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- Oceanus abstract "Oceanus (/oʊˈsiːənəs/; Greek: Ὠκεανός Ōkeanós, pronounced [ɔːkeanós]) was a divine figure in classical antiquity, believed by the ancient Greeks and Romans to be the divine personification of the sea, an enormous river encircling the world.Strictly speaking, Oceanus was the ocean-stream at the Equator in which floated the habitable hemisphere (οἰκουμένη, oikoumene). Thus, the sun rises from the deep-flowing Oceanus in the east and at the end of the day sinks back into the Oceanus in the west. In Greek mythology, this world-ocean was personified as a Titan, a son of Uranus and Gaea. In Hellenistic and Roman mosaics, this Titan was often depicted as having the upper body of a muscular man with a long beard and horns (often represented as the claws of a crab) and the lower body of a serpent (cf. Typhon). On a fragmentary archaic vessel of circa 580 BC (British Museum 1971.11-1.1), among the gods arriving at the wedding of Peleus and the sea-nymph Thetis, is a fish-tailed Oceanus, with a fish in one hand and a serpent in the other, gifts of bounty and prophecy. In Roman mosaics, such as that from Bardo he might carry a steering-oar and cradle a ship.Some scholars believe that Oceanus originally represented all bodies of salt water, including the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, the two largest bodies known to the ancient Greeks. However, as geography became more accurate, Oceanus came to represent the stranger, more unknown waters of the Atlantic Ocean (also called the \"Ocean Sea\"), while the newcomer of a later generation, Poseidon, ruled over the Mediterranean.Oceanus' consort is his sister Tethys, and from their union came the ocean nymphs, also referred to as the three-thousand Oceanids, and all the rivers of the world, fountains, and lakes. From Cronus, of the race of Titans, the Olympian gods have their birth, and Hera mentions twice in Iliad book XIV her intended journey \"to the ends of the generous earth on a visit to Oceanus, whence the gods have risen, and Tethys our mother who brought me up kindly in their own house.\"In most variations of the war between the Titans and the Olympians, or Titanomachy, Oceanus, along with Prometheus and Themis, did not take the side of his fellow Titans against the Olympians, but instead withdrew from the conflict. In most variations of this myth, Oceanus also refused to side with Cronus in the latter's revolt against their father, Uranus.".
- Oceanus thumbnail Oceanus_at_Trevi.JPG?width=300.
- Oceanus wikiPageExternalLink cosmol.htm.
- Oceanus wikiPageExternalLink TitanOkeanos.html.
- Oceanus wikiPageID "49071".
- Oceanus wikiPageLength "10398".
- Oceanus wikiPageOutDegree "113".
- Oceanus wikiPageRevisionID "705305426".
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Achilles.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Amphitrite.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greece.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Apollo.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Apollonius_of_Rhodes.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Arcadia.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Atlantic_Ocean.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Avienus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Bibliotheca_(Pseudo-Apollodorus).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Black_Sea.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Greek_sea_gods.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Offspring_of_Gaia.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Titans.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Classical_antiquity.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Coeus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Crius.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Cronus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Cyclops.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Danube.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Dione_(Titaness).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Dionysius_Periegetes.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Dionysus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Earth.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Ecumene.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Equator.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Gaia_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Greek_mythology.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Hecataeus_of_Abdera.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Hephaestus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Hera.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Heracles.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Herodotus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Hesiod.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Hesperides.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Homer.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Hyperion_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Iapetus_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Iliad.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Inachus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Károly_Kerényi.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Le_Bardo.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Leto.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink List_of_water_deities.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Livio_Catullo_Stecchini.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Mediterranean_Sea.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Metis_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Mnemosyne.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Nephele.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Nestor_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Nile.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Nymph.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Ocean.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Oceanid.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Odysseus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Ogyges.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Peleus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Phoebe_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Pleione_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Pomponius_Mela.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Poseidon.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Potamoi.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Pottery_of_ancient_Greece.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Pre-Greek_substrate.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Prometheus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Rasā.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Rhea_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink River.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Robert_S._P._Beekes.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Rome.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Sea.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Serpent_(symbolism).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Stream.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Sub-Saharan_Africa.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Tartarus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Tell.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Tethys_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Theia.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Themis.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Thetis.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Titan_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Titanomachy.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Trevi_Fountain.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Twelve_Olympians.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Typhon.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Uranus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Uranus_(mythology).
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink World_Ocean.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink Zeus.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLink File:Pergamon_Museum_Berlin_2007034.jpg.
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ocean River".
- Oceanus wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ocean".