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Amphitrite

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(Redirected from Amphitrite (mythology)) Queen of the sea and wife of Poseidon in Greek mythology For other uses, see Amphitrite (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Aphrodite.
Amphitrite
  • Queen of the sea
  • Goddess of the sea
Member of the Nereids
Amphitrite with downturned trident, by François Théodore Devaulx (1866)
AbodeMount Olympus, or the sea
SymbolTrident, dolphin, seal
Genealogy
ParentsNereus and Doris, or Oceanus and Tethys
SiblingsNerites and the Nereids or the Potamoi and the Oceanids
ConsortPoseidon
ChildrenTriton, Rhodos, Benthesikyme
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In ancient Greek mythology, Amphitrite (/æmfɪˈtraɪtiː/; Ancient Greek: Ἀμφιτρίτη, romanizedAmphitrítē) was the goddess of the sea, the queen of the sea, and her consort is Poseidon. She was a daughter of Nereus and Doris (or Oceanus and Tethys). Under the influence of the Olympian pantheon, she became the consort of Poseidon and was later used as a symbolic representation of the sea. Her Roman counterpart is Salacia, a comparatively minor figure, and the goddess of saltwater.

Family

According to Hesiod's Theogony, Amphitrite was one of the Nereid daughters of Nereus and Doris. The mythographer Apollodorus, however, lists her among both the Nereids, as well as the Oceanids, the daughters of Oceanus and Tethys.

Amphitrite's offspring included seals and dolphins. She also bred sea monsters and her great waves crashed against the rocks, putting sailors at risk. Poseidon and Amphitrite had a son, Triton, who was a merman, and a daughter, Rhodos (if this Rhodos was not actually fathered by Poseidon on Halia or was not the daughter of Asopus as others claim). According to the mythographer Apollodorus, Benthesikyme was the daughter of Poseidon and Amphitrite.

Mythology

Amphitrite ("Aphirita") bearing a trident on a pinax from Corinth (575–550 BC).

When Poseidon desired to marry her, Amphitrite, wanting to protect her virginity, fled to the Atlas Mountains. Poseidon sent many creatures to find her. A dolphin came across Amphitrite and convinced her to marry Poseidon. As a reward for the dolphin's help, Poseidon created the Delphinus constellation.

Eustathius said that Poseidon first saw her dancing at Naxos among the other Nereids, and carried her off. But in another version of the myth, she fled from his advances to Atlas, at the farthest ends of the sea; there the dolphin of Poseidon sought her through the islands of the sea, and finding her, spoke persuasively on behalf of Poseidon, if we may believe Hyginus and was rewarded by being placed among the stars as the constellation Delphinus.

Amphitrite is not fully personified in the Homeric epics: "out on the open sea, in Amphitrite's breakers" (Odyssey iii.101), "moaning Amphitrite" nourishes fishes "in numbers past all counting" (Odyssey xii.119). She shares her Homeric epithet Halosydne (Ancient Greek: Ἁλοσύδνη, romanizedHalosúdnē, lit.'sea-nourished') with Thetis. In some sense, the sea-nymphs are doublets.

Pindar, in his sixth Olympian Ode, recognized Poseidon's role as "great god of the sea, husband of Amphitrite, goddess of the golden spindle." For later poets, Amphitrite became simply a metaphor for the sea: Euripides, in Cyclops (702) and Ovid, Metamorphoses, (i.14).

Representation and cult

Though Amphitrite does not figure in Greek cultus, at an archaic stage she was of outstanding importance, for in the Homeric Hymn to Delian Apollo, she appears at the birthing of Apollo among, in Hugh G. Evelyn-White's translation, "all the chiefest of the goddesses, Dione and Rhea and Ichnaea and Themis and loud-moaning Amphitrite"; more recent translators are unanimous in rendering "Ichnaean Themis" rather than treating "Ichnae" as a separate identity. Theseus in the submarine halls of his father Poseidon saw the daughters of Nereus dancing with liquid feet, and "august, ox-eyed Amphitrite", who wreathed him with her wedding wreath, according to a fragment of Bacchylides. Jane Ellen Harrison recognized in the poetic treatment an authentic echo of Amphitrite's early importance: "It would have been much simpler for Poseidon to recognize his own son… the myth belongs to that early stratum of mythology when Poseidon was not yet god of the sea, or, at least, no-wise supreme there—Amphitrite and the Nereids ruled there, with their servants the Tritons. Even so late as the Iliad Amphitrite is not yet 'Neptuni uxor' ."

Amphitrite, "the third one who encircles ", was so entirely confined in her authority to the sea and the creatures in it that she was almost never associated with her husband, either for purposes of worship or in works of art, except when he was to be distinctly regarded as the god who controlled the sea. An exception may be the cult image of Amphitrite that Pausanias saw in the temple of Poseidon at the Isthmus of Corinth (ii.1.7).

In the arts of vase-painting and mosaic, Amphitrite was distinguishable from the other Nereids only by her queenly attributes. In works of art, both ancient ones and post-Renaissance paintings, Amphitrite is represented either enthroned beside Poseidon or driving with him in a chariot drawn by sea-horses (hippocamps) or other fabulous creatures of the deep, and attended by Tritons and Nereids. She is dressed in queenly robes and has nets in her hair. The pincers of a crab are sometimes shown attached to her temples.

Legacy

Amphitrite on 1936 Australian stamp commemorating completion of submarine telephone cable to Tasmania

Notes

  1. Compare the North Syrian Atargatis.
  2. ^ Roman, L., & Roman, M. (2010). Encyclopedia of Greek and Roman mythology., p. 58, at Google Books
  3. Apollodorus, 1.2.2, 1.2.7, 1.4.5.
  4. "…A throng of seals, the brood of lovely Halosydne." (Homer, Odyssey iv.404).
  5. Aelian, On Animals (12.45) ascribed to Arion a line "Music-loving dolphins, sea-nurslings of the Nereis maids divine, whom Amphitrite bore."
  6. Hard, p. 105; Apollodorus, 3.15.4.
  7. Ogden, Daniel (2017). The Legend of Seleucus. Translated by Raffan, John. Cambridge University Press. p. 41, note 64. ISBN 978-1-107-16478-9.
  8. Gaius Julius Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.17.1
  9. Eustathius of Thessalonica, Commentary on Odyssey 3.91.1458, line 40.
  10. The Wedding of Neptune and Ampitrite provided a subject to Poussin; the painting is at Philadelphia.
  11. ad Atlante, in Hyginus' words.
  12. "…qui pervagatus insulas, aliquando ad virginem pervenit, eique persuasit ut nuberet Neptuno…" Oppian's Halieutica I.383–92 is a parallel passage.
  13. Catasterismi, 31; Hyginus, Poetical Astronomy, ii.17, .132.
  14. Wilhelm Vollmer, Wörterbuch der Mythologie, 3rd ed. 1874
  15. Odyssey iv.404 (Amphitrite), and Iliad, xx.207.
  16. E.g. Jules Cashford, Susan C. Shelmerdine, Apostolos N. Athanassakis.
  17. Harrison, "Notes Archaeological and Mythological on Bacchylides" The Classical Review 12.1 (February 1898, pp. 85–86), p. 86.
  18. Robert Graves. The Greek Myths (1960)
  19. "AMPHITRITE - Greek Goddess & Nereid Queen of the Sea". www.theoi.com. Retrieved 2023-03-15.

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