Deucalion
Deukalion ( ancient Greek Δευκαλίων Deukalíōn , Latin Deucalion ) is the son of Prometheus and Pronoia ("precaution") in Greek mythology . He was king of Thessaly and lived in Kymos in the Phthiotis . His wife Pyrrha and his son Hellen were also buried here. Deucalion built the first temple of Olympian Zeus in Athens and was buried near it after his death.
Etymology and meaning
Deucalion is assigned the same role as the biblical Noah and the Sumerian Utnapishtim from the Epic of Gilgamesh . The origin of the name is not absolutely certain: one version is the derivation from the Boeotic form for Zeus ( Ζεύς ): Dyēus ( Δ (υ) εύς ) and kâlon ( κᾶλον (from * καϝελον ) "combustible (wood), ship"; from καίειν "Burn, light"). Another version sees the name as a Greek equivalent of the Indian Kali-Yuga . The name of his wife Pyrrha comes from the adjective pyrrhós, -á, -ón (πυρρός, ά, όν "flaming (transferred), flame-colored").
Deucalionic flood
Because of the depravity of the people, Zeus decided to end the Bronze Age with a great flood (the Deucalionic Flood ). Above all, the sons of Lykaon are said to have brought him to this decision.
Prometheus had ordered his son to build a ship ( ἡ κιβοτός "the box"). When it began to rain, Deucalion and his wife Pyrrha got into the box. All of Greece was flooded, after nine days and nine nights, when the tide was over, the couple landed on the Parnassos , according to other tradition on the Othrys . The righteous Deucalion and his wife Pyrrha were the only survivors. In the library of Apollodorus it is reported that other people who had escaped to the mountains also survived.
Deucalion asked the oracle of Themis what should be done to repopulate the earth (according to another source, Zeus himself gave him the order). He was advised to "throw his mother's bones over his shoulder". At first appalled by this outrage , they then understood the “mother” as Gaia (“mother earth”) and the “bones” as rocks; so they threw stones over their shoulders. It became people, a new human race, "a hard sex, experienced in tribulation". Pyrrha's stones became women and Deucalion became men.
In Hierapolis Bambyke , according to Lukian of Samosata , there was a throat under the temple of Dea Syria , which was supposed to be a remnant of the Deucalionic flood. According to tradition, Deucalion himself built the first temple here.
According to the Parian Chronicle , the Deucalionic Flood occurred in 1529/8 BC. When Kranaos was king of Athens.
Descendants of Deucalion
Deucalion had at least five children with Pyrrha , Protogeneia , Hellen (the progenitor of the Hellenes ), Graikos, Thyia and Orestheus and possibly a sixth, Amphictyon .
The following family tree based on Hesiod's theogony around 700 BC BC puts Deucalion in the center. He and his direct ancestors are written in bold , the large lines with the ancestors are also highlighted.
- The first gods, the Protogonoi, are marked with the + symbol, the chaos with ++ .
- The following generations are indented and supplemented with a preceding → arrow pointing to the right.
- In addition, each level, e.g. B. Uranus's grandchildren, highlighted in color and marked with → ² →.
- The color scale for each generation follows the rainbow.
- Siblings and cousins have the same color.
- The symbol ∞ connects father and mother as two partners, the slash / means “or”, ie a second name.
Single duplications are intended, e.g. For example, Hesperides appear over two branches, with Phorkys, god of the sea, and with Altlas.
- ++ the chaos , a complete disorder is in the beginning
- + Gaia is a Protogonos , i.e. a divine embodiment of the original principles
- Uranos and the titans rule the world in the origin
- → Iapetos plus all sons or daughters of Uranus can be found in this first level
- → ² → Prometheus and all of Uranus' grandchildren are on a second level
- → ² → → Deucalion , the great-grandson of Uranus, is in the third level
- → ² → → ⁴ → Hellen is a descendant of Uranos in the fourth level
- → ² → → ⁴ → → Aiolos , the great "progenitor" of the Greeks, is in the fifth level
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Kalyke , a daughter of Aiolos is in the sixth level, counting from Uranus
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Endymion , son of the Kalyke in the Seventh
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Aitolus , son of Endymion, in the 8th level
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Kalydon , son of Aitolus, is on the ninth level
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → Epicaste , wife of Agenor , the 10th
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → → Porthaon the 11th
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → → ¹² → Oineus the twelfth
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → → ¹² → → Deïaneira , wife of Heracles , in the 13th level
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → → ¹² → → ¹⁴ → Hyllos , cousin of Diomedes , fights against Troy , the 14th generation after Uranus
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → → ¹² → → ¹⁴ → → Telemachus , son of Odysseus , the 15th
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → → ¹² → → ¹⁴ → → ¹⁶ → the 16th level is the beginning of Roman mythology
- → ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → → ¹² → → ¹⁴ → → ¹⁶ → → the 17th
Surname | Partner | Note | |
---|---|---|---|
++ chaos | complete mess | 1 | |
+ Nyx | personalized night | 4th | |
Hesperides | Nymphs | 5 | |
Ker | violent death | 6th | |
Moros | God of doom | 7th | |
Thanatos | a god of the dead | 8th | |
Hypnos | God of sleep | 9 | |
Oneiroi | embodies dreams | 10 | |
Momos | personified blame | 11 | |
Moiren | three goddesses of fate | 12 | |
→ Clotho | the madwoman | 13 | |
→ Lachesis | the allocator | 14th | |
→ Atropos | the inevitable | 15th | |
Nemesis | justice | 16 | |
Apate | Deception and fraud | 17th | |
Philotes | friendship | 18th | |
Geras | the old age | 19th | |
Eris | Discord and strife | 20th | |
Oizys | Misery and misery | 21st | |
+ Erebos | ∞ Nyx | personified darkness | 23 |
Aither | the upper sky | 24 | |
Hemera | personalized day | 25th | |
+ Eros | covetous love | 26th | |
+ Tartaros | ∞ Gaia | World under Hades | 27 |
Typhon | ghastly monster | 28 | |
+ Gaia | various | personified earth | 29 |
Ourea | personified mountains | 30th | |
→ Etna | Sicily 3323 m | 31 | |
→ Athos | Greece 2033 m | 32 | |
→ Helicon | Boeotia 1748 m | 33 | |
→ Nysus | 40 | ||
→ Oreios | Thessaly 1726 m | 34 | |
→ Parnes | Attica 1413 m | 35 | |
→ Olymp | Macedonia 2918 m | 36 | |
→ Tmolos | Asia Minor | 37 | |
Pontus | ∞ Gaia | Sea deity | 39 |
→ Nereus | ∞ Doris | wise god of the sea | 40 |
→ ² → Nereids | 50 daughters | 41 | |
→ Thaumas | ∞ Ozomene / Electra | Sea god | 42 |
→ ² → Aello | Harpy, Wind Bride | 44 | |
→ ² → Okypete | Harpy, fast-winged | 45 | |
→ ² → Podarge | Harpy, quick-footed | 46 | |
→ ² → Kelaino | Harpy, the dark one | 47 | |
→ ² → Iris | ∞ Zephyr | Rainbow | 48 |
→ ² → Arke | Twin of the iris | 49 | |
→ Keto | ∞ Phorkys | Sea goddess , whale | 50 |
→ Phorkys | ∞ Keto | Sea god | 51 |
→ ² → Stheno | Gorgon , mighty | 52 | |
→ ² → Euryale | Gorgon , jump far | 53 | |
→ ² → Medusa | Gorgon , mortal | 54 | |
→ ² → Pemphredo | Gray , a gray | 55 | |
→ ² → Enyo | Gray , a gray | 56 | |
→ ² → Deino | Gray , a gray | 57 | |
→ ² → Echidna | ∞ Typhon | unspeakable monster | 58 |
→ ² → → Orthos | Dog with two heads | 59 | |
→ ² → → Kerberos | at the entrance to the underworld | 60 | |
→ ² → → Hydra | regrowing heads | 61 | |
→ ² → → Chimera | Hybrid creatures , breathing fire | 62 | |
→ ² → → Nemean lion | invulnerable in Argolida | 63 | |
→ ² → → Phaia | Wild boar near Corinth | 64 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Calydonian boar | with bristles like skewers | 65 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Erymanthic boar | in Arcadia | 66 | |
→ ² → → Aithon | huge eagle | 67 | |
→ ² → Ladon | guards golden apples | 68 | |
→ ² → Scylla | Sea monsters | 69 | |
→ ² → Hesperides | 3–7 nymphs | 70 | |
→ ² → Thoosa | ∞ Poseidon | Sea nymph | 71 |
→ ² → → Polyphem | Cyclops | 72 | |
→ Eurybia | ∞ Kreios | with a heart of steel | 73 |
Uranus | ∞ Gaia | first born | 105 |
→ Briareos | Hundred armed man | 106 | |
→ Gyges | Hundred armed man | 107 | |
→ Kottos | Hundred armed man | 108 | |
→ Brontes | Cyclops | 109 | |
→ Steropes | Cyclops | 110 | |
→ Arges | Cyclops | 111 | |
→ giants | fight Olympians | 112 | |
→ Alekto | Erinnye , incessantly | 113 | |
→ Megaira | Erinnye , envious anger | 114 | |
→ Tisiphone | Erinnye , retaliation | 115 | |
→ Meliads | Ash nymphs | 116 | |
→ Oceanus | ∞ Tethys | Titan , Lord of the Ocean | 117 |
→ Tethys | ∞ Oceanus | Titan , goddess of the sea | 118 |
→ ² → Oceanids | Sea and fresh water | 119 | |
→ Kronos | ∞ Rhea | Titan , leader | 181 |
→ Rhea | ∞ Kronos | Titanine , River of Time | 182 |
→ ² → Hestia | Olympian of the hearth | 183 | |
→ ² → Hades | Olympians of the underworld | 184 | |
→ ² → Poseidon | Olympians of the sea | 185 | |
→ ² → Demeter | Olympian , grain | 186 | |
→ ² → Zeus | ∞ Metis | supreme Olympian | 187 |
→ ² → → Athena | Olympian of wisdom | 188 | |
→ ² → Hera | ∞ Zeus | Olympian and wife | 189 |
→ ² → → Aphrodite | Olympian of love | 190 | |
→ ² → → Ares | Olympians of War | 191 | |
→ ² → → Hephaestus | ∞ Aphrodite | Olympians of fire | 192 |
→ Koios | ∞ Phoibe | Titan in Tartaros | 200 |
→ Phoibe | ∞ Koios | Titanine , the shining one | 201 |
→ ² → Leto | ∞ Zeus | 202 | |
→ ² → → Artemis | Olympian in the hunt | 203 | |
→ ² → → Apollo | Olympians of light | 204 | |
→ ² → Hecate | 205 | ||
→ Hyperion | ∞ Theia | Titan of Light | 235 |
→ Theia | ∞ Hyperion | Titanine | 236 |
→ ² → Helios | the sun god | 237 | |
→ ² → Selene | the moon goddess | 238 | |
→ ² → Eos | the dawn | 239 | |
→ Kreios | ∞ Eurybia | titanium | 240 |
→ ² → Astraios | ∞ Eos | Titan of the evening glow | 241 |
→ ² → Pallas | titanium | 242 | |
→ ² → Perses | ∞ Asteria | Titan of Destruction | 243 |
→ Themis | ∞ Zeus | Titaness of Justice | 250 |
→ ² → Thallo | Hore (1), spring | 251 | |
→ ² → Auxo | Hore (1), growth | 252 | |
→ ² → Karpo | Hore (1), summer | 253 | |
→ ² → Dike | Hore (2), justice | 254 | |
→ ² → Eunomia | Hore (2), Legislation | 255 | |
→ ² → Irene | Hore (2), peace | 256 | |
→ ² → eye | 12 o'clock, first light | 257 | |
→ ² → anatole | 12 o'clock, sunrise | 258 | |
→ ² → Mousika | 12 h, study | 249 | |
→ ² → gymnastics | 12 o'clock, gymnastics | 260 | |
→ ² → nymph | 12 h, cleaning | 261 | |
→ ² → Mesembria | 12 noon | 262 | |
→ ² → sponde | 12 h, fuel offer | 263 | |
→ ² → Elete | 12 o'clock, prayer | 264 | |
→ ² → file | 12 o'clock, food, pleasure | 265 | |
→ ² → Hesperis | 12 o'clock, evening | 266 | |
→ ² → Dysis | 12 o'clock, sunset | 267 | |
→ ² → Arktos | 12 h, last light | 268 | |
→ Mnemosyne | ∞ Zeus | Titanin , the memory | 280 |
→ ² → Klio | Muse story | 281 | |
→ ² → Euterpe | Muse lyric and flute | 282 | |
→ ² → Melpomene | Muse tragedy | 283 | |
→ ² → Erato | Muse love poem | 284 | |
→ ² → Terpsichore | Muse choral lyric and dance | 285 | |
→ ² → Urania | Muse astronomy | 286 | |
→ ² → Thalia | Muse comedy | 287 | |
→ ² → Polyhymnia | Muse singing | 288 | |
→ ² → Calliope | Muse epic poetry | 289 | |
→ Iapetos | ∞ Klymene / Asia | Titan in Tartaros | 290 |
→ ² → Menoitios | the arrogant | 291 | |
→ ² → Atlas | ∞ Pleione / Hesperia | supports heavenly vaults | 292 |
→ ² → → asteropes | ∞ Ares | Pleiade | 293 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Oinomaos | ∞ steropes | King of Pisa | 294 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Hippodameia | ∞ Pelops | 295 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Atreus | ∞ Aërope | King of Mycenae | 296 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Agamemnon | ∞ Clytaimnestra | Ruler of Mycenae | 297 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Menelaus | King of Sparta | 298 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Thyestes | King of Mycenae | 299 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Pelopeia | ∞ Thyestes | father and daughter | 300 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Aigisthos | 301 | ||
→ ² → → Alkyons | ∞ Poseidon | Pleiades leader | 305 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Hyrieus | 306 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → Aithusa | 310 | ||
→ ² → → Elektra | ∞ Zeus | Pleiade | 311 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Dardanos | Ancestor of Troy | 312 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Iasion | Lover of Demeter | 313 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Harmonia | ∞ Cadmos | Goddess of unity | 314 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Polydoros | ∞ Nykteis | King of Thebes | 315 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Labdakos | 316 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Ino | ∞ Athamas | Nurse of Dionysus | 317 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Learchos | 318 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Melikertes | 319 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Autonoë | ∞ Aristaios | 320 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → actaion | Hunter with 35 dogs | 321 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Makris | Nurse of Dionysus | 322 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Semele | ∞ Zeus | 323 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Dionysus | Wine god | 324 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Illyrios | List of Illyrians | 325 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Encheleus | Encheleans | 326 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Autarieus | Autariats | 327 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Pannonius | Pannonians | 328 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Scordiscus | Scordisker | 329 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Triballus | Triballer | 330 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Dardanus | Dardaner | 331 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Maedus | 332 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Taulas | Taulantier | 333 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Perrhaebus | 334 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Partho | Parthians | 335 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Daortho | Daorsier | 336 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Dassaro | Dassaretes | 337 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Agaue | ∞ Echion | 338 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Pentheus | rules over Thebes | 339 | |
→ ² → → Kelaino | ∞ Poseidon | Pleiade | 340 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Lykos | 341 | ||
→ ² → → Maia | ∞ Zeus | Pleiade | 342 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Hermes | Olympic messenger of the gods | 343 | |
→ ² → → Merope | ∞ Sisyphus | 344 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Glaucos | ∞ Eurynomials | 345 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Bellerophon | kill the Chimera | 346 | |
→ ² → → Taygete | ∞ Zeus | Pleiade | 353 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Lacedaemon | ∞ Division | Ancestor of Sparta | 354 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → amyklas | ∞ Diomede | King of Sparta | 355 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Argalos | King of Sparta | 356 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Dereites | 357 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Oibalos | ∞ Gorgophone | 358 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Arene | 359 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Tyndareos | King of Sparta | 360 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Ikarios | establishes viticulture | 361 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Kynortas | King of Sparta | 362 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Perieres | King of Sparta | 363 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Hyakinthos | Lover of Apollo | 364 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Laodameia | ∞ Arkas | 365 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Hegesandra | 366 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Polyboia | 367 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Eurydice | ∞ Akrisios | 368 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Danaë | ∞ Zeus | 369 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Perseus | ∞ Andromeda | 370 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Perses | in Ethiopia | 371 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Alkaios | ∞ Astydameia | King of Tiryns | 372 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Amphitryon | 373 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Perimede | ∞ Likymnios | 374 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Anaxo | ∞ Electryon | 375 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Sthenelos | King of Tiryns | 376 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Heleios | 377 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Mestor | ∞ Lysidike | 378 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Kynouros | 379 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Electryon | ∞ Anaxo | King of Mycenae | 380 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Gorgophone | ∞ Perieres | 381 | |
→ ² → → Hyades | Nymphs | 400 | |
→ ² → → Hesperides | 3–7 clairvoyant daughters | 401 | |
→ ² → Epimetheus | ∞ Pandora | the one who thinks accordingly | 402 |
→ ² → → Pyrrha | Wife of Deucalion | 403 | |
→ ² → Prometheus | ∞ Clymene | Friend of the people | 404 |
→ ² → → Deucalion | ∞ Pyrrha | King of Thessaly | 405 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Melantho | 406 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Delphos | Namesake for Delphi | 407 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Pandora | ∞ Zeus | with an ominous rifle | 408 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Graikos | 409 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → Protogeneia | ∞ Lokros | the firstborn | 410 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Opus | 411 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Aethlios | ∞ Kalyke | King of Elis | 412 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Endymion | ∞ Selene | forever young lover | 413 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Aitolos | King of Elis | 414 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Paion | 415 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Epeios | ∞ Anaxiroe | King of Elis | 416 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Eurykyda | ∞ Poseidon | 417 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Eleios | King of Elis | 418 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Amphictyon | King in Attica | 424 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → Hellen | ∞ Orseis | Eponym of the Hellenes | 425 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Aiolos | ∞ Enarete | Progenitor of the Aioler | 426 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Sisyphus | ∞ Tyro | King of Corinth | 427 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Kretheus | King of Iolkos | 427 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Athamas | ∞ Nephele / Ino | King of Boeotia | 429 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Salmoneus | ∞ Alkidike / Sidero | 430 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Deion | ∞ Diomede | King of Phocis | 440 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Ainetos | 472 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → actuator | ∞ Aegina | 473 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Menoitios | ∞ Sthenele | Argonaut | 474 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Patroclus | fights against Troy | 475 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Phylakos | ∞ Clymene | 476 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Iphiklos | 477 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Alkimede | ∞ Aison | 478 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Jason | Leader of the Argonauts | 479 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Cephalus | ∞ Prokris / Eos | 485 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Magnes | Magnesia Peninsula | 486 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Perieres | ∞ Gorgophone | King of Messenia | 487 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Aphareus | ∞ Arene | 489 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Lynkeus | Argonaut | 490 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Idas | ∞ Marpessa | Argonaut | 491 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Leukippos | ∞ Philodike | King of Messenia | 492 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Tyndareos | 500 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Ikarios | 501 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Makareus | 502 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Kanake | ∞ Poseidon | 503 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Aloeus | ∞ Iphimedeia | 504 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Epopeus | King of Sicyon | 505 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Hopleus | 506 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Nireus | 507 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Triopas | 508 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Alkyons | ∞ Keyx | 520 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Peisidike | ∞ Myrmidon | 521 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Antiphos | 522 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → actuator | King of Phthia | 523 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Kalyke | ∞ Aethlios | 524 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → see | family tree | of the husband | 525 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Perimede | 526 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Xuthos | ∞ Krëusa | founds the Tetrapolis | 570 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Diomede | ∞ Deion | 571 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → see | family tree | of the husband | 572 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Phaëthon | 586 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Achaios | Progenitor of the Achaeans | 590 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Archandros | 591 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Archiletes | 592 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → ion | Ancestor of the Ionians | 595 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → Doros | Ancestor of the Dorians | 604 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Xanthippe | ∞ Pleuron | 605 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Agenor | ∞ epicaste | 606 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Porthaon | ∞ Euryte | King in Pleuron | 607 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Oineus | King in Pleuron | 608 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Agrios | King in Pleuron | 609 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Alkathoos | 610 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Melas | 620 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Leukopeus | 621 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → steropes | ∞ Acheloos | 622 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → sirens | 623 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → Demonike | ∞ Ares | 624 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Euenos | River god | 635 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → Marpessa | ∞ Idas | was kidnapped | 636 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → → Cleopatra | an alkyone | 637 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Thestios | ∞ Eurythemis | King of Pleuron | 638 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → Althaia | ∞ Oineus | 639 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → Hypermestra | ∞ Oikles | 660 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → Leda | ∞ Tyndareos | in Sparta | 661 |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → Plexippos | hunts Calydonian boar | 662 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → ¹⁰ → Eurypylos | 663 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Pylos | 664 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → ⁸ → → Molos | 665 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → steropes | 666 | ||
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → Tektamos | moves to Crete | 667 | |
→ ² → → ⁴ → → ⁶ → → Asterios | 668 |
Connection to other traditions
In connection with the volcanic explosion on Santorini, the legendary figure Deukalion could refer to an early king of the Athenians around 1500/1600 BC. Or to the legendary Minoan king of Crete . Traces of flooding can be found on Crete at this time; the Santorini explosion is said to have led to violent tsunamis .
The Deucalion myth is very similar to the biblical Noah saga with its arch construction ( cf. Flood ). There are also parallels in the Epic of Gilgamesh .
It is believed that the Greeks recognized Deucalion in the constellation of Aquarius .
literature
- Gian Andrea Caduff: Ancient deluge legends. Goettingen 1986.
- Paul Weizsäcker : Deucalion 1 . In: Wilhelm Heinrich Roscher (Hrsg.): Detailed lexicon of Greek and Roman mythology . Volume 1,1, Leipzig 1886, Col. 994-997 ( digitized version ).
- Karl Tümpel : Deucalion . In: Paulys Realencyclopadie der classischen Antiquity Science (RE). Volume V, 1, Stuttgart 1903, Col. 261-276.
Web links
- Photos of representations of Deucalion and Pyrrha in art, in the Warburg Institute Iconographic Database