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In Greek mythology Cephissus also spelled Kephissos (Ancient Greek: Κηφισός, romanized: Kephisos) is a river god of ancient Greece, associated with the river Cephissus in Attica and/or with the river Cephissus in Boeotia, both in Greece.

Family[]

Cephissus 5thcentBC

The Xenokrateia Relief, from the late fifth century BC, commemorates the founding of a sanctuary to Cephissus, National Archaeological Museum of Athens.

Cephissus was a son of Oceanus and Tethys.[1] The naiad nymph daughters of Cephissus were called the Cephisides who bore fifty sons to Orion.[2]

The daughters of Cephissus were:

  1. the naiad Lilaea, the eponym of Lilaea,[3]
  2. Daulis, the eponym of the city of Daulis[4] and
  3. Melaeno, mother of Delphus by Apollo, though he also gives two other accounts of Delphus' mother.[5]

However, one of these alternate versions is that Thyia daughter of the aboriginal Castalius was Delphus' mother, almost certainly the same Thyia whom Herodotus claims was daughter of Cephissus to whom the Delphians built an altar to the winds and who was eponym of the Thyiades.[6] Interestingly, Castalia is said to be the child of Cephissus.[7]

A mortal son of Cephissus was Eteocles by Euippe, daughter of Leucon, son of Athamas. This Euippe later on became the wife of King Andreus of Orchomenus and Eteocles inherited Andreus' throne.[8] Eteocles or Eteoclus, son of Cephissus, was confirmed from Hesiod's and Pindar's accounts.[9] He was the first made offering to the Charites by the side of the river Cephissus.[10]

Cephissus was also said to be the father of Narcissus by the naiad Liriope.[11] Another son, Euonymus who gave his name to Euonymeia, was the father of Aulis, the eponym of Aulis.[12]

Mythology[]

This Cephisus may also be the Argive river-god of the same name who together with two other river-gods, Inachus and Asterion, judged that the land of Argolis to be belonged to Hera instead of Poseidon. Thus, the sea god made their waters disappear and for this reason neither of the three rivers provide water to the land except after rain.[13] In an obscure myth only stated by Ovid in Book 7 of his Metamorphoses, Cephissus greatly lamented his grandson being turned into a seal by Apollo.[14]

References[]

  1. Hyginus, Fabulae Preface 5
  2. Corinna Frag 655.
  3. Pausanias, Description of Greece 10.33.4
  4. Pausanias, Description of Greece 10.4.7
  5. Pausanias, Description of Greece 10.6.4
  6. Herodotus, The Histories 7.178.1
  7. Alcaeus Frag, Pausanias 10.8.9
  8. Pausanias, 9.34.9
  9. Hesiod, Ehoiai fr. 26; Pindar, Olympian Odes 14
  10. Pindar, Pythian Ode 12 str 4
  11. Ovid, Metamorphoses 3.342; Hyginus, Fabulae 271; Statius, Thebaid 7.340
  12. Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Euonymeia, Aulis
  13. Pausanias, 2.15.5
  14. Ovid, Metamorphoses 7.388
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