Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The earliest surviving representation of Nyx is an Attic lekythos (c. 500 BC), which shows her driving a two-horse chariot away from Helios, who is ascending into the sky in his quadriga at the start of the new day. [167] Most depictions of Nyx portray her as having wings, and in early representations she is usually shown riding in a chariot. [168]
Children of Nyx. Subcategories. This category has the following 7 subcategories, out of 7 total. E. Eos (3 C, 11 P) Erinyes (7 P) Eris (mythology) (4 C, 15 P) Eros (3 ...
Eris is the oldest and most important child of Nyx, while Nereus is Pontus' oldest and most important son. Hesiod chooses verbs and adjectives to describe Nereus in juxtaposition to Eris' children, such as ἀ-ψευδέα ' does-not-lie ' and ἀ-ληθέα ' does-not-forget ' , as opposed to Ψευδέα ' Lies ' and Λήθη ' Forgetfulness ...
In Hesiod's Theogony, Hypnos is one of the offspring of Nyx (Νύξ, ' Night '), the goddess of Night, without a father. [11] In genealogies from works by Roman authors, he is the son of Erebus (Darkness) and Nox (Night, the Roman name for Nyx). [12] In the Iliad, Nyx is a dreadful and powerful goddess, and even Zeus fears to enter her realm. [13]
Hesiod says Nyx and Erebus together had Aether and Hemera, but Nyx had the other children on her own. Cicero and Hyginus say Nyx had all her children with Erebus. In Virgil's Aeneid, Nox is said to be the mother of the Furies by Hades. [18] Some authors made Nyx the mother of Eos, the dawn goddess, who was often conflated with Nyx's daughter ...
Like her mother Nyx, Hesiod has Eris as the mother—with no father mentioned—of many children (the only child of Nyx with offspring) who are also personifications representing various misfortunes and harmful things which, in Eris' case, might be thought to result from discord and strife [6] All of Eris' children are little more than ...
However, other early sources give other genealogies. According to one, the union of Erebus and Nyx resulted in Aether, Eros, and Metis (rather than Aether and Hemera), while according to another, Aether and Nyx were the parents of Eros (in Hesiod, the fourth god to come into existence after Chaos, Gaia (Earth), and Tartarus). [6]
Moros is the offspring of Nyx, the primordial goddess of the night. It is suggested by Roman authors that Moros was sired by Erebus, primordial god of darkness. [3] However, in Hesiod's Theogony it is suggested that Nyx bore him by herself, along with several of her other children.