03AF\u03B4\u03B7\u03C2) was a patronymic of ancient Greece, used in Greek mythology, from the mythological Antenor, and applied to his sons and descendants, the Antenoridae. Pindar and the scholiast on Pindar suggest that the Antenoridae were worshipped in ancient Cyrene because of the legend of their migration to Cyrene from Troy. The historian Strabo makes reference to a lost play of Sophocles called the Antenoridae (\u1F08\u03BD\u03C4\u03B7\u03BD\u03BF\u03C1\u03B9\u03B4\u03B1\u03B9), which may have dealt with the history of the family following the Trojan War. According to the medieval writer and printer William Caxton in his translation of Raoul Lef\u00E8vre, Recuyell of the Historyes of Troye, \"Antenorides\" was also the name of one of the six gates of Troy, named after Antenor, though this is not recorded in any known ancient source. This gate is also later mentioned in William Shakespeare's play Troilus and Cressida."@en . . "1045829611"^^ . . . . "Antenorides (Ancient Greek: \u1F08\u03BD\u03C4\u03B7\u03BD\u03BF\u03C1\u03AF\u03B4\u03B7\u03C2) was a patronymic of ancient Greece, used in Greek mythology, from the mythological Antenor, and applied to his sons and descendants, the Antenoridae. Pindar and the scholiast on Pindar suggest that the Antenoridae were worshipped in ancient Cyrene because of the legend of their migration to Cyrene from Troy. The historian Strabo makes reference to a lost play of Sophocles called the Antenoridae (\u1F08\u03BD\u03C4\u03B7\u03BD\u03BF\u03C1\u03B9\u03B4\u03B1\u03B9), which may have dealt with the history of the family following the Trojan War."@en . . . . . . "Antenorides"@en . . . "4576"^^ . . . . . . "Anten\u00F2rides"@ca . . . . . . . . . "Antenorides"@en . . . "LS"@en . . . "49046572"^^ . . . . "1"^^ . . . . . "183"^^ . . . . . . . "Els Anten\u00F2rides (grec antic: \u1F08\u03BD\u03C4\u03B7\u03BD\u03BF\u03C1\u03AF\u03B4\u03B1\u03B9 Ant\u0113nor\u00EDdai, patron\u00EDmic d'Ant\u00E8nor) eren els descendents de l'heroi troi\u00E0 Ant\u00E8nor. A Cirene, on es deia que Ant\u00E8nor es va establir despr\u00E9s de la destrucci\u00F3 de Troia, els considerats anten\u00F2rides gaudien d'honors especials. Estrab\u00F3 cita una obra perduda de S\u00F2focles anomenada Els Anten\u00F2rides (\u1F08\u03BD\u03C4\u03B7\u03BD\u03BF\u03C1\u03B9\u03B4\u03B1\u03B9), on \u00E9s possible que fos explicada la hist\u00F2ria de la fam\u00EDlia despr\u00E9s de la Guerra de Troia."@ca . . .