Notebook
Notebook, 1993-

ANCIENT GREEK CULTURE

[From: Kyriazis, Constantine D. Eternal Greece. Translated by Harry T. Hionides. A Chat Publication.]

Asclepios - Atlas - Boreas - Charites - Cybele - Dryads - Eos - Erinyes - Eros - Gaea - Gigantes - Gorgons - Hades - Harpies - Hebe - Helios - Hermaphroditus - Hestia - Horae - Iris - Kronos - Maenads - Moirai - Muses - Naiads - Nereids - Nereus - Nymphs - Oceanides - Oceanos - Pan - Persephone - Priapus - Prometheus - Rhea - Satyrs - Seilenoi - Seilenos - Selene - Themis - Thetis - Triton - Zephyros

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Oceanos










The son of Ouranos and Gaea and a Titan. He represents the water element. He married his sister Tethya and begot three thousand sons, the trickling rivers, and three thousand daughters, the Oceanides, who guarded all the deep Springs throughout [p. 51] the world. The Greeks imagined him as a vast river embracing the earth in which all things were born and all things died. In art, he is depicted as an old man holding a bullÍs horn, the symbol of the plentitude that comes from water. [pp. 51-52]

[Kyriazis, Constantine D. Eternal Greece. Translated by Harry T. Hionides. A Chat Publication.]




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