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==Trivia==
 
==Trivia==
 
*According to the myths, the [[Titan]] [[Kronos]] devoured every child he begat with his sister-wife [[Rhea]]. When [[Zeus]] saved his siblings, they accompanied him as the new gods, and became part of the twelve mightiest. In order from oldest to youngest, the children were [[Hestia]], [[Demeter]], [[Hera]], [[Hades]] and Poseidon before Zeus.
 
*According to the myths, the [[Titan]] [[Kronos]] devoured every child he begat with his sister-wife [[Rhea]]. When [[Zeus]] saved his siblings, they accompanied him as the new gods, and became part of the twelve mightiest. In order from oldest to youngest, the children were [[Hestia]], [[Demeter]], [[Hera]], [[Hades]] and Poseidon before Zeus.
*The mural depicting Poseidon in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]'' is based on a [https://www.theoi.com/Gallery/L20.1.html painting] on an amphora from Late Classical period, depicting the War of the Giants.
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*The mural depicting Poseidon in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]'' is based on a [https://www.theoi.com/Gallery/L20.1.html painting] on an amphora from Late Classical period, depicting the [[Battle of the Giants and Gods]].
 
*According to ''[[The Art of Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]'', the amulet worn by [[Barnabas]] and [[Mydon]] for example is that of Poseidon, featuring his trident.
 
*According to ''[[The Art of Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]'', the amulet worn by [[Barnabas]] and [[Mydon]] for example is that of Poseidon, featuring his trident.
   
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ACOD Pellene Statue of Poseidon.jpg|Statue of Poseidon in [[Pellene]]
 
ACOD Pellene Statue of Poseidon.jpg|Statue of Poseidon in [[Pellene]]
 
ACOd-AmuletofPoseidon.jpg|Amulet of Poseidon
 
ACOd-AmuletofPoseidon.jpg|Amulet of Poseidon
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ACOd-Gigantomachy-Poseidon.jpg|Poseidon depicted in a mural in 5th century BCE Greece
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   

Revision as of 13:26, 13 May 2019


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"Poseidon, god of the ocean. Thank you for watching over the Adrestia."
―Kassandra[src]
ACOD Statue of Poseidon

Statue of Poseidon and his trident

Poseidon was an Isu revered by the Greek god of the seas and the ocean, horses and earthquakes. His equivalent in Roman mythology is Neptune.

Relations

Poseidon was rumored to have fathered Byzas with the nymph Keroessa. Byzas later became the founder of Byzantium, which was renamed sometime after as Constantinople.[1]

Amphitrite, wife of Poseidon and queen of the sea, was said to have birthed his other son Triton, who had a conch shell to control the sea.[2]

According to the stories told in Naxos Island, a mortal woman by the name of Iphimedeia fell in love with Poseidon, and was in the habit of walking the shores, gathering sea water into her lap. Later, she gave birth to twin giant sons, the Aloadai Otos and Ephialtes.[2]

Orion the Giant was also a son of Poseidon, born in Boeotia.[2]

Biography

According to the story of the death of Hippolytos, the hero Theseus' son, Poseidon played a part in it. Angered by what his wife Phaidra claimed Hippolytos to have done, Theseus invoked the god to kill Hippolytos. Poseidon summoned a sea monster, and Hippolytos died within the Sinkholes of Herakles in Argolis, in a chariot accident.[2]

Influence and legacy

Classical antiquity

During the Peloponnesian War the misthios Kassandra obtained Poseidon's Trident within the ruins of a temple dedicated to him on a small Samian island. This trident was an artifact attributed to Poseidon that allowed the wielder to breathe underwater and was said to "control the seas".[2]

The Areopagus in Athens was said to have been the place where the god of war Ares was judged for killing one of Poseidon's sons.[2]

Throughout the Greek world, there were numerous temples dedicated to the god, and some like the Erechtheion on the Akropolis Sanctuary in Athens was dedicated many gods at the same time. There was also the region of Korinthia dedicated to Poseidon: the Isthmus of Poseidon, housing the Sanctuary of Isthmia, home to the Isthmian Games.[2]

In 48 BCE, Poseidon was often invoked by Phoxidas during his time sailing the seas with Aya.[3]

Trivia

Gallery

Appearances

References