POSEIDON (puh-SYE-dun or
poh-SYE-dun; Roman name
Neptune) was the god of the sea,
earthquakes and horses. Although he
was officially one of the supreme
gods of Mount Olympus, he spent
most of his time in his watery
domain.
Poseidon was brother to Zeus and
Hades. These three gods divided
creation between them. Zeus was
ruler of the sky, Hades had dominion
of the Underworld and Poseidon
was given all water, both fresh and
salt.
Although there were various rivers
personified as gods, these would
have been technically under
Poseidon's sway. Similarly, Nereus,
the Old Man of the Sea, wasn't really
considered on a par with Poseidon,
who was known to drive his chariot
through the waves in unquestioned
dominance. Poseidon had married
Nereus's daughter, the sea-nymph
Amphitrite.
In dividing heaven, the watery realm
and the subterranean land of the
dead, the Olympians agreed that the
earth itself would be ruled jointly,
with Zeus as king. This led to a
number of territorial disputes among
the gods. Poseidon vied with Athena
to be patron deity of Athens. The
god demonstrated his power and
benevolence by striking the
Acropolis with his three-pronged
spear, which caused a spring of salt
water to emerge.
Athena, however, planted an olive
tree, which was seen as a more
useful favor. Her paramount
importance to the Athenians is seen
in her magnificent temple, the
Parthenon, which still crowns the
Acropolis. The people of Athens
were careful, all the same, to honor
Poseidon as well (as soon as his
anger calmed down and he withdrew
the flood of seawater with which he
ravaged the land after his loss in the
contest with Athena).
Poseidon was father of the hero
Theseus, although the mortal Aegeus
also claimed this distinction. Theseus
was happy to have two fathers,
enjoying the lineage of each when it
suited him. Thus he became king of
Athens by virtue of being Aegeus's
son, but availed himself of Poseidon's
parentage in facing a challenge
handed him by King Minos of Crete.
This monarch threw his signet ring
into the depths of the sea and dared
Theseus to retrieve it. The hero dove
beneath the waves and not only
found the ring but was given a crown
by Poseidon's wife, Amphitrite.
Poseidon was not so well-disposed
toward another famous hero.
Because Odysseus killed the
Cyclops Polyphemus, who was
Poseidon's son, the god not only
delayed the hero's homeward return
from the Trojan War but caused him
to face enormous perils. At one point
he whipped up the sea with his
trident and caused a storm so severe
that Odysseus was shipwrecked.
Poseidon similarly cursed the wife of
King Minos. Minos had proved his
divine right to rule Crete by calling on
Poseidon to send a bull from the sea,
which the king promised to sacrifice.
Poseidon sent the bull, but Minos
liked it too much to sacrifice it. So
Poseidon asked Aphrodite, the
goddess of love, to make Minos's
queen, Pasiphae, fall in love with the
bull. The result was the monstrous
Minotaur, half-man, half-bull.
As god of horses, Poseidon often
adopted the shape of a steed. It is
not certain that he was in this form
when he wooed Medusa. But when
Perseus later killed the Gorgon, the
winged horse Pegasus sprang from
her severed neck.
Poseidon sometimes granted the
shape-shifting power to others. And
he ceded to the request of the
maiden Caenis that she be
transformed into the invulnerable,
male warrior Caeneus.