In
Greek mythology,
Melisseus ("bee-man"), the father of the nymphs
Adrasteia and
Ide (or
Aega, according to
Hyginus) who nursed the infant
Zeus on
Crete, was the eldest and leader of the nine
Kuretes of Crete. They were chthonic
daimones of
Mount Ida, who clashed their spears and shields to drown out the wails of infant Zeus, whom they received from the
Great Goddess,
Rhea, his mother. The infant-god was hidden from his cannibal father and was raised in the cave that was sacred to the Goddess (
Da) celebrated by the Kuretes, whose name it bore and still bears. The names of the two daughters of Melisseus, one called the "inevitable" (Adrasteia) and the other simply "goddess" (Ida,
de) are names used for the Great Mother Rhea herself.