Oceanus in Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
(Ὠκεανός), the god of the river Oceanus, by which,
according to the most ancient notions of the Greeks, the
whole earth was surrounded. An account of this river belongs
to mythical geography, and we shall here confine ourselves
to describing the place which Oceanus holds in the ancient
cosmogony. In the Homeric poems he appears as a mighty god,
who yields to none save Zeus. (Il. 14.245, 20.7, 21.195.)
Homer does not mention his parentage. but calls Tethys his
wife, by whom he had three daughters, Thetis, Eurynome and
Perse. (Il. 14.302, 18.398, Od. 10.139.) His palace is
placed somewhere in the west (Il. 14.303, &c.), and there he
and Tethys brought up Hera, who was conveyed to them at the
time when Zeus was engaged in the struggle with the Titans.
Hesiod (Hes. Th. 133, 337, &c., 349, &c.) calls Oceanus a
son of Uranus and Gaea, the eldest of the Titans, and the
husband of Tethys, by whom he begot 3000 rivers, and as manv
Oceanides, of whom Hesiod mentions only the eldest. (Comp.
Apollod. 3.8.1, 10.1.) This poet (Theoy. 282) also speaks of
sources of Oceanus. Representations of the god are seen on
imperial coins of Tyre and Alexandria. (Hirt, Mythol.
Bilderb. p. 149.) - A Dictionary of Greek and Roman
biography and mythology, William Smith, Ed.
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