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  2. River gods (Greek mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_gods_(Greek_mythology)

    Peneus, river god of Thessaly flowing from the foot of Pindus. He was the father of Daphne and Stilbe , love interests of the god Apollo. Scamander , who fought on the side of the Trojans during the Trojan War , and was offended when Achilles polluted his waters with a large number of Trojan corpses.

  3. Achelous - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achelous

    Achelous was a rural-agricultural water god whose importance was a reflection of the agricultural importance of rivers and their fertile river deltas. This relationship is also reflected in the association of Achelous' broken-off horn with the cornucopia or horn of plenty. [ 62 ]

  4. List of water deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_water_deities

    Oceanus, Titan god of the Earth-encircling river Okeanos, the font of all the Earth's fresh water. Palaemon, a young sea god who aided sailors in distress. Phorcys, god of the hidden dangers of the deep. Pontus, primeval god of the sea, father of the fish and other sea creatures. Poseidon, Olympian god of the sea and king of the sea gods; also god

  5. Phlegethon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phlegethon

    Plato describes it as "a stream of fire, which coils round the earth and flows into the depths of Tartarus". [ 2 ] In Orphic literature , in which there are four rivers of the underworld, the Phlegethon is associated with the element of fire, and the direction east.

  6. Lethe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lethe

    There were rivers of Lethe and Mnemosyne at the oracular shrine of Trophonius in Boeotia, from which worshippers would drink before making oracular consultations with the god. More recently, Martin Heidegger used "lēthē" to symbolize not only the "concealment of Being" or "forgetting of Being", but also the "concealment of concealment", which ...

  7. Cocytus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cocytus

    Cocytus / k oʊ ˈ s aɪ t ə s / or Kokytos / k oʊ ˈ k aɪ t ə s / (Ancient Greek: Κωκυτός, literally "lamentation") is the river of wailing in the underworld in Greek mythology. [1] Cocytus flows into the river Acheron , on the other side of which lies Hades , the underworld , the mythological abode of the dead.

  8. Eridanos (mythological river) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eridanos_(mythological_river)

    A small river near Athens was named Eridanos in ancient times, and has been rediscovered with the excavations for construction of the Athens Metro.There were no serious scientific works that would investigate the connection of Eridanus with the Balkan hydronym for the river Drina, although such studies would be necessary, bearing in mind the ...

  9. Styx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Styx

    the famous cold water ... trickles down from a high and beetling rock. Far under the wide-pathed earth a branch of Oceanus flows through the dark night out of the holy stream, and a tenth part of his water is allotted to her. [23] In the Iliad the river Styx forms a boundary of Hades, the abode of the dead, in the Underworld. [24]