Hyades, Are seuen starres, whose names are Ambrosia, Fudôra, Pasithoë, Coronis, Plexaura, Pyto, and Tythe, they beetroublous, and raise stormes and windes. They goe downe the fourteenth Calendes of May. Poets name them the daughters of Atlas, and Ætheria, wherefore they bee also called Atlantides. But because in lamenting their brother I yas (slain by a Lionesse) they mourned away and died, and therefore were translanted by Iupiter into the sirmamente They were afterwarde called Hyades, by the name of their brother. Some say, that they were the nourices of Bacchus, and were called Dodonides nymphæ of a towne and forest called Dodona The Romaines called them Suculæ.
Hyas, hyadis, Looke Hyadis.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
Hădes, um, f., = *(ua/des (the rainers), the Hyades, a group of seven stars in the head of Taurus (called in pure Lat. suculae; v. 3. sucula), Cic. N. D. 2, 43, 111; Plin. 18, 26, 66, 247; 37, 7, 28, 100; cf. id. 2, 39, 39, 106. They were fabled as daughters of Atlas and sisters of Hyas and of the Pleiades, Ov. F. 5, 165 sq.; id. M. 3, 595; 13, 293; Verg. A. 3, 516; Hor. C. 1, 3, 14.— In sing.: Hyas, ădis, the Hyad, collect., Stat. S. 1, 6, 22.