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Tethys (mythology)

In Greek mythology, Tethys (/ˈtθɪs, ˈtɛθɪs/; Ancient Greek: Τηθύς, romanizedTēthýs) was a Titan daughter of Uranus and Gaia, a sister and wife of the Titan Oceanus, and the mother of the river gods and the Oceanids. Although Tethys had no active role in Greek mythology and no established cults,[2] she was depicted in mosaics decorating baths, pools, and triclinia in the Greek East, particularly in Antioch and its suburbs, either alone or with Oceanus.

Tethys
Member of the Titans
Mosaic (detail) of Tethys, from Philipopolis (modern Shahba, Syria), fourth-century AD, Shahba Museum.[1]
SymbolWinged brow
Personal information
ParentsUranus and Gaia
Siblings
  • Briareos
  • Cottus
  • Gyges
Other siblings
ConsortOceanus
OffspringMany river gods including:
Achelous, Alpheus, and Scamander

Many Oceanids including:

Callirhoe, Clymene, Eurynome, Doris, Idyia, Metis, Perseis, and Styx

Genealogy Edit

Tethys was one of the Titan offspring of Uranus (Sky) and Gaia (Earth).[3] Hesiod lists her Titan siblings as Oceanus, Coeus, Crius, Hyperion, Iapetus, Theia, Rhea, Themis, Mnemosyne, Phoebe, and Cronus.[4] Tethys married her brother Oceanus, an enormous river encircling the world, and was by him the mother of numerous sons (the river gods) and numerous daughters (the Oceanids).[5]

According to Hesiod, there were three thousand (i.e. innumerable) river gods.[6] These included Achelous, the god of the Achelous River, the largest river in Greece, who gave his daughter in marriage to Alcmaeon[7] and was defeated by Heracles in a wrestling contest for the right to marry Deianira;[8] Alpheus, who fell in love with the nymph Arethusa and pursued her to Syracuse, where she was transformed into a spring by Artemis;[9] and Scamander who fought on the side of the Trojans during the Trojan War and, offended when Achilles polluted his waters with a large number of Trojan corpses, overflowed his banks nearly drowning Achilles.[10]

According to Hesiod, there were also three thousand Oceanids.[11] These included Metis, Zeus' first wife, whom Zeus impregnated with Athena and then swallowed;[12] Eurynome, Zeus' third wife, and mother of the Charites;[13] Doris, the wife of Nereus and mother of the Nereids;[14] Callirhoe, the wife of Chrysaor and mother of Geryon;[15] Clymene, the wife of Iapetus, and mother of Atlas, Menoetius, Prometheus, and Epimetheus;[16] Perseis, wife of Helios and mother of Circe and Aeetes;[17] Idyia, wife of Aeetes and mother of Medea;[18] and Styx, goddess of the river Styx, and the wife of Pallas and mother of Zelus, Nike, Kratos, and Bia.[19]

Primeval mother? Edit

Passages in book 14 of the Iliad, called the Deception of Zeus, suggest the possibility that Homer knew a tradition in which Oceanus and Tethys (rather than Uranus and Gaia, as in Hesiod) were the primeval parents of the gods.[26] Twice Homer has Hera describe the pair as "Oceanus, from whom the gods are sprung, and mother Tethys".[27] According to M. L. West, these lines suggests a myth in which Oceanus and Tethys are the "first parents of the whole race of gods."[28] However, as Timothy Gantz points out, "mother" could simply refer to the fact that Tethys was Hera's foster mother for a time, as Hera tells us in the lines immediately following, while the reference to Oceanus as the genesis of the gods "might be simply a formulaic epithet indicating the numberless rivers and springs descended from Okeanos" (compare with Iliad 21.195–197).[29] But, in a later Iliad passage, Hypnos also describes Oceanus as "genesis for all", which, according to Gantz, is hard to understand as meaning other than that, for Homer, Oceanus was the father of the Titans.[30]

Plato, in his Timaeus, provides a genealogy (probably Orphic) which perhaps reflected an attempt to reconcile this apparent divergence between Homer and Hesiod, in which Uranus and Gaia are the parents of Oceanus and Tethys, and Oceanus and Tethys are the parents of Cronus and Rhea and the other Titans, as well as Phorcys.[31] In his Cratylus, Plato quotes Orpheus as saying that Oceanus and Tethys were "the first to marry", possibly also reflecting an Orphic theogony in which Oceanus and Tethys—rather than Uranus and Gaia—were the primeval parents.[32] Plato's apparent inclusion of Phorkys as a Titan (being the brother of Cronus and Rhea), and the mythographer Apollodorus's inclusion of Dione, the mother of Aphrodite by Zeus, as a thirteenth Titan,[33] suggests an Orphic tradition in which Hesiod's twelve Titans were the offspring of Oceanus and Tethys, with Phorkys and Dione taking the place of Oceanus and Tethys.[34]

According to Epimenides, the first two beings, Night and Aer, produced Tartarus, who in turn produced two Titans (possibly Oceanus and Tethys) from whom came the world egg.[35]

Mythology Edit

 
Mosaic (detail) of Tethys from Antioch, Turkey, Hatay Archaeology Museum 9095.[36]

Tethys played no active part in Greek mythology. The only early story concerning Tethys is what Homer has Hera briefly relate in the Iliad’s Deception of Zeus passage.[37] There, Hera says that when Zeus was in the process of deposing Cronus, she was given by her mother Rhea to Tethys and Oceanus for safekeeping and that they "lovingly nursed and cherished me in their halls".[38] Hera relates this while dissembling that she is on her way to visit Oceanus and Tethys in the hopes of reconciling her foster parents, who are angry with each other and are no longer having sexual relations.

Originally Oceanus' consort, at a later time Tethys came to be identified with the sea, and in Hellenistic and Roman poetry Tethys' name came to be used as a poetic term for the sea.[39]

The only other story involving Tethys is an apparently late astral myth concerning the polar constellation Ursa Major (the Great Bear), which was thought to represent the catasterism of Callisto who was transformed into a bear and placed by Zeus among the stars. The myth explains why the constellation never sets below the horizon, saying that since Callisto had been Zeus's lover, she was forbidden by Tethys from "touching Ocean's deep" out of concern for her foster-child Hera, Zeus's jealous wife.[40]

Claudian wrote that Tethys nursed two of her nephlings in her breast, Helios and Selene, the children of her siblings Hyperion and Theia, during their infancy, when their light was weak and had not yet grown into their older, more luminous selves.[41]

In Ovid's Metamorphoses, Tethys turns Aesacus into a diving bird.[42]

Tethys was sometimes confused with another sea goddess, the sea-nymph Thetis, wife of Peleus and mother of Achilles.[43]

Tethys as Tiamat Edit

M. L. West detects in the Iliad's Deception of Zeus passage an allusion to a possible archaic myth "according to which [Tethys] was the mother of the gods, long estranged from her husband," speculating that the estrangement might refer to a separation of "the upper and lower waters ... corresponding to that of heaven and earth," which parallels the story of "Apsū and Tiamat in the Babylonian cosmology, the male and female waters, which were originally united (En. El. I. 1 ff.)," but that, "By Hesiod's time the myth may have been almost forgotten and Tethys remembered only as the name of Oceanus' wife."[44] This possible correspondence between Oceanus and Tethys, and Apsū and Tiamat has been noticed by several authors, with Tethys' name possibly having been derived from that of Tiamat.[45]

Iconography Edit

 
Detail of Tethys attending the wedding of Peleus and Thetis on an Attic black-figure dinos by Sophilos, c. 600–550 BC, British Museum 971.11–1.1.[46]

Representations of Tethys before the Roman period are rare.[47] Tethys appears, identified by inscription (ΘΕΘΥΣ), as part of an illustration of the wedding of Peleus and Thetis on the early sixth-century BC Attic black-figure "Erskine" dinos by Sophilos (British Museum 1971.111–1.1).[48] Accompanied by Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth, Tethys follows close behind Oceanus at the end of a procession of gods invited to the wedding. Tethys is also conjectured to be represented in a similar illustration of the wedding of Peleus and Thetis depicted on the early sixth-century BC Attic black-figure François Vase (Florence 4209).[49] Tethys probably also appeared as one of the gods fighting the Giants in the Gigantomachy frieze of the second-century BC Pergamon Altar.[50] Only fragments of the figure remain: a part of a chiton below Oceanus' left arm and a hand clutching a large tree branch visible behind Oceanus' head.

 
Mosaic (detail) of Tethys and Oceanus, excavated from the House of Menander, Daphne (modern Harbiye, Turkey), third century AD, Hatay Archaeology Museum 1013.[51]

During the second to fourth centuries AD, Tethys—sometimes with Oceanus, sometimes alone—became a relatively frequent feature of mosaics decorating baths, pools, and triclinia in the Greek East, particularly in Antioch and its suburbs.[52] Her identifying attributes are wings sprouting from her forehead, a rudder/oar, and a ketos, a creature from Greek mythology with the head of a dragon and the body of a snake.[53] The earliest of these mosaics, identified as Tethys, decorated a triclinium overlooking a pool, excavated from the House of the Calendar in Antioch, dated to shortly after AD 115 (Hatay Archaeology Museum 850).[54] Tethys, reclining on the left, with Oceanus reclining on the right, has long hair, a winged forehead, and is nude to the waist with draped legs. A ketos twines around her raised right arm. Other mosaics of Tethys with Oceanus include Hatay Archaeology Museum 1013 (from the House of Menander, Daphne),[55] Hatay Archaeology Museum 9095,[56] and Baltimore Museum of Art 1937.126 (from the House of the Boat of Psyches: triclinium).[57]

In other mosaics, Tethys appears without Oceanus. One of these is a fourth-century AD mosaic from a pool (probably a public bath) found at Antioch, now installed in Boston, Massachusetts at the Harvard Business School's Morgan Hall and formerly at Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C. (Dumbarton Oaks 76.43).[58] Besides the Sophilos dinos, this is the only other representation of Tethys identified by inscription. Here Tethys, with a winged forehead, rises from the sea bare-shouldered, with long dark hair parted in the middle. A golden rudder rests against her right shoulder. Others include Hatay Archaeology Museum 9097,[59] Shahba Museum (in situ),[60] Baltimore Museum of Art 1937.118 (from the House of the Boat of Psyches: Room six),[61] and Memorial Art Gallery 42.2.[62]

Toward the end of the period represented by these mosaics, Tethys' iconography appears to merge with that of another sea goddess Thalassa, the Greek personification of the sea (thalassa being the Greek word for the sea).[63] Such a transformation would be consistent with the frequent use of Tethys' name as a poetic reference to the sea in Roman poetry (see above).

Modern use of the name Edit

Tethys, a moon of the planet Saturn, and the prehistoric Tethys Ocean are named after this goddess.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ LIMC 7683 (Tethys I (S) 10).
  2. ^ Burkert, p. 92.
  3. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 126 ff.; Caldwell, p. 35 line 126-128. Compare with Diodorus Siculus, 5.66.1–3, which says that the Titans (including Tethys) "were born, as certain writers of myths relate, of Uranus and Gê, but according to others, of one of the Curetes and Titaea, from whom as their mother they derive the name".
  4. ^ Apollodorus adds Dione to this list, while Diodorus Siculus leaves out Theia.
  5. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 337–370; Homer, Iliad 200–210, 14.300–304, 21.195–197; Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound 137–138 (Sommerstein, pp. 458, 459), Seven Against Thebes 310–311 (Sommerstein, pp. 184, 185); Hyginus, Fabulae Preface (Smith and Trzaskoma, p. 95). For Tethys as mother of the river gods, see also: Diodorus Siculus, 4.69.1, 72.1. For Tethys as mother of the Oceanids, see also: Apollodorus, 1.2.2; Callimachus, Hymn 3.40–45 (Mair, pp. 62, 63); Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica, 242–244 (Seaton, pp. 210, 211). For a discussion of these offspring of Oceanus and Tethys, see Hard, pp. 40–43.
  6. ^ Hard, p. 40; Hesiod, Theogony 364–368, which says there are "as many" rivers as the "three thousand neat-ankled daughters of Ocean", and at 330–345, names 25 of these river gods: Nilus, Alpheus, Eridanos, Strymon, Maiandros, Istros, Phasis, Rhesus, Achelous, Nessos, Rhodius, Haliacmon, Heptaporus, Granicus, Aesepus, Simoeis, Peneus, Hermus, Caicus, Sangarius, Ladon, Parthenius, Evenus, Aldeskos, and Scamander. Compare with Acusilaus fr. 1 Fowler [= FGrHist 2 1 = Vorsokr. 9 B 21 = Macrobius, Saturnalia 5.18.9–10], which says that from Oceanus and Tethys, "spring three thousand rivers".
  7. ^ Apollodorus, 3.7.5.
  8. ^ Apollodorus, 1.8.1, 2.7.5.
  9. ^ Smith, s.v. "Alpheius".
  10. ^ Homer, Iliad 20.74, 21.211 ff..
  11. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 346–366, which names 41 Oceanids: Peitho, Admete, Ianthe, Electra, Doris, Prymno, Urania, Hippo, Clymene, Rhodea, Callirhoe, Zeuxo, Clytie, Idyia, Pasithoe, Plexaura, Galaxaura, Dione, Melobosis, Thoe, Polydora, Cerceis, Plouto, Perseis, Ianeira, Acaste, Xanthe, Petraea, Menestho, Europa, Metis, Eurynome, Telesto, Chryseis, Asia, Calypso, Eudora, Tyche, Amphirho, Ocyrhoe, and Styx.
  12. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 886–900; Apollodorus, 1.3.6
  13. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 907–909; Apollodorus, 1.3.1. Other sources give the Charites other parents, see Smith, s.v. "Charis".
  14. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 240–264; Apollodorus, 1.2.7.
  15. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 286–288; Apollodorus, 2.5.10.
  16. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 351, however according to Apollodorus, 1.2.3, another Oceanid, Asia was their mother by Iapetus;
  17. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 956–957; Apollodorus, 1.9.1.
  18. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 958–962; Apollodorus, 1.9.23.
  19. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 383–385; Apollodorus, 1.2.4.
  20. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 132–138, 337–411, 453–520, 901–906, 915–920; Caldwell, pp. 8–11, tables 11–14.
  21. ^ One of the Oceanid daughters of Oceanus and Tethys, at Hesiod, Theogony 351. However, according to Apollodorus, 1.2.3, a different Oceanid, Asia was the mother, by Iapetus, of Atlas, Menoetius, Prometheus, and Epimetheus.
  22. ^ Although usually, as here, the daughter of Hyperion and Theia, in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes (4), 99–100, Selene is instead made the daughter of Pallas the son of Megamedes.
  23. ^ According to Plato, Critias, 113d–114a, Atlas was the son of Poseidon and the mortal Cleito.
  24. ^ In Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound 18, 211, 873 (Sommerstein, pp. 444–445 n. 2, 446–447 n. 24, 538–539 n. 113) Prometheus is made to be the son of Themis.
  25. ^ Although, at Hesiod, Theogony 217, the Moirai are said to be the daughters of Nyx (Night).
  26. ^ Fowler 2013, pp. 8, 11; Hard, pp. 36–37, p. 40; West 1997, p. 147; Gantz, p. 11; Burkert 1995, pp. 91–92; West 1983, pp. 119–120.
  27. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.201, 302 [= 201].
  28. ^ West 1997, p. 147.
  29. ^ Gantz, p. 11.
  30. ^ Gantz, p. 11; Homer, Iliad 14.245.
  31. ^ Gantz, pp. 11–12; West 1983, pp. 117–118; Fowler 2013, p. 11; Plato, Timaeus 40d–e.
  32. ^ West 1983, pp. 118–120; Fowler 2013, p. 11; Plato, Cratylus 402b [= Orphic fr. 15 Kern].
  33. ^ Apollodorus, 1.1.3, 1.3.1.
  34. ^ Gantz, p. 743.
  35. ^ Fowler 2013, pp. 7–8.
  36. ^ LIMC 7630 (Tethys I (S) 16).
  37. ^ Gantz, p. 28: "For Tethys, there are no myths at all, save for Hera’s comment in the ‘’Iliad’’ that she was given by Rhea to Tethys to raise when Zeus was deposing Kronos"; Burkert, p. 92: “Tethys is in no way an active figure in Greek mythology”; West 1997, p. 147: "In early poetry she is merely an inactive mythological figure who lives with Oceanus and has borne his children."
  38. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.201–204.
  39. ^ West 1966, p. 204 136. Τῃθύν; West 1997, p. 147; Hard, p. 40; Matthews, p. 199. According to Matthews the "metonymy 'Tethys' = 'sea' seems to occur first in Hellenistic poetry", see for example Lycophron, Alexandria 1069 1069 (Mair, pp. 582–583)), becoming a frequent occurrence in Latin poetry, for example appearing nine times in Lucan.
  40. ^ Hard, p. 40; Hyginus, Fabulae 177; Astronomica 2.1; Ovid, Fasti 2.191–192 (Frazer, pp. 70, 71); Metamorphoses 2.508–530.
  41. ^ Claudian, Rape of Persephone Book II
  42. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 11.784–795.
  43. ^ This happened "even in antiquity", according to Burkert, p. 92.
  44. ^ West 1966, p. 204; see also West 1983, pp. 120–121.
  45. ^ West 1997, pp. 147–148; Burkert, pp. 91–93. For a discussion of the possibility of oriental sources for the Illiad's Deception of Zeus passage, see Budelmann and Haubold, pp. 20–22.
  46. ^ LIMC 6487 (Tethys I (S) 1); Beazley Archive 350099; Avi 4748.
  47. ^ For a discussion of Tethy's iconography see Jentel, pp. 1193–1195.
  48. ^ LIMC 6487 (Tethys I (S) 1); Beazley Archive 350099; Avi 4748; Gantz, pp. 28, 229–230; Burkert, p. 202; Williams, pp. 27 fig. 34, 29, 31–32; Perseus: London 1971.11–1.1 (Vase); British Museum 1971,1101.1.
  49. ^ LIMC 1602 (Okeanos 3); Beazley Archive 300000; Perseus Florence 4209 (Vase). The identification as Tethys is accepted by Beazley, p. 27, and Gantz, p. 28, but found "unconvincing" by Carpenter p. 6. This vase is unremarked upon by Jentel, who says that the Sophilos dinos Tethys (LIMC Tethys I (S) 1) is the "seule representation de [Tethys] à l'époque archaique".
  50. ^ LIMC 617 (Tethys I (S) 2); Jentel, p. 1195; Queyrel, p. 67; Pollitt, p. 96.
  51. ^ LIMC 659 (Tethys I (S) 15).
  52. ^ For a discussion of this group of mosaics, see Jentel, 1194–1195, which lists 15 Roman period Tethys mosaics (Tethys I (S) 3–17), and Wages, pp. 119–128. Doro Levi identified the sea goddess in the Antioch mosaics as Thetis, however according to Wages, p. 126, "Neither the inscriptions nor the attributes in this group of mosaics support Doro Levi's identification". See also Kondoleon, p. 152 with p. 153 n. 2, which, in discussing one of these mosaics (Baltimore Museum of Art 1937.118, see below), says that "although the Baltimore goddess does not have any other attributes or label, she is convincingly identified as Tethys" saying further (in the note) that "Levi identified her as Thetis without much evidence, but Wages makes a good argument for identifying her as Tethys". Jentel identifies these mosaics as Tethys, while noting, p. 1195, that "Dès l'Antiquité et encore actuellement, certains auteurs ont confound [Tethys] avec la Néréeid Thetis."
  53. ^ Jentel, p. 1195; Wages, p. 125.
  54. ^ LIMC 735 (Tethys I (S) 5); Wages, pp. 120–124, fig. 2, p. 127; Hatay Archaeology Museum 850 2016-08-15 at the Wayback Machine; Campbell 1988, pp. 60–61 (identified as Thetis).
  55. ^ LIMC 659 (Tethys I (S) 15); Wages, p. 123 n. 24, fig. 8, p. 127; Hatay Archaeology Museum 1013 2016-08-15 at the Wayback Machine.
  56. ^ LIMC 7630 (Tethys I (S) 16); Hatay Archaeology Museum 9095 2016-08-15 at the Wayback Machine.
  57. ^ LIMC 661 (Tethys I (S) 17); Wages, p. 127; Baltimore Museum of Art 1937.126 2016-08-17 at the Wayback Machine.
  58. ^ LIMC Tethys I (S) 7; Wages, 119–128; Jentel, p. 1195; Campbell 1988, p. 49.
  59. ^ 7916 (Tethys I (S) 3*); Wages, pp. 125, 128; Eraslan, p. 458; Hatay Archaeology Museum 9097.
  60. ^ LIMC 7683 (Tethys I (S) 10); Wages, p. 122, fig. 7, p. 125; Dunabin, p. 166.
  61. ^ LIMC 7627 (Tethys I (S) 11); Kondoleon, pp. 38–39; Wages, pp. 120–121, figs. 3, 4, p. 127; Baltimore Museum of Art 1937.118.
  62. ^ LIMC 7628 (Tethys I (S) 12*); Wages, p. 127; Memorial Art Gallery 42.2.
  63. ^ Wages, pp. 124–126; Jentel, p. 1195; Cahn, p. 1199; Campbell 1998, p. 20.

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  • 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.
  • Plato, Timaeus 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.
  • Claudian, Rape of Persephone in Claudian: Volume II. Translated by Platnauer, Maurice. Loeb Classical Library Volume 136. Cambridge, MA. Harvard Univserity Press. 1922.
  • Pollitt, Jerome Jordan, Art in the Hellenistic Age, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521276726.
  • Queyrel, François, L'Autel de Pergame: Images et pouvoir en Grèce d'Asie, Paris: Éditions A. et J. Picard, 2005. ISBN 2-7084-0734-1.
  • Smith, William; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London (1873).
  • Wages, Sara M., “A Note on the Dumbarton Oaks ‘Tethys Mosaic’” in: Dumbarton Oaks Papers 40 (1986), pp. 119–128.
  • West, M. L. (1966), Hesiod: Theogony, Oxford University Press.
  • West, M. L. (1983), The Orphic Poems, Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-814854-8.
  • West, M. L. (1997), The East Face of Helicon: West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-815042-3.
  • Williams, Dyfri, "Sophilos in the British Museum" in Greek Vases In The J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Publications, 1983, pp. 9–34. ISBN 0-89236-058-5.

External links Edit

  • TETHYS from The Theoi Project
  • TETHYS from greekmythology.com
  • TETHYS from Mythopedia

tethys, mythology, confused, with, nymph, thetis, themis, personification, other, uses, tethys, disambiguation, thetis, disambiguation, greek, mythology, tethys, ancient, greek, Τηθύς, romanized, tēthýs, titan, daughter, uranus, gaia, sister, wife, titan, ocea. Not be confused with the sea nymph Thetis or Themis the personification of law For other uses see Tethys disambiguation or Thetis disambiguation In Greek mythology Tethys ˈ t iː 8 ɪ s ˈ t ɛ 8 ɪ s Ancient Greek Th8ys romanized Tethys was a Titan daughter of Uranus and Gaia a sister and wife of the Titan Oceanus and the mother of the river gods and the Oceanids Although Tethys had no active role in Greek mythology and no established cults 2 she was depicted in mosaics decorating baths pools and triclinia in the Greek East particularly in Antioch and its suburbs either alone or with Oceanus TethysMember of the TitansMosaic detail of Tethys from Philipopolis modern Shahba Syria fourth century AD Shahba Museum 1 SymbolWinged browPersonal informationParentsUranus and GaiaSiblingsTitans CriusCronusCoeusHyperionIapetusMnemosyneOceanusPhoebeRheaTheiaThemis Hecatoncheires BriareosCottusGyges Cyclopes ArgesBrontesSteropes Other siblings GigantesErinyes the Furies Meliae Half siblings AphroditeEurybiaCetoNereusPhorcysPontusPythonThaumasTyphonUranusConsortOceanusOffspringMany river gods including Achelous Alpheus and ScamanderMany Oceanids including Callirhoe Clymene Eurynome Doris Idyia Metis Perseis and Styx Contents 1 Genealogy 1 1 Primeval mother 2 Mythology 3 Tethys as Tiamat 4 Iconography 5 Modern use of the name 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksGenealogy EditTethys was one of the Titan offspring of Uranus Sky and Gaia Earth 3 Hesiod lists her Titan siblings as Oceanus Coeus Crius Hyperion Iapetus Theia Rhea Themis Mnemosyne Phoebe and Cronus 4 Tethys married her brother Oceanus an enormous river encircling the world and was by him the mother of numerous sons the river gods and numerous daughters the Oceanids 5 According to Hesiod there were three thousand i e innumerable river gods 6 These included Achelous the god of the Achelous River the largest river in Greece who gave his daughter in marriage to Alcmaeon 7 and was defeated by Heracles in a wrestling contest for the right to marry Deianira 8 Alpheus who fell in love with the nymph Arethusa and pursued her to Syracuse where she was transformed into a spring by Artemis 9 and Scamander who fought on the side of the Trojans during the Trojan War and offended when Achilles polluted his waters with a large number of Trojan corpses overflowed his banks nearly drowning Achilles 10 According to Hesiod there were also three thousand Oceanids 11 These included Metis Zeus first wife whom Zeus impregnated with Athena and then swallowed 12 Eurynome Zeus third wife and mother of the Charites 13 Doris the wife of Nereus and mother of the Nereids 14 Callirhoe the wife of Chrysaor and mother of Geryon 15 Clymene the wife of Iapetus and mother of Atlas Menoetius Prometheus and Epimetheus 16 Perseis wife of Helios and mother of Circe and Aeetes 17 Idyia wife of Aeetes and mother of Medea 18 and Styx goddess of the river Styx and the wife of Pallas and mother of Zelus Nike Kratos and Bia 19 Tethys immediate family according to Hesiod s Theogony 20 UranusGaiaPontusOceanusTETHYSCoeusPhoebeCriusEurybiaThe RiversThe OceanidsLetoAsteriaAstraeusPallasPersesHyperionTheiaIapetusClymene 21 HeliosSelene 22 EosAtlas 23 MenoetiusPrometheus 24 EpimetheusCronusRheaHestiaDemeterHeraHadesPoseidonZeusThemis Zeus MnemosyneThe HoraeThe Moirai 25 The MusesPrimeval mother Edit Passages in book 14 of the Iliad called the Deception of Zeus suggest the possibility that Homer knew a tradition in which Oceanus and Tethys rather than Uranus and Gaia as in Hesiod were the primeval parents of the gods 26 Twice Homer has Hera describe the pair as Oceanus from whom the gods are sprung and mother Tethys 27 According to M L West these lines suggests a myth in which Oceanus and Tethys are the first parents of the whole race of gods 28 However as Timothy Gantz points out mother could simply refer to the fact that Tethys was Hera s foster mother for a time as Hera tells us in the lines immediately following while the reference to Oceanus as the genesis of the gods might be simply a formulaic epithet indicating the numberless rivers and springs descended from Okeanos compare with Iliad 21 195 197 29 But in a later Iliad passage Hypnos also describes Oceanus as genesis for all which according to Gantz is hard to understand as meaning other than that for Homer Oceanus was the father of the Titans 30 Plato in his Timaeus provides a genealogy probably Orphic which perhaps reflected an attempt to reconcile this apparent divergence between Homer and Hesiod in which Uranus and Gaia are the parents of Oceanus and Tethys and Oceanus and Tethys are the parents of Cronus and Rhea and the other Titans as well as Phorcys 31 In his Cratylus Plato quotes Orpheus as saying that Oceanus and Tethys were the first to marry possibly also reflecting an Orphic theogony in which Oceanus and Tethys rather than Uranus and Gaia were the primeval parents 32 Plato s apparent inclusion of Phorkys as a Titan being the brother of Cronus and Rhea and the mythographer Apollodorus s inclusion of Dione the mother of Aphrodite by Zeus as a thirteenth Titan 33 suggests an Orphic tradition in which Hesiod s twelve Titans were the offspring of Oceanus and Tethys with Phorkys and Dione taking the place of Oceanus and Tethys 34 According to Epimenides the first two beings Night and Aer produced Tartarus who in turn produced two Titans possibly Oceanus and Tethys from whom came the world egg 35 Mythology Edit nbsp Mosaic detail of Tethys from Antioch Turkey Hatay Archaeology Museum 9095 36 Tethys played no active part in Greek mythology The only early story concerning Tethys is what Homer has Hera briefly relate in the Iliad s Deception of Zeus passage 37 There Hera says that when Zeus was in the process of deposing Cronus she was given by her mother Rhea to Tethys and Oceanus for safekeeping and that they lovingly nursed and cherished me in their halls 38 Hera relates this while dissembling that she is on her way to visit Oceanus and Tethys in the hopes of reconciling her foster parents who are angry with each other and are no longer having sexual relations Originally Oceanus consort at a later time Tethys came to be identified with the sea and in Hellenistic and Roman poetry Tethys name came to be used as a poetic term for the sea 39 The only other story involving Tethys is an apparently late astral myth concerning the polar constellation Ursa Major the Great Bear which was thought to represent the catasterism of Callisto who was transformed into a bear and placed by Zeus among the stars The myth explains why the constellation never sets below the horizon saying that since Callisto had been Zeus s lover she was forbidden by Tethys from touching Ocean s deep out of concern for her foster child Hera Zeus s jealous wife 40 Claudian wrote that Tethys nursed two of her nephlings in her breast Helios and Selene the children of her siblings Hyperion and Theia during their infancy when their light was weak and had not yet grown into their older more luminous selves 41 In Ovid s Metamorphoses Tethys turns Aesacus into a diving bird 42 Tethys was sometimes confused with another sea goddess the sea nymph Thetis wife of Peleus and mother of Achilles 43 Tethys as Tiamat EditM L West detects in the Iliad s Deception of Zeus passage an allusion to a possible archaic myth according to which Tethys was the mother of the gods long estranged from her husband speculating that the estrangement might refer to a separation of the upper and lower waters corresponding to that of heaven and earth which parallels the story of Apsu and Tiamat in the Babylonian cosmology the male and female waters which were originally united En El I 1 ff but that By Hesiod s time the myth may have been almost forgotten and Tethys remembered only as the name of Oceanus wife 44 This possible correspondence between Oceanus and Tethys and Apsu and Tiamat has been noticed by several authors with Tethys name possibly having been derived from that of Tiamat 45 Iconography Edit nbsp Detail of Tethys attending the wedding of Peleus and Thetis on an Attic black figure dinos by Sophilos c 600 550 BC British Museum 971 11 1 1 46 Representations of Tethys before the Roman period are rare 47 Tethys appears identified by inscription 8E8YS as part of an illustration of the wedding of Peleus and Thetis on the early sixth century BC Attic black figure Erskine dinos by Sophilos British Museum 1971 111 1 1 48 Accompanied by Eileithyia the goddess of childbirth Tethys follows close behind Oceanus at the end of a procession of gods invited to the wedding Tethys is also conjectured to be represented in a similar illustration of the wedding of Peleus and Thetis depicted on the early sixth century BC Attic black figure Francois Vase Florence 4209 49 Tethys probably also appeared as one of the gods fighting the Giants in the Gigantomachy frieze of the second century BC Pergamon Altar 50 Only fragments of the figure remain a part of a chiton below Oceanus left arm and a hand clutching a large tree branch visible behind Oceanus head nbsp Mosaic detail of Tethys and Oceanus excavated from the House of Menander Daphne modern Harbiye Turkey third century AD Hatay Archaeology Museum 1013 51 During the second to fourth centuries AD Tethys sometimes with Oceanus sometimes alone became a relatively frequent feature of mosaics decorating baths pools and triclinia in the Greek East particularly in Antioch and its suburbs 52 Her identifying attributes are wings sprouting from her forehead a rudder oar and a ketos a creature from Greek mythology with the head of a dragon and the body of a snake 53 The earliest of these mosaics identified as Tethys decorated a triclinium overlooking a pool excavated from the House of the Calendar in Antioch dated to shortly after AD 115 Hatay Archaeology Museum 850 54 Tethys reclining on the left with Oceanus reclining on the right has long hair a winged forehead and is nude to the waist with draped legs A ketos twines around her raised right arm Other mosaics of Tethys with Oceanus include Hatay Archaeology Museum 1013 from the House of Menander Daphne 55 Hatay Archaeology Museum 9095 56 and Baltimore Museum of Art 1937 126 from the House of the Boat of Psyches triclinium 57 In other mosaics Tethys appears without Oceanus One of these is a fourth century AD mosaic from a pool probably a public bath found at Antioch now installed in Boston Massachusetts at the Harvard Business School s Morgan Hall and formerly at Dumbarton Oaks Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks 76 43 58 Besides the Sophilos dinos this is the only other representation of Tethys identified by inscription Here Tethys with a winged forehead rises from the sea bare shouldered with long dark hair parted in the middle A golden rudder rests against her right shoulder Others include Hatay Archaeology Museum 9097 59 Shahba Museum in situ 60 Baltimore Museum of Art 1937 118 from the House of the Boat of Psyches Room six 61 and Memorial Art Gallery 42 2 62 Toward the end of the period represented by these mosaics Tethys iconography appears to merge with that of another sea goddess Thalassa the Greek personification of the sea thalassa being the Greek word for the sea 63 Such a transformation would be consistent with the frequent use of Tethys name as a poetic reference to the sea in Roman poetry see above Modern use of the name EditTethys a moon of the planet Saturn and the prehistoric Tethys Ocean are named after this goddess Notes Edit LIMC 7683 Tethys I S 10 Burkert p 92 Hesiod Theogony 126 ff Caldwell p 35 line 126 128 Compare with Diodorus Siculus 5 66 1 3 which says that the Titans including Tethys were born as certain writers of myths relate of Uranus and Ge but according to others of one of the Curetes and Titaea from whom as their mother they derive the name Apollodorus adds Dione to this list while Diodorus Siculus leaves out Theia Hesiod Theogony 337 370 Homer Iliad 200 210 14 300 304 21 195 197 Aeschylus Prometheus Bound 137 138 Sommerstein pp 458 459 Seven Against Thebes 310 311 Sommerstein pp 184 185 Hyginus Fabulae Preface Smith and Trzaskoma p 95 For Tethys as mother of the river gods see also Diodorus Siculus 4 69 1 72 1 For Tethys as mother of the Oceanids see also Apollodorus 1 2 2 Callimachus Hymn 3 40 45 Mair pp 62 63 Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica 242 244 Seaton pp 210 211 For a discussion of these offspring of Oceanus and Tethys see Hard pp 40 43 Hard p 40 Hesiod Theogony 364 368 which says there are as many rivers as the three thousand neat ankled daughters of Ocean and at 330 345 names 25 of these river gods Nilus Alpheus Eridanos Strymon Maiandros Istros Phasis Rhesus Achelous Nessos Rhodius Haliacmon Heptaporus Granicus Aesepus Simoeis Peneus Hermus Caicus Sangarius Ladon Parthenius Evenus Aldeskos and Scamander Compare with Acusilaus fr 1 Fowler FGrHist 2 1 Vorsokr 9 B 21 Macrobius Saturnalia 5 18 9 10 which says that from Oceanus and Tethys spring three thousand rivers Apollodorus 3 7 5 Apollodorus 1 8 1 2 7 5 Smith s v Alpheius Homer Iliad 20 74 21 211 ff Hesiod Theogony 346 366 which names 41 Oceanids Peitho Admete Ianthe Electra Doris Prymno Urania Hippo Clymene Rhodea Callirhoe Zeuxo Clytie Idyia Pasithoe Plexaura Galaxaura Dione Melobosis Thoe Polydora Cerceis Plouto Perseis Ianeira Acaste Xanthe Petraea Menestho Europa Metis Eurynome Telesto Chryseis Asia Calypso Eudora Tyche Amphirho Ocyrhoe and Styx Hesiod Theogony 886 900 Apollodorus 1 3 6 Hesiod Theogony 907 909 Apollodorus 1 3 1 Other sources give the Charites other parents see Smith s v Charis Hesiod Theogony 240 264 Apollodorus 1 2 7 Hesiod Theogony 286 288 Apollodorus 2 5 10 Hesiod Theogony 351 however according to Apollodorus 1 2 3 another Oceanid Asia was their mother by Iapetus Hesiod Theogony 956 957 Apollodorus 1 9 1 Hesiod Theogony 958 962 Apollodorus 1 9 23 Hesiod Theogony 383 385 Apollodorus 1 2 4 Hesiod Theogony 132 138 337 411 453 520 901 906 915 920 Caldwell pp 8 11 tables 11 14 One of the Oceanid daughters of Oceanus and Tethys at Hesiod Theogony 351 However according to Apollodorus 1 2 3 a different Oceanid Asia was the mother by Iapetus of Atlas Menoetius Prometheus and Epimetheus Although usually as here the daughter of Hyperion and Theia in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes 4 99 100 Selene is instead made the daughter of Pallas the son of Megamedes According to Plato Critias 113d 114a Atlas was the son of Poseidon and the mortal Cleito In Aeschylus Prometheus Bound 18 211 873 Sommerstein pp 444 445 n 2 446 447 n 24 538 539 n 113 Prometheus is made to be the son of Themis Although at Hesiod Theogony 217 the Moirai are said to be the daughters of Nyx Night Fowler 2013 pp 8 11 Hard pp 36 37 p 40 West 1997 p 147 Gantz p 11 Burkert 1995 pp 91 92 West 1983 pp 119 120 Homer Iliad 14 201 302 201 West 1997 p 147 Gantz p 11 Gantz p 11 Homer Iliad 14 245 Gantz pp 11 12 West 1983 pp 117 118 Fowler 2013 p 11 Plato Timaeus 40d e West 1983 pp 118 120 Fowler 2013 p 11 Plato Cratylus 402b Orphic fr 15 Kern Apollodorus 1 1 3 1 3 1 Gantz p 743 Fowler 2013 pp 7 8 LIMC 7630 Tethys I S 16 Gantz p 28 For Tethys there are no myths at all save for Hera s comment in the Iliad that she was given by Rhea to Tethys to raise when Zeus was deposing Kronos Burkert p 92 Tethys is in no way an active figure in Greek mythology West 1997 p 147 In early poetry she is merely an inactive mythological figure who lives with Oceanus and has borne his children Homer Iliad 14 201 204 West 1966 p 204 136 Tῃ8yn West 1997 p 147 Hard p 40 Matthews p 199 According to Matthews the metonymy Tethys sea seems to occur first in Hellenistic poetry see for example Lycophron Alexandria 1069 1069 Mair pp 582 583 becoming a frequent occurrence in Latin poetry for example appearing nine times in Lucan Hard p 40 Hyginus Fabulae 177 Astronomica 2 1 Ovid Fasti 2 191 192 Frazer pp 70 71 Metamorphoses 2 508 530 Claudian Rape of Persephone Book II Ovid Metamorphoses 11 784 795 This happened even in antiquity according to Burkert p 92 West 1966 p 204 see also West 1983 pp 120 121 West 1997 pp 147 148 Burkert pp 91 93 For a discussion of the possibility of oriental sources for the Illiad s Deception of Zeus passage see Budelmann and Haubold pp 20 22 LIMC 6487 Tethys I S 1 Beazley Archive 350099 Avi 4748 For a discussion of Tethy s iconography see Jentel pp 1193 1195 LIMC 6487 Tethys I S 1 Beazley Archive 350099 Avi 4748 Gantz pp 28 229 230 Burkert p 202 Williams pp 27 fig 34 29 31 32 Perseus London 1971 11 1 1 Vase British Museum 1971 1101 1 LIMC 1602 Okeanos 3 Beazley Archive 300000 Perseus Florence 4209 Vase The identification as Tethys is accepted by Beazley p 27 and Gantz p 28 but found unconvincing by Carpenter p 6 This vase is unremarked upon by Jentel who says that the Sophilos dinos Tethys LIMC Tethys I S 1 is the seule representation de Tethys a l epoque archaique LIMC 617 Tethys I S 2 Jentel p 1195 Queyrel p 67 Pollitt p 96 LIMC 659 Tethys I S 15 For a discussion of this group of mosaics see Jentel 1194 1195 which lists 15 Roman period Tethys mosaics Tethys I S 3 17 and Wages pp 119 128 Doro Levi identified the sea goddess in the Antioch mosaics as Thetis however according to Wages p 126 Neither the inscriptions nor the attributes in this group of mosaics support Doro Levi s identification See also Kondoleon p 152 with p 153 n 2 which in discussing one of these mosaics Baltimore Museum of Art 1937 118 see below says that although the Baltimore goddess does not have any other attributes or label she is convincingly identified as Tethys saying further in the note that Levi identified her as Thetis without much evidence but Wages makes a good argument for identifying her as Tethys Jentel identifies these mosaics as Tethys while noting p 1195 that Des l Antiquite et encore actuellement certains auteurs ont confound Tethys avec la Nereeid Thetis Jentel p 1195 Wages p 125 LIMC 735 Tethys I S 5 Wages pp 120 124 fig 2 p 127 Hatay Archaeology Museum 850 Archived 2016 08 15 at the Wayback Machine Campbell 1988 pp 60 61 identified as Thetis LIMC 659 Tethys I S 15 Wages p 123 n 24 fig 8 p 127 Hatay Archaeology Museum 1013 Archived 2016 08 15 at the Wayback Machine LIMC 7630 Tethys I S 16 Hatay Archaeology Museum 9095 Archived 2016 08 15 at the Wayback Machine LIMC 661 Tethys I S 17 Wages p 127 Baltimore Museum of Art 1937 126 Archived 2016 08 17 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Tethys I S 7 Wages 119 128 Jentel p 1195 Campbell 1988 p 49 7916 Tethys I S 3 Wages pp 125 128 Eraslan p 458 Hatay Archaeology Museum 9097 LIMC 7683 Tethys I S 10 Wages p 122 fig 7 p 125 Dunabin p 166 LIMC 7627 Tethys I S 11 Kondoleon pp 38 39 Wages pp 120 121 figs 3 4 p 127 Baltimore Museum of Art 1937 118 LIMC 7628 Tethys I S 12 Wages p 127 Memorial Art Gallery 42 2 Wages pp 124 126 Jentel p 1195 Cahn p 1199 Campbell 1998 p 20 References EditAeschylus Prometheus Bound in Aeschylus with an English translation by Herbert Weir Smyth Ph D in two volumes Vol 2 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1926 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Aeschylus Persians Seven against Thebes Suppliants Prometheus Bound Edited and translated by Alan H Sommerstein Loeb Classical Library No 145 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 674 99627 4 Online version at Harvard University Press Apollodorus 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 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Apollonius of Rhodes Apollonius Rhodius the Argonautica translated by Robert Cooper Seaton W Heinemann 1912 Internet Archive Beazley John Davidson The Development of Attic Black figure Volume 24 University of California Press 1951 ISBN 9780520055933 Budelmann Felix and Johannes Haubold Reception and Tradition in A Companion to Classical Receptions edited by Lorna Hardwick and Christopher Stray pp 13 25 John Wiley amp Sons 2011 ISBN 9781444393774 Burkert Walter The Orientalizing Revolution Near Eastern Influence on Greek Culture in the Early archaic Age Harvard University Press 1992 pp 91 93 Cahn Herbert A Thalassa in Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae LIMC VIII 1 Artemis Verlag Zurich and Munich 1997 ISBN 3 7608 8758 9 Caldwell Richard Hesiod s Theogony Focus Publishing R Pullins Company June 1 1987 ISBN 978 0 941051 00 2 Callimachus Callimachus and Lycophron with an English translation by A W Mair Aratus with an English translation by G R Mair London W Heinemann New York G P Putnam 1921 Internet Archive Campbell Sheila D 1988 The Mosaics of Antioch PIMS ISBN 9780888443649 Campbell Sheila D 1998 The Mosaics of Anemurium PIMS ISBN 9780888443748 Carpenter Thomas H Dionysian Imagery in Archaic Greek Art Its Development in Black Figure Vase Painting Clarendon Press 1986 ISBN 9780198132226 Diodorus Siculus Diodorus Siculus The Library of History Translated by C H Oldfather Twelve volumes Loeb Classical Library Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1989 Vol 3 Books 4 59 8 ISBN 0674993756 Online version at Bill Thayer s Web Site Eraslan Sehnaz Oceanus Tethys and Thalssa Figures in the Light of Antioch and Zeugma Mosaics in Journal of International Social Research 8 37 2015 pp 454 461 Fowler R L 2000 Early Greek Mythography Volume 1 Text and Introduction Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 978 0198147404 Fowler R L 2013 Early Greek Mythography Volume 2 Commentary Oxford University Press 2013 ISBN 978 0198147411 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 Hard Robin The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology Based on H J Rose s Handbook of Greek Mythology Psychology Press 2004 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 Ph D in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Hyginus Gaius Julius Astronomica in The Myths of Hyginus edited and translated by Mary A Grant Lawrence University of Kansas Press 1960 Hyginus Gaius Julius Fabulae in Apollodorus Libraryand Hyginus Fabulae Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology Translated with Introductions by R Scott Smith and Stephen M Trzaskoma Hackett Publishing Company 2007 ISBN 978 0 87220 821 6 Homeric Hymn to Hermes 4 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 Jentel Marie Odile Tethys I in Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae LIMC VIII 1 Artemis Verlag Zurich and Munich 1997 ISBN 3 7608 8758 9 Kern Otto Orphicorum Fragmenta Berlin 1922 Internet Archive Kondoleon Christine Antioch The Lost Ancient City Princeton University Press 2000 ISBN 9780691049328 Lycophron Alexandra or Cassandra in Callimachus and Lycophron with an English translation by A W Mair Aratus with an English translation by G R Mair London W Heinemann New York G P Putnam 1921 Internet Archive Macrobius Saturnalia Volume II Books 3 5 edited and translated by Robert A Kaster Loeb Classical Library No 511 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2011 Online version at Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 99649 6 Matthews Monica Caesar and the Storm A Commentary on Lucan De Bello Civili Book 5 Lines 476 721 Peter Lang 2008 ISBN 9783039107360 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 Ovid Ovid s Fasti With an English translation by Sir James George Frazer London W Heinemann LTD Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1959 Internet Archive Ovid Metamorphoses Brookes More Boston Cornhill Publishing Co 1922 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 Plato Timaeus 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 Claudian Rape of Persephone in Claudian Volume II Translated by Platnauer Maurice Loeb Classical Library Volume 136 Cambridge MA Harvard Univserity Press 1922 Pollitt Jerome Jordan Art in the Hellenistic Age Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521276726 Queyrel Francois L Autel de Pergame Images et pouvoir en Grece d Asie Paris Editions A et J Picard 2005 ISBN 2 7084 0734 1 Smith William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology London 1873 Wages Sara M A Note on the Dumbarton Oaks Tethys Mosaic in Dumbarton Oaks Papers 40 1986 pp 119 128 West M L 1966 Hesiod Theogony Oxford University Press West M L 1983 The Orphic Poems Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 814854 8 West M L 1997 The East Face of Helicon West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 815042 3 Williams Dyfri Sophilos in the British Museum in Greek Vases In The J Paul Getty Museum Getty Publications 1983 pp 9 34 ISBN 0 89236 058 5 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tethys mythology TETHYS from The Theoi Project TETHYS from greekmythology com TETHYS from Mythopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tethys mythology amp oldid 1179593120, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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