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Poseidon

Poseidon (/pəˈsdən, pɒ-, p-/;[1] Greek: Ποσειδῶν) is one of the Twelve Olympians in ancient Greek religion and mythology, presiding over the sea, storms, earthquakes and horses.[2] He was the protector of seafarers and the guardian of many Hellenic cities and colonies. In pre-Olympian Bronze Age Greece, Poseidon was venerated as a chief deity at Pylos and Thebes, with the cult title "earth shaker";[2] in the myths of isolated Arcadia, he is related to Demeter and Persephone and was venerated as a horse, and as a god of the waters.[3] Poseidon maintained both associations among most Greeks: he was regarded as the tamer or father of horses,[2] who, with a strike of his trident, created springs (the terms for horses and springs are related in the Greek language).[4] His Roman equivalent is Neptune.

Poseidon
  • King of the sea
  • God of the sea, storms, earthquakes, and horses
Member of the Twelve Olympians
The Poseidon of Melos, a statue of Poseidon found in Milos in 1877
AbodeMount Olympus, or the sea
SymbolTrident, fish, dolphin, horse, bull
Personal information
ParentsCronus and Rhea
SiblingsHades, Demeter, Hestia, Hera, Zeus
ConsortAmphitrite, various others
ChildrenTheseus, Triton, Rhodos, Benthesikyme, Arion, Despoina, Polyphemus, Orion, Belus, Agenor, Neleus, Atlas, Pegasus, Chrysaor, Kymopoleia, Bellerophon, various others
Equivalents
Roman equivalentNeptune
Poseidon greeting Theseus (on the right). Detail, Attic red-figured calyx-krater by Syriscos Painter, 450-500BC from Agrigento. BnF Museum (Cabinet des médailles), Paris

Homer and Hesiod suggest that Poseidon became lord of the sea when, following the overthrow of his father Cronus, the world was divided by lot among Cronus' three sons; Zeus was given the sky, Hades the underworld, and Poseidon the sea, with the Earth and Mount Olympus belonging to all three.[2][5] In Homer's Iliad, Poseidon supports the Greeks against the Trojans during the Trojan War; in the Odyssey, during the sea-voyage from Troy back home to Ithaca, the Greek hero Odysseus provokes Poseidon's fury by blinding his son, the Cyclops Polyphemus, resulting in Poseidon punishing him with storms, causing the complete loss of his ship and companions, and delaying his return by ten years. Poseidon is also the subject of a Homeric hymn. In Plato's Timaeus and Critias, the legendary island of Atlantis was Poseidon's domain.[6][7][8]

Poseidon is famous for his contests with other deities for winning the patronage of the city. According to legend, Athena became the patron goddess of the city of Athens after a competition with Poseidon, though he remained on the Acropolis in the form of his surrogate, Erechtheus. After the fight, Poseidon sent a monstrous flood to the Attic plain to punish the Athenians for not choosing him.[9] In similar competitions with other deities in different cities, he causes devastating floods when he loses. Poseidon is a horrifying and avenging god and must be honoured even when he is not the patron deity of the city.[10]

Some scholars suggested that Poseidon was probably a Pelasgian god[11] or a god of the Minyans.[12] However it is possible that Poseidon, like Zeus was a common god of all Greeks from the beginning.[13]

Etymology

The earliest attested occurrence of the name, written in Linear B, is 𐀡𐀮𐀅𐀃 Po-se-da-o or 𐀡𐀮𐀅𐀺𐀚 Po-se-da-wo-ne,[14] which correspond to Ποσειδάων (Poseidaōn) and Ποσειδάϝoνος (Poseidawοnos) in Mycenean Greek; in Homeric Greek it appears as Ποσιδάων (Posidaōn); in Aeolic as Ποτε(ι)δάων (Pote(i)daōn); in Doric as Ποτειδάν (Poteidan) and Ποτειδᾶς (Poteidas); in Arcadic as Ποσoιδᾱν (Posoidan). In inscriptions with Laconic style from Tainaron, Helos and Thuria as Ποhoιδᾱν (Pohoidan), indicating that the Dorians took the name from the older population.[15] The form Ποτειδάϝων (Poteidawōn) appears in Corinth.[16]

The origins of the name "Poseidon" are unclear and the possible etymologies are contradictive between the scholars. One theory breaks it down into an element meaning "husband" or "lord" (Greek πόσις (posis), from PIE *pótis) and another element meaning "earth" (δᾶ (da), Doric for γῆ ()), producing something like lord or spouse of Da, i.e. of the earth; this would link him with Demeter, "Earth-mother".[17] Burkert finds that "the second element δᾶ- remains hopelessly ambiguous" and finds a "husband of Earth" reading "quite impossible to prove".[2] According to Beekes in Etymological Dictionary of Greek, "there is no indication that δᾶ means 'earth'",[18] although the root da appears in the Linear B inscription E-ne-si-da-o-ne, "earth-shaker".[2][19]

Another, theory interprets the second element as related to the (presumed) Doric word *δᾶϝον dâwon, "water", Proto-Indo-European *dah₂- "water" or *dʰenh₂- "to run, flow", Sanskrit दन् dā́-nu- "fluid, drop, dew" and names of rivers such as Danube (< *Danuvius) or Don. This would make *Posei-dawōn into the master of waters.[20][15]

Plato in his dialogue Cratylus gives two traditional etymologies: either the sea restrained Poseidon when walking as a "foot-bond" (ποσίδεσμον), or he "knew many things" (πολλά εἰδότος or πολλά εἰδῶν).[21]

Beekes suggests that the word has probably a Pre-Greek origin.[22] At least a few sources deem Poseidon as a "prehellenic" (i.e. Pelasgian) word, considering an Indo-European etymology improbable.[23][citation needed]

Bronze Age Greece

Linear B (Mycenean Greek) inscriptions

If surviving Linear B clay tablets can be trusted, the names po-se-da-wo-ne and Po-se-da-o ("Poseidon")[14] occurs with greater frequency than does di-u-ja ("Zeus"). A feminine variant, po-se-de-ia, is also found, indicating a lost consort goddess, in effect the precursor of Amphitrite.

Poseidon was the chief god at Pylos. The title wa-na-ka appears in the inscriptions. Poseidon was identified with wanax from the Homeric era to classical Greece. (anax). The title didn't mean only king, but also protector. Wanax had chthonic aspects, and he was closely associated with Poseidon, who had the title "Lord of the Underworld". The chthonic nature of Poseidon is also indicated by his title E-ne-si-da-o-ne (Earth-shaker) in Mycenean Knossos and Pylos. Through Homer the epithet was also used in classical Greece. (ennosigaios, ennosidas).[24]

Po-tini-ja (potnia: lady or mistress) was the chief goddess at Pylos and she was closely associated with Poseidon. She was the Mycenean goddess of nature and Poseidon—Wanax is one from the gods who may be considered her "male paredros". The earth shaker received offerings in the cave of the goddess of childbirth Eileithyia at Amnisos in Crete. Poseidon is allied with Potnia and the divine child.[25]

Wa-na-ssa (anassa:queen or lady) appears in the inscriptions usually in plural. (Wa-na-ssoi). The dual number is common in Indoeuropean grammar (usually for chthonic deities like the Erinyes) and the duality was used for Demeter and Persephone in classical Greece (the double named goddesses).[26][27] Potnia and wanassa refer to identical deities or two aspects of the same deity.[24]

E-ri-nu (Erinys) is attested in the inscriptions.[28] In some ancient cults Erinys is related to Poseidon and her name is an epithet of Demeter.[29]

It is possible that Demeter appears as Da-ma-te in a Linear B inscription (PN EN 609), however the interpretation is still under dispute.[30][31] Si-to Po-tini-ja is probably related with Demeter as goddess of grain.[32]

Tablets from Pylos record sacrificial goods destined for "the Two ladies and the Lord" (or "to the Two Queens and the King": wa-na-soi, wa-na-ka-te). Wa-na-ssoi may be related with Demeter and Persephone, or their precursors, goddesses who were not associated with Poseidon in later periods.[33][27]

Mycenean cult

During the Mycenean period, the ancestral male gods of the Myceneans were probably not represented in human forms, and the information given by the tablets found at Pylos and Knossos is insufficient.[32] Poseidon was the chief deity at Pylos and Thebes. He is identified with Anax and he carried the title "Master of the Underworld". Anax had probably a cult associated with the protection of the palace.[24] In Acrocorinth he was worshipped as Poseidon Anax during the Mycenean age.[34] In the city there was the famous spring Peirene which in a myth is related to the winged horse Pegasus.[35] In Attica there was a cult of Anax heroes who was connected to Poseidon.[34] A cult title of Poseidon was "earth-shaker" and in Knossos he was worshipped together with the goddess Eleithyia who was related to the annual birth of the divine child.[34] Potnia was the Mycenean goddess of nature and she was the consort of Poseidon at Pylos. She is mentioned together with bucrania in decorated jugs and he was associated with the animals and especially to the bull.[24] In Athens Poseidon was an inland god who created the salt-sea Erecthēιs (Ερεχθηίς), "sea of Erechtheus". In Acropolis his cult was superimposed on the cult of the Pre-Greek godErechtheus. In Athens and Asine he was worshipped in the house of the king during the Mycenean period.[35] The bull was the favourite animal for sacrifices and it seems that horses were rarely used during the burial of the Mycenean leaders.[32]

Arcadian myths

 
Poseidon pursuing a woman, probably by Achilleus painter, 480-450BC. Metropolitan Museum of Art, Manhattan NY

In the Arcadian myths , Poseidon is related to Demeter and Despoina (another name of Kore- Persephone) and he was worshipped with the surname Hippios in many Arcadian cities.[10] At Thelpusa and Phigalia there were sister worships which are very important for the study of primitive religions. In these cults Demeter and Poseidon were chthonic divinities of the underworld.[29]

Near Thelpusa the river Ladon descended to the sunctuary of Demeter Erinys (Demeter-Fury). During her wandering in search of her daughter Demeter changed into a mare to avoid Poseidon. Poseidon took the form of a stallion and after their mating she gave birth to a daughter whose name was not allowed to be told to the unitiated and a horse called Arion (very swift). Her daughter obviously had the shape of a mare too. At first Demeter became angry and she was given the surname Erinys (fury) by the Thelpusians.[29][10] The Erinyes were deities of vangeance, and Erinys had a similar function with the goddess Dike (Justice).[36] In the very old myth of Thelpusa Demeter-Erinys and Poseidon are divinities of the underworld in a pre-mythic period. Poseidon appears as a horse. In Greek folklore the horses had chthonic associations and it was believed that they could create springs.[10] In European folklore the water-creatures or water-spirits appear with the shape of a horse or a bull. In Greece the river god Acheloos is represented like a bull or a man-bull.[37] Many people when sacrificed to Demeter should make a premilinary sacrifice to Acheloos [29]

At Phigalia Demeter had a sanctuary in a cavern and she was given the surname Melaina (black). The goddess was related to the black undeworld. In a similar myth Poseidon appears as horse and Demeter gives birth to a daughter whose name was not allowed to be told to the unitiated (At Lycosura her daughter was called Despoina). Demeter angry with Poseidon put on a black dressing and shut herself in the cavern. When the fruits of the earth were perished, Zeus sent the Moirai to Demeter who listened to them and led aside her wrath. In this cult we have traces of a very old cult of Demeter and Poseidon as deities of the underworld.[29]

 
Statue of Poseidon in Germany by Johann David Räntz and Lorenz Wilhelm Räntz (1760).

In another Arcadian myth when Rhea had given birth to Poseidon, she told Cronus that she had given birth to a horse, and gave him a foal to swallow instead of the child.[10][38] In the Homeric Hymn Demeter puts a dark mourning robe around her shoulders as a sign of her sorrow.[29] Demeter's mare-form was worshipped into historical times. The xoanon of Melaina at Phigalia shows how the local cult interpreted her, as goddess of nature. A Medusa type with a horse's head with snaky hair, holding a dove and a dolphin, probably representing her power over air and water.[39]

Boeotian myths

The myth of Poseidon appearing as a horse and mating with Demeter was not localized in Arcadia. At Haliartos in Boeotia near Thebes Poseidon appears as stallion. He mates with Erinys near the spring of Tilpousa and she gives birth to the faboulous horse Arion.[10] At Tilpusa we have a very old cult of the chthonic deities Erinys and Poseidon. The water-god Poseidon[40] appears as a horse which seems to represent the water-spirit [37] and Erinys is probably the personification of a revenging earth-spirit.[41][36] From earlier times at Delphi Poseidon was joined in a religious union with the earth-goddess Ge. She is represented as a snake which is a form of the earth-spirit.[40]

In the Theogony of Hesiod Poseidon once slept with the monstrous Medousa near the mountain Helikon. She conceived the winged horse Pegasus who sprang out of her body when Perseus cut off her head. Pegasus stuck the ground with his hoof and created the famous spring Hippocrene near Helikon.[10]

Praxidicai were female deities of judicial punishment worshipped in the region of Haliartos in the historical times. Ttheir origin is probably the same with Erinys. Their images depicted only the heads of the goddesses probably a representation of the earth goddess emerging from the ground.[29] Praxidice is and epithet of Persephone in the Orphic Hymn. Persephone is sometimes depicted with her head emerging from the ground.[42][43]

Origins

 
Colossal-type statue of Poseidon-Neptune, probably sculpted in a workshop in Aphrodisias (Asia Minor). It was at Palaemon's sanctuary in Isthmia, where it was described by Pausanias. Prado Museum, Madrid

During the Mycenean period Poseidon was worshipped in several regions in Greece. At Pylos and some other cities he was a god of the underworld (Lord of the Underworld) and his cult was related to the protection of the palace. He carried the title anax, king or protector. His consort potnia, lady or mistress, was the Mycenean goddess of nature. Her main aspects were birth and vegetation.[24] Poseidon had the title "Enesidaon" (earth-shaker) and in Crete he was associated with the goddess of childbirth Eleithyia. Through Homer the Mycenean titles were also used in classical Greece with similar meaning. He was identified with anax and he carried the epithets "Ennosigaios" and "Ennosidas" (earth-shaker). Potnia was a title which accompanied female goddesses.[44] The goddess of nature survived in the Eleusinian cult, where the following words were uttered: "Mighty Potnia bore a strong son".[45] In the heavily sea-dependent Mycenaean culture, there is not sufficient evidence that Poseidon was connected with the sea; it is unclear whether "Posedeia" was a sea-goddess. The Greeks invaders came from far inland and they were not familiarized with the sea.[46]

In the primitive Boeotian and Arcadian myths Poseidon, the god of the underworld, appears as a horse and he is mating with the earth goddess.[40] The earth goddess is called Erinys or Demeter and she gives birth to the fabulous horse Arion and the unnamed daughter Despoina, which is another name of Persephone.[10] The horse represents the divine spirit (numen) and is related to the liquid element and the underworld.[47] In Greek folklore the horse is associated with the underworld and it was believed that it had the ability to create springs.[10] In the European folklore the water-spirit appears with the shape of a horse or a bull. In Greece the river god Acheloos is represented as a bull or a man-bull.[37] Burkert suggests that the Hellenic cult of Poseidon as a horse god may be connected to the introduction of the horse and war-chariot from Anatolia to Greece around 1600 BC.[2]

In the Boeotian myth Poseidon is the water-god and Erinys is a goddess of the underworld.[40] She is probably the personification of a revenging earth spirit[41][48] and it seems that she had a similar function with the goddess Dike (Justice).[36] At the spring "Tilpousa" she gives birth to the fabulous horse Arion. In the Arcadian myth Poseidon Hippios (horse) is mating with the mare-Demeter. At Thelpousa Demeter-Erinys gives birth to the horse Arion and to an unnamable daughter who has the shape of a mare. In some neighbour cults the daughter was called Despoina (mistress), which is another name of Persephone.[10] The theriomorphic form of gods seems to be local in Arcadia in an old religion associated with xoana.[26]

 
From left to right: Poseidon, Dionysos, Zeus. Black figured neck-amphora, 540 BC. National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen

According to some theories Poseidon was a Pelasgian god or a god of the Minyans. Traditionally the Minyans are considered Pelasgians and they lived in Thessaly and Boeotia. In Thessaly (Pelasgiotis) there was a close relation to the horses. Poseidon created the first horse Skyphios hitting a rock with his trident and managed in the same way to drain the valley of Tempe.[13] The Thessalians were famous charioteers.[49] Some of the oldest Greek myths appear in Boeotia. In ancient cults Poseidon was worshipped as a horse. The mythical horse Arion was a sire of Poseidon-horse with Erinys and the winged horse Pegasus a sire of Poseidon foaled by Medousa.[10] At Onchestos he had an old famous festival which included horseracing.[10] However it is possible that Poseidon like Zeus was a common god of all Greeks from the beginning.[13]

It is possible that the Greeks did not bring with them other gods except Zeus, Eos, and the Dioskouroi.[47] The Pelasgian god probably represented the fertilising power of water, and then he was he was considered god of the sea . As the sea encircles and holds the earth in its position, Poseidon is the god who holds the earth and who has the ability to shake the earth.[50] The primeval water who encircled the earth ( Oceanus) is the origin of all rivers and springs. They are children of Oceanus and Tethys.[35]

Farnell suggested that Poseidon was originally the god of the Minyans who occupied Thessaly and Boeotia. There is a similarity between the Boeotian and Arcadian myths and especially between the myths which represent the god of the waters Poseidon as a horse.[40] The mythical horse Arion appears in both regions. The offspring of Poseidon winged horse Pegasus creates famous springs near Helikon and at Troizen. Some springs of Poseidon have similar names in Boeotia and Peloponnese.[13][12] It is possible that the name of Poseidon Helikonios in Boeotia whose fest included horseracing derives from the mountain Helikon. The Minyans had trade contacts with Mycenean Pylos and the Achaeans adopted the cult of Poseidon Helikonios. The cult spread in Peloponnese and then to Ionia when the Achaeans migrated to Asia Minor.[13][12]

 
Hermes, Dionysos, Ariadne and Poseidon (Amphitrite is depicted on side B.). Detail from the belly of an Attic red-figure hydria, ca. 510 BC–500 BC. Louvre, Paris

Nilsson suggested that Poseidon was probably a common god of all Greeks from the beginning. The Greeks occupied Thessaly, Boeotia and Peloponnese during the Bronze Age. In all these regions Poseidon was the god of the horses. The origin of his cult was Peloponnese and he was the inland god of the Achaeans, the god of the "horses" and the "earthquakes". When the Achaeans migrated to Ionia there was a transition to regarding Poseidon as the god of the sea because the Ionians were sea-dependent.[35] With no doubt he was originally the god of the waters. The Greeks believed that the cause of the earthquakes was the erosion of the rocks by the waters, by the rivers in Peloponnese which they saw to disappear into the earth and then to burst out again. The god of the waters became the "earth-shaker".[35][51] This is what the natural philosophers Thales Anaximenes and Aristotle believed and could not be different from the folk belief. [52] In the Greek legends Arethusa and the river Alpheus traversed underground under the sea and reappeared at Ortygia.[53][54]

In any case, the early importance of Poseidon can still be glimpsed in Homer's Odyssey, where Poseidon rather than Zeus is the major mover of events. In Homer, Poseidon is the master of the sea.[55] He is described as a majestic scary and avenging monarch of the sea.[46]

Worship of Poseidon

 
Artemision Bronze, bronze statue probably of Poseidon, Severe style 480-440 BC. The statue was possibly a thank offering to the god after the battle of Artemision (480 BC).[56]National Archaeological Museum Athens.
I begin to sing about Poseidon, the great god,
mover of the earth and fruitless sea
god of the deep who is also lord of Helicon [57] and wide Aegae.
A two-fold office the gods allotted you,
O Shaker of the Earth, to be a tamer of horses
and a saviour of ships!
Hail, Poseidon, Holder of the Earth, dark-haired lord!
O blessed one, be kindly in heart
and help those who voyage in ships!
(Homeric Hymn to Poseidon)[58]

The worship of Poseidon was extended all over Greece and southern Italy , but he was specially honoured in Peloponnese which is called "the residence of Poseidon" and in the Ionic cities.[11] The significance of his cult is indicated by the names of cities like Poteidaia in the Chalkidiki peninsula and Poseidonia (Paestum), a Greek colony in Italy.[2] Poseidion is a frequent Greek placename along coastlines and the name of a Greek colony at the Syrian coast.[59]

In Ionia his cult was introduced by Achaean colonists from Greece in the 11th century BC. Traditionally the colonists came from Pylos where Poseidon was the principal god of the city. The god had a famous temple near the mountain Mycale.[2] The month Poseidaon is the month of the winter-storms. The name of the month was used in Ionic territories, in Athens, in the islands of the Aegean and in the cities of Asia Minor. At Lesbos and Epidauros the month was called Poseidios. During this month Poseidon was worshipped as the "master of the sea" in a bright cult.[13]

 
Poseidon with trident on hippocamp (sea-horse). Athenian black-figure white-ground pottery lekythos ca. 500-480 BC, by Athena Painter. Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Poseidon was a major civic god of several cities: in Athens, he was second only to Athena in importance, while in Corinth and many cities of Ionia and Magna Graecia he was the chief god of the polis.[2] Many fests of Poseidon included athletic competitions and horseracing. In Corinth his cult was related to the Isthmian games.[2] In Arcadia his cult was related to the games "Hippocrateia" and at Sparta he had a temple near an Hippodrome. In Onchestos of Boeotia horseracing was a part of the athletic games in honour of the god.[10][13]

Poseidon was considered a symbol of unity. The Panionia the festival of all Ionians near Mycale were celebrated in honour of Poseidon Helikonios [60] and was the place of meeting of the Ionian League.[61] He was the patron god of the Amphictiony of Kalaureia. At Onchestos of Boeotia he was worshipped as Poseidon Helikonios. His sanctuary became the place of meeting of the second Boeotian league.[13][62] At Helike of Achaea there was the famous temple of Poseidon Helikonios,which was the place of meeting of the Achaean League.[63]

The "master of the sea" creates clouds and storms, but he is also the protector of the sailors. He has the ability to calm the sea for a good voyage and save those who are in danger.[11] He was worshipped with the surname "savior" as the protector of the seafarers and the fishermen.[56] He is the "earthshaker", however he is also the protector against the earthquakes. In some cults he was worshipped as the "bringer of safety" or "protector of the house and the foundations". [13]

The god was considered the creator of the first horse, and it was believed that he taught men the art of taming horses. He was depicted on horseback, or riding in a chariot drawn by two or four horses.[11] He had a lot of temples in Arcadia, with the surname Hippios (of the horse) and he was also transformed into a horse to seduce Demeter .[13]

 
Poseidon with a trident and a fish. Tondo of an Attic red-figured kylix, 520-510 BC, from Etruria.National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen.

Being the god of waters, Poseidon is related to the primeval water which encircles the earth (Oceanus),[11] who is the father of all rivers and springs. He can create springs with the strike of his trident.[2] He was worshipped as "ruler of the springs" and "leader of the nymphs" [64] In Thessaly it was believed that he drained the area cutting the rocks of Tempe with his trident.[2][65] In Greek folklore the horse can also create springs .[10]

As god of the sea Poseidon was also god of fishing and especially of sea-fishing. Tuna was offered to him by the fishermen during the festal meal for the protection of the nets .[2] Tuna and later dolphin was his attribute. He was worshipped in many islands and cities by the coast. At Corcyra a roaring bull near the sea-shore quaranteed a good fishing.[66] The devastating storm of Poseidon is related to fishermen and they poured drink offerings to Poseidon -savior into the sea.[56] The god of inland waters is very close to vegetation and Poseidon was worshipped in many cities as god of vegetation. Haloa in Athens was a fest of vegetation. The Protrygaia, a wine-fest seem to belong to Dionysus and Poseidon.[66]

In several cities Poseidon was worshipped in relation to the genealogy and the phratry.[2] At Tinos he was worshipped as a healer-god, probably a forerunner of the famous Evangelistria.[66]

The bull is related to Poseidon mainly in Ionia. The sacrifice of a bull offered to Poseidon is mentioned by Homer in an Ionic festival. (Panionia) [67][66] The sacrifices offered to Poseidon consisted of black and white bulls which were killed or thrown into the sea. Boars and rams were also used and in Argolis horses were thrown into a well as a sacrifice to him.[68][11]

 
Gigantomachy scene: Poseidon fighting Polybotes. Tondo of an Attic red-figure kylix, ca. 475-470 BC. Painter of the Paris Gigantomachy (eponymous vase), circle of the Brygos Painter found in Vulci BnF Museum (Cabinet des médailles), Paris

In his benign aspect, Poseidon was seen as creating new islands and offering calm seas. When offended or ignored, he supposedly struck the ground with his trident and caused chaotic springs, earthquakes, drownings and shipwrecks. Sailors prayed to Poseidon for a safe voyage, sometimes drowning horses as a sacrifice; in this way, according to a fragmentary papyrus, Alexander the Great paused at the Syrian seashore before the climactic battle of Issus, and resorted to prayers, "invoking Poseidon the sea-god, for whom he ordered a four-horse chariot to be cast into the waves".[69]

According to Pausanias, Poseidon was one of the caretakers of the oracle at Delphi before Olympian Apollo took it over. Apollo and Poseidon worked closely in many realms: in colonization, for example, Delphic Apollo provided the authorization to go out and settle, while Poseidon watched over the colonists on their way, and provided the lustral water for the foundation-sacrifice. At one time Delphi belonged to him in common with Ge, but Apollo gave him the psychopompeion Kalaureia as a compensation for it.[11][70]

Xenophon's Anabasis describes a group of Spartan soldiers in 400–399 BC singing to Poseidon a paean—a kind of hymn normally sung for Apollo. Like Dionysus, who inflamed the maenads, Poseidon also caused certain forms of mental disturbance. A Hippocratic text of ca 400 BC, On the Sacred Disease[71] says that he was blamed for certain types of epilepsy.

Poseidon is still worshipped today in modern Hellenic religion, among other Greek gods. The worship of Greek gods has been recognized by the Greek government since 2017.[72][73]

Epithets and attributes

 
Poseidon Epoptes

Poseidon had a variety of roles, duties and attributes. He is a separate deity from the oldest Greek god of the sea Pontus. In Athens his name is superimposed οn the name of the non-Greek god Erechtheus Ἑρεχθεύς (Poseidon Erechtheus).[74][75] In the Iliad, he is the lord of the sea and his golden palace is built in Aegai, in the depth of the sea.[76] His significance is indicated by his titles Eurykreion (Εὐρυκρείων) "wide-ruling", an epithet also applied to Agamemnon[77][78] and Helikonios anax (Ἑλικώνιος ἂναξ), "lord of Helicon or Helike" [79] In Helike of Achaia he was specially honoured.[80] Anax is identified in Mycenaean Greek (Linear B) as wa-na-ka, a title of Poseidon as king of the underworld. Aeschylus uses also the epithet anax [81] and Pindar the epithet Eurymedon (Εὐρυμέδων) "widely ruling".[82]

 
Poseidon- Neptune Detail from the "Mosaic of the Seasons", from the Roman era. Regional Archeological Museum Antonio Salinas, Palermo).

Some of the epithets (or adjectives) applied to him like Enosigaios (Ἐνοσίγαιος), Enosichthon (Ἐνοσίχθων) (Homer) and Ennosidas (Ἐννοσίδας) (Pindar), mean "earth shaker".[83] These epithets indicate his chthonic nature, and have an older evidence of use, as it is identified in Linear B, as 𐀁𐀚𐀯𐀅𐀃𐀚, E-ne-si-da-o-ne.[84] Other epithets that relate him with the earthquakes are Gaieochos (Γαιήοχος) [85] and Seisichthon (Σεισίχθων) [86] The god who causes the earthquakes is also the protector against them, and he had the epithets Themeliouchos (Θεμελιούχος) "upholding the foundations",[87] Asphaleios (Ἀσφάλειος) "securer, protector" [88] with a temple at Tainaron.[89] Pausanias describes a sanctuary of Poseidon near Sparta beside the shrine of Alcon, where he had the surname Domatites (Δωματίτης), "of the house"[90][91]

 
Poseidon surprises Anymone near a spring. Attic pelike in red figure, circle of the Polygnotus Painter, 440-430 BC. Archaeological Museum of Agrigento

Homer uses for Poseidon the title Kyanochaites (Κυανοχαίτης), "dark-haired, dark blue of the sea".[92][93] Epithets like Pelagios (Πελάγιος) "of the open sea",[94][95] Aegeus (Αἰγαίος), "of the high sea" [96] in the town of Aegae in Euboea, where he had a magnificent temple upon a hill,[97][98][99] Pontomedon (Ποντομέδων),[100]" lord of the sea" (Pindar, Aeschylus) and Kymothales (Κυμοθαλής), "abounding with waves",[101] indicate that Poseidon was regarded as holding sway over the sea.[102] Other epithets that relate him with the sea are, Porthmios (Πόρθμιος), "of strait, narrow sea" at Karpathos,[103] Epactaeus (Ἐπακταῖος) "god worshipped on the coast", in Samos.,[104] Alidoupos, (Ἀλίδουπος) "sea resounding".[105] The master of the sea who can cause devastating storms is also the protector of seafarers and he was given the epithet sōtēr (Σωτήρ), "savior".[56]

His symbol is the trident and he has the epithet Eutriaina (Εὐτρίαινα), "with goodly trident" (Pindar).[106] The god of the sea is also the god of fishing, and tuna was his attribute. At Lampsacus they offered fishes to Poseidon and he had the epithet phytalmios (φυτάλμιος) [107] His epithet Phykios (Φύκιος), "god of seaweeds" at Mykonos,[108] seems to be related with fishing. He had a fest where women were not allowed, with special offers also to Poseidon Temenites (Τεμενίτης) "related to an official domain ".[109] At the same day they made offers to Demeter Chloe therefore Poseidon was the promotor of vegetation. He had the epithet phytalmios (φυτάλμιος) at Myconos, Troizen, Megara and Rhodes, comparable with Ptorthios (Πτόρθιος) at Chalcis.[107][110][111]

 
Poseidon fighting the Giant Polybotes. Attic black-figure neck amphora by Swing Painter, 540-530 BC, ca. 540 BC–530 BC. Louvre, Paris.

Poseidon had a close association with horses. He is known under the epithet Hippios (Ἳππειος), "of a horse or horses" [112] usually in Arcadia. He had temples at Lycosura, Mantineia, Methydrium, Pheneos, Pallandion.[113]

At Lycosura he is related with the cult of Despoina.[114] The modern sanctuary near Mantineia was built by Emperor Hadrian.[115] In Athens on the hill of horses there was the altar of Poseidon Hippios and Athena Hippia. The temple of Poseidon was destroyed by Antigonus when he attacked Attica.[116] He is usually the tamer of horses (Damaios,Δαμαίος at Corinth),[117] and the tender of horses Hippokourios Ἱπποκούριος) at Sparta, where he had a sanctuary near the sanctuary of Artemis Aiginea.[118][119] In some myths he is the father of horses, either by spilling his seed upon a rock or by mating with a creature who then gave birth to the first horse.[2] In Thessaly he had the title Petraios Πετραἵος, "of the rocks".[120] He hit a rock and the first horse "Skyphios" appeared.[121] He was closely related with the springs, and with the strike of his trident, he created springs. He had the epithets Krenouchos (Κρηνούχος), "ruling over springs",[122] and nymphagetes (Νυμφαγέτης) "leader of the nymphs" [123] On the Acropolis of Athens he created the saltspring Sea of Erechtheus (Ἐρεχθηίς θάλασσα).[124] Many springs like Hippocrene and Aganippe in Helikon are related with the word horse (hippos). (also Glukippe, Hyperippe). He is the father of Pegasus, whose name is derived from πηγή, (pēgē) "spring".[125]

 
Poseidon carrying a trident. Corinthian plate 550-525 BC, from Pentescouphia, Louvre

Epithets like Genesios Γενέσιος at Lerna[126][127] Genethlios (Γενέθλιος) "of the race or family" [128] Phratrios (Φράτριος) "of the brotherhood",[129] and Patrigenios (Πατριγένειος) [130] indicate his relation with the genealogy trees and the brotherhood.

Other epithets of Poseidon in local cults are Epoptes (Ἐπόπτης), "overseer, watcher" at Megalopolis,[131] Empylios (Ἑμπύλιος), "at the gate " at Thebes.,[132] Kronios (Κρόνιος)[133] (Pindar) and semnos (σεμνός), "august, holy" [134] (Sophocles).

Some of Poseidon's epithets are related to festivals and athletic games including racing. At Corinth the Isthmian games was an athletic and music festival in honour of the god who had the epithet Isthmios (Ἴσθμιος). At Sparta there was the race in Gaiaochō. (ἐν Γαιαόχω) [135][136] Poseidon Gaiēochos (Γαιήοχος) had a temple near the city beside an Hippodrome.[137] At Mantineia and Pallandion in Arcadia the Hippokrateia (Ιπποκράτεια) were athletic games in honour of Poseidon Hippeios (Ιππειος). At Ephesus there was a fest "Tavria" and he had the epithet Tavreios (Tαύρειος), "related with the bull".[138][136]

Festivals

 
Poseidon and Nike (victory). Terracotta Attic amphora by the Syracuse Painter, one of the last to decorate an amphora, 470-460 BC. Metropolitan Museum of Art, Manhattan, NY

Many festivals all over Greece,in the Ionic cities and in Italy were celebrated in honour of Poseidon.

  • Corinth: The Panhellenic Isthmian Games were celebrated in honour of Poseidon. His sanctuary is to be seen in the context of the position of Corinth controlling the sea.[2] The festival included athletic and musical competitions and horseracing. Traditionally the games were established in the Bronze Age over the dead prince Palaimon.[139]
  • Athens: Poseidon had a fest in the month Poseidaon. He was worshipped as the "master of the sea".[13]
  • Athens: Haloa was a fest of vegetation. The wine- fest Protrygaia belonged to Dionysus and to Poseidon as a god of vegetation.[66]
  • Mycale in Ionia: Mycale was a promontory, between Samos and Miletus. The representatives of twelve cities (dodekapolis) celebrated the Panionia (of all the Ionians), a festival of Poseidon Helikonios.[60] Traditionally the first settlers landed in this place. The temple became the meeting place of the Ionian League).[61] Homer describes the sacrifice of a bull to Poseidon, during the festival.[66]
  • Ephesus in Ionia. The relation of Poseidon with the bull is stronger in Ionia. The fest Tauria was celebrated in honour of Poseidon Taureios and the capbearers were called tauroi (bulls).[66]
  • Kalaureia: Poseidon was the patron god of the Amphictiony of Kalaureia. The festival was celebrated in honour of the god. The famous temple was the meeting place of the representatives of the members (Amphiktiones).[140]
  • Tainaron: The famous festival Tainaria was celebrated in honour of Poseidon. The participants were called Tainarioi.[141] The sacred sanctuary of the god was built in a cave in the Tainaron peninsula.[142] A filial cult existed in Sparta.[13]
 
Libation scene: Poseidon seated on a chair, wearing a chiton and a himation, holding a trident and a phiale.450-440 BC red-figure Attic amphora.Louvre
  • Onchestos in Boeotia. Poseidon had a famous temple praised by Homer' in the Catalogue of Ships,[62] with the surname Helikonios. It became the place of meeting of the second Boeotian league. The peculiar fest included horseracing.[13] At the beginning of the race the charioteers jumped down and made a prayer to Poseidon to protect them if the chariot would fall in the sacred grove.[10]
  • Sparta; Poseidon was worshipped with the surname Gaiaochos (carrying the earth or moving under the earth). There was the race Gaiaochoi and the temple was built beside an Hippodrome.[13]
  • Helike in Achaea: The city is mentioned in Homers Catalogue of Ships.[143] The temple and the festival of Poseidon Helikonios was Panhellenic. It was the place of meeting of the Achaean League.The city was destroyed by a tsunami in 370 BC.[63]
  • Epidauros: A fest in the month Poseidios was celebrated in honour of Poseidon. He was worshipped as the "master of the sea".[13]
  • Helos : The fest Pohoidaia was celebrated in honour of Poseidon. The festival included athletic games and competitions.[13]
  • Thuria: The fest Pohoidaia was celebrated in honour of Poseidon. It included athletic games and competitions.[13]
 
Sozopol Archaelogical Museum. Poseidon in the middle.
  • Mantineia in Arcadia: Poseidon was worshipped with the surname Hippios (of the horse). The fest included the athletic games Hippokrateia. The temple was holy and the entrance into the cella was not allowed.[13]
  • Pallandion in Arcadia : Poseidon had the epithet Hippios (of the horse) and the fest included the athletic games Hippokrateia.[13]
  • Thronium: Thronium was the chief city of Ancient Locris and is mentioned by Homer in the Catalogue of Ships.[144] The name of a month in the city was Hippios.[145]
  • Lesbos: A festival in the month Poseidios was celebrated in honour of Poseidon. He was worshipped as the "master of the sea".[13]
  • Myconos: In a fest he was worshipped as a god of fishing and women were not allowed. Chloe (Demeter) received offerings in the same fest,indicating that Poseidon was also god of vegetation.[66]
  • Tinos: A great fest called Poseidonia was celebrated in honour of Poseidon. The temple included great banquet halls, indicating the large number of the participants.[146] Poseidon was worshipped as a healer-god.[66]

Temples of Poseidon

 
Archaic Temple of Poseidon at Isthmia, Greece (Assumed reconstruction)

The Corinthians are considered to be the inventors of the Doric order. However Corinth was completely destroyed and rebuilt and there is not sufficient evidence for the existence of earliest Doric Greek temples in the city.[147] A building constructed in early 7th century BC c.690-650 BC at Isthmia near Corinth which was later dedicated to Poseidon, is considered a pioneering building featuring Doric architecture.[148] It seems that the first temple with pure Doric elements was built with the aid of Corinthians at Thermon in Aetolia in the middle of 7th century BC century. c.640-630 BC. It was a peripteral narrow wooden structure dedicated to Apollo,[149] It measured 12.13 X38.23 m at the stylobate and the number of pteron columns was 5X15.[150]

In the earlier temples the peripteral colonnade is treated with a freedom unknown to later Doric architects. This is in part an especially western feature (in Italy) because the hexastyle sceme was adopted [151] as in the temple of Poseidon at Taranto and the second temple of Hera at Paestum (traditionally named temple of Poseidon). In the earlier temples where the number of the columns in the porch is odd, so are the columns of the pteron facade. In such temples the side ptera are approximately the width of one or two intercolumniations.[152] In the hexastyle scheme like the temple of Poseidon at Sounion, there are normally two or four columns in the porch and the side ptera are approximately the width of one intercolumniation.[153] In Doric early work the distance between column and column differs on the fronts and on the flanks [154] and this can be observed in the temple of Poseidon at Kalaureia and in Basilica at Paestum. After the 6th century the rule in Doric is an approximate equality of intercolumniations [154] and it can be observed in the temple of Poseidon at Sounion, where there is a slight difference.

  • Isthmia. The temple dedicated later to the god Poseidon was probably built in early 7th century BC c.690-650 BC in the city Isthmia near Corinth and it had a wooden peristyle. The building was completely destroyed in 470 BC and it seems that it was one of the pioneering buildings featuring Doric architecture.[148] The ground plan showed a temple that was of epic proportions for its time and of a layout that was almost entirely new,[155] however there was no evidence for the employment of the Doric style as it was suggested [156]
 
Plan of the second temple of Hera, Paestum (traditionally temple of Poseidon)
  • Paestum , on the west coast of Italy near Naples. The Greek name of the city was Poseidonia. The Doric temple was built in early 6th century BC and it was believed that it was a temple of Poseidon. Traditionally this name is associated with the 5th century BC temple at Paestum, however recent excavations indicate that both temples were dedicated to Hera. The so called Basilica measured 24,5 X54,3 m at the stylobate and the number of pteron columns was 9x18.[157] The temple is wider than most Greek temples it had two doors. This may indicate a dual dedication of the temple.[158]
  • A Doric temple the so called temple of Poseidon was built in the first half of the 5th century BC and is usually placed later than Parthenon. The temple measured 24,3 X 60,00 m at the stylobate.It was an hexastyle structure and the number of pteron columns was 6X14.[159] The temple was also used to worship Zeus and another deity, whose identity is unknown.
 
Sounionplan-Temple of Poseidon
  • Taranto, a city of Magna Graecia in Italy. Τhe temple of Poseidon was a perpiteral Doric temple, however its exact plan cannot be outlined. It was probably built in 6th century BC and it seems that the number of pteron columns was 6X13. The interval of the remaining columns is 3.72 m, indicating that the maximum dimensions of the temple at the stylobate could be 22,32X 47,46 m.
  • Sounion in Attica. The first temple of Poseidon (formerly called temple of Athena) was built in 490 BC and it was destroyed by the Persians before completion. It measured 13,12 X30,34 m at the stylobate and the number of pteron columns was 6X13. There is a slight difference between the front and back intercolumniations and those of the flanks. There was probably a double row of inner columns. (close wall, engaged). The cella with porches and adyta measured c.9.00 X21,20m [160]
  • The second temple was built in 425 BC and it was modelled on its predecessor. It measured 13.48 X 31.15 m at the stylobate and the number of pteron columns was 6X13. An Ionic frieze carried across pteron and continued round interior of each end of pteron.[161] The cella with porches and adyta measured c.9.00 X21,20m.[160] The temple probably contained, at one end facing the entrance, a colossal, bronze statue of Poseidon.[162]
 
Architectural Terracotta Sanctuary of Poseidon Kalaureia
  • Kalaureia ,an island close to the coast of Troezen in the Peloponnese , part of the modern island-pair Poros. Early roof tiles from c.650 BC suggest the existence of a precursor to the Late Archaic temple of Poseidon. This Doric temple was probably built in the middle of the 6th century BC, constructed mainly of poros stone. It measured 14,50 X27,00 m at the stylobate and the number of the pteron columns was 6X12. Both front and back intercolumniations were wider than those on the flanks. The building was surrounded by a low wall with the main entrance on the east side.[163]
 
Temple of Poseidon, Hermione
  • Hermione in Argolis.The most remarkable temple in the time of Pausanias was the temple of Poseidon.[164] The temple was built in the Late archaic-Early classical period, in late 6th century BC. It was completely destroyed and its foundations at the peninsula of Bisti (Poseidio) indicate that the temple measured approximately 15,00 X30,00 m at the stylobate.[165]
  • Tainaron .The sacred sanctuary of Poseidon was built in a cave at the Tainaron peninsula. The path to the interior, carved into the rock, was preparing him who wanted to get into the psychopompeion. It also functioned as a necromancy and oneiromancy temple. The temple was also established as a place for persecuted who fled there for protection.[142]
  • Tinos ,an island of Cyclades. The temple of Poseidon and Amphitrite was built near a beach of the island, in the 4th century BC (Hellenistic period). It was a peripteral Doric temple, which was reconstructed in the 3rd century BC. The temple was made of local marble and had some representations of the god's symbols, such as dolphins and the trident.[166]

Mythology

Birth

 
Poseidon-Neptune and triumphal chariot with a pair of sea-horses (Hippocamps). Mosaic, 3rd century. Sousse Archaeological Museum, Medina, Tunesia

In the standard version, Poseidon was born to the Titans Cronus and Rhea, the fifth child out of six, born after Hestia, Demeter, Hera and Hades in that order.[167] Because Poseidon's father was afraid that one of his children would overthrow him like he had done to his own father, Cronus devoured each infant as soon as they were born. Poseidon was the last one to suffer this fate before Rhea decided to deceive Cronus and whisk the sixth child, Zeus, away to safety, after offering Cronus a rock wrapped in a blanket to eat.[168] Once Zeus was grown, he gave his father a powerful emetic that made him gorge up the children he had eaten. The five children emerged from their father's belly in reverse order, making Poseidon both the second youngest child and the second oldest at the same time. Armed with a trident forged for him by the Cyclopes, Poseidon with his siblings and other divine allies defeated the Titans and became rulers in their place.[169] According to Homer and Apollodorus, Zeus, Poseidon and the third brother Hades then divided the world between them by drawing lots; Zeus got the sky, Poseidon the sea, and Hades the Underworld.[170]

 
Andrea Doria as Neptune, by Angelo Bronzino .1540-1530, Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

In a rarer - and later- version, Poseidon avoided being devoured by his father as his mother Rhea saved him in the same manner she did Zeus, by offering Cronus a foal instead, claiming she had given birth to a horse instead of a god, while she had actually laid the child in a flock.[171] Rhea entrusted her infant to a spring nymph. When Cronus demanded the child, the nymph Arne[172] denied having him, and her spring thereafter was called Arne (which bears resemblance to the Greek word for 'deny').[173]

In another tale, Rhea gave Poseidon to the Telchines, ancient inhabitants of the island of Rhodes;[174] Capheira, an Oceanid nymph, became the young god's nurse.[175] As Poseidon grew, he fell in love with Halia, the beautiful sister of the Telchines, and fathered six sons and one daughter, Rhodos, on her.[176][175] By that time Aphrodite, the goddess of love, had been born and risen from the sea, and attempted to make a stop at Rhodes on her way to Cyprus. Poseidon and Halia's sons denied her hospitality, so Aphrodite cursed them to fall in love and rape Halia. After they had done so, Poseidon made them sink below the sea.[176]

In Homer's Odyssey, Poseidon has a home in Aegae.[177]

City patronage

Foundation of Athens

 
Poseidon (right) and Athena (identified with inscriptions). Black-figure vaise painting by Amasis Painter, 540 BC. BnF Museum (Cabinet des médailles), Paris

Athena became the patron goddess of the city of Athens after a competition with Poseidon. Yet Poseidon remained a numinous presence on the Acropolis in the form of his surrogate, Erechtheus.[2] At the dissolution festival at the end of the year in the Athenian calendar, the Skira, the priests of Athena and the priest of Poseidon would process under canopies to Eleusis.[178] They agreed that each would give the Athenians one gift and the Athenians would choose whichever gift they preferred. Poseidon struck the ground with his trident and a spring sprang up; the water was salty and not very useful, whereas Athena offered them an olive tree.

The Athenians or their king, Cecrops, accepted the olive tree and along with it Athena as their patron, for the olive tree brought wood, oil and food. After the fight, infuriated at his loss, Poseidon sent a monstrous flood to the Attic Plain, to punish the Athenians for not choosing him. The depression made by Poseidon's trident and filled with salt water was surrounded by the northern hall of the Erechtheum, remaining open to the air.

 
Athena and Poseidon, Faliscan red-figure volute-krater, by Nazzano Painter, 360 BC. Louvre, Paris.

Burkert noted :"In cult, Poseidon was identified with Erechtheus" and "the myth turns this into a temporal-causal sequence: in his anger at losing, Poseidon led his son Eumolpus against Athens and killed Erectheus."[9]

It was also said that Poseidon in his anger over his defeat sent one of his sons, Halirrhothius, to cut down Athena's tree gift. But as Halirrhothius swung his axe, he missed his aim and it fell in himself, killing him instantly. Poseidon in fury accused Ares of murder, and the matter was eventually settled on the Areopagus ("hill of Ares") in favour of Ares, which was thereafter named after the event.[179][180] In other versions, Halirrhothius raped Alcippe, Ares's daughter, so Ares slew him. Poseidon was enraged over the murder of his son, and Ares was thus held in hold, which eventually acquitted him.[181]

The contest of Athena and Poseidon was the subject of the reliefs on the western pediment of the Parthenon, the first sight that greeted the arriving visitor.

This myth is construed by Robert Graves and others as reflecting a clash between the inhabitants during Mycenaean times and newer immigrants. Athens at its height was a significant sea power, at one point defeating the Persian fleet at Salamis Island in a sea battle.

Others

 
Poseidon and Amymone, fresco in Stabiae, Italy, 1st century AD

The Corinthians had a similar story to the foundations of Athens, about their own city Corinth. According to the myth, Helios and Poseidon clashed, both desiring to make the city their own. Their dispute was brought to one of the Hecatoncheires, Briareos, an elder god, who was thus tasked to settle the fight between the two gods. Briareus decided to award the Acrocorinth to Helios, while to Poseidon he gave the isthmus of Corinth.[182] In this tale, Helios and Poseidon are supposed to represent fire versus water.[183] Helios, as the sun god, received the area that is closest to the sky, while Poseidon, who is the sea god, got the isthmus by the sea.[184]

At another time, Poseidon came to an agreement with another goddess, Leto, that he would give her the island of Delos in exchange for the island of Calauria; he also exchanged Delphi for Taenarum with Apollo. A temple of Poseidon stood at Calauria during ancient times.[185] Poseidon also came to dispute with his sister Hera over the city of Argos. A local king was chosen to settle the matter, Phoroneus, and he decided to award the city to Hera, who then became its patroness.[186] Poseidon was enraged, and sent a drought to plague the city. One day, as an Argive woman named Amymone went out in search of water, came upon a satyr who tried to rape her. Amymone prayed to Poseidon for help, and he scared the satyr away with his trident.[187] After Poseidon rescued Amymone from the lecherous satyr he fathered a child on her, Nauplius.[188]

Walls of Troy

Poseidon and Apollo, having offended Zeus by their rebellion in Hera's scheme, were temporarily stripped of their divine authority and sent to serve King Laomedon of Troy. He had them build huge walls around the city and promised to reward them with his immortal horses, a promise he then refused to fulfill. In vengeance, before the Trojan War, Poseidon sent a sea monster to attack Troy. The monster was later killed by Heracles.[189]

Theseus

 
Poseidon and Theseus (on the left). Storage jar 470BC. J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu, California

Poseidon fathered the hero Theseus with the Troezenian princess Aethra. Theseus was also said to be the son of Aegeus, the king of Athens, who slept with Aethra on the very same night. Thus Theseus's origins included both the human and the divine element.[190][191]

Meanwhile in Crete, Zeus's son Minos asked for Poseidon's help in order to certify his claim on the throne of Crete. Poseidon offered Minos a splendid white bull, with the understanding that he was to sacrifice the bull to Poseidon later. The Cretans were so impressed with the bull and the divine sign itself that Minos was declared king of Crete.[192][193] But wishing to keep the beautiful animal for himself, Minos instead sacrificed an ordinary bull to the sea-god instead of the agreed upon one.[193]

Poseidon, enraged, caused Minos's wife, Pasiphae, to fall in love with the bull; their coupling produced the Minotaur, a half-bull half-human creature who fed on human flesh.[192][193] Minos concealed him within the labyrinth built by Daedalus, and fed to him Athenian men and women he forced Aegeus to send him over.[168]

Once Theseus was grown up and recognized by his father Aegeus in Athens, he decided to end the bloody tax Athens had to pay to Crete once and for all, and volunteered to set sail to Crete along with the other Athenian youths who had been chosen to be devoured by the Minotaur.[194]

Once he arrived in Crete, Minos insulted Theseus and insisted he was no son of Poseidon; to demonstrate so, he threw his own ring in to the sea, and commanded Theseus to retrieve it, expecting he would not be able to do so.[195] Theseus immediately dove in after it.

 
Pasiphae seated on a throne receives the wooden cow from Daidalos. Eros plays with the head of the crafted cow. Roman Mosaic, from Zeugma, Commagene. Zeugma Mosaic Museum, Gaziantep, Turkey

Dolphins then came as guides and escorted him to the halls of Poseidon and Amphitrite's palace, where he was warmly welcomed.[196] He received the ring, and in addition a purple wedding cloak and a crown from Amphitrite, to prove his words. Theseus then emerged from the sea and gave the ring to Minos.[197] Theseus killed the Minotaur, and in time succeeded his father Aegeus as king of Athens. By an Amazon he had a son, Hippolytus, while his wife Phaedra (Minos' daughter) gave him two sons.

At some point, Poseidon promised three favours to Theseus, and he called upon Poseidon to fulfill one of those when Phaedra falsely accused Hippolytus of forcing himself on her.[198] Theseus, not knowing the truth, asked his father to destroy Hippolytus; Poseidon granted his son's wish, and as Hippolytus was driving by the sea, Poseidon sent a terrifying sea monster to spook the man's horses, which then dragged him to his death.[198][199]

Consort, lovers, victims and children

 
Sea thiasos depicting the wedding of Poseidon and Amphitrite, from the Altar of Domitius Ahenobarbus in the Field of Mars, bas-relief, Roman Republic, 2nd century BC

Poseidon was said to have had many lovers of both sexes. His consort was Amphitrite, a nymph and ancient sea-goddess, daughter of Nereus and Doris. In one account, attributed to Eratosthenes, Poseidon wished to wed Amphitrite, but she fled from him and hid with Atlas. Poseidon sent out many to find her, and it was a dolphin who tracked her down. The dolphin persuaded Amphitrite to accept Poseidon as her husband, and eventually took charge of their wedding. Poseidon then put him among the stars as a reward for his good services.[200] Oppian says that the dolphin betrayed Amphitrite's whereabouts to Poseidon, and he carried off Amphitrite against her will to marry her.[201] Together they had a son named Triton, a merman.[202] Poseidon was the father of many heroes. He is thought to have fathered the famed Theseus. Poseidon also had an affair with Alope, his granddaughter through Cercyon, his son and King of Eleusis, begetting the Attic hero Hippothoon. Cercyon had his daughter buried alive but Poseidon turned her into the spring, Alope, near Eleusis.[203]

A mortal woman named Cleito once lived on an isolated island; Poseidon fell in love with the human mortal and created a dwelling sanctuary at the top of a hill near the middle of the island and surrounded the dwelling with rings of water and land to protect her. She gave birth to five sets of twin boys; the firstborn, Atlas, became the first ruler of Atlantis.[6][7][8]Alebion and Bergion and Otos and Ephialtae (the giants).

 
Poseidon-Neptune and Amphitrite. Roman Mosaic 1st century AD. House of Neptune, Herculanum. Metropolitan City of Naples

Not all of Poseidon's children were human. His other children include Polyphemus (the Cyclops) and, finally, Amycus was the son of Poseidon and the Bithynian nymph Melia.[204] The philosopher Plato was held by his fellow ancient Greeks to have traced his descent to the sea-God Poseidon through his father Ariston and his mythic predecessors the demigod kings Codrus and Melanthus.[205][206]

Poseidon also took the young Nerites, the son of Nereus and Doris (and thus brother to Amphitrite) as a lover. Nerites was also Poseidon's charioteer, and impressed all marine creatures with his speed. But one day the sun god, Helios, turned Nerites into a shellfish. Aelian, who recorded this tale as told by mariners, says it is not clear why Helios did this, but theorizes he might have been offended somehow, or that he and Poseidon were rivals in love, and Helios wanted Nerites to travel among the constellations instead of the sea-monsters. From the love between Poseidon and Nerites was born Anteros, mutual love.[207]

Other male lovers included Pelops and Patroclus.[208]

Rape and assault victims

 
Bellerehron spears Chimera from underneath, while Pegasus strikes the monster with his hooves. Laconian Black Figure Kylix attributed to Boreads Painter, 570–565 B.C. J. Paul Getty Museum Malibu ,California.

A mortal woman named Tyro was married to Cretheus (with whom she had one son, Aeson), but loved Enipeus, a river god. She pursued Enipeus, who refused her advances. One day, Poseidon, filled with lust for Tyro, disguised himself as Enipeus, and from their union were born the heroes Pelias and Neleus, twin boys.[209]

In an archaic myth, Poseidon once pursued Demeter. She spurned his advances, turning herself into a mare so that she could hide in a herd of horses; he saw through the deception and became a stallion, captured and raped her.[210] Their child was a horse, Arion, which was capable of human speech.[211] According to Hesiod's Theogony, Poseidon "lay down in a soft meadow among spring flowers" with the Gorgon Medusa and two offspring, the winged horse Pegasus and the warrior Chrysaor, were born when the hero Perseus cut off Medusa's head.[212]

 
Lattanzio Gambara (c. 1530-Brescia 1574) - Poseidon-Neptune and Caenis

Ovid however says that Medusa was originally a very beautiful maiden whom Poseidon raped inside the temple of Athena. Athena, furious over the sacrilege, changed the beautiful girl into a monster.[213] Elsewhere in the Metamorphoses, Ovid says that Poseidon seduced Medusa in the form of a bird.[214]

One day, Poseidon spotted Caenis walking by the seashore, caught her and raped her. Having enjoyed her greatly, he offered her a wish, any wish. Traumatized, Caenis wished to be transformed into a man, so that she would never experience assault again. Poseidon fulfilled her request and changed her into a male warrior, who then took the name Caeneus.[215]

Another time Poseidon once fell in love with a Phocian woman, Corone, the daughter of Coronaeus as she was walking along the shore. He attempted to court her, but she rejected him, and ran away. Poseidon then chased her down with the aim to rape her. Athena, witnessing all that, took pity in the girl and changed her into a crow.[216]

When Zeus fell in love and pursued the goddess Asteria, she transformed into a quail and flung herself into the sea to escape being raped by him. Poseidon then, equally rapacious, picked up the chase where Zeus had left it and chased Asteria with the aim to force himself on her, so Asteria had to transform for a second time to save herself, this time into a small rocky island named Delos.[217]

List of offspring and their mothers

Offspring Mother
Triton Amphitrite [218]
Benthesicyme [219]
Rhodos [220]
Antaeus Gaea [221]
Charybdis [222]
Laistryon [223]
Despoina Demeter [224]
Arion [225]
Rhodos Aphrodite [226]
Herophile [227]
Pegasus Medusa[228]
Chrysaor
Ergiscus Aba [229]
Aethusa Alcyone [230]
Hyrieus [231]
Hyperenor [231]
Hyperes [232]
Anthas [233]
Abas Arethusa [234]
Halirrhothius Bathycleia[235] or Euryte[236]
Chrysomallus Bisalpis or Bisaltis or Theophane[237]
Minyas Callirhoe [238]
Lycus Celaeno[239]
Nycteus
Eurypylus (Eurytus)
Lycaon
Asopus (possibly) Kelousa[240] or Pero[241]
Parnassus Cleodora [242]
Eumolpus Chione [243]
Phaeax Corcyra [244]
Rhode (possibly) Halia[245]
six sons
Eirene Melantheia [246]
Amycus Melia[247]
Mygdon
Aspledon Mideia [248]
Astacus Olbia [249]
Cenchrias Peirene[250]
Leches
Euadne Pitane[251] or Lena
Phocus Pronoe [252]
Athos Rhodope [253]
Cychreus Salamis [254]
Taras Satyria of Taras [255]
Polyphemus Thoosa [256]
Chios a nymph of Chios [257]
Melas another nymph of Chios[257]
Agelus
Malina
Dictys Agamede[234]
Actor
Theseus Aethra [258]
Ogyges Alistra [259]
Hippothoon Alope [260]
Erythras Amphimedusa [261]
Nauplius Amymone [262]
Busiris Anippe[263] or Lysianassa[264]
Idas Arene [265]
Aeolus Antiope[234] or Arne[266] or Melanippe[267]
Boeotus Melanippe [267]
Oeoclus Ascre [268]
Ancaeus Astypalaea [269]
Eurypylus [270]
Peratus Calchinia [271]
Cycnus Calyce[234] or Harpale[272] or Scamandrodice[273] or a Nereid[274]
Hopleus Canace[275]
Nireus
Aloeus
Epopeus
Triopas
Celaenus Celaeno [276]
Dictys Cerebia[277]
Polydectes
Byzas Ceroessa [278]
Chryses Chrysogeneia [279]
Minyas [280]
Phaunos Circe [281]
Atlas Cleito[282]
Eumelus (Gadeirus)
Ampheres
Euaemon
Mneseus
Autochthon
Elasippus
Mestor
Azaes
Diaprepes
Scylla Crataeis [283]
Celaeno Ergea [276]
Euphemus Doris (Oris)[284] or Europa[285] or Mecionice[284] or Macionassa[286]
Orion Euryale [287]
Minyas Euryanassa[288] or Hermippe[289] or Tritogeneia[290]
Eleius Eurycyda[291] or Eurypyle[292]
Bellerophon Eurynome[293] or Eurymede[294]
Almops Helle [295]
Edonus (Paion) [296]
Taphius Hippothoe [297]
The Aloadae (Ephialtes and Otus) Iphimedeia [298]
Sciron [299][300]
Achaeus Larissa [301]
Pelasgus
Pythius
Althepus Leis [302]
Agenor Libya [303]
Belus [303]
Lelex [304]
Delphus Melantho [305]
Dyrrhachius Melissa [306]
Metus Melite [234]
The Molionides (Cteatus, Eurytus) Molione [307]
Myton Mytilene [308]
Megareus Oenope [234]
Sithon Ossa [309]
Nausithous Periboea [310]
Torone Phoenice[311]
Proteus
Ialysus Rhode[312]
Cameirus
Lindus
Chthonius Syme [313]
Leucon or Leuconoe Themisto [234]
Pelias Tyro[314]
Neleus
Cercyon Daughter of Amphictyon [315]
Ialebion no mother mentioned [316]
Bergion [316]
Dicaeus [317]
Syleus [318]
Poltys [247]
Sarpedon of Ainos [319]
Amphimarus [320]
Amyrus [321]
Aon, eponym of Aonia [322]
Astraeus [323]
Alcippe [323]
Augeas [324]
Byzenus [274]
Calaurus [325]
Caucon or Glaucon [326]
Corynetes [327]
Cromus [328]
Cymopoleia [329]
Erginus of Caria [330]
Eryx [331]
Euseirus [332]
Geren [333]
Lamia [334]
Lamus [335]
Messapus [336]
Onchestus [337]
Palaestinus [338]
Paralus [citation needed]
Phineus [339]
Phorbas of Acarnania [340]
Procrustes [327]
Taenarus [341]
Thasus [342]
Thessalus [343]
Ourea (a nymph) [344]
Dorus [345]
Laocoön [346]
Telchines [347]

Genealogy

In literature and art

 
Poseidon and Amphitryte - Joseph Kuhn-Régnier

In Greek art, Poseidon rides a chariot that was pulled by a hippocampus or by horses that could ride on the sea. He was associated with dolphins and three-pronged fish spears (tridents). He lived in a palace on the ocean floor, made of coral and gems.

In the Iliad, Poseidon favors the Greeks, and on several occasion takes an active part in the battle against the Trojan forces. However, in Book XX he rescues Aeneas after the Trojan prince is laid low by Achilles.

In the Odyssey, Poseidon is notable for his hatred of Odysseus who blinded the god's son, the Cyclops Polyphemus. The enmity of Poseidon prevents Odysseus's return home to Ithaca for many years. Odysseus is even told, notwithstanding his ultimate safe return, that to placate the wrath of Poseidon will require one more voyage on his part.

 
Neptune and Amphitrite by Jacob de Gheyn II (late 1500s)

In the Aeneid, Neptune is still resentful of the wandering Trojans, but is not as vindictive as Juno, and in Book I he rescues the Trojan fleet from the goddess's attempts to wreck it, although his primary motivation for doing this is his annoyance at Juno's having intruded into his domain.

A hymn to Poseidon included among the Homeric Hymns is a brief invocation, a seven-line introduction that addresses the god as both "mover of the earth and barren sea, god of the deep who is also lord of Mount Helicon and wide Aegae,[354] and specifies his twofold nature as an Olympian: "a tamer of horses and a saviour of ships".

In modern culture

 
Poseidon as portrayed in the 1963 film Jason and the Argonauts

Due to his status as a Greek god, Poseidon has made multiple appearances in modern and popular culture.

Books

Poseidon has appeared in modern literature, most notably in the Percy Jackson & the Olympians series, in which he plays a role as the titular character's father. Poseidon appears in Gareth Hinds' 2010 version of The Odyssey.[355]

Webcomics

Poseidon appeared in Rachel Smythe's 2018 comic Lore Olympus.[356][357]

Films and television

Poseidon has been very popular especially in god-related films. Poseidon appeared in the 1963 film Jason and the Argonauts.[358]

Poseidon appears in Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief and Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters, the two film adaptations of the book series.[359][360] He also appears in the ABC television series Once Upon a Time as a supporting character in the second half of season four, played by Ernie Hudson.[361] In this version, Poseidon is portrayed as the father of the Sea Witch Ursula.

Video games

Poseidon has made multiple appearances in video games, such as in God of War 3 by Sony. In the game, Poseidon appears as a boss for the player to defeat.[362] He also appears in Smite as a playable character.[363] In the video game Hades, he is a character who will grant "boons".[364]

Narrations

 
Neptune's fountain in Prešov, Slovakia.

List of all pre-modern retellings of myths relating to Poseidon:

Gallery

Paintings

Statues

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Jones, Daniel (2003) [1917], Peter Roach; James Hartmann; Jane Setter (eds.), English Pronouncing Dictionary, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-3-12-539683-8
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Burkert 1985, pp. 136–139.
  3. ^ Seneca quaest. Nat. VI 6 :Nilsson Vol I p.450
  4. ^ Nilsson Vol I p.450
  5. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 456.
  6. ^ a b Plato (1971). Timaeus and Critias. London, England: Penguin Books Ltd. pp. 167. ISBN 9780140442618.
  7. ^ a b Timaeus 24e–25a, R. G. Bury translation (Loeb Classical Library).
  8. ^ a b Also it has been interpreted that Plato or someone before him in the chain of the oral or written tradition of the report accidentally changed the very similar Greek words for "bigger than" ("meson") and "between" ("mezon") – Luce, J.V. (1969). The End of Atlantis – New Light on an Old Legend. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 224.
  9. ^ a b Burkert 1983, pp. 149, 157.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hard, "Greek mythology", p.100-103 Hard p.100-103
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Smith Poseidon
  12. ^ a b c Farnell Cults IV S.1ff
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t NiLsson, Geschichte, 446-448
  14. ^ a b Minoan.Deaditerranean
  15. ^ a b Nilsson,Geschichte Vol I, 444-445
  16. ^ Liddell & Scott. . A Greek-English Lexicon. Archived from the original on 9 October 2012.
  17. ^ Pierre Chantraine Dictionnaire etymologique de la langue grecque Paris 1974–1980 4th s.v.; Lorenzo Rocci Vocabolario Greco-Italiano Milano, Roma, Napoli 1943 (1970) s.v.
  18. ^ Beekes. Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009, p. 324
  19. ^ Adams, John Paul, Mycenean divinities – List of handouts for California State University Classics 315. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  20. ^ Michael Janda, pp. 256–258.
  21. ^ Plato, Cratylus, 402d–402e
  22. ^ Beekes, Etymological Dictionary of Greek, p. 324.
  23. ^ van der Toorn, Karel; Becking, Bob; van der Horst, Pieter Willem (1999), Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (second ed.), Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdman's Publishing Company, ISBN 0-8028-2491-9
  24. ^ a b c d e Dietrich 2004, pp. 180–185.
  25. ^ Dietrich 2004, pp. 175–180, 220.
  26. ^ a b A.B. Stallmith in GRBS 18(2008) p.117,119, "The name of Demeter Thesmophoros".p.116
  27. ^ a b Mylonas, "Mycenean age", p.159: "Wa-na-ssoi, wa-na-ka-te, (to the two queens and the king). Wanax is best suited to Poseidon, the special divinity of Pylos. The identity of the two divinities addressed as wanassoi, is uncertain"
  28. ^ Chadwick, p. 98.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Farnell Cults III, 50-55
  30. ^ Ventris, Michael; Chadwick, John (21 May 2015). Documents in Mycenean Greek. Cambridge University Press. p. 242. ISBN 978-1-107-50341-0.
  31. ^ Dietrich, p. 172 n. 218.
  32. ^ a b c Mylonas, "Mycenean age", p. 159-161.
  33. ^ "In Greek popular religion, the chthonic Potniai (Wanassoi) and the Erinyes are closely related to the Eleusinian Demeter":Dietrich, p.179-180 The origins of Greek religion 189-190
  34. ^ a b c Dietrich 2004, pp. 175–180.
  35. ^ a b c d e Nilsson, "Geschicte", p.449,450
  36. ^ a b c Bowra,"The Greek experience", p.67-121
  37. ^ a b c Nilsson, "Geschichte" Vol I, 450 and 450A4: J.Grimm, "Deutsche Mythology": Horse and springs, horse as a water-spirit
  38. ^ Pausanias 8.8.2
  39. ^ L. H. Jeffery (1976). Archaic Greece: The Greek city states c.800-500 B.C (Ernest Benn Limited) p 23 ISBN 0-510-03271-0
  40. ^ a b c d e Farnell CultsIII,53 Farnell CultsIII, 53
  41. ^ a b Nilsson "Geschichte", Vol I, p.100-101
  42. ^ Burkert, "Greek religion", p.42
  43. ^ Nilsson, "Geschichte" Vol I, p.472: "Anodos of Pherephata", Tables 39,1 and 39,2
  44. ^ Dietrich 2004, pp. 175–185.
  45. ^ Dietrich 2004, p. 167.
  46. ^ a b Hard,"Greek mythology",p.99 p.99
  47. ^ a b F.Schachermeyer: Poseidon und die Entstehung des Griechischen Gotter glaubens :Nilsson p 444
  48. ^ Chadwick, p. 98
  49. ^ Jeffery, "The city states", p.72:"The proud title dikaios (the Just) in Thessaly was borne by a good brood-mare of Pharsalus, whose foals all resembled their sires."
  50. ^ "gaiaochos ennosigaios": holder of the earth earthshaker: Smith Poseidon
  51. ^ Iliad 13.43: "Poseidawn gaiaochos ennosigaios " (carrying the earth, earthshaker) Iliad 13.43
  52. ^ Nilsson ,"Geschicte", Vol I, p.450 : a)Thales: Plutarch,plac.phil.p.896 C , b)Anaximenes-Aristotle:Aristotle,Meteorogica 27 p. 365 . All Inform. by Seneca quest. nat. VI 6;10;20
  53. ^ Pindar ,Pyth, II v,7:Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.492.
  54. ^ Pausanias 5.7.3
  55. ^ "Poseidon – God of the Sea". www.crystalinks.com. from the original on 11 November 2017. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
  56. ^ a b c d "In 480 BC a great storm at Magnesia and then at Artemision heavily damaged the Persian fleet. After the war the Greeks gave to Poseidon the epithet soter (savior). The agalma found near Artemision was probably a thank offering dedicated to Poseidon-Soter (saviοr)" : Burkert, "Greek religion" p.137
  57. ^ Helikonios, (Ελικώνιος): The word may mean, "god of the eddying waves" :Nilsson, Geschichte. p.447 A6
  58. ^ The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White. Homeric Hymns. Cambridge, MA.,Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914.Homeric Hymn to Poseidon
  59. ^ Diodorus 19.79.1
  60. ^ a b "The form is the same with Helikon. Traditionally the adjective derives from the town Helike of Achaea . However it is possible that it derives from "helix" (twisted, spiral) and Poseidon would be the "god of the eddying waves"":Nilsson, "Geschichte, p.447 A6
  61. ^ a b Jeffery, The city states, p.208
  62. ^ a b Iliad 2.506
  63. ^ a b Katsonopoulou, Dora (2002). "Helike and her Territory in Historical Times". Pallα as. 58: 175–182. ISSN 0031-0387.
  64. ^ Nilsson, "Geschichte" p.450 A4.
  65. ^ πετραῖος
  66. ^ a b c d e f g h i Nilsson, Geschichte, 449-452
  67. ^ Iliad 20.404
  68. ^ Pausanias 8.7.2
  69. ^ Karl Wilhelm Ludwig Müller's ed. Papyrus Oxyrrhincus Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum 148, 44, col. 2; quoted by Robin Lane Fox, Alexander the Great (1973) 1986:168 and note. Alexander also invoked other sea deities: Thetis, mother of his hero Achilles, Nereus and the Nereids
  70. ^ Pausanias 2.33.2
  71. ^ "(Hippocrates), On the Sacred Disease, Francis Adams, tr". from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 22 December 2007.
  72. ^ Brunwasser, Matthew (20 June 2013). "The Greeks Who Worship Ancient Gods". BBC. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  73. ^ Souli, Sarah (4 January 2018). "Greece's Old Gods Are Ready for Your Sacrifice". The Outline. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  74. ^ Walter Burkert (Peter Bing, tr.) Homo Necans 1983, p. 149 gives references for this observation
  75. ^ "Ἑρεχθεύς".
  76. ^ Iliad 13.21 Nilsson Vol I p.446
  77. ^ "Iliad 10.751".
  78. ^ "Εὐρυκρείων".
  79. ^ Iliad 20.404.
  80. ^ "Ἑλικώνιος".
  81. ^ "Seven against Thebes 131".
  82. ^ "εὐρυμέδων".
  83. ^ Diedrich p. 185 n. 305
  84. ^ Adams, John Paul. "Mycenaean Divinities". List of Handouts for Classics 315. from the original on 1 October 2018. Retrieved 2 September 2006.
  85. ^ "Γαιήοχος".
  86. ^ σεισίχθων
  87. ^ "θεμελιούχος".
  88. ^ "ἀσφάλειος".
  89. ^ "Suda, tau, 206".
  90. ^ "δωματίτης".
  91. ^ Pausanias, doc=Paus.+3.14.7&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0160:book=:chapter=&highlight=Poseidon3.14.7 3.14.7
  92. ^ Κυανοχαίτης
  93. ^ "Iliad 20.144".
  94. ^ πελάγιος
  95. ^ Nilsson Vol I p.449
  96. ^ "Aἰγαίος".
  97. ^ Strabo, ix. p. 405
  98. ^ Virgil, Aeneid iii. 74, where Servius erroneously derives the name from the Aegean Sea
  99. ^ Schmitz, Leonhard (1867). "Aegaeus". In Smith, William (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Vol. 1. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company. p. 24.
  100. ^ ποντομέδων
  101. ^ "κυμοθαλής".
  102. ^ Smith, >Steven D. (2019), Maria Kanellou; Ivana Petrovic; Chris Carey (eds.), "Art, Nature, Power: Garden Epigrams from Nero to Heraclius", Greek Epigram from the Hellenistic to the Early Byzantine Era, Oxford University Press, p. 348, ISBN 978-0-192-57379-7
  103. ^ "πόρθμιος".
  104. ^   Leonhard Schmitz (1870). "Epactaeus". In Smith, William (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.
  105. ^ "Ἀλίδουπος".
  106. ^ "εὐτρίαινα".
  107. ^ a b Nilsson Vol I p.451,452
  108. ^ φύκιος
  109. ^ "Τεμενίτης".
  110. ^ φυτάλμιος
  111. ^ πτόρθιος.
  112. ^ "ἲππειος".
  113. ^ Nilsson Vol I p.448
  114. ^ Pausanias 8.37.9–10
  115. ^ "Pausanias 8.10.3".
  116. ^ "Pausanias 1.30.4".
  117. ^ "Δαμαῖος".
  118. ^ "Pausanias 3.14.2".
  119. ^ "Ἱπποκούριος".
  120. ^ "Πετραῖος".
  121. ^ Nilsson Vol I p. 447
  122. ^ "κρηνούχος".
  123. ^ " Oceanus is the primeval water, the origin of all springs and rivers" : Nilsson Vol I p.450
  124. ^ "Apollodorus 3.14.1".
  125. ^ Nilsson Vol I p.450-451
  126. ^ γενέσιος
  127. ^ "Pausanias 2.38.4".
  128. ^ γενέθλιος
  129. ^ "φράτριος".
  130. ^ Nilsson Vol I p.452
  131. ^ "ἐπόπτης".
  132. ^ "ἐμπύλιος".
  133. ^ "Κρόνιος".
  134. ^ "σεμνός".
  135. ^ Pausanias 3.21.8.
  136. ^ a b Nilsson Vol I p.446- 448
  137. ^ contest at Sparta : Γαάοχοι
  138. ^ ταύρειος
  139. ^ Jeffery, The city states, p.152
  140. ^ Thomas Kelly, "The Calaurian Amphictiony" American Journal of Archaeology 70.2 (April 1966:113–121).
  141. ^ Ταιναρον
  142. ^ a b Temple of Poseidon Tainaron
  143. ^ Iliad 2.575
  144. ^ Iliad 2.533
  145. ^ ιππειος
  146. ^ Strabo 10.5.11
  147. ^ N.Spivey (1997), Greek art, Phaidon Press Limited ,p.61
  148. ^ a b Gebhard, Elizabeth R. and Hemans, Frederick P. University of Chicago Excavations at Isthmia, 1989: I. Hesperia, Volume 61, Number 1 (January 1992), pp. 1–77, page 25.
  149. ^ N.Spivey, p.111-112
  150. ^ Robertson (1945), Greek and Roman architecture, pp. 66,324
  151. ^ Robertson, p.73
  152. ^ Thermon: one column in the porch, five columns on the facade. "Basilica" (Paestum): three columns on the potch, nine columns in the pteron facade :Robertson, p.73
  153. ^ Paestum,second temple of Hera: two columns in the porch. Sounion: two columns in the porch.
  154. ^ a b Robertson, p.75
  155. ^ Salmon, J. B. 1984. Wealthy Corinth: A History of the City to 338 BC. Oxford: Clarendon Press, page 61.
  156. ^ Gebhard, Elizabeth on ‘The Evolution of a Pan-Hellenic Sanctuary: From Archaeology towards History at Isthmia.’ pp. 154–177 in: Marinatos, Nanno (ed.) and Hägg, Robin (ed.). 1993. Greek Sanctuaries: New Approaches. London: Routledge, page 160.
  157. ^ Robertson pp.75-76,325
  158. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 March 2019. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  159. ^ Robertson, pp. 136,327
  160. ^ a b Robertson, p. 327
  161. ^ Robertson, pp. 115,328
  162. ^ W. Burkert, Greek Religion (1987).
  163. ^ "KalaureiaKalaureia, Poros (1894 and 1997– ongoing) - Kalaureia, Poros (1894 and 1997– ongoing)". Swedish Institute at Athens. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  164. ^ Pausanias 2.34.10
  165. ^ Swedish Institute p.446
  166. ^ Temple of Poseidon Tinos
  167. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 453-455; Hard, p. 67.
  168. ^ a b Hard 2004, p. 68.
  169. ^ Grimal 1987, s.v. Cronus.
  170. ^ Homer, Iliad 15.184-93 11 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine)
  171. ^ In the 2nd century AD, a well with the name of Arne, the "lamb's well", in the neighbourhood of Mantineia in Arcadia, where old traditions lingered, was shown to Pausanias. (Pausanias, 8.8.2)
  172. ^ Tzetzes ad Lycophron 644
  173. ^ Kerenyi 1951, p. 182.
  174. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 5.55
  175. ^ a b Grimal 1987, pp. 387-388.
  176. ^ a b Kerenyi 1951, pp. 183-184.
  177. ^ Homer, Odyssey 5.380
  178. ^ Burkert 1983, pp. 143–149.
  179. ^ Servius On Virgil's Georgics 1.18; scholia on Aristophanes's Clouds 1005
  180. ^ Wunder 1855, p. note on verse 703.
  181. ^ Apollodorus, 3.14.2
  182. ^ Fowler 1988, p. 98 n. 5; Pausanias, 2.1.6 & 2.4.6
  183. ^ Dio Chrysostom, Discourses 37.11–12
  184. ^ Grummond and Ridgway, p. 69, "Helios' higher position would correspond to the sun's location in the sky versus Poseidon's lower venue in the sea, opposite Demeter on land."
  185. ^ Strabo, Geographica 8.6.14
  186. ^ O'Brien 1993, p. 144.
  187. ^ Grimal 1987, p. 40.
  188. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 169.
  189. ^ Ogden, Daniel (2021). The Oxford Handbook of Heracles. Oxford University Press. p. 210. ISBN 978-0-19-065098-8.
  190. ^ Grimal 1987, p. 446.
  191. ^ Walker 1995, p. 85.
  192. ^ a b Grimal 1987, p. 291.
  193. ^ a b c Hard 2004, p. 67.
  194. ^ Rose 1974, p. 82.
  195. ^ Ogden 2017, p. 41.
  196. ^ Williams & Clare 2022, pp. 160-161.
  197. ^ Williams & Clare 2022, p. 162.
  198. ^ a b Williams & Clare 2022, p. 139.
  199. ^ Walker 1995, p. 114.
  200. ^ Hyginus, Astronomica 2.17.1
  201. ^ Oppian, Halieutica 1.38
  202. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 930–933
  203. ^ Hard, p. 344
  204. ^ Apollonius Rhodius, 2.1 ff. & 2.94 ff. with scholia
  205. ^ Great Books of the Western World, Plato's Dialogues. Biographical Note
  206. ^ Diogenes Laertius Plato 1
  207. ^ "Aelian : On Animals, 14". www.attalus.org. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  208. ^ Ptolemy Hephaestion, New History, 1 in Photius, 190
  209. ^ Smith, s.v. Tyro
  210. ^ Pausanias, 8.25.5
  211. ^ Pausanias, 8.25.7
  212. ^ Theogony 270–281 (Most, pp. 24, 25), where Poseidon is referred to as the "dark-haired one".
  213. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 4.794–803
  214. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.134
  215. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 12.195-199; Apollodorus, Epitome.1.22
  216. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 2.569-88
  217. ^ Kramer Richards, Arlene; Spira, Lucille (2015). Myths of Mighty Women: Their Application in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. New York, NY: Karnac Books Ltd. p. 80. ISBN 9781782203049.
  218. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 930–933
  219. ^ Apollodorus, 3.15.4
  220. ^ Pindar, Olympian Odes 7.14
  221. ^ Apollodorus, 2.5.11
  222. ^ Servius, Commentary on Virgil's Aeneid 3.420
  223. ^ Hesiod, Ehoiai fr. 40a as cited in Oxyrhynchus Papyri 1358 fr. 2
  224. ^ Pausanias, 8.25.7 & 8.42.1
  225. ^ Apollodorus, 3.6.8; Pausanias, 8.25.5 & 8.25.7
  226. ^ Herodorus, fr. 62 Fowler (Fowler 2000, p. 253), apud schol. Pindar, Olympian Odes 7.24–5; Fowler 2013, p. 591
  227. ^ Giovanni Boccaccio's Famous Women translated by Virginia Brown 2001; Cambridge and London, Harvard University Press; ISBN 0-674-01130-9; p. 42
  228. ^ Apollodorus, 2.4.2
  229. ^ Suida, s.v. Ergiske
  230. ^ Apollodorus, 3.10.3.
  231. ^ a b Apollodorus, 3.10.1.
  232. ^ Pausanias, 2.30.7
  233. ^ Pausanias, 9.22.5
  234. ^ a b c d e f g Hyginus, Fabulae 157
  235. ^ Scholia on Pindar, Olympian Ode 10.83 quoted in Hesiod, Ehoiai fr. 64
  236. ^ Apollodorus, 3.14.2
  237. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 188
  238. ^ Tzetzes on Lycophron, 875
  239. ^ also said to be the daughter of Ergeus
  240. ^ Pausanias, 2.12.4
  241. ^ Apollodorus, 3.12.6
  242. ^ Pausanias, 10.6.13
  243. ^ Apollodorus, 3.15.4
  244. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.72.3
  245. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 5.55
  246. ^ Plutarch, Quaestiones Graecae 19
  247. ^ a b Apollodorus, 2.5.9
  248. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Aspledon
  249. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Astakos, with a reference to Arrian
  250. ^ Pausanias, 2.2.2
  251. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 175
  252. ^ Scholia on Homer, Iliad 2.517
  253. ^ Scholia on Theocritus, Idylls 7.76
  254. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.72.1–5
  255. ^ Probus on Virgil's Georgics 2.197
  256. ^ Homer, Odyssey 1.70–73
  257. ^ a b Pausanias, 7.4.8
  258. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 14
  259. ^ Tzetzes on Lycophron, 1206
  260. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 187
  261. ^ Scholia on Homer, Iliad 2.499
  262. ^ Apollodorus, 2.1.5, 2.7.4; Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica 1.133–139; Hyginus, Fabulae 14, 169.
  263. ^ Plutarch, Parallela minora 38
  264. ^ Apollodorus, 2.5.11.
  265. ^ Apollodorus, 3.10.3.
  266. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica 4.67.3–4
  267. ^ a b Hyginus, Fabulae 186
  268. ^ Pausanias, 9.29.1
  269. ^ Pausanias, 7.4.1
  270. ^ Apollodorus, 2.7.1.
  271. ^ Pausanias, 2.5.7
  272. ^ Scholia on Pindar, Olympian Ode 2.147
  273. ^ Tzetzes on Lycophron, 232
  274. ^ a b Murray, John (1833). A Classical Manual, being a Mythological, Historical and Geographical Commentary on Pope's Homer, and Dryden's Aeneid of Virgil with a Copious Index. Albemarle Street, London. p. 78.
  275. ^ Apollodorus, 1.7.4
  276. ^ a b Strabo, Geographica 12.8.18
  277. ^ Tzetzes on Lycophron, 838
  278. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica s.v. Byzantion
  279. ^ Pausanias, 9.36.4
  280. ^ Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 3.1094
  281. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 13.328 ff.
  282. ^ Plato, Critias 113d-144c
  283. ^ Eustathius on Homer, p. 1714
  284. ^ a b Tzetzes, Chiliades 2.43
  285. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 14; Pindar, Pythian Ode 4.45
  286. ^ John Lempière, Argonautae
  287. ^ Apollodorus, 1.4.3.
  288. ^ Scholia on Homer, Odyssey 11.326 = Hesiod, fr. 62 (Loeb edition, 1914)
  289. ^ Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 1.230-3b
  290. ^ Scholia on Pindar, Pythian Odes 4.122
  291. ^ Pausanias, 5.1.8
  292. ^ Conon, Narrations 14
  293. ^ Hesiod, Ehoiai fr. 7
  294. ^ Apollodorus, 1.9.3
  295. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Almopia
  296. ^ Pseudo-Eratosthenes, Catasterismi 19; Hyginus, Poeticon astronomicon 2.20
  297. ^ Apollodorus, 2.4.5
  298. ^ Homer, Odyssey 11.305–8
  299. ^ Apollodorus, Epitome 1.2
  300. ^ Tripp, Edward. The Meridian Handbook of Classical Mythology. Meridian, 1970, p. 522.
  301. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Antiquitates Romanae 1.17.3
  302. ^ Pausanias, 2.30.5
  303. ^ a b Apollodorus, 2.1.4.
  304. ^ Pausanias, 1.44.3
  305. ^ Tzetzes on Lycophron, 208
  306. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Dyrrhakhion
  307. ^ Apollodorus, 2.7.2
  308. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Mytilene
  309. ^ Conon, Narrations 10
  310. ^ Homer, Odyssey 7.56–57
  311. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Torōnē
  312. ^ Tzetzes on Lycophron, 923
  313. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 5.53.1
  314. ^ Apollodorus, 4.68.3
  315. ^ Pausanias, 1.14.3
  316. ^ a b Apollodorus, Bibliotheca, 2.5.10.
  317. ^ eponym of Dicaea, a city in Thrace as cited in Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Dikaia
  318. ^ Conon, Narrations 17
  319. ^ Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 1.216
  320. ^ Pausanias, 9.29.5
  321. ^ eponym of a river in Thessaly as cited in Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 1.596
  322. ^ Scholia on Statius, Thebaid 1.34
  323. ^ a b Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis 21.1
  324. ^ Apollodorus, 2.88
  325. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Kalaureia
  326. ^ Aelian, Varia Historia 1.24
  327. ^ a b Hyginus, Fabulae, 38.
  328. ^ Pausanias, 2.1.3
  329. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 817–819
  330. ^ Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 1.185 & 2.896
  331. ^ Apollodorus, 2.5.10
  332. ^ Antoninus Liberalis, 22 2 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  333. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Gerēn
  334. ^ Pausanias, 10.12.1
  335. ^ Eustathius ad Homer, Odyssey p. 1649
  336. ^ Virgil, Aeneid 7.691
  337. ^ Pausanias, 9.26.5
  338. ^ Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis 11.1
  339. ^ Apollodorus, 1.9.21
  340. ^ Suda, s.v. Phorbanteion
  341. ^ Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 1.179
  342. ^ Apollodorus, 3.1.1
  343. ^ Scholia on Pindar, Olympian Odes 14.5
  344. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 161
  345. ^ Servius ad Virgil, Aeneid 2.27
  346. ^ Tzetzes ad Lycophron, 347
  347. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 14.36 ff
  348. ^ This chart is based upon Hesiod's Theogony, unless otherwise noted.
  349. ^ According to Homer, Iliad 1.570–579, 14.338, Odyssey 8.312, Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus, see Gantz, p. 74.
  350. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 927–929 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone, with no father, see Gantz, p. 74.
  351. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 886–890 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine, of Zeus' children by his seven wives, Athena was the first to be conceived, but the last to be born; Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her, later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena "from his head", see Gantz, pp. 51–52, 83–84.
  352. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 183–200 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Aphrodite was born from Uranus' severed genitals, see Gantz, pp. 99–100.
  353. ^ According to Homer, Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus (Iliad 3.374, 20.105 2 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; Odyssey 8.308 2 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine, 320) and Dione (Iliad 5.370–71), see Gantz, pp. 99–100.
  354. ^ The ancient palace-city that was replaced by Vergina
  355. ^ "The Odyssey – Gareth Hinds Illustration". Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  356. ^ "Lore Olympus - Episode 2". www.webtoons.com. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  357. ^ Smythe, Rachel (2021). Lore Olympus: Volume One. Random House. ISBN 978-0593160299.
  358. ^ Chaffey, Don (19 June 1963), Jason and the Argonauts (Action, Adventure, Family), Todd Armstrong, Nancy Kovack, Gary Raymond, Charles H. Schneer Productions, retrieved 18 September 2023
  359. ^ Columbus, Chris (12 February 2010), Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief (Adventure, Family, Fantasy), Fox 2000 Pictures, 1492 Pictures, Sunswept Entertainment, retrieved 10 September 2022
  360. ^ Freudenthal, Thor (7 August 2013), Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters (Adventure, Family, Fantasy), Fox 2000 Pictures, TSG Entertainment, Sunswept Entertainment, retrieved 10 September 2022
  361. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (19 December 2014). "Ernie Hudson To Play Poseidon On 'Once Upon a Time'". Deadline Hollywood. from the original on 24 December 2014. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
  362. ^ "God Of War: 15 Gods Kratos Took Down & How He Did It". TheGamer. 10 April 2020. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  363. ^ "SMITE – Poseidon". www.smitegame.com. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  364. ^ Plante, Corey (17 October 2020). "1 single boon in 'Hades' transforms Excalibur into the ultimate weapon". Inverse. Retrieved 11 January 2023.

References

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External links

  •   Media related to Poseidon at Wikimedia Commons
  • Theoi.com: Poseidon
  • GML Poseidon
  • Gods found in Mycenaean Greece; a table drawn up from Michael Ventris and John Chadwick, Documents in Mycenaean Greek second edition (Cambridge 1973)
  • The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (images of Poseidon)

poseidon, this, article, about, greek, other, uses, disambiguation, earth, shaker, redirects, here, other, uses, earth, shaker, disambiguation, greek, Ποσειδῶν, twelve, olympians, ancient, greek, religion, mythology, presiding, over, storms, earthquakes, horse. This article is about the Greek god For other uses see Poseidon disambiguation Earth Shaker redirects here For other uses see Earth Shaker disambiguation Poseidon p e ˈ s aɪ d en p ɒ p oʊ 1 Greek Poseidῶn is one of the Twelve Olympians in ancient Greek religion and mythology presiding over the sea storms earthquakes and horses 2 He was the protector of seafarers and the guardian of many Hellenic cities and colonies In pre Olympian Bronze Age Greece Poseidon was venerated as a chief deity at Pylos and Thebes with the cult title earth shaker 2 in the myths of isolated Arcadia he is related to Demeter and Persephone and was venerated as a horse and as a god of the waters 3 Poseidon maintained both associations among most Greeks he was regarded as the tamer or father of horses 2 who with a strike of his trident created springs the terms for horses and springs are related in the Greek language 4 His Roman equivalent is Neptune PoseidonKing of the seaGod of the sea storms earthquakes and horsesMember of the Twelve OlympiansThe Poseidon of Melos a statue of Poseidon found in Milos in 1877AbodeMount Olympus or the seaSymbolTrident fish dolphin horse bullPersonal informationParentsCronus and RheaSiblingsHades Demeter Hestia Hera ZeusConsortAmphitrite various othersChildrenTheseus Triton Rhodos Benthesikyme Arion Despoina Polyphemus Orion Belus Agenor Neleus Atlas Pegasus Chrysaor Kymopoleia Bellerophon various othersEquivalentsRoman equivalentNeptuneThis article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Poseidon greeting Theseus on the right Detail Attic red figured calyx krater by Syriscos Painter 450 500BC from Agrigento BnF Museum Cabinet des medailles ParisHomer and Hesiod suggest that Poseidon became lord of the sea when following the overthrow of his father Cronus the world was divided by lot among Cronus three sons Zeus was given the sky Hades the underworld and Poseidon the sea with the Earth and Mount Olympus belonging to all three 2 5 In Homer s Iliad Poseidon supports the Greeks against the Trojans during the Trojan War in the Odyssey during the sea voyage from Troy back home to Ithaca the Greek hero Odysseus provokes Poseidon s fury by blinding his son the Cyclops Polyphemus resulting in Poseidon punishing him with storms causing the complete loss of his ship and companions and delaying his return by ten years Poseidon is also the subject of a Homeric hymn In Plato s Timaeus and Critias the legendary island of Atlantis was Poseidon s domain 6 7 8 Poseidon is famous for his contests with other deities for winning the patronage of the city According to legend Athena became the patron goddess of the city of Athens after a competition with Poseidon though he remained on the Acropolis in the form of his surrogate Erechtheus After the fight Poseidon sent a monstrous flood to the Attic plain to punish the Athenians for not choosing him 9 In similar competitions with other deities in different cities he causes devastating floods when he loses Poseidon is a horrifying and avenging god and must be honoured even when he is not the patron deity of the city 10 Some scholars suggested that Poseidon was probably a Pelasgian god 11 or a god of the Minyans 12 However it is possible that Poseidon like Zeus was a common god of all Greeks from the beginning 13 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Bronze Age Greece 2 1 Linear B Mycenean Greek inscriptions 2 2 Mycenean cult 2 3 Arcadian myths 2 4 Boeotian myths 3 Origins 4 Worship of Poseidon 4 1 Epithets and attributes 4 2 Festivals 5 Temples of Poseidon 6 Mythology 6 1 Birth 6 2 City patronage 6 2 1 Foundation of Athens 6 2 2 Others 6 3 Walls of Troy 6 4 Theseus 6 5 Consort lovers victims and children 6 5 1 Rape and assault victims 6 5 2 List of offspring and their mothers 7 Genealogy 8 In literature and art 9 In modern culture 9 1 Books 9 2 Webcomics 9 3 Films and television 9 4 Video games 10 Narrations 11 Gallery 11 1 Paintings 11 2 Statues 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksEtymologyThe earliest attested occurrence of the name written in Linear B is 𐀡𐀮𐀅𐀃 Po se da o or 𐀡𐀮𐀅𐀺𐀚 Po se da wo ne 14 which correspond to Poseidawn Poseidaōn and Poseidaϝonos Poseidawonos in Mycenean Greek in Homeric Greek it appears as Posidawn Posidaōn in Aeolic as Pote i dawn Pote i daōn in Doric as Poteidan Poteidan and Poteidᾶs Poteidas in Arcadic as Posoidᾱn Posoidan In inscriptions with Laconic style from Tainaron Helos and Thuria as Pohoidᾱn Pohoidan indicating that the Dorians took the name from the older population 15 The form Poteidaϝwn Poteidawōn appears in Corinth 16 The origins of the name Poseidon are unclear and the possible etymologies are contradictive between the scholars One theory breaks it down into an element meaning husband or lord Greek posis posis from PIE potis and another element meaning earth dᾶ da Doric for gῆ ge producing something like lord or spouse of Da i e of the earth this would link him with Demeter Earth mother 17 Burkert finds that the second element dᾶ remains hopelessly ambiguous and finds a husband of Earth reading quite impossible to prove 2 According to Beekes in Etymological Dictionary of Greek there is no indication that dᾶ means earth 18 although the root da appears in the Linear B inscription E ne si da o ne earth shaker 2 19 Another theory interprets the second element as related to the presumed Doric word dᾶϝon dawon water Proto Indo European dah water or dʰenh to run flow Sanskrit दन da nu fluid drop dew and names of rivers such as Danube lt Danuvius or Don This would make Posei dawōn into the master of waters 20 15 Plato in his dialogue Cratylus gives two traditional etymologies either the sea restrained Poseidon when walking as a foot bond posidesmon or he knew many things polla eἰdotos or polla eἰdῶn 21 Beekes suggests that the word has probably a Pre Greek origin 22 At least a few sources deem Poseidon as a prehellenic i e Pelasgian word considering an Indo European etymology improbable 23 citation needed Bronze Age GreeceLinear B Mycenean Greek inscriptions If surviving Linear B clay tablets can be trusted the names po se da wo ne and Po se da o Poseidon 14 occurs with greater frequency than does di u ja Zeus A feminine variant po se de ia is also found indicating a lost consort goddess in effect the precursor of Amphitrite Poseidon was the chief god at Pylos The title wa na ka appears in the inscriptions Poseidon was identified with wanax from the Homeric era to classical Greece anax The title didn t mean only king but also protector Wanax had chthonic aspects and he was closely associated with Poseidon who had the title Lord of the Underworld The chthonic nature of Poseidon is also indicated by his title E ne si da o ne Earth shaker in Mycenean Knossos and Pylos Through Homer the epithet was also used in classical Greece ennosigaios ennosidas 24 Po tini ja potnia lady or mistress was the chief goddess at Pylos and she was closely associated with Poseidon She was the Mycenean goddess of nature and Poseidon Wanax is one from the gods who may be considered her male paredros The earth shaker received offerings in the cave of the goddess of childbirth Eileithyia at Amnisos in Crete Poseidon is allied with Potnia and the divine child 25 Wa na ssa anassa queen or lady appears in the inscriptions usually in plural Wa na ssoi The dual number is common in Indoeuropean grammar usually for chthonic deities like the Erinyes and the duality was used for Demeter and Persephone in classical Greece the double named goddesses 26 27 Potnia and wanassa refer to identical deities or two aspects of the same deity 24 E ri nu Erinys is attested in the inscriptions 28 In some ancient cults Erinys is related to Poseidon and her name is an epithet of Demeter 29 It is possible that Demeter appears as Da ma te in a Linear B inscription PN EN 609 however the interpretation is still under dispute 30 31 Si to Po tini ja is probably related with Demeter as goddess of grain 32 Tablets from Pylos record sacrificial goods destined for the Two ladies and the Lord or to the Two Queens and the King wa na soi wa na ka te Wa na ssoi may be related with Demeter and Persephone or their precursors goddesses who were not associated with Poseidon in later periods 33 27 Mycenean cult During the Mycenean period the ancestral male gods of the Myceneans were probably not represented in human forms and the information given by the tablets found at Pylos and Knossos is insufficient 32 Poseidon was the chief deity at Pylos and Thebes He is identified with Anax and he carried the title Master of the Underworld Anax had probably a cult associated with the protection of the palace 24 In Acrocorinth he was worshipped as Poseidon Anax during the Mycenean age 34 In the city there was the famous spring Peirene which in a myth is related to the winged horse Pegasus 35 In Attica there was a cult of Anax heroes who was connected to Poseidon 34 A cult title of Poseidon was earth shaker and in Knossos he was worshipped together with the goddess Eleithyia who was related to the annual birth of the divine child 34 Potnia was the Mycenean goddess of nature and she was the consort of Poseidon at Pylos She is mentioned together with bucrania in decorated jugs and he was associated with the animals and especially to the bull 24 In Athens Poseidon was an inland god who created the salt sea Erectheis Erex8his sea of Erechtheus In Acropolis his cult was superimposed on the cult of the Pre Greek godErechtheus In Athens and Asine he was worshipped in the house of the king during the Mycenean period 35 The bull was the favourite animal for sacrifices and it seems that horses were rarely used during the burial of the Mycenean leaders 32 Arcadian myths nbsp Poseidon pursuing a woman probably by Achilleus painter 480 450BC Metropolitan Museum of Art Manhattan NYIn the Arcadian myths Poseidon is related to Demeter and Despoina another name of Kore Persephone and he was worshipped with the surname Hippios in many Arcadian cities 10 At Thelpusa and Phigalia there were sister worships which are very important for the study of primitive religions In these cults Demeter and Poseidon were chthonic divinities of the underworld 29 Near Thelpusa the river Ladon descended to the sunctuary of Demeter Erinys Demeter Fury During her wandering in search of her daughter Demeter changed into a mare to avoid Poseidon Poseidon took the form of a stallion and after their mating she gave birth to a daughter whose name was not allowed to be told to the unitiated and a horse called Arion very swift Her daughter obviously had the shape of a mare too At first Demeter became angry and she was given the surname Erinys fury by the Thelpusians 29 10 The Erinyes were deities of vangeance and Erinys had a similar function with the goddess Dike Justice 36 In the very old myth of Thelpusa Demeter Erinys and Poseidon are divinities of the underworld in a pre mythic period Poseidon appears as a horse In Greek folklore the horses had chthonic associations and it was believed that they could create springs 10 In European folklore the water creatures or water spirits appear with the shape of a horse or a bull In Greece the river god Acheloos is represented like a bull or a man bull 37 Many people when sacrificed to Demeter should make a premilinary sacrifice to Acheloos 29 At Phigalia Demeter had a sanctuary in a cavern and she was given the surname Melaina black The goddess was related to the black undeworld In a similar myth Poseidon appears as horse and Demeter gives birth to a daughter whose name was not allowed to be told to the unitiated At Lycosura her daughter was called Despoina Demeter angry with Poseidon put on a black dressing and shut herself in the cavern When the fruits of the earth were perished Zeus sent the Moirai to Demeter who listened to them and led aside her wrath In this cult we have traces of a very old cult of Demeter and Poseidon as deities of the underworld 29 nbsp Statue of Poseidon in Germany by Johann David Rantz and Lorenz Wilhelm Rantz 1760 In another Arcadian myth when Rhea had given birth to Poseidon she told Cronus that she had given birth to a horse and gave him a foal to swallow instead of the child 10 38 In the Homeric Hymn Demeter puts a dark mourning robe around her shoulders as a sign of her sorrow 29 Demeter s mare form was worshipped into historical times The xoanon of Melainaat Phigalia shows how the local cult interpreted her as goddess of nature A Medusa type with a horse s head with snaky hair holding a dove and a dolphin probably representing her power over air and water 39 Boeotian myths The myth of Poseidon appearing as a horse and mating with Demeter was not localized in Arcadia At Haliartos in Boeotia near Thebes Poseidon appears as stallion He mates with Erinys near the spring of Tilpousa and she gives birth to the faboulous horse Arion 10 At Tilpusa we have a very old cult of the chthonic deities Erinys and Poseidon The water god Poseidon 40 appears as a horse which seems to represent the water spirit 37 and Erinys is probably the personification of a revenging earth spirit 41 36 From earlier times at Delphi Poseidon was joined in a religious union with the earth goddess Ge She is represented as a snake which is a form of the earth spirit 40 In the Theogony of Hesiod Poseidon once slept with the monstrous Medousa near the mountain Helikon She conceived the winged horse Pegasus who sprang out of her body when Perseus cut off her head Pegasus stuck the ground with his hoof and created the famous spring Hippocrene near Helikon 10 Praxidicai were female deities of judicial punishment worshipped in the region of Haliartos in the historical times Ttheir origin is probably the same with Erinys Their images depicted only the heads of the goddesses probably a representation of the earth goddess emerging from the ground 29 Praxidice is and epithet of Persephone in the Orphic Hymn Persephone is sometimes depicted with her head emerging from the ground 42 43 Origins nbsp Colossal type statue of Poseidon Neptune probably sculpted in a workshop in Aphrodisias Asia Minor It was at Palaemon s sanctuary in Isthmia where it was described by Pausanias Prado Museum MadridDuring the Mycenean period Poseidon was worshipped in several regions in Greece At Pylos and some other cities he was a god of the underworld Lord of the Underworld and his cult was related to the protection of the palace He carried the title anax king or protector His consort potnia lady or mistress was the Mycenean goddess of nature Her main aspects were birth and vegetation 24 Poseidon had the title Enesidaon earth shaker and in Crete he was associated with the goddess of childbirth Eleithyia Through Homer the Mycenean titles were also used in classical Greece with similar meaning He was identified with anax and he carried the epithets Ennosigaios and Ennosidas earth shaker Potnia was a title which accompanied female goddesses 44 The goddess of nature survived in the Eleusinian cult where the following words were uttered Mighty Potnia bore a strong son 45 In the heavily sea dependent Mycenaean culture there is not sufficient evidence that Poseidon was connected with the sea it is unclear whether Posedeia was a sea goddess The Greeks invaders came from far inland and they were not familiarized with the sea 46 In the primitive Boeotian and Arcadian myths Poseidon the god of the underworld appears as a horse and he is mating with the earth goddess 40 The earth goddess is called Erinys or Demeter and she gives birth to the fabulous horse Arion and the unnamed daughter Despoina which is another name of Persephone 10 The horse represents the divine spirit numen and is related to the liquid element and the underworld 47 In Greek folklore the horse is associated with the underworld and it was believed that it had the ability to create springs 10 In the European folklore the water spirit appears with the shape of a horse or a bull In Greece the river god Acheloos is represented as a bull or a man bull 37 Burkert suggests that the Hellenic cult of Poseidon as a horse god may be connected to the introduction of the horse and war chariot from Anatolia to Greece around 1600 BC 2 In the Boeotian myth Poseidon is the water god and Erinys is a goddess of the underworld 40 She is probably the personification of a revenging earth spirit 41 48 and it seems that she had a similar function with the goddess Dike Justice 36 At the spring Tilpousa she gives birth to the fabulous horse Arion In the Arcadian myth Poseidon Hippios horse is mating with the mare Demeter At Thelpousa Demeter Erinys gives birth to the horse Arion and to an unnamable daughter who has the shape of a mare In some neighbour cults the daughter was called Despoina mistress which is another name of Persephone 10 The theriomorphic form of gods seems to be local in Arcadia in an old religion associated with xoana 26 nbsp From left to right Poseidon Dionysos Zeus Black figured neck amphora 540 BC National Museum of Denmark CopenhagenAccording to some theories Poseidon was a Pelasgian god or a god of the Minyans Traditionally the Minyans are considered Pelasgians and they lived in Thessaly and Boeotia In Thessaly Pelasgiotis there was a close relation to the horses Poseidon created the first horse Skyphios hitting a rock with his trident and managed in the same way to drain the valley of Tempe 13 The Thessalians were famous charioteers 49 Some of the oldest Greek myths appear in Boeotia In ancient cults Poseidon was worshipped as a horse The mythical horse Arion was a sire of Poseidon horse with Erinys and the winged horse Pegasus a sire of Poseidon foaled by Medousa 10 At Onchestos he had an old famous festival which included horseracing 10 However it is possible that Poseidon like Zeus was a common god of all Greeks from the beginning 13 It is possible that the Greeks did not bring with them other gods except Zeus Eos and the Dioskouroi 47 The Pelasgian god probably represented the fertilising power of water and then he was he was considered god of the sea As the sea encircles and holds the earth in its position Poseidon is the god who holds the earth and who has the ability to shake the earth 50 The primeval water who encircled the earth Oceanus is the origin of all rivers and springs They are children of Oceanus and Tethys 35 Farnell suggested that Poseidon was originally the god of the Minyans who occupied Thessaly and Boeotia There is a similarity between the Boeotian and Arcadian myths and especially between the myths which represent the god of the waters Poseidon as a horse 40 The mythical horse Arion appears in both regions The offspring of Poseidon winged horse Pegasus creates famous springs near Helikon and at Troizen Some springs of Poseidon have similar names in Boeotia and Peloponnese 13 12 It is possible that the name of Poseidon Helikonios in Boeotia whose fest included horseracing derives from the mountain Helikon The Minyans had trade contacts with Mycenean Pylos and the Achaeans adopted the cult of Poseidon Helikonios The cult spread in Peloponnese and then to Ionia when the Achaeans migrated to Asia Minor 13 12 nbsp Hermes Dionysos Ariadne and Poseidon Amphitrite is depicted on side B Detail from the belly of an Attic red figure hydria ca 510 BC 500 BC Louvre ParisNilsson suggested that Poseidon was probably a common god of all Greeks from the beginning The Greeks occupied Thessaly Boeotia and Peloponnese during the Bronze Age In all these regions Poseidon was the god of the horses The origin of his cult was Peloponnese and he was the inland god of the Achaeans the god of the horses and the earthquakes When the Achaeans migrated to Ionia there was a transition to regarding Poseidon as the god of the sea because the Ionians were sea dependent 35 With no doubt he was originally the god of the waters The Greeks believed that the cause of the earthquakes was the erosion of the rocks by the waters by the rivers in Peloponnese which they saw to disappear into the earth and then to burst out again The god of the waters became the earth shaker 35 51 This is what the natural philosophers Thales Anaximenes and Aristotle believed and could not be different from the folk belief 52 In the Greek legends Arethusa and the river Alpheus traversed underground under the sea and reappeared at Ortygia 53 54 In any case the early importance of Poseidon can still be glimpsed in Homer s Odyssey where Poseidon rather than Zeus is the major mover of events In Homer Poseidon is the master of the sea 55 He is described as a majestic scary and avenging monarch of the sea 46 Worship of Poseidon nbsp Artemision Bronze bronze statue probably of Poseidon Severe style 480 440 BC The statue was possibly a thank offering to the god after the battle of Artemision 480 BC 56 National Archaeological Museum Athens I begin to sing about Poseidon the great god mover of the earth and fruitless sea god of the deep who is also lord of Helicon 57 and wide Aegae A two fold office the gods allotted you O Shaker of the Earth to be a tamer of horses and a saviour of ships Hail Poseidon Holder of the Earth dark haired lord O blessed one be kindly in heart and help those who voyage in ships Homeric Hymn to Poseidon 58 The worship of Poseidon was extended all over Greece and southern Italy but he was specially honoured in Peloponnese which is called the residence of Poseidon and in the Ionic cities 11 The significance of his cult is indicated by the names of cities like Poteidaia in the Chalkidiki peninsula and Poseidonia Paestum a Greek colony in Italy 2 Poseidion is a frequent Greek placename along coastlines and the name of a Greek colony at the Syrian coast 59 In Ionia his cult was introduced by Achaean colonists from Greece in the 11th century BC Traditionally the colonists came from Pylos where Poseidon was the principal god of the city The god had a famous temple near the mountain Mycale 2 The month Poseidaon is the month of the winter storms The name of the month was used in Ionic territories in Athens in the islands of the Aegean and in the cities of Asia Minor At Lesbos and Epidauros the month was called Poseidios During this month Poseidon was worshipped as the master of the sea in a bright cult 13 nbsp Poseidon with trident on hippocamp sea horse Athenian black figure white ground pottery lekythos ca 500 480 BC by Athena Painter Ashmolean Museum OxfordPoseidon was a major civic god of several cities in Athens he was second only to Athena in importance while in Corinth and many cities of Ionia and Magna Graecia he was the chief god of the polis 2 Many fests of Poseidon included athletic competitions and horseracing In Corinth his cult was related to the Isthmian games 2 In Arcadia his cult was related to the games Hippocrateia and at Sparta he had a temple near an Hippodrome In Onchestos of Boeotia horseracing was a part of the athletic games in honour of the god 10 13 Poseidon was considered a symbol of unity The Panionia the festival of all Ionians near Mycale were celebrated in honour of Poseidon Helikonios 60 and was the place of meeting of the Ionian League 61 He was the patron god of the Amphictiony of Kalaureia At Onchestos of Boeotia he was worshipped as Poseidon Helikonios His sanctuary became the place of meeting of the second Boeotian league 13 62 At Helike of Achaea there was the famous temple of Poseidon Helikonios which was the place of meeting of the Achaean League 63 The master of the sea creates clouds and storms but he is also the protector of the sailors He has the ability to calm the sea for a good voyage and save those who are in danger 11 He was worshipped with the surname savior as the protector of the seafarers and the fishermen 56 He is the earthshaker however he is also the protector against the earthquakes In some cults he was worshipped as the bringer of safety or protector of the house and the foundations 13 The god was considered the creator of the first horse and it was believed that he taught men the art of taming horses He was depicted on horseback or riding in a chariot drawn by two or four horses 11 He had a lot of temples in Arcadia with the surname Hippios of the horse and he was also transformed into a horse to seduce Demeter 13 nbsp Poseidon with a trident and a fish Tondo of an Attic red figured kylix 520 510 BC from Etruria National Museum of Denmark Copenhagen Being the god of waters Poseidon is related to the primeval water which encircles the earth Oceanus 11 who is the father of all rivers and springs He can create springs with the strike of his trident 2 He was worshipped as ruler of the springs and leader of the nymphs 64 In Thessaly it was believed that he drained the area cutting the rocks of Tempe with his trident 2 65 In Greek folklore the horse can also create springs 10 As god of the sea Poseidon was also god of fishing and especially of sea fishing Tuna was offered to him by the fishermen during the festal meal for the protection of the nets 2 Tuna and later dolphin was his attribute He was worshipped in many islands and cities by the coast At Corcyra a roaring bull near the sea shore quaranteed a good fishing 66 The devastating storm of Poseidon is related to fishermen and they poured drink offerings to Poseidon savior into the sea 56 The god of inland waters is very close to vegetation and Poseidon was worshipped in many cities as god of vegetation Haloa in Athens was a fest of vegetation The Protrygaia a wine fest seem to belong to Dionysus and Poseidon 66 In several cities Poseidon was worshipped in relation to the genealogy and the phratry 2 At Tinos he was worshipped as a healer god probably a forerunner of the famous Evangelistria 66 The bull is related to Poseidon mainly in Ionia The sacrifice of a bull offered to Poseidon is mentioned by Homer in an Ionic festival Panionia 67 66 The sacrifices offered to Poseidon consisted of black and white bulls which were killed or thrown into the sea Boars and rams were also used and in Argolis horses were thrown into a well as a sacrifice to him 68 11 nbsp Gigantomachy scene Poseidon fighting Polybotes Tondo of an Attic red figure kylix ca 475 470 BC Painter of the Paris Gigantomachy eponymous vase circle of the Brygos Painter found in Vulci BnF Museum Cabinet des medailles ParisIn his benign aspect Poseidon was seen as creating new islands and offering calm seas When offended or ignored he supposedly struck the ground with his trident and caused chaotic springs earthquakes drownings and shipwrecks Sailors prayed to Poseidon for a safe voyage sometimes drowning horses as a sacrifice in this way according to a fragmentary papyrus Alexander the Great paused at the Syrian seashore before the climactic battle of Issus and resorted to prayers invoking Poseidon the sea god for whom he ordered a four horse chariot to be cast into the waves 69 According to Pausanias Poseidon was one of the caretakers of the oracle at Delphi before Olympian Apollo took it over Apollo and Poseidon worked closely in many realms in colonization for example Delphic Apollo provided the authorization to go out and settle while Poseidon watched over the colonists on their way and provided the lustral water for the foundation sacrifice At one time Delphi belonged to him in common with Ge but Apollo gave him the psychopompeion Kalaureia as a compensation for it 11 70 Xenophon s Anabasis describes a group of Spartan soldiers in 400 399 BC singing to Poseidon a paean a kind of hymn normally sung for Apollo Like Dionysus who inflamed the maenads Poseidon also caused certain forms of mental disturbance A Hippocratic text of ca 400 BC On the Sacred Disease 71 says that he was blamed for certain types of epilepsy Poseidon is still worshipped today in modern Hellenic religion among other Greek gods The worship of Greek gods has been recognized by the Greek government since 2017 72 73 Epithets and attributes nbsp Poseidon EpoptesPoseidon had a variety of roles duties and attributes He is a separate deity from the oldest Greek god of the sea Pontus In Athens his name is superimposed on the name of the non Greek god Erechtheus Ἑrex8eys Poseidon Erechtheus 74 75 In the Iliad he is the lord of the sea and his golden palace is built in Aegai in the depth of the sea 76 His significance is indicated by his titles Eurykreion Eὐrykreiwn wide ruling an epithet also applied to Agamemnon 77 78 and Helikonios anax Ἑlikwnios ἂna3 lord of Helicon or Helike 79 In Helike of Achaia he was specially honoured 80 Anax is identified in Mycenaean Greek Linear B as wa na ka a title of Poseidon as king of the underworld Aeschylus uses also the epithet anax 81 and Pindar the epithet Eurymedon Eὐrymedwn widely ruling 82 nbsp Poseidon Neptune Detail from the Mosaic of the Seasons from the Roman era Regional Archeological Museum Antonio Salinas Palermo Some of the epithets or adjectives applied to him like Enosigaios Ἐnosigaios Enosichthon Ἐnosix8wn Homer and Ennosidas Ἐnnosidas Pindar mean earth shaker 83 These epithets indicate his chthonic nature and have an older evidence of use as it is identified in Linear B as 𐀁𐀚𐀯𐀅𐀃𐀚 E ne si da o ne 84 Other epithets that relate him with the earthquakes are Gaieochos Gaihoxos 85 and Seisichthon Seisix8wn 86 The god who causes the earthquakes is also the protector against them and he had the epithets Themeliouchos 8emelioyxos upholding the foundations 87 Asphaleios Ἀsfaleios securer protector 88 with a temple at Tainaron 89 Pausanias describes a sanctuary of Poseidon near Sparta beside the shrine of Alcon where he had the surname Domatites Dwmatiths of the house 90 91 nbsp Poseidon surprises Anymone near a spring Attic pelike in red figure circle of the Polygnotus Painter 440 430 BC Archaeological Museum of AgrigentoHomer uses for Poseidon the title Kyanochaites Kyanoxaiths dark haired dark blue of the sea 92 93 Epithets like Pelagios Pelagios of the open sea 94 95 Aegeus Aἰgaios of the high sea 96 in the town of Aegae in Euboea where he had a magnificent temple upon a hill 97 98 99 Pontomedon Pontomedwn 100 lord of the sea Pindar Aeschylus and Kymothales Kymo8alhs abounding with waves 101 indicate that Poseidon was regarded as holding sway over the sea 102 Other epithets that relate him with the sea are Porthmios Por8mios of strait narrow sea at Karpathos 103 Epactaeus Ἐpaktaῖos god worshipped on the coast in Samos 104 Alidoupos Ἀlidoypos sea resounding 105 The master of the sea who can cause devastating storms is also the protector of seafarers and he was given the epithet sōter Swthr savior 56 His symbol is the trident and he has the epithet Eutriaina Eὐtriaina with goodly trident Pindar 106 The god of the sea is also the god of fishing and tuna was his attribute At Lampsacus they offered fishes to Poseidon and he had the epithet phytalmios fytalmios 107 His epithet Phykios Fykios god of seaweeds at Mykonos 108 seems to be related with fishing He had a fest where women were not allowed with special offers also to Poseidon Temenites Temeniths related to an official domain 109 At the same day they made offers to Demeter Chloe therefore Poseidon was the promotor of vegetation He had the epithet phytalmios fytalmios at Myconos Troizen Megara and Rhodes comparable with Ptorthios Ptor8ios at Chalcis 107 110 111 nbsp Poseidon fighting the Giant Polybotes Attic black figure neck amphora by Swing Painter 540 530 BC ca 540 BC 530 BC Louvre Paris Poseidon had a close association with horses He is known under the epithet Hippios Ἳppeios of a horse or horses 112 usually in Arcadia He had temples at Lycosura Mantineia Methydrium Pheneos Pallandion 113 At Lycosura he is related with the cult of Despoina 114 The modern sanctuary near Mantineia was built by Emperor Hadrian 115 In Athens on the hill of horses there was the altar of Poseidon Hippios and Athena Hippia The temple of Poseidon was destroyed by Antigonus when he attacked Attica 116 He is usually the tamer of horses Damaios Damaios at Corinth 117 and the tender of horses Hippokourios Ἱppokoyrios at Sparta where he had a sanctuary near the sanctuary of Artemis Aiginea 118 119 In some myths he is the father of horses either by spilling his seed upon a rock or by mating with a creature who then gave birth to the first horse 2 In Thessaly he had the title Petraios Petraἵos of the rocks 120 He hit a rock and the first horse Skyphios appeared 121 He was closely related with the springs and with the strike of his trident he created springs He had the epithets Krenouchos Krhnoyxos ruling over springs 122 and nymphagetes Nymfageths leader of the nymphs 123 On the Acropolis of Athens he created the saltspring Sea of Erechtheus Ἐrex8his 8alassa 124 Many springs like Hippocrene and Aganippe in Helikon are related with the word horse hippos also Glukippe Hyperippe He is the father of Pegasus whose name is derived from phgh pege spring 125 nbsp Poseidon carrying a trident Corinthian plate 550 525 BC from Pentescouphia LouvreEpithets like Genesios Genesios at Lerna 126 127 Genethlios Gene8lios of the race or family 128 Phratrios Fratrios of the brotherhood 129 and Patrigenios Patrigeneios 130 indicate his relation with the genealogy trees and the brotherhood Other epithets of Poseidon in local cults are Epoptes Ἐpopths overseer watcher at Megalopolis 131 Empylios Ἑmpylios at the gate at Thebes 132 Kronios Kronios 133 Pindar and semnos semnos august holy 134 Sophocles Some of Poseidon s epithets are related to festivals and athletic games including racing At Corinth the Isthmian games was an athletic and music festival in honour of the god who had the epithet Isthmios Ἴs8mios At Sparta there was the race in Gaiaochō ἐn Gaiaoxw 135 136 Poseidon Gaieochos Gaihoxos had a temple near the city beside an Hippodrome 137 At Mantineia and Pallandion in Arcadia the Hippokrateia Ippokrateia were athletic games in honour of Poseidon Hippeios Ippeios At Ephesus there was a fest Tavria and he had the epithet Tavreios Tayreios related with the bull 138 136 Festivals nbsp Poseidon and Nike victory Terracotta Attic amphora by the Syracuse Painter one of the last to decorate an amphora 470 460 BC Metropolitan Museum of Art Manhattan NYMany festivals all over Greece in the Ionic cities and in Italy were celebrated in honour of Poseidon Corinth The Panhellenic Isthmian Games were celebrated in honour of Poseidon His sanctuary is to be seen in the context of the position of Corinth controlling the sea 2 The festival included athletic and musical competitions and horseracing Traditionally the games were established in the Bronze Age over the dead prince Palaimon 139 Athens Poseidon had a fest in the month Poseidaon He was worshipped as the master of the sea 13 Athens Haloa was a fest of vegetation The wine fest Protrygaia belonged to Dionysus and to Poseidon as a god of vegetation 66 Mycale in Ionia Mycale was a promontory between Samos and Miletus The representatives of twelve cities dodekapolis celebrated the Panionia of all the Ionians a festival of Poseidon Helikonios 60 Traditionally the first settlers landed in this place The temple became the meeting place of the Ionian League 61 Homer describes the sacrifice of a bull to Poseidon during the festival 66 Ephesus in Ionia The relation of Poseidon with the bull is stronger in Ionia The fest Tauria was celebrated in honour of Poseidon Taureios and the capbearers were called tauroi bulls 66 Kalaureia Poseidon was the patron god of the Amphictiony of Kalaureia The festival was celebrated in honour of the god The famous temple was the meeting place of the representatives of the members Amphiktiones 140 Tainaron The famous festival Tainaria was celebrated in honour of Poseidon The participants were called Tainarioi 141 The sacred sanctuary of the god was built in a cave in the Tainaron peninsula 142 A filial cult existed in Sparta 13 nbsp Libation scene Poseidon seated on a chair wearing a chiton and a himation holding a trident and a phiale 450 440 BC red figure Attic amphora LouvreOnchestos in Boeotia Poseidon had a famous temple praised by Homer in the Catalogue of Ships 62 with the surname Helikonios It became the place of meeting of the second Boeotian league The peculiar fest included horseracing 13 At the beginning of the race the charioteers jumped down and made a prayer to Poseidon to protect them if the chariot would fall in the sacred grove 10 Sparta Poseidon was worshipped with the surname Gaiaochos carrying the earth or moving under the earth There was the race Gaiaochoi and the temple was built beside an Hippodrome 13 Helike in Achaea The city is mentioned in Homers Catalogue of Ships 143 The temple and the festival of Poseidon Helikonios was Panhellenic It was the place of meeting of the Achaean League The city was destroyed by a tsunami in 370 BC 63 Epidauros A fest in the month Poseidios was celebrated in honour of Poseidon He was worshipped as the master of the sea 13 Helos The fest Pohoidaia was celebrated in honour of Poseidon The festival included athletic games and competitions 13 Thuria The fest Pohoidaia was celebrated in honour of Poseidon It included athletic games and competitions 13 nbsp Sozopol Archaelogical Museum Poseidon in the middle Mantineia in Arcadia Poseidon was worshipped with the surname Hippios of the horse The fest included the athletic games Hippokrateia The temple was holy and the entrance into the cella was not allowed 13 Pallandion in Arcadia Poseidon had the epithet Hippios of the horse and the fest included the athletic games Hippokrateia 13 Thronium Thronium was the chief city of Ancient Locris and is mentioned by Homer in the Catalogue of Ships 144 The name of a month in the city was Hippios 145 Lesbos A festival in the month Poseidios was celebrated in honour of Poseidon He was worshipped as the master of the sea 13 Myconos In a fest he was worshipped as a god of fishing and women were not allowed Chloe Demeter received offerings in the same fest indicating that Poseidon was also god of vegetation 66 Tinos A great fest called Poseidonia was celebrated in honour of Poseidon The temple included great banquet halls indicating the large number of the participants 146 Poseidon was worshipped as a healer god 66 Temples of Poseidon nbsp Archaic Temple of Poseidon at Isthmia Greece Assumed reconstruction The Corinthians are considered to be the inventors of the Doric order However Corinth was completely destroyed and rebuilt and there is not sufficient evidence for the existence of earliest Doric Greek temples in the city 147 A building constructed in early 7th century BC c 690 650 BC at Isthmia near Corinth which was later dedicated to Poseidon is considered a pioneering building featuring Doric architecture 148 It seems that the first temple with pure Doric elements was built with the aid of Corinthians at Thermon in Aetolia in the middle of 7th century BC century c 640 630 BC It was a peripteral narrow wooden structure dedicated to Apollo 149 It measured 12 13 X38 23 m at the stylobate and the number of pteron columns was 5X15 150 In the earlier temples the peripteral colonnade is treated with a freedom unknown to later Doric architects This is in part an especially western feature in Italy because the hexastyle sceme was adopted 151 as in the temple of Poseidon at Taranto and the second temple of Hera at Paestum traditionally named temple of Poseidon In the earlier temples where the number of the columns in the porch is odd so are the columns of the pteron facade In such temples the side ptera are approximately the width of one or two intercolumniations 152 In the hexastyle scheme like the temple of Poseidon at Sounion there are normally two or four columns in the porch and the side ptera are approximately the width of one intercolumniation 153 In Doric early work the distance between column and column differs on the fronts and on the flanks 154 and this can be observed in the temple of Poseidon at Kalaureia and in Basilica at Paestum After the 6th century the rule in Doric is an approximate equality of intercolumniations 154 and it can be observed in the temple of Poseidon at Sounion where there is a slight difference Isthmia The temple dedicated later to the god Poseidon was probably built in early 7th century BC c 690 650 BC in the city Isthmia near Corinth and it had a wooden peristyle The building was completely destroyed in 470 BC and it seems that it was one of the pioneering buildings featuring Doric architecture 148 The ground plan showed a temple that was of epic proportions for its time and of a layout that was almost entirely new 155 however there was no evidence for the employment of the Doric style as it was suggested 156 nbsp Plan of the second temple of Hera Paestum traditionally temple of Poseidon Paestum on the west coast of Italy near Naples The Greek name of the city was Poseidonia The Doric temple was built in early 6th century BC and it was believed that it was a temple of Poseidon Traditionally this name is associated with the 5th century BC temple at Paestum however recent excavations indicate that both temples were dedicated to Hera The so called Basilica measured 24 5 X54 3 m at the stylobate and the number of pteron columns was 9x18 157 The temple is wider than most Greek temples it had two doors This may indicate a dual dedication of the temple 158 A Doric temple the so called temple of Poseidon was built in the first half of the 5th century BC and is usually placed later than Parthenon The temple measured 24 3 X 60 00 m at the stylobate It was an hexastyle structure and the number of pteron columns was 6X14 159 The temple was also used to worship Zeus and another deity whose identity is unknown nbsp Sounionplan Temple of PoseidonTaranto a city of Magna Graecia in Italy The temple of Poseidon was a perpiteral Doric temple however its exact plan cannot be outlined It was probably built in 6th century BC and it seems that the number of pteron columns was 6X13 The interval of the remaining columns is 3 72 m indicating that the maximum dimensions of the temple at the stylobate could be 22 32X 47 46 m Sounion in Attica The first temple of Poseidon formerly called temple of Athena was built in 490 BC and it was destroyed by the Persians before completion It measured 13 12 X30 34 m at the stylobate and the number of pteron columns was 6X13 There is a slight difference between the front and back intercolumniations and those of the flanks There was probably a double row of inner columns close wall engaged The cella with porches and adyta measured c 9 00 X21 20m 160 The second temple was built in 425 BC and it was modelled on its predecessor It measured 13 48 X 31 15 m at the stylobate and the number of pteron columns was 6X13 An Ionic frieze carried across pteron and continued round interior of each end of pteron 161 The cella with porches and adyta measured c 9 00 X21 20m 160 The temple probably contained at one end facing the entrance a colossal bronze statue of Poseidon 162 nbsp Architectural Terracotta Sanctuary of Poseidon KalaureiaKalaureia an island close to the coast of Troezen in the Peloponnese part of the modern island pair Poros Early roof tiles from c 650 BC suggest the existence of a precursor to the Late Archaic temple of Poseidon This Doric temple was probably built in the middle of the 6th century BC constructed mainly of poros stone It measured 14 50 X27 00 m at the stylobate and the number of the pteron columns was 6X12 Both front and back intercolumniations were wider than those on the flanks The building was surrounded by a low wall with the main entrance on the east side 163 nbsp Temple of Poseidon HermioneHermione in Argolis The most remarkable temple in the time of Pausanias was the temple of Poseidon 164 The temple was built in the Late archaic Early classical period in late 6th century BC It was completely destroyed and its foundations at the peninsula of Bisti Poseidio indicate that the temple measured approximately 15 00 X30 00 m at the stylobate 165 Tainaron The sacred sanctuary of Poseidon was built in a cave at the Tainaron peninsula The path to the interior carved into the rock was preparing him who wanted to get into the psychopompeion It also functioned as a necromancy and oneiromancy temple The temple was also established as a place for persecuted who fled there for protection 142 Tinos an island of Cyclades The temple of Poseidon and Amphitrite was built near a beach of the island in the 4th century BC Hellenistic period It was a peripteral Doric temple which was reconstructed in the 3rd century BC The temple was made of local marble and had some representations of the god s symbols such as dolphins and the trident 166 MythologyBirth nbsp Poseidon Neptune and triumphal chariot with a pair of sea horses Hippocamps Mosaic 3rd century Sousse Archaeological Museum Medina TunesiaIn the standard version Poseidon was born to the Titans Cronus and Rhea the fifth child out of six born after Hestia Demeter Hera and Hades in that order 167 Because Poseidon s father was afraid that one of his children would overthrow him like he had done to his own father Cronus devoured each infant as soon as they were born Poseidon was the last one to suffer this fate before Rhea decided to deceive Cronus and whisk the sixth child Zeus away to safety after offering Cronus a rock wrapped in a blanket to eat 168 Once Zeus was grown he gave his father a powerful emetic that made him gorge up the children he had eaten The five children emerged from their father s belly in reverse order making Poseidon both the second youngest child and the second oldest at the same time Armed with a trident forged for him by the Cyclopes Poseidon with his siblings and other divine allies defeated the Titans and became rulers in their place 169 According to Homer and Apollodorus Zeus Poseidon and the third brother Hades then divided the world between them by drawing lots Zeus got the sky Poseidon the sea and Hades the Underworld 170 nbsp Andrea Doria as Neptune by Angelo Bronzino 1540 1530 Pinacoteca di Brera MilanIn a rarer and later version Poseidon avoided being devoured by his father as his mother Rhea saved him in the same manner she did Zeus by offering Cronus a foal instead claiming she had given birth to a horse instead of a god while she had actually laid the child in a flock 171 Rhea entrusted her infant to a spring nymph When Cronus demanded the child the nymph Arne 172 denied having him and her spring thereafter was called Arne which bears resemblance to the Greek word for deny 173 In another tale Rhea gave Poseidon to the Telchines ancient inhabitants of the island of Rhodes 174 Capheira an Oceanid nymph became the young god s nurse 175 As Poseidon grew he fell in love with Halia the beautiful sister of the Telchines and fathered six sons and one daughter Rhodos on her 176 175 By that time Aphrodite the goddess of love had been born and risen from the sea and attempted to make a stop at Rhodes on her way to Cyprus Poseidon and Halia s sons denied her hospitality so Aphrodite cursed them to fall in love and rape Halia After they had done so Poseidon made them sink below the sea 176 In Homer s Odyssey Poseidon has a home in Aegae 177 City patronage Foundation of Athens nbsp Poseidon right and Athena identified with inscriptions Black figure vaise painting by Amasis Painter 540 BC BnF Museum Cabinet des medailles ParisAthena became the patron goddess of the city of Athens after a competition with Poseidon Yet Poseidon remained a numinous presence on the Acropolis in the form of his surrogate Erechtheus 2 At the dissolution festival at the end of the year in the Athenian calendar the Skira the priests of Athena and the priest of Poseidon would process under canopies to Eleusis 178 They agreed that each would give the Athenians one gift and the Athenians would choose whichever gift they preferred Poseidon struck the ground with his trident and a spring sprang up the water was salty and not very useful whereas Athena offered them an olive tree The Athenians or their king Cecrops accepted the olive tree and along with it Athena as their patron for the olive tree brought wood oil and food After the fight infuriated at his loss Poseidon sent a monstrous flood to the Attic Plain to punish the Athenians for not choosing him The depression made by Poseidon s trident and filled with salt water was surrounded by the northern hall of the Erechtheum remaining open to the air nbsp Athena and Poseidon Faliscan red figure volute krater by Nazzano Painter 360 BC Louvre Paris Burkert noted In cult Poseidon was identified with Erechtheus and the myth turns this into a temporal causal sequence in his anger at losing Poseidon led his son Eumolpus against Athens and killed Erectheus 9 It was also said that Poseidon in his anger over his defeat sent one of his sons Halirrhothius to cut down Athena s tree gift But as Halirrhothius swung his axe he missed his aim and it fell in himself killing him instantly Poseidon in fury accused Ares of murder and the matter was eventually settled on the Areopagus hill of Ares in favour of Ares which was thereafter named after the event 179 180 In other versions Halirrhothius raped Alcippe Ares s daughter so Ares slew him Poseidon was enraged over the murder of his son and Ares was thus held in hold which eventually acquitted him 181 The contest of Athena and Poseidon was the subject of the reliefs on the western pediment of the Parthenon the first sight that greeted the arriving visitor This myth is construed by Robert Graves and others as reflecting a clash between the inhabitants during Mycenaean times and newer immigrants Athens at its height was a significant sea power at one point defeating the Persian fleet at Salamis Island in a sea battle Others nbsp Poseidon and Amymone fresco in Stabiae Italy 1st century ADThe Corinthians had a similar story to the foundations of Athens about their own city Corinth According to the myth Helios and Poseidon clashed both desiring to make the city their own Their dispute was brought to one of the Hecatoncheires Briareos an elder god who was thus tasked to settle the fight between the two gods Briareus decided to award the Acrocorinth to Helios while to Poseidon he gave the isthmus of Corinth 182 In this tale Helios and Poseidon are supposed to represent fire versus water 183 Helios as the sun god received the area that is closest to the sky while Poseidon who is the sea god got the isthmus by the sea 184 At another time Poseidon came to an agreement with another goddess Leto that he would give her the island of Delos in exchange for the island of Calauria he also exchanged Delphi for Taenarum with Apollo A temple of Poseidon stood at Calauria during ancient times 185 Poseidon also came to dispute with his sister Hera over the city of Argos A local king was chosen to settle the matter Phoroneus and he decided to award the city to Hera who then became its patroness 186 Poseidon was enraged and sent a drought to plague the city One day as an Argive woman named Amymone went out in search of water came upon a satyr who tried to rape her Amymone prayed to Poseidon for help and he scared the satyr away with his trident 187 After Poseidon rescued Amymone from the lecherous satyr he fathered a child on her Nauplius 188 Walls of Troy Poseidon and Apollo having offended Zeus by their rebellion in Hera s scheme were temporarily stripped of their divine authority and sent to serve King Laomedon of Troy He had them build huge walls around the city and promised to reward them with his immortal horses a promise he then refused to fulfill In vengeance before the Trojan War Poseidon sent a sea monster to attack Troy The monster was later killed by Heracles 189 Theseus nbsp Poseidon and Theseus on the left Storage jar 470BC J Paul Getty Museum Malibu CaliforniaPoseidon fathered the hero Theseus with the Troezenian princess Aethra Theseus was also said to be the son of Aegeus the king of Athens who slept with Aethra on the very same night Thus Theseus s origins included both the human and the divine element 190 191 Meanwhile in Crete Zeus s son Minos asked for Poseidon s help in order to certify his claim on the throne of Crete Poseidon offered Minos a splendid white bull with the understanding that he was to sacrifice the bull to Poseidon later The Cretans were so impressed with the bull and the divine sign itself that Minos was declared king of Crete 192 193 But wishing to keep the beautiful animal for himself Minos instead sacrificed an ordinary bull to the sea god instead of the agreed upon one 193 Poseidon enraged caused Minos s wife Pasiphae to fall in love with the bull their coupling produced the Minotaur a half bull half human creature who fed on human flesh 192 193 Minos concealed him within the labyrinth built by Daedalus and fed to him Athenian men and women he forced Aegeus to send him over 168 Once Theseus was grown up and recognized by his father Aegeus in Athens he decided to end the bloody tax Athens had to pay to Crete once and for all and volunteered to set sail to Crete along with the other Athenian youths who had been chosen to be devoured by the Minotaur 194 Once he arrived in Crete Minos insulted Theseus and insisted he was no son of Poseidon to demonstrate so he threw his own ring in to the sea and commanded Theseus to retrieve it expecting he would not be able to do so 195 Theseus immediately dove in after it nbsp Pasiphae seated on a throne receives the wooden cow from Daidalos Eros plays with the head of the crafted cow Roman Mosaic from Zeugma Commagene Zeugma Mosaic Museum Gaziantep TurkeyDolphins then came as guides and escorted him to the halls of Poseidon and Amphitrite s palace where he was warmly welcomed 196 He received the ring and in addition a purple wedding cloak and a crown from Amphitrite to prove his words Theseus then emerged from the sea and gave the ring to Minos 197 Theseus killed the Minotaur and in time succeeded his father Aegeus as king of Athens By an Amazon he had a son Hippolytus while his wife Phaedra Minos daughter gave him two sons At some point Poseidon promised three favours to Theseus and he called upon Poseidon to fulfill one of those when Phaedra falsely accused Hippolytus of forcing himself on her 198 Theseus not knowing the truth asked his father to destroy Hippolytus Poseidon granted his son s wish and as Hippolytus was driving by the sea Poseidon sent a terrifying sea monster to spook the man s horses which then dragged him to his death 198 199 Consort lovers victims and children nbsp Sea thiasos depicting the wedding of Poseidon and Amphitrite from the Altar of Domitius Ahenobarbus in the Field of Mars bas relief Roman Republic 2nd century BCPoseidon was said to have had many lovers of both sexes His consort was Amphitrite a nymph and ancient sea goddess daughter of Nereus and Doris In one account attributed to Eratosthenes Poseidon wished to wed Amphitrite but she fled from him and hid with Atlas Poseidon sent out many to find her and it was a dolphin who tracked her down The dolphin persuaded Amphitrite to accept Poseidon as her husband and eventually took charge of their wedding Poseidon then put him among the stars as a reward for his good services 200 Oppian says that the dolphin betrayed Amphitrite s whereabouts to Poseidon and he carried off Amphitrite against her will to marry her 201 Together they had a son named Triton a merman 202 Poseidon was the father of many heroes He is thought to have fathered the famed Theseus Poseidon also had an affair with Alope his granddaughter through Cercyon his son and King of Eleusis begetting the Attic hero Hippothoon Cercyon had his daughter buried alive but Poseidon turned her into the spring Alope near Eleusis 203 A mortal woman named Cleito once lived on an isolated island Poseidon fell in love with the human mortal and created a dwelling sanctuary at the top of a hill near the middle of the island and surrounded the dwelling with rings of water and land to protect her She gave birth to five sets of twin boys the firstborn Atlas became the first ruler of Atlantis 6 7 8 Alebion and Bergion and Otos and Ephialtae the giants nbsp Poseidon Neptune and Amphitrite Roman Mosaic 1st century AD House of Neptune Herculanum Metropolitan City of NaplesNot all of Poseidon s children were human His other children include Polyphemus the Cyclops and finally Amycus was the son of Poseidon and the Bithynian nymph Melia 204 The philosopher Plato was held by his fellow ancient Greeks to have traced his descent to the sea God Poseidon through his father Ariston and his mythic predecessors the demigod kings Codrus and Melanthus 205 206 Poseidon also took the young Nerites the son of Nereus and Doris and thus brother to Amphitrite as a lover Nerites was also Poseidon s charioteer and impressed all marine creatures with his speed But one day the sun god Helios turned Nerites into a shellfish Aelian who recorded this tale as told by mariners says it is not clear why Helios did this but theorizes he might have been offended somehow or that he and Poseidon were rivals in love and Helios wanted Nerites to travel among the constellations instead of the sea monsters From the love between Poseidon and Nerites was born Anteros mutual love 207 Other male lovers included Pelops and Patroclus 208 Rape and assault victims nbsp Bellerehron spears Chimera from underneath while Pegasus strikes the monster with his hooves Laconian Black Figure Kylix attributed to Boreads Painter 570 565 B C J Paul Getty Museum Malibu California A mortal woman named Tyro was married to Cretheus with whom she had one son Aeson but loved Enipeus a river god She pursued Enipeus who refused her advances One day Poseidon filled with lust for Tyro disguised himself as Enipeus and from their union were born the heroes Pelias and Neleus twin boys 209 In an archaic myth Poseidon once pursued Demeter She spurned his advances turning herself into a mare so that she could hide in a herd of horses he saw through the deception and became a stallion captured and raped her 210 Their child was a horse Arion which was capable of human speech 211 According to Hesiod s Theogony Poseidon lay down in a soft meadow among spring flowers with the Gorgon Medusa and two offspring the winged horse Pegasus and the warrior Chrysaor were born when the hero Perseus cut off Medusa s head 212 nbsp Lattanzio Gambara c 1530 Brescia 1574 Poseidon Neptune and CaenisOvid however says that Medusa was originally a very beautiful maiden whom Poseidon raped inside the temple of Athena Athena furious over the sacrilege changed the beautiful girl into a monster 213 Elsewhere in the Metamorphoses Ovid says that Poseidon seduced Medusa in the form of a bird 214 One day Poseidon spotted Caenis walking by the seashore caught her and raped her Having enjoyed her greatly he offered her a wish any wish Traumatized Caenis wished to be transformed into a man so that she would never experience assault again Poseidon fulfilled her request and changed her into a male warrior who then took the name Caeneus 215 Another time Poseidon once fell in love with a Phocian woman Corone the daughter of Coronaeus as she was walking along the shore He attempted to court her but she rejected him and ran away Poseidon then chased her down with the aim to rape her Athena witnessing all that took pity in the girl and changed her into a crow 216 When Zeus fell in love and pursued the goddess Asteria she transformed into a quail and flung herself into the sea to escape being raped by him Poseidon then equally rapacious picked up the chase where Zeus had left it and chased Asteria with the aim to force himself on her so Asteria had to transform for a second time to save herself this time into a small rocky island named Delos 217 List of offspring and their mothers Offspring MotherTriton Amphitrite 218 Benthesicyme 219 Rhodos 220 Antaeus Gaea 221 Charybdis 222 Laistryon 223 Despoina Demeter 224 Arion 225 Rhodos Aphrodite 226 Herophile 227 Pegasus Medusa 228 ChrysaorErgiscus Aba 229 Aethusa Alcyone 230 Hyrieus 231 Hyperenor 231 Hyperes 232 Anthas 233 Abas Arethusa 234 Halirrhothius Bathycleia 235 or Euryte 236 Chrysomallus Bisalpis or Bisaltis or Theophane 237 Minyas Callirhoe 238 Lycus Celaeno 239 NycteusEurypylus Eurytus LycaonAsopus possibly Kelousa 240 or Pero 241 Parnassus Cleodora 242 Eumolpus Chione 243 Phaeax Corcyra 244 Rhode possibly Halia 245 six sonsEirene Melantheia 246 Amycus Melia 247 MygdonAspledon Mideia 248 Astacus Olbia 249 Cenchrias Peirene 250 LechesEuadne Pitane 251 or LenaPhocus Pronoe 252 Athos Rhodope 253 Cychreus Salamis 254 Taras Satyria of Taras 255 Polyphemus Thoosa 256 Chios a nymph of Chios 257 Melas another nymph of Chios 257 AgelusMalinaDictys Agamede 234 ActorTheseus Aethra 258 Ogyges Alistra 259 Hippothoon Alope 260 Erythras Amphimedusa 261 Nauplius Amymone 262 Busiris Anippe 263 or Lysianassa 264 Idas Arene 265 Aeolus Antiope 234 or Arne 266 or Melanippe 267 Boeotus Melanippe 267 Oeoclus Ascre 268 Ancaeus Astypalaea 269 Eurypylus 270 Peratus Calchinia 271 Cycnus Calyce 234 or Harpale 272 or Scamandrodice 273 or a Nereid 274 Hopleus Canace 275 NireusAloeusEpopeusTriopasCelaenus Celaeno 276 Dictys Cerebia 277 PolydectesByzas Ceroessa 278 Chryses Chrysogeneia 279 Minyas 280 Phaunos Circe 281 Atlas Cleito 282 Eumelus Gadeirus AmpheresEuaemonMneseusAutochthonElasippusMestorAzaesDiaprepesScylla Crataeis 283 Celaeno Ergea 276 Euphemus Doris Oris 284 or Europa 285 or Mecionice 284 or Macionassa 286 Orion Euryale 287 Minyas Euryanassa 288 or Hermippe 289 or Tritogeneia 290 Eleius Eurycyda 291 or Eurypyle 292 Bellerophon Eurynome 293 or Eurymede 294 Almops Helle 295 Edonus Paion 296 Taphius Hippothoe 297 The Aloadae Ephialtes and Otus Iphimedeia 298 Sciron 299 300 Achaeus Larissa 301 PelasgusPythiusAlthepus Leis 302 Agenor Libya 303 Belus 303 Lelex 304 Delphus Melantho 305 Dyrrhachius Melissa 306 Metus Melite 234 The Molionides Cteatus Eurytus Molione 307 Myton Mytilene 308 Megareus Oenope 234 Sithon Ossa 309 Nausithous Periboea 310 Torone Phoenice 311 ProteusIalysus Rhode 312 CameirusLindusChthonius Syme 313 Leucon or Leuconoe Themisto 234 Pelias Tyro 314 NeleusCercyon Daughter of Amphictyon 315 Ialebion no mother mentioned 316 Bergion 316 Dicaeus 317 Syleus 318 Poltys 247 Sarpedon of Ainos 319 Amphimarus 320 Amyrus 321 Aon eponym of Aonia 322 Astraeus 323 Alcippe 323 Augeas 324 Byzenus 274 Calaurus 325 Caucon or Glaucon 326 Corynetes 327 Cromus 328 Cymopoleia 329 Erginus of Caria 330 Eryx 331 Euseirus 332 Geren 333 Lamia 334 Lamus 335 Messapus 336 Onchestus 337 Palaestinus 338 Paralus citation needed Phineus 339 Phorbas of Acarnania 340 Procrustes 327 Taenarus 341 Thasus 342 Thessalus 343 Ourea a nymph 344 Dorus 345 Laocoon 346 Telchines 347 GenealogyPoseidon s family tree 348 UranusGaiaUranus genitalsCronusRheaZeusHeraPOSEIDONHadesDemeterHestia a 349 b 350 AresHephaestusMetisAthena 351 LetoApolloArtemisMaiaHermesSemeleDionysusDione a 352 b 353 AphroditeIn literature and art nbsp Poseidon and Amphitryte Joseph Kuhn RegnierIn Greek art Poseidon rides a chariot that was pulled by a hippocampus or by horses that could ride on the sea He was associated with dolphins and three pronged fish spears tridents He lived in a palace on the ocean floor made of coral and gems In the Iliad Poseidon favors the Greeks and on several occasion takes an active part in the battle against the Trojan forces However in Book XX he rescues Aeneas after the Trojan prince is laid low by Achilles In the Odyssey Poseidon is notable for his hatred of Odysseus who blinded the god s son the Cyclops Polyphemus The enmity of Poseidon prevents Odysseus s return home to Ithaca for many years Odysseus is even told notwithstanding his ultimate safe return that to placate the wrath of Poseidon will require one more voyage on his part nbsp Neptune and Amphitrite by Jacob de Gheyn II late 1500s In the Aeneid Neptune is still resentful of the wandering Trojans but is not as vindictive as Juno and in Book I he rescues the Trojan fleet from the goddess s attempts to wreck it although his primary motivation for doing this is his annoyance at Juno s having intruded into his domain A hymn to Poseidon included among the Homeric Hymns is a brief invocation a seven line introduction that addresses the god as both mover of the earth and barren sea god of the deep who is also lord of Mount Helicon and wide Aegae 354 and specifies his twofold nature as an Olympian a tamer of horses and a saviour of ships In modern culture nbsp Poseidon as portrayed in the 1963 film Jason and the ArgonautsDue to his status as a Greek god Poseidon has made multiple appearances in modern and popular culture Books Poseidon has appeared in modern literature most notably in the Percy Jackson amp the Olympians series in which he plays a role as the titular character s father Poseidon appears in Gareth Hinds 2010 version of The Odyssey 355 Webcomics Poseidon appeared in Rachel Smythe s 2018 comic Lore Olympus 356 357 Films and television Poseidon has been very popular especially in god related films Poseidon appeared in the 1963 film Jason and the Argonauts 358 Poseidon appears in Percy Jackson amp the Olympians The Lightning Thief and Percy Jackson Sea of Monsters the two film adaptations of the book series 359 360 He also appears in the ABC television series Once Upon a Time as a supporting character in the second half of season four played by Ernie Hudson 361 In this version Poseidon is portrayed as the father of the Sea Witch Ursula Video games Poseidon has made multiple appearances in video games such as in God of War 3 by Sony In the game Poseidon appears as a boss for the player to defeat 362 He also appears in Smite as a playable character 363 In the video game Hades he is a character who will grant boons 364 Narrations nbsp Neptune s fountain in Presov Slovakia List of all pre modern retellings of myths relating to Poseidon Homer Odyssey 11 567 7th century BC Pindar Olympian Odes 1 476 BC Euripides Orestes 12 16 408 BC Bibliotheca Epitome 2 1 9 140 BC Ovid Metamorphoses VI 213 458 AD 8 Hyginus Fables 82 Tantalus 83 Pelops 1st century AD Pausanias Description of Greece 2 22 3 AD 160 176 Pindar Olympian Ode I 476 BC Sophocles 1 Electra 504 430 415 BC amp 2 Oenomaus Fr 433 408 BC Euripides Orestes 1024 1062 408 BC Bibliotheca Epitome 2 1 9 140 BC Diodorus Siculus Histories 4 73 1st century BC Hyginus Fables 84 Oinomaus Poetic Astronomy ii 1st century AD Pausanias Description of Greece 5 1 3 7 5 13 1 6 21 9 8 14 10 11 c AD 160 176 Philostratus the Elder Imagines I 30 Pelops AD 170 245 Philostratus the Younger Imagines 9 Pelops c 200 245 First Vatican Mythographer 22 Myrtilus Atreus et Thyestes Second Vatican Mythographer 146 OenomausGalleryPaintings nbsp Poseidon holding a trident Corinthian plaque 550 525 BC From Penteskouphia nbsp Poseidon on an Attic kalyx krater detail first half of the 5th century BC nbsp Poseidon and Amphitrite Ancient Roman fresco 50 79 AD Pompeii Italy nbsp Triumph of Poseidon and Amphitrite showing the couple in procession detail of a vast mosaic from Cirta Roman Africa ca 315 325 AD now at the Louvre nbsp Poseidon and Athena battle for control of Athens by Benvenuto Tisi 1512 Statues nbsp Poseidon statue in Gothenburg Sweden nbsp Poseidon statue in Presov Slovakia nbsp Poseidon statue in Bristol England nbsp The Neptunbrunnen fountain in Berlin nbsp Poseidon sculpture in Copenhagen DenmarkSee also nbsp Ancient Greece portal nbsp Myths portal nbsp Religion portalAmphitrite Despoina Demeter Erechtheus Family tree of the Greek gods Ionian League Panionium Ionian festival to Poseidon Trident of Poseidon Linear BNotes Jones Daniel 2003 1917 Peter Roach James Hartmann Jane Setter eds English Pronouncing Dictionary Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 3 12 539683 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Burkert 1985 pp 136 139 Seneca quaest Nat VI 6 Nilsson Vol I p 450 Nilsson Vol I p 450 Hesiod Theogony 456 a b Plato 1971 Timaeus and Critias London England Penguin Books Ltd pp 167 ISBN 9780140442618 a b Timaeus 24e 25a R G Bury translation Loeb Classical Library a b Also it has been interpreted that Plato or someone before him in the chain of the oral or written tradition of the report accidentally changed the very similar Greek words for bigger than meson and between mezon Luce J V 1969 The End of Atlantis New Light on an Old Legend London Thames and Hudson p 224 a b Burkert 1983 pp 149 157 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hard Greek mythology p 100 103 Hard p 100 103 a b c d e f g Smith Poseidon a b c Farnell Cults IV S 1ff a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t NiLsson Geschichte 446 448 a b Minoan Deaditerranean po se da o a b Nilsson Geschichte Vol I 444 445 Liddell amp Scott Poseidῶn A Greek English Lexicon Archived from the original on 9 October 2012 Pierre Chantraine Dictionnaire etymologique de la langue grecque Paris 1974 1980 4th s v Lorenzo Rocci Vocabolario Greco Italiano Milano Roma Napoli 1943 1970 s v Beekes Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill 2009 p 324 Adams John Paul Mycenean divinities List of handouts for California State University Classics 315 Retrieved 7 March 2011 Michael Janda pp 256 258 Plato Cratylus 402d 402e Beekes Etymological Dictionary of Greek p 324 van der Toorn Karel Becking Bob van der Horst Pieter Willem 1999 Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible second ed Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdman s Publishing Company ISBN 0 8028 2491 9 a b c d e Dietrich 2004 pp 180 185 Dietrich 2004 pp 175 180 220 a b A B Stallmith in GRBS 18 2008 p 117 119 The name of Demeter Thesmophoros p 116 a b Mylonas Mycenean age p 159 Wa na ssoi wa na ka te to the two queens and the king Wanax is best suited to Poseidon the special divinity of Pylos The identity of the two divinities addressed as wanassoi is uncertain Chadwick p 98 a b c d e f g Farnell Cults III 50 55 Ventris Michael Chadwick John 21 May 2015 Documents in Mycenean Greek Cambridge University Press p 242 ISBN 978 1 107 50341 0 Dietrich p 172 n 218 sfn error no target CITEREFDietrich help a b c Mylonas Mycenean age p 159 161 In Greek popular religion the chthonic Potniai Wanassoi and the Erinyes are closely related to the Eleusinian Demeter Dietrich p 179 180 The origins of Greek religion 189 190 a b c Dietrich 2004 pp 175 180 a b c d e Nilsson Geschicte p 449 450 a b c Bowra The Greek experience p 67 121 a b c Nilsson Geschichte Vol I 450 and 450A4 J Grimm Deutsche Mythology Horse and springs horse as a water spirit Pausanias 8 8 2 L H Jeffery 1976 Archaic Greece The Greek city states c 800 500 B C Ernest Benn Limited p 23 ISBN 0 510 03271 0 a b c d e Farnell CultsIII 53 Farnell CultsIII 53 a b Nilsson Geschichte Vol I p 100 101 Burkert Greek religion p 42 Nilsson Geschichte Vol I p 472 Anodos of Pherephata Tables 39 1 and 39 2 Dietrich 2004 pp 175 185 Dietrich 2004 p 167 a b Hard Greek mythology p 99 p 99 a b F Schachermeyer Poseidon und die Entstehung des Griechischen Gotter glaubens Nilsson p 444 Chadwick p 98 Jeffery The city states p 72 The proud title dikaios the Just in Thessaly was borne by a good brood mare of Pharsalus whose foals all resembled their sires gaiaochos ennosigaios holder of the earth earthshaker Smith Poseidon Iliad 13 43 Poseidawn gaiaochos ennosigaios carrying the earth earthshaker Iliad 13 43 Nilsson Geschicte Vol I p 450 a Thales Plutarch plac phil p 896 C b Anaximenes Aristotle Aristotle Meteorogica 27 p 365 All Inform by Seneca quest nat VI 6 10 20 Pindar Pyth II v 7 Nilsson Geschichte Vol I p 492 Pausanias 5 7 3 Poseidon God of the Sea www crystalinks com Archived from the original on 11 November 2017 Retrieved 6 November 2017 a b c d In 480 BC a great storm at Magnesia and then at Artemision heavily damaged the Persian fleet After the war the Greeks gave to Poseidon the epithet soter savior The agalma found near Artemision was probably a thank offering dedicated to Poseidon Soter savior Burkert Greek religion p 137 Helikonios Elikwnios The word may mean god of the eddying waves Nilsson Geschichte p 447 A6 The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Homeric Hymns Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Homeric Hymn to Poseidon Diodorus 19 79 1 a b The form is the same with Helikon Traditionally the adjective derives from the town Helike of Achaea However it is possible that it derives from helix twisted spiral and Poseidon would be the god of the eddying waves Nilsson Geschichte p 447 A6 a b Jeffery The city states p 208 a b Iliad 2 506 a b Katsonopoulou Dora 2002 Helike and her Territory in Historical Times Palla as 58 175 182 ISSN 0031 0387 Nilsson Geschichte p 450 A4 petraῖos a b c d e f g h i Nilsson Geschichte 449 452 Iliad 20 404 Pausanias 8 7 2 Karl Wilhelm Ludwig Muller s ed Papyrus Oxyrrhincus Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum 148 44 col 2 quoted by Robin Lane Fox Alexander the Great 1973 1986 168 and note Alexander also invoked other sea deities Thetis mother of his hero Achilles Nereus and the Nereids Pausanias 2 33 2 Hippocrates On the Sacred Disease Francis Adams tr Archived from the original on 24 May 2011 Retrieved 22 December 2007 Brunwasser Matthew 20 June 2013 The Greeks Who Worship Ancient Gods BBC Retrieved 24 July 2020 Souli Sarah 4 January 2018 Greece s Old Gods Are Ready for Your Sacrifice The Outline Retrieved 24 July 2020 Walter Burkert Peter Bing tr Homo Necans 1983 p 149 gives references for this observation Ἑrex8eys Iliad 13 21 Nilsson Vol I p 446 Iliad 10 751 Eὐrykreiwn Iliad 20 404 Ἑlikwnios Seven against Thebes 131 eὐrymedwn Diedrich p 185 n 305 Adams John Paul Mycenaean Divinities List of Handouts for Classics 315 Archived from the original on 1 October 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2006 Gaihoxos seisix8wn 8emelioyxos ἀsfaleios Suda tau 206 dwmatiths Pausanias doc Paus 3 14 7 amp fromdoc Perseus 3Atext 3A1999 01 0160 book chapter amp highlight Poseidon3 14 7 3 14 7 Kyanoxaiths Iliad 20 144 pelagios Nilsson Vol I p 449 Aἰgaios Strabo ix p 405 Virgil Aeneid iii 74 where Servius erroneously derives the name from the Aegean Sea Schmitz Leonhard 1867 Aegaeus In Smith William ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Vol 1 Boston Little Brown and Company p 24 pontomedwn kymo8alhs Smith gt Steven D 2019 Maria Kanellou Ivana Petrovic Chris Carey eds Art Nature Power Garden Epigrams from Nero to Heraclius Greek Epigram from the Hellenistic to the Early Byzantine Era Oxford University Press p 348 ISBN 978 0 192 57379 7 por8mios nbsp Leonhard Schmitz 1870 Epactaeus In Smith William ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Ἀlidoypos eὐtriaina a b Nilsson Vol I p 451 452 fykios Temeniths fytalmios ptor8ios ἲppeios Nilsson Vol I p 448 Pausanias 8 37 9 10 Pausanias 8 10 3 Pausanias 1 30 4 Damaῖos Pausanias 3 14 2 Ἱppokoyrios Petraῖos Nilsson Vol I p 447 krhnoyxos Oceanus is the primeval water the origin of all springs and rivers Nilsson Vol I p 450 Apollodorus 3 14 1 Nilsson Vol I p 450 451 genesios Pausanias 2 38 4 gene8lios fratrios Nilsson Vol I p 452 ἐpopths ἐmpylios Kronios semnos Pausanias 3 21 8 a b Nilsson Vol I p 446 448 contest at Sparta Gaaoxoi tayreios Jeffery The city states p 152 Thomas Kelly The Calaurian Amphictiony American Journal of Archaeology 70 2 April 1966 113 121 Tainaron a b Temple of Poseidon Tainaron Iliad 2 575 Iliad 2 533 ippeios Strabo 10 5 11 N Spivey 1997 Greek art Phaidon Press Limited p 61 a b Gebhard Elizabeth R and Hemans Frederick P University of Chicago Excavations at Isthmia 1989 I Hesperia Volume 61 Number 1 January 1992 pp 1 77 page 25 N Spivey p 111 112 Robertson 1945 Greek and Roman architecture pp 66 324 Robertson p 73 Thermon one column in the porch five columns on the facade Basilica Paestum three columns on the potch nine columns in the pteron facade Robertson p 73 Paestum second temple of Hera two columns in the porch Sounion two columns in the porch a b Robertson p 75 Salmon J B 1984 Wealthy Corinth A History of the City to 338 BC Oxford Clarendon Press page 61 Gebhard Elizabeth on The Evolution of a Pan Hellenic Sanctuary From Archaeology towards History at Isthmia pp 154 177 in Marinatos Nanno ed and Hagg Robin ed 1993 Greek Sanctuaries New Approaches London Routledge page 160 Robertson pp 75 76 325 The early temple of Hera known as the Basilica Archived from the original on 7 March 2019 Retrieved 26 February 2016 Robertson pp 136 327 a b Robertson p 327 Robertson pp 115 328 W Burkert Greek Religion 1987 KalaureiaKalaureia Poros 1894 and 1997 ongoing Kalaureia Poros 1894 and 1997 ongoing Swedish Institute at Athens Retrieved 19 November 2021 Pausanias 2 34 10 Swedish Institute p 446 Temple of Poseidon Tinos Hesiod Theogony 453 455 Hard p 67 a b Hard 2004 p 68 Grimal 1987 s v Cronus Homer Iliad 15 184 93 Archived 11 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine In the 2nd century AD a well with the name of Arne the lamb s well in the neighbourhood of Mantineia in Arcadia where old traditions lingered was shown to Pausanias Pausanias 8 8 2 Tzetzes ad Lycophron 644 Kerenyi 1951 p 182 Diodorus Siculus 5 55 a b Grimal 1987 pp 387 388 a b Kerenyi 1951 pp 183 184 Homer Odyssey 5 380 Burkert 1983 pp 143 149 Servius On Virgil s Georgics 1 18 scholia on Aristophanes s Clouds 1005 Wunder 1855 p note on verse 703 Apollodorus 3 14 2 Fowler 1988 p 98 n 5 Pausanias 2 1 6 amp 2 4 6 Dio Chrysostom Discourses 37 11 12 Grummond and Ridgway p 69 Helios higher position would correspond to the sun s location in the sky versus Poseidon s lower venue in the sea opposite Demeter on land Strabo Geographica 8 6 14 O Brien 1993 p 144 Grimal 1987 p 40 Hyginus Fabulae 169 Ogden Daniel 2021 The Oxford Handbook of Heracles Oxford University Press p 210 ISBN 978 0 19 065098 8 Grimal 1987 p 446 Walker 1995 p 85 a b Grimal 1987 p 291 a b c Hard 2004 p 67 Rose 1974 p 82 Ogden 2017 p 41 Williams amp Clare 2022 pp 160 161 Williams amp Clare 2022 p 162 a b Williams amp Clare 2022 p 139 Walker 1995 p 114 Hyginus Astronomica 2 17 1 Oppian Halieutica 1 38 Hesiod Theogony 930 933 Hard p 344 Apollonius Rhodius 2 1 ff amp 2 94 ff with scholia Great Books of the Western World Plato s Dialogues Biographical Note Diogenes Laertius Plato 1 Aelian On Animals 14 www attalus org Retrieved 11 January 2023 Ptolemy Hephaestion New History 1 in Photius 190 Smith s v Tyro Pausanias 8 25 5 Pausanias 8 25 7 Theogony 270 281 Most pp 24 25 where Poseidon is referred to as the dark haired one Ovid Metamorphoses 4 794 803 Ovid Metamorphoses 6 134 Ovid Metamorphoses 12 195 199 Apollodorus Epitome 1 22 Ovid Metamorphoses 2 569 88 Kramer Richards Arlene Spira Lucille 2015 Myths of Mighty Women Their Application in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy New York NY Karnac Books Ltd p 80 ISBN 9781782203049 Hesiod Theogony 930 933 Apollodorus 3 15 4 Pindar Olympian Odes 7 14 Apollodorus 2 5 11 Servius Commentary on Virgil s Aeneid 3 420 Hesiod Ehoiai fr 40a as cited in Oxyrhynchus Papyri 1358 fr 2 Pausanias 8 25 7 amp 8 42 1 Apollodorus 3 6 8 Pausanias 8 25 5 amp 8 25 7 Herodorus fr 62 Fowler Fowler 2000 p 253 apud schol Pindar Olympian Odes 7 24 5 Fowler 2013 p 591 Giovanni Boccaccio s Famous Women translated by Virginia Brown 2001 Cambridge and London Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 01130 9 p 42 Apollodorus 2 4 2 Suida s v Ergiske Apollodorus 3 10 3 a b Apollodorus 3 10 1 Pausanias 2 30 7 Pausanias 9 22 5 a b c d e f g Hyginus Fabulae 157 Scholia on Pindar Olympian Ode 10 83 quoted in Hesiod Ehoiai fr 64 Apollodorus 3 14 2 Hyginus Fabulae 188 Tzetzes on Lycophron 875 also said to be the daughter of Ergeus Pausanias 2 12 4 Apollodorus 3 12 6 Pausanias 10 6 13 Apollodorus 3 15 4 Diodorus Siculus 4 72 3 Diodorus Siculus 5 55 Plutarch Quaestiones Graecae 19 a b Apollodorus 2 5 9 Stephanus of Byzantium s v Aspledon Stephanus of Byzantium s v Astakos with a reference to Arrian Pausanias 2 2 2 Hyginus Fabulae 175 Scholia on Homer Iliad 2 517 Scholia on Theocritus Idylls 7 76 Diodorus Siculus 4 72 1 5 Probus on Virgil s Georgics 2 197 Homer Odyssey 1 70 73 a b Pausanias 7 4 8 Hyginus Fabulae 14 Tzetzes on Lycophron 1206 Hyginus Fabulae 187 Scholia on Homer Iliad 2 499 Apollodorus 2 1 5 2 7 4 Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica 1 133 139 Hyginus Fabulae 14 169 Plutarch Parallela minora 38 Apollodorus 2 5 11 Apollodorus 3 10 3 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 4 67 3 4 a b Hyginus Fabulae 186 Pausanias 9 29 1 Pausanias 7 4 1 Apollodorus 2 7 1 Pausanias 2 5 7 Scholia on Pindar Olympian Ode 2 147 Tzetzes on Lycophron 232 a b Murray John 1833 A Classical Manual being a Mythological Historical and Geographical Commentary on Pope s Homer and Dryden s Aeneid of Virgil with a Copious Index Albemarle Street London p 78 Apollodorus 1 7 4 a b Strabo Geographica 12 8 18 Tzetzes on Lycophron 838 Stephanus of Byzantium Ethnica s v Byzantion Pausanias 9 36 4 Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 3 1094 Nonnus Dionysiaca 13 328 ff Plato Critias 113d 144c Eustathius on Homer p 1714 a b Tzetzes Chiliades 2 43 Hyginus Fabulae 14 Pindar Pythian Ode 4 45 John Lempiere Argonautae Apollodorus 1 4 3 Scholia on Homer Odyssey 11 326 Hesiod fr 62 Loeb edition 1914 Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 1 230 3b Scholia on Pindar Pythian Odes 4 122 Pausanias 5 1 8 Conon Narrations 14 Hesiod Ehoiai fr 7 Apollodorus 1 9 3 Stephanus of Byzantium s v Almopia Pseudo Eratosthenes Catasterismi 19 Hyginus Poeticon astronomicon 2 20 Apollodorus 2 4 5 Homer Odyssey 11 305 8 Apollodorus Epitome 1 2 Tripp Edward The Meridian Handbook of Classical Mythology Meridian 1970 p 522 Dionysius of Halicarnassus Antiquitates Romanae 1 17 3 Pausanias 2 30 5 a b Apollodorus 2 1 4 Pausanias 1 44 3 Tzetzes on Lycophron 208 Stephanus of Byzantium s v Dyrrhakhion Apollodorus 2 7 2 Stephanus of Byzantium s v Mytilene Conon Narrations 10 Homer Odyssey 7 56 57 Stephanus of Byzantium s v Torōne Tzetzes on Lycophron 923 Diodorus Siculus 5 53 1 Apollodorus 4 68 3 Pausanias 1 14 3 a b Apollodorus Bibliotheca 2 5 10 eponym of Dicaea a city in Thrace as cited in Stephanus of Byzantium s v Dikaia Conon Narrations 17 Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 1 216 Pausanias 9 29 5 eponym of a river in Thessaly as cited in Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 1 596 Scholia on Statius Thebaid 1 34 a b Pseudo Plutarch De fluviis 21 1 Apollodorus 2 88 Stephanus of Byzantium s v Kalaureia Aelian Varia Historia 1 24 a b Hyginus Fabulae 38 Pausanias 2 1 3 Hesiod Theogony 817 819 Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 1 185 amp 2 896 Apollodorus 2 5 10 Antoninus Liberalis 22 Archived 2 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Stephanus of Byzantium s v Geren Pausanias 10 12 1 Eustathius ad Homer Odyssey p 1649 Virgil Aeneid 7 691 Pausanias 9 26 5 Pseudo Plutarch De fluviis 11 1 Apollodorus 1 9 21 Suda s v Phorbanteion Scholia on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 1 179 Apollodorus 3 1 1 Scholia on Pindar Olympian Odes 14 5 Hyginus Fabulae 161 Servius ad Virgil Aeneid 2 27 Tzetzes ad Lycophron 347 Nonnus Dionysiaca 14 36 ff This chart is based upon Hesiod s Theogony unless otherwise noted According to Homer Iliad 1 570 579 14 338 Odyssey 8 312 Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus see Gantz p 74 According to Hesiod Theogony 927 929 Archived 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone with no father see Gantz p 74 According to Hesiod Theogony 886 890 Archived 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine of Zeus children by his seven wives Athena was the first to be conceived but the last to be born Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena from his head see Gantz pp 51 52 83 84 According to Hesiod Theogony 183 200 Archived 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Aphrodite was born from Uranus severed genitals see Gantz pp 99 100 According to Homer Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus Iliad 3 374 20 105 Archived 2 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Odyssey 8 308 Archived 2 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine 320 and Dione Iliad 5 370 71 see Gantz pp 99 100 The ancient palace city that was replaced by Vergina The Odyssey Gareth Hinds Illustration Retrieved 1 February 2023 Lore Olympus Episode 2 www webtoons com Retrieved 1 February 2023 Smythe Rachel 2021 Lore Olympus Volume One Random House ISBN 978 0593160299 Chaffey Don 19 June 1963 Jason and the Argonauts Action Adventure Family Todd Armstrong Nancy Kovack Gary Raymond Charles H Schneer Productions retrieved 18 September 2023 Columbus Chris 12 February 2010 Percy Jackson amp the Olympians The Lightning Thief Adventure Family Fantasy Fox 2000 Pictures 1492 Pictures Sunswept Entertainment retrieved 10 September 2022 Freudenthal Thor 7 August 2013 Percy Jackson Sea of Monsters Adventure Family Fantasy Fox 2000 Pictures TSG Entertainment Sunswept Entertainment retrieved 10 September 2022 Andreeva Nellie 19 December 2014 Ernie Hudson To Play Poseidon On Once Upon a Time Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on 24 December 2014 Retrieved 24 December 2014 God Of War 15 Gods Kratos Took Down amp How He Did It TheGamer 10 April 2020 Retrieved 14 April 2022 SMITE Poseidon www smitegame com Retrieved 14 April 2022 Plante Corey 17 October 2020 1 single boon in Hades transforms Excalibur into the ultimate weapon Inverse Retrieved 11 January 2023 ReferencesApollodorus Apollodorus The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer F B A F R S in 2 Volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1921 ISBN 0 674 99135 4 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Apollonius of Rhodes Apollonius Rhodius the Argonautica translated by Robert Cooper Seaton W Heinemann 1912 Internet Archive Burkert Walter 1983 Homo Necans University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles 1983 ISBN 978 0 520 05875 0 Burkert Walter 1985 Greek Religion Wiley Blackwell 1985 ISBN 978 0 631 15624 6 Internet Archive Dietrich Bernard Clive 2004 The Origins of Greek Religion Bristol Phoenix Press ISBN 978 1 904675 31 0 Diodorus Siculus Library of History Volume III Books 4 59 8 translated by C H Oldfather Loeb Classical Library No 340 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1939 ISBN 978 0 674 99375 4 Online version at Harvard University Press Online version by Bill Thayer Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities Volume I Books 1 2 translated by Earnest Cary Loeb Classical Library No 319 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1937 Online version by Bill Thayer Online version at Harvard University Press Gantz Timothy Early Greek Myth A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources Johns Hopkins University Press 1996 Two volumes ISBN 978 0 8018 5360 9 Vol 1 ISBN 978 0 8018 5362 3 Vol 2 Grimal Pierre 1987 The Dictionary of Classical Mythology Translated by A R Maxwell Hyslop New York USA Wiley Blackwell ISBN 0 631 13209 0 Halieutica in Oppian Colluthus Tryphiodorus Oppian Colluthus and Tryphiodorus Translated by A W Mair edited by W H D Rouse Loeb Classical Library 219 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1928 Hard Robin 2004 The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology Based on H J Rose s Handbook of Greek Mythology Psychology Press ISBN 9780415186360 Hesiod Theogony in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Iliad with an English Translation by A T Murray PhD in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Odyssey with an English Translation by A T Murray PH D in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1919 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Hyginus Gaius Julius De Astronomica in The Myths of Hyginus edited and translated by Mary A Grant Lawrence University of Kansas Press 1960 Online version at ToposText Hyginus Gaius Julius Fabulae in The Myths of Hyginus edited and translated by Mary A Grant Lawrence University of Kansas Press 1960 Online version at ToposText Janda Michael Eleusis Das indogermanische Erbe der Mysterien Innsbruck 2000 pp 256 258 Innsbrucker Beitrage zur Sprachwissenschaft vol 96 Jenks Kathleen April 2003 Mythic themes clustered around Poseidon Neptune Myth ing links Archived from the original on 27 September 2006 Retrieved 13 January 2007 Kerenyi Karl 1951 The Gods of the Greeks London UK Thames and Hudson Most G W Hesiod Theogony Works and Days Testimonia Edited and translated by Glenn W Most Loeb Classical Library No 57 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2018 ISBN 978 0 674 99720 2 Online version at Harvard University Press O Brien Joan V 1993 The Transformation of Hera A Study of Ritual Hero and the Goddess in the Iliad Maryland USA Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc ISBN 0 8476 7807 5 Ogden Daniel 7 April 2017 The Legend of Seleucus Kingship Narrative and Mythmaking in the Ancient World Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 16478 9 Ovid Heroides in Heroides Amores Translated by Grant Showerman Revised by G P Goold Loeb Classical Library No 41 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1977 ISBN 978 0 674 99045 6 Online version at Harvard University Press Ovid Metamorphoses Brookes More Boston Cornhill Publishing Co 1922 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Pausanias Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W H S Jones Litt D and H A Ormerod M A in 4 Volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1918 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Plato Cratylus in Plato in Twelve Volumes Vol 12 translated by Harold N Fowler Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1925 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Plato Critias in Plato in Twelve Volumes Vol 9 translated by W R M Lamb Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1925 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Rose Herbert Jennings 1974 Gods and heroes of the Greeks London UK Methuen amp Co Ltd ISBN 0 450 02187 4 Seelig Beth J August 2002 The Rape of Medusa in the Temple of Athena Aspects of Triangulation in the Girl The International Journal of Psychoanalysis 83 4 895 911 doi 10 1516 3NLL UG13 TP2J 927M PMID 12204171 S2CID 28961886 Smith William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology London 1873 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Strabo Geography Editors H C Hamilton Esq W Falconer M A London George Bell amp Sons 1903 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Tzetzes John Scolia eis Lycophroon edited by Christian Gottfried Muller Sumtibus F C G Vogelii 1811 Internet Archive Virgil Aeneid Theodore C Williams trans Boston Houghton Mifflin Co 1910 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Walker Henry John 19 January 1995 Theseus and Athens Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 508908 1 Williams Hamish Clare Ross 17 November 2022 The Ancient Sea The Utopian and Catastrophic in Classical Narratives and their Reception Liverpool UK Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 1 80207 760 5 Wunder Eduard 1855 Sophocles Oedipus rex Oedipus Colonaeus Electra Antigone Vol I London Williams and Norgate External links nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Poseidon nbsp Media related to Poseidon at Wikimedia Commons Theoi com Poseidon GML Poseidon Gods found in Mycenaean Greece a table drawn up from Michael Ventris and John Chadwick Documents in Mycenaean Greek second edition Cambridge 1973 The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database images of Poseidon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poseidon amp oldid 1214798144, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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