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Trident

A trident (/ˈtrdənt/) is a three-pronged spear. It is used for spear fishing and historically as a polearm.

Trident of Poseidon

The trident is the tool of Poseidon (Greek) or Neptune (Roman) used for the protection of the sea realms, the god of the sea in classical mythology. Other sea deities such as Amphitrite or Triton were also often depicted with a trident in classical art. Later, tridents were used in medieval heraldry, sometimes held by a merman or triton. In Hinduism, it is the weapon of Shiva and is known as a trishula (Sanskrit for "triple-spear").

Etymology edit

 
Illustration of a trident user from the Wubei Zhi, late 16th to early 17th century

The word "trident" comes from the Latin word tridens or tridentis: tri meaning "three" and dentes meaning "teeth", referring specifically to the three prongs, or "teeth", of the weapon.[1]

The Greek equivalent is τρίαινα (tríaina), from Proto-Greek trianja, meaning "threefold". The Greek term does not imply three of anything specific, and is vague about the shape, thus the assumption it was originally of "trident" form has been challenged.[2]

Latin fuscina also means "trident".[3]

The Sanskrit name for the trident, trishula, is a compound of tri त्रि for "three" and śūla शूल for "thorn", calling the trident's three prongs "thorns" rather than "teeth" or dant in Sanskrit, making the word "Tridant" for trident.[citation needed]

Mythology and art edit

 
Fountain of Neptune in Diafáni, Karpathos island

Poseidon edit

The trident is associated with the sea god Poseidon. This divine instrument is said to have been forged by the cyclopes.[4]

Poseidon struck a rock with his trident, causing a sea (or a saltwater spring, called the Erechtheis) to appear nearby on the Acropolis in Athens.[5][6] And according to Roman sources, Neptune struck the earth with the trident to produce the first warhorse.[7]

Poseidon, as well as being the god of the sea, was also known as the "Earth Shaker",[8] believed to cause earthquakes;[9][a] some commentators[who?] have extrapolated that the god would have used the trident to cause them,[10] possibly by striking the earth.[citation needed]

In the Renaissance artist Gian Bernini's sculpture Neptune and Triton (1622–23), Neptune is posed holding a trident turned downwards, and is thought to reenact a scene from Aeneid or Ovid's Metamorphoses where he is calming the waves to aid Aeneas's ships.[11]

Other sea divinities edit

In later Greek and Roman art and literature, other sea deities and their attendants have been depicted holding the trident.

Poseidon's consort Amphitrite is often identified by some marine attribute other than a trident, which she never carries according to some scholars, though other commentators have disagreed.[12][14]

Turning to the retinue or a train of beings which follow the sea deities (the marine thiasos) the Tritons (mermen) may be seen bearing tridents.[15] Likewise, the Old Man of the Sea (halios geron) and the god Nereus are seen holding tridents.[15] Tritons, other mermen, and the Nereides can also carry rudders, oars, fish, or dolphins.[15]

Oceanus normally should not carry a trident, allowing him to be clearly distinguished from Poseidon. However, there is conflation of the deities in Romano-British iconography, and examples exist where the crab-claw headed Oceanus also bears a trident.[17][18] Oceanus holding a trident has been found on Romano-British coinage as well.[b][19]

Some amorini have been depicted carrying tiny tridents.[c][20]

The trident is even seen suspended like a pendant on a dolphin in Roman mosaic art.[d][21]

Hindu Religion edit

In Hindu legends and stories Shiva, the Hindu god uses a trishula as his principal weapon. The trident is also said to represent three gunas mentioned in Indian Vedic philosophy namely sāttvika, rājasika, and tāmasika.[citation needed] The goddess Kali is sometimes portrayed with a trident as well.[22]

A weapon of South-East Asian (particularly Thai) depiction of Hanuman, a character of Ramayana.[citation needed]

Miscellaneous edit

In religious Taoism, the trident represents the Taoist Trinity, the Three Pure Ones. In Taoist rituals, a trident bell is used to invite the presence of deities and summon spirits, as the trident signifies the highest authority of Heaven.[citation needed]

A fork Jewish priests (Kohanim) used to take their portions of offerings.[23]

 
A trident in the coat of arms of Riistavesi

In heraldry within the UK, the trident is often held by the figure identified as either a Neptune or a triton,[e][24][25] or a merman.[f][26]

The trident held up by an arm is depicted on some coats-of-arms.[27]

Use edit

 
Dutch fishermen using tridents in the 17th century.

Fishing edit

In Ancient Greece, the trident was employed as a harpoon for spearing large fish, especially tuna fishing.[28]

Tridents used in modern spear-fishing usually have barbed tines, which trap the speared fish firmly. In the Southern and Midwestern United States, gigging is used for harvesting suckers, bullfrogs, flounder and many species of rough fish.[29]

Agriculture edit

It has been used by farmers as a decorticator to remove leaves, seeds and buds from the stalks of plants such as flax and hemp.[citation needed] A form of trident is used by the gardians in the Camargue of southern France for herding cattle.[citation needed]

Combat edit

In Ancient Rome tridents (Latin: tridens or fuscina) were used by a type of gladiator called a retiarius or "net fighter". The retiarius was traditionally pitted against a secutor, and cast a net to wrap his adversary and then used the trident to fight him.[30][31]

Tridents were also used in medieval heraldry.

The trident, known as dangpa, is used as a weapon in the 17th- to 18th-century systems of Korean martial arts.[citation needed]

Modern symbolism edit

The glyph or sigil of the planet Neptune (♆), which alludes to the trident, is used in astronomy and astrology.

Political edit

 
Coat of arms of Ukraine.
 
The flag of Barbados incorporates a Trident.

Civilian use edit

Military insignia edit

 
Emblem of the Hellenic Navy

Botanical nomenclature edit

A number of structures in the biological world are described as trident in appearance. Since at least the late 19th century the trident shape was applied to certain botanical shapes; for example, certain orchid flora were described as having trident-tipped lips in early botanical works.[33] Furthermore, in current botanical literature, certain bracts are stated to have a trident-shape (e.g. Douglas-fir).[34]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Mackay catalogs instances in classical literature where Poseidon is connected with the earthquake, but does not cite use of the trident in any, only mentioning its use in creating the horse.[9]
  2. ^ The reverse side on the denarius of Carausius, acquired by the British Museum in 1998.
  3. ^ Porta Capena mosaics, Rome. In the center is a square with geometric design (star inscribed in circle), and there are four diagonal spokes from it in the shape of a trident.
  4. ^ Villa della Pisanella, Boscoreale, Italy.
  5. ^ Burke assigns trident to Neptune and Eve to Triton. Eve states the Triton is "sometimes called Neptune", while Burke cross-references "merman" to "Neptune".
  6. ^ Thomas Moule, among others write "triton, or merman" implying interchangeability of these terms.

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ "Trident" at the Online Etymology Dictionary. Accessed on 23 March 2024.
  2. ^ Walters, H. B. (1892–1893), "Poseidon's Trident", The Journal of Hellenic Studies, 13 (37): 454, 459, 45
  3. ^ Lewis, Charlton T.; Short, Charles, eds. (1879), "fuscina", A Latin Dictionary, Clarendon Press
  4. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheke 1.2. Frazer tr. (1921), 1:11; text version via Perseus Project.
  5. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheke 3.14. Frazer tr. (1921), 2:79 and note 2; text version via Perseus Project.
  6. ^ Hurwit, Jeffrey M. (1999). The Athenian Acropolis: History, Mythology, and Archaeology from the Neolithic Era to the Present. Cambridge University Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-521-41786-0.
  7. ^ Virgil, Georgics 1.12ff, apud Frazer tr. (1921), 2:79 and note 2
  8. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 930.
  9. ^ a b Mackay, L. A. (1946), "The Earthquake-Horse", Classical Philology, 41 (3): 150–154, doi:10.1086/362950, S2CID 162926974 JSTOR 267107
  10. ^ Bury, John Bagnell (1940). "XXII.vi Zeus, Hera, Poseidon". The Cambridge Ancient History. University Press. p. 631. Poseidon,..the earth-shaker, whose trident roused the earthquake, and the god of horses.
  11. ^ Wilkins, Ann Thomas (2000), "Bernini and Ovid: Expanding the Concept of Metamorphosis", International Journal of the Classical Tradition, 6 (3): 403–404 JSTOR 30222585
  12. ^ Collignon, Maxime (1890). Manual of Mythology: In Relation to Greek Art. Translated by Jane E. Harrison. H. Grevel & Co. pp. 197–199.
  13. ^ Montfaucon, Bernard de (1724). Les Dieux Des Grecs Et Des Romains: Suppl. Delaulne. p. 70.; Pl. XXV
  14. ^ The helmeted goddess bearing a trident has been identified as Amphitrite by Montfaucon in a carved carnelian in the collection of Maréchal d'Estrées.[13]
  15. ^ a b c Mylonopoulos (2009), pp. 188–189.
  16. ^ "The Oceanus Mosaic". The British Museum.
  17. ^ Oceanus Mosaic from Withington;[16] The "pavement from Ashcroft Villas, Cirencester" is also mentioned.
  18. ^ Wilson, R. J. A. (2006), "Aspects of Iconography in Romano-British Mosaics: The Rudston 'Aquatic' Scene and the Brading Astronomer Revisited", Britannia, 37, Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies: 297–299, doi:10.3815/000000006784016693, S2CID 190728064 JSTOR 30030523
  19. ^ Williams, J. H. C. (1999), "Septimius Severus and Sol, Carausius and Oceanus: two new Roman acquisitions at the British Museum", The Numismatic Chronicle, 159: 310–311 JSTOR 42668508
  20. ^ Blake (1936), p. 149.
  21. ^ Blake (1936), p. 139.
  22. ^ Powerful Kali Mantra for Protection - In Sanskrit, English with Meaning
  23. ^ . mechon-mamre.org. Archived from the original on 2020-10-03. Retrieved 2012-11-22.
  24. ^ Burke, Bernard (1864). merman, Neptune, trident (2nd ed.). Harrison & sons. pp. xlii, xlvi. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  25. ^ Eve, George W. (1907). "Heraldic birds and other figures". Heraldry as Art: An Account of Its Development and Practice, Chiefly in England. Batsford. p. 95.
  26. ^ Moule, Thomas (1842). Heraldry of Fish: Notices of the Principal Families Bearing Fish in Their Arms. J. Van Voorst. p. 218.
  27. ^ Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1985). The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopaedia of Armory. T.C. & E.C. Jack., p. 195 and Fig. 488, p. 396 Fig. 778 (p. 285)
  28. ^ Burkert, Walter (1985). The Athenian Acropolis: History, Mythology, and Archaeology from the Neolithic Era to the Present. Translated by Raffan, John. Harvard University Press. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-674-36281-9.
  29. ^ Turner, Andy. . Missouri Department of Conservation. Archived from the original on 2019-08-11. Retrieved 2015-02-12.
  30. ^   Smith, William, ed. (1870). "Gladiatores". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. London: John Murray.
  31. ^ Auguet, Roland [1970] (2012). Cruelty and Civilization: The Roman Games. London: Routledge. pp. 56–57, 72–74. ISBN 0-415-10452-1.
  32. ^ Kramer, Daniel (April 25, 2023). "Mariners embrace Aquaman trident as home run prop". MLB.com. MLB Advanced Media. Retrieved August 28, 2023.
  33. ^ John Lindley and Thomas Moore (1964) The Treasury of Botany: A Popular Dictionary of the Vegetable Kingdom with which is Incorporated a Glossary of Botanical Terms, Published by Longmans Green, pt.1
  34. ^ C. Michael Hogan (2008) Douglas-fir: Pseudotsuga menziesii, globalTwitcher.com, ed. Nicklas Strõmberg 2009-06-04 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ "Iron-willed 'hero' images". nypost.com. 9 April 2010.
Bibliography
  • Blake, Marion Elizabeth (1936). Roman Mosaics of the Second Century in Italy. Loeb classical library. Vol. 13. New York: University of Michigan Press for the American Academy in Rome. pp. 67–214. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help) JSTOR 4238589
  • Pseudo-Apollodorus (1921). Apollodorus: The Library. Loeb classical library. Vol. 1. Translated by J. G. Frazer. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. ISBN 9780674991354.; Vol. 2
  • Mylonopoulos, Joannis (2009). Odysseus with a trident? The Use of Attributes in Ancient Greek Imagery. BRILL. pp. 171–204. ISBN 978-9-047-44165-6. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

trident, other, uses, disambiguation, trident, three, pronged, spear, used, spear, fishing, historically, polearm, poseidon, trident, tool, poseidon, greek, neptune, roman, used, protection, realms, classical, mythology, other, deities, such, amphitrite, trito. For other uses see Trident disambiguation A trident ˈ t r aɪ d e n t is a three pronged spear It is used for spear fishing and historically as a polearm Trident of Poseidon The trident is the tool of Poseidon Greek or Neptune Roman used for the protection of the sea realms the god of the sea in classical mythology Other sea deities such as Amphitrite or Triton were also often depicted with a trident in classical art Later tridents were used in medieval heraldry sometimes held by a merman or triton In Hinduism it is the weapon of Shiva and is known as a trishula Sanskrit for triple spear Contents 1 Etymology 2 Mythology and art 2 1 Poseidon 2 2 Other sea divinities 2 3 Hindu Religion 2 4 Miscellaneous 3 Use 3 1 Fishing 3 2 Agriculture 3 3 Combat 4 Modern symbolism 4 1 Political 4 2 Civilian use 4 3 Military insignia 5 Botanical nomenclature 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Explanatory notes 9 ReferencesEtymology edit nbsp Illustration of a trident user from the Wubei Zhi late 16th to early 17th century The word trident comes from the Latin word tridens or tridentis tri meaning three and dentes meaning teeth referring specifically to the three prongs or teeth of the weapon 1 The Greek equivalent is triaina triaina from Proto Greek trianja meaning threefold The Greek term does not imply three of anything specific and is vague about the shape thus the assumption it was originally of trident form has been challenged 2 Latin fuscina also means trident 3 The Sanskrit name for the trident trishula is a compound of tri त र for three and sula श ल for thorn calling the trident s three prongs thorns rather than teeth or dant in Sanskrit making the word Tridant for trident citation needed Mythology and art edit nbsp Fountain of Neptune in Diafani Karpathos island Poseidon edit Main article Trident of Poseidon The trident is associated with the sea god Poseidon This divine instrument is said to have been forged by the cyclopes 4 Poseidon struck a rock with his trident causing a sea or a saltwater spring called the Erechtheis to appear nearby on the Acropolis in Athens 5 6 And according to Roman sources Neptune struck the earth with the trident to produce the first warhorse 7 Poseidon as well as being the god of the sea was also known as the Earth Shaker 8 believed to cause earthquakes 9 a some commentators who have extrapolated that the god would have used the trident to cause them 10 possibly by striking the earth citation needed In the Renaissance artist Gian Bernini s sculpture Neptune and Triton 1622 23 Neptune is posed holding a trident turned downwards and is thought to reenact a scene from Aeneid or Ovid s Metamorphoses where he is calming the waves to aid Aeneas s ships 11 Other sea divinities edit In later Greek and Roman art and literature other sea deities and their attendants have been depicted holding the trident Poseidon s consort Amphitrite is often identified by some marine attribute other than a trident which she never carries according to some scholars though other commentators have disagreed 12 14 Turning to the retinue or a train of beings which follow the sea deities the marine thiasos the Tritons mermen may be seen bearing tridents 15 Likewise the Old Man of the Sea halios geron and the god Nereus are seen holding tridents 15 Tritons other mermen and the Nereides can also carry rudders oars fish or dolphins 15 Oceanus normally should not carry a trident allowing him to be clearly distinguished from Poseidon However there is conflation of the deities in Romano British iconography and examples exist where the crab claw headed Oceanus also bears a trident 17 18 Oceanus holding a trident has been found on Romano British coinage as well b 19 Some amorini have been depicted carrying tiny tridents c 20 The trident is even seen suspended like a pendant on a dolphin in Roman mosaic art d 21 Hindu Religion edit In Hindu legends and stories Shiva the Hindu god uses a trishula as his principal weapon The trident is also said to represent three gunas mentioned in Indian Vedic philosophy namely sattvika rajasika and tamasika citation needed The goddess Kali is sometimes portrayed with a trident as well 22 A weapon of South East Asian particularly Thai depiction of Hanuman a character of Ramayana citation needed Miscellaneous edit In religious Taoism the trident represents the Taoist Trinity the Three Pure Ones In Taoist rituals a trident bell is used to invite the presence of deities and summon spirits as the trident signifies the highest authority of Heaven citation needed A fork Jewish priests Kohanim used to take their portions of offerings 23 nbsp A trident in the coat of arms of Riistavesi In heraldry within the UK the trident is often held by the figure identified as either a Neptune or a triton e 24 25 or a merman f 26 The trident held up by an arm is depicted on some coats of arms 27 Use edit nbsp Dutch fishermen using tridents in the 17th century Fishing edit In Ancient Greece the trident was employed as a harpoon for spearing large fish especially tuna fishing 28 Tridents used in modern spear fishing usually have barbed tines which trap the speared fish firmly In the Southern and Midwestern United States gigging is used for harvesting suckers bullfrogs flounder and many species of rough fish 29 Agriculture edit It has been used by farmers as a decorticator to remove leaves seeds and buds from the stalks of plants such as flax and hemp citation needed A form of trident is used by the gardians in the Camargue of southern France for herding cattle citation needed Combat edit In Ancient Rome tridents Latin tridens or fuscina were used by a type of gladiator called a retiarius or net fighter The retiarius was traditionally pitted against a secutor and cast a net to wrap his adversary and then used the trident to fight him 30 31 Tridents were also used in medieval heraldry The trident known as dangpa is used as a weapon in the 17th to 18th century systems of Korean martial arts citation needed Modern symbolism editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message The glyph or sigil of the planet Neptune which alludes to the trident is used in astronomy and astrology Political edit nbsp Coat of arms of Ukraine nbsp The flag of Barbados incorporates a Trident The Tryzub in the Coat of Arms of Ukraine adopted in 1918 in a reinterpretation of a medieval emblem which is traced to the Volodymyr the Great but may likely depicted a Algiz also Elhaz Viking rune that was introduced by Olga of Kyiv The national and presidential flags of Barbados The forks of the people s anger adopted by the Russian anti Soviet revolutionary organization National Alliance of Russian Solidarists NTS Britannia the personification of Great Britain usually depicted to hold a trident Civilian use edit The symbol for Washington and Lee University King Triton the mascot of the University of California San Diego holds a trident and the trident is omnipresent in UCSD s athletic gear The symbol since June 2008 for the athletic teams Tritons at the University of Missouri St Louis Sparky the Sun Devil the mascot of Arizona State University holds a trident ASU recently when redesigned its trident as a stand alone symbol The trident was used as the original cap insignia and original logo for the Seattle Mariners Although the Mariners changed their cap insignia amp logo away from a trident theme in 1993 the club allows players to use a trident as a prop after hitting home runs during games The trident prop used by the team is a replica from the 2018 film Aquaman 32 An element on the flag of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society The Maserati logo Club Mediterranee The Hawker Siddeley Trident a 1960s British three engine jet airliner The Tirreno Adriatico cycle race trophy The exterior of the World Trade Center used three pronged decorative and structural elements at its base commonly referred to as tridents Military insignia edit nbsp Emblem of the Hellenic Navy The emblem of the Hellenic Navy The emblem of the Cyprus Navy The insignia of Nepal Army With Poseidon in the 31st Brigade The symbol of the Swedish Coastal Rangers Kustjagarna The trident is a recurring element in the colours of certain units of the Finnish navy The United States Naval Special Warfare Command and the Special Warfare insignia particularly worn by members of the US Navy SEALs and containing a trident representing the three aspects Sea Air and Land of SEAL special operations Part of the golden colored crest of the United States Naval Academy which depicts a trident running vertically in its background The ship s crests of 13 of the 18 Ohio class submarines of the U S Navy prominently feature tridents as both a symbol of maritime power and in reference to their payloads of Trident D 5 missiles The rating badge of the United States Coast Guard Marine Science Technician The Tug Banner used by Mongolian Honor guards The insignia of the German commando force Kampfschwimmer The rating badge of the United States Navy Ocean Systems Technician OT Botanical nomenclature editA number of structures in the biological world are described as trident in appearance Since at least the late 19th century the trident shape was applied to certain botanical shapes for example certain orchid flora were described as having trident tipped lips in early botanical works 33 Furthermore in current botanical literature certain bracts are stated to have a trident shape e g Douglas fir 34 Gallery edit nbsp A statue of Hindu God Shiva holding a trishula near Indira Gandhi International Airport Delhi nbsp Two guardian deities of an ancient Chinese tomb both holding tridents nbsp 18th century trident from Thailand nbsp Tridents trishula brought as offerings to Guna Devi near Dharamsala Himachal Pradesh India 35 nbsp Camargue trident in FranceSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tridents Bident Eighteen Arms of Wushu Leister Military fork Pitchfork Sai Trishula Symbols of the Rurikids Trident UK nuclear programme Tug banner Explanatory notes edit Mackay catalogs instances in classical literature where Poseidon is connected with the earthquake but does not cite use of the trident in any only mentioning its use in creating the horse 9 The reverse side on the denarius of Carausius acquired by the British Museum in 1998 Porta Capena mosaics Rome In the center is a square with geometric design star inscribed in circle and there are four diagonal spokes from it in the shape of a trident Villa della Pisanella Boscoreale Italy Burke assigns trident to Neptune and Eve to Triton Eve states the Triton is sometimes called Neptune while Burke cross references merman to Neptune Thomas Moule among others write triton or merman implying interchangeability of these terms References editCitations Trident at the Online Etymology Dictionary Accessed on 23 March 2024 Walters H B 1892 1893 Poseidon s Trident The Journal of Hellenic Studies 13 37 454 459 45 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles eds 1879 fuscina A Latin Dictionary Clarendon Press Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheke 1 2 Frazer tr 1921 1 11 text version via Perseus Project Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheke 3 14 Frazer tr 1921 2 79 and note 2 text version via Perseus Project Hurwit Jeffrey M 1999 The Athenian Acropolis History Mythology and Archaeology from the Neolithic Era to the Present Cambridge University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 521 41786 0 Virgil Georgics 1 12ff apud Frazer tr 1921 2 79 and note 2 Hesiod Theogony 930 a b Mackay L A 1946 The Earthquake Horse Classical Philology 41 3 150 154 doi 10 1086 362950 S2CID 162926974 JSTOR 267107 Bury John Bagnell 1940 XXII vi Zeus Hera Poseidon The Cambridge Ancient History University Press p 631 Poseidon the earth shaker whose trident roused the earthquake and the god of horses Wilkins Ann Thomas 2000 Bernini and Ovid Expanding the Concept of Metamorphosis International Journal of the Classical Tradition 6 3 403 404 JSTOR 30222585 Collignon Maxime 1890 Manual of Mythology In Relation to Greek Art Translated by Jane E Harrison H Grevel amp Co pp 197 199 Montfaucon Bernard de 1724 Les Dieux Des Grecs Et Des Romains Suppl Delaulne p 70 Pl XXV The helmeted goddess bearing a trident has been identified as Amphitrite by Montfaucon in a carved carnelian in the collection of Marechal d Estrees 13 a b c Mylonopoulos 2009 pp 188 189 The Oceanus Mosaic The British Museum Oceanus Mosaic from Withington 16 The pavement from Ashcroft Villas Cirencester is also mentioned Wilson R J A 2006 Aspects of Iconography in Romano British Mosaics The Rudston Aquatic Scene and the Brading Astronomer Revisited Britannia 37 Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies 297 299 doi 10 3815 000000006784016693 S2CID 190728064 JSTOR 30030523 Williams J H C 1999 Septimius Severus and Sol Carausius and Oceanus two new Roman acquisitions at the British Museum The Numismatic Chronicle 159 310 311 JSTOR 42668508 Blake 1936 p 149 Blake 1936 p 139 Powerful Kali Mantra for Protection In Sanskrit English with Meaning 1 Samuel 2 Hebrew Bible in English Mechon Mamre mechon mamre org Archived from the original on 2020 10 03 Retrieved 2012 11 22 Burke Bernard 1864 merman Neptune trident 2nd ed Harrison amp sons pp xlii xlvi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Eve George W 1907 Heraldic birds and other figures Heraldry as Art An Account of Its Development and Practice Chiefly in England Batsford p 95 Moule Thomas 1842 Heraldry of Fish Notices of the Principal Families Bearing Fish in Their Arms J Van Voorst p 218 Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1985 The Art of Heraldry An Encyclopaedia of Armory T C amp E C Jack p 195 and Fig 488 p 396 Fig 778 p 285 Burkert Walter 1985 The Athenian Acropolis History Mythology and Archaeology from the Neolithic Era to the Present Translated by Raffan John Harvard University Press p 137 ISBN 978 0 674 36281 9 Turner Andy Fish Gigging An Ozark Tradition Missouri Department of Conservation Archived from the original on 2019 08 11 Retrieved 2015 02 12 nbsp Smith William ed 1870 Gladiatores Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities London John Murray Auguet Roland 1970 2012 Cruelty and Civilization The Roman Games London Routledge pp 56 57 72 74 ISBN 0 415 10452 1 Kramer Daniel April 25 2023 Mariners embrace Aquaman trident as home run prop MLB com MLB Advanced Media Retrieved August 28 2023 John Lindley and Thomas Moore 1964 The Treasury of Botany A Popular Dictionary of the Vegetable Kingdom with which is Incorporated a Glossary of Botanical Terms Published by Longmans Green pt 1 C Michael Hogan 2008 Douglas fir Pseudotsuga menziesii globalTwitcher com ed Nicklas Stromberg Archived 2009 06 04 at the Wayback Machine Iron willed hero images nypost com 9 April 2010 Bibliography Blake Marion Elizabeth 1936 Roman Mosaics of the Second Century in Italy Loeb classical library Vol 13 New York University of Michigan Press for the American Academy in Rome pp 67 214 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help JSTOR 4238589 Pseudo Apollodorus 1921 Apollodorus The Library Loeb classical library Vol 1 Translated by J G Frazer New York G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 9780674991354 Vol 2 Mylonopoulos Joannis 2009 Odysseus with a trident The Use of Attributes in Ancient Greek Imagery BRILL pp 171 204 ISBN 978 9 047 44165 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trident amp oldid 1216698758, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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