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- Nereids - Mythopedia
The Nereids were the fifty daughters of the sea gods Nereus and Doris Numbered among the nymphs—female divinities who took the form of beautiful young women—the Nereids were widely regarded as kind and helpful sea deities The most famous among them were Amphitrite, Galatea, and Thetis
- Thetis – Mythopedia
Thetis, like her Nereid sisters, was a beautiful sea nymph She was honored as a goddess and was immortal Except for a brief period after her marriage to the mortal Peleus—during which she lived in Peleus’ palace in Phthia in northern Greece—Thetis lived with the other Nereids far below the waves, in the luxurious grotto of Nereus
- Psamathe – Mythopedia
Psamathe was a Nereid—one of the fifty sea nymphs born to the gods Nereus and Doris With her two consorts, Aeacus and Proteus, she had several children A famous shapeshifter, Psamathe once turned herself into a seal to avoid a suitor’s attentions, but to no avail
- Amphitrite – Mythopedia
As a Nereid and the wife of Poseidon, Amphitrite was the queen of the sea She was tremendously powerful, said to be able to calm the waves and even the wind Amphitrite was quite popular in ancient art She could be shown with her husband Poseidon or on her own
- Naiads - Mythopedia
The Nereid Amphitrite, for example, was the wife of Poseidon himself, the Olympian god of the sea; the Oceanid Metis was the second wife of Zeus, king of the gods; another Oceanid, Doris, married the Titan Oceanus and became the mother of the fifty Nereids
- Doris - Mythopedia
A few of Doris’ Nereid daughters were significant figures Thetis, for example, married the hero Peleus and became the mother of Achilles; Amphitrite became the wife of Poseidon and ruled as queen of the sea; and Galatea was known as the unhappy love interest of the Cyclops Polyphemus Popular Culture
- Nereus – Mythopedia
Etymology The name “Nereus” (Greek Νηρεύς, translit Nēreús), which is not necessarily older than the title “Nereid,” may be related to the obscure Greek words νῆρις (nêris, “hollow rock”) and νηρός (nērós, “low-lying”), but it is perhaps more likely to be of pre-Greek origin; Indo-European etymologies have been proposed but have not found widespread
- Abas (son of Poseidon) – Mythopedia
Abas was a son of Poseidon and the Nereid Arethusa He was a king on the island of Euboea and gave his name to the Abantes tribe His grandson Elephenor led the Abantes during the Trojan War
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