Lewis Short
Mēdēa | Mēdē, ĭdis | Mēdīa | Mēdēis (noun F.f) : (arch.
* Gen. Medeaï, Enn. ap. Cic. Tusc. 3, 26, 63; v. Enn. p. 127, v. 292 Vahl.; nom. , acc. to id. p. 130, v. 311 Vahl.), and , f., = Μήδεια, a celebrated sorceress, daughter of Aeetes, king of Colchis. She assisted her lover, Jason the Argonaut, in obtaining the golden fleece, accompanied him to Greece, and prevented her father, who was in pursuit, from overtaking them, by strewing the sea with her brother's limbs. When Jason afterwards repudiated her, in order to marry Creusa, she killed the children she had had by him, and burned the bride to death in her palace: item ut Medea Peliam concoxit senem,Plaut. Ps. 3, 2, 52; Ov. M. 7, 9 sqq.; Hyg. Fab. 21, 22, 25: ne pueros coram populo Medea trucidet,Hor. A. P. 185.—The subject of tragedies by several authors, v. Quint. 10, 1, 98.
* Transf.
* F.adj., Medean, magical (poet.): Medeides herbae,Ov. A. A. 2, 101.
* Medea nigra, a precious stone, so named after Medea, Plin. 37, 10, 63, § 173.—Hence
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary