Online Encyclopedia

TRITON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 296 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TRITON  , in

Greek
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mythology, son of
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Poseidon and
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Amphitrite, the personification of the roaring waters . According to
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Hesiod (Theog . 930), he dwelt with his parents in a
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golden palace in the depths of the sea . The story of the Argonauts places his home on the coast of
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Libya . When the Argo was driven ashore on the Lesser Syrtes the crew carried the vessel to Lake Tritonis, whence Triton, the
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local deity, guided them across to the Mediterranean (
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Apollonius Rhodius iv . 1552) . He was represented as human down to the
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waist, with the tail of a fish . His
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special attribute was a
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twisted seashell, on which he blew to
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calm or raise the waves . Its sound was so terrible, when loudly blown, that it put the giants to
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flight, who imagined it to be the roar of a mighty wild beast (Hyginus, Poet. astronom. ii . 23) . When Misenus, the
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trumpeter of
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Aeneas, challenged him to a contest of blowing, Triton in his jealousy flung him into the sea . In course of time Triton became the name for individuals of a class, like Pan and
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Silenus, and Tritons (male and
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female) are mentioned in the plural, usually as forming the escort of marine divinities .

The beings called Centauro-Tritons or Ichthyocentaurs were of a triple nature, with the forefeet of a

horse in addition to the human
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body and fish tail .
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Pausanias (ix . 21) gives a detailed description of the ordinary Triton . It is probable that the idea of Triton owes its origin to the Phoenician fish-deities . See Preller, Griechische Mythologie (4th ed., 1894) ; F . R . Dressler, Triton and die Tritonen (
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Wurzen, 1892) .

End of Article: TRITON
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