:ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :crown: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: :ocean: “Jung described the animus as the unconscious masculine side of a woman, and the anima as the unconscious feminine side of a man, with each transcending the personal psyche” Enjoy :blush: Females can identify with the male gods archetypes and vice versa for males relating with female goddesses. I think you guys would really like this Greek god and goddess archetype series. This is all from the text “Gods in everyman” by Jean Shinoda Bolen and she also has a book called “Goddess in everywomen”. Wherever we find her, Amphitrite is a reminder of the wondrous and mysterious creatures, both real and mythological, that inhabit the seas.:warning: Disclaimer! :warning: I do not own any of the text below. The large Asteroid 29 Amphitrite lies within the Aries constellation. We can also find the goddess above us in the stars. There, she lounges with a dolphin while wearing her identifying crab claw crown. There are several priceless works of art depicting Amphitrite’s image around the world, including a sculpture at the Louvre in Paris by Jacques Prou. It’s on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Many ships in both the US and the British Royal Navy were named for her.Ī painting by baroque artist Nicole Poussin completed in 1604 is called The Triumph of Amphitrite and depicts her marriage ceremony. In later Greek mythology, the name Amphitrite became synonymous with the sea. Their children were Triton, who was a famous merman, and their daughter Rhode, who was a sea nymph. The eldest was Amphitrite, who had two children with Poseidon after they were married. Nereus, the old man of the sea and lord of the fish, and his wife Doris had 50 daughters called the Nereid, meaning daughters of Nereus, derived from the word neros (wet). Amphitrite rode off on her magical seahorse into the happily ever after of the ocean. Scylla spent her days living in a cave and grabbing sailors as they passed with her long arms and eating them for lunch. In a fit of jealousy, she tossed magic herbs into Scylla’s bath and the nymph changed into a terrible hideous monster with twelve arms and six mouths. Particularly irritating to Amphitrite was his extreme infatuation with the beautiful sea nymph, Scylla. Although she generally had a kind nature toward the creatures of the sea, the goddess was getting increasingly annoyed and jealous due to the extracurricular activities of her husband outside of their marriage. Once they were actually married, the sea god went back to his usual ways and had numerous affairs with other goddesses, nymphs and mortals. As a reward, Poseidon placed an image of Delphinus in the sky. Delphinus explained that her steadiness would balance the volatile nature of Poseidon, and that if she married him there would be harmony in the sea and joy for all. He was such a lovely creature that Amphitrite was drawn to him and listened to his persuasion. After weeks of searching, he finally found her. The smart and gentle natured dolphin set off on the mission. Unfortunately, for the love-struck Poseidon, the goddess wasn’t interested in his proposal or giving up her life as a sea virgin and she ran off to the Atlas Mountains to hide.īeing the persistent type, Poseidon summoned Delphinus, the dolphin king, to find the goddess and persuade her to marry him. She was dancing with her sisters and when the god of the sea saw her, he decided he wanted her as his wife. The story of her courtship with Poseidon started on the island called Naxos in the Aegean Sea. She is often depicted wearing a crab claw crown and sitting on a throne near her husband Poseidon or in a chariot drawn by hippocamps, seahorses. In the creation myths, the heavens and the land came first before the sea. The name Amphitrite means the third element, or the third that encompasses. In later years, she had a lesser role in the myths and eventually her name simply represented the sea itself. Her legendary husband was the powerful Poseidon, the god of the sea, and brother of the chief of gods, Zeus. She witnessed the birth of the god Apollo along with other high ranking deities. Originally, Amphitrite was an important goddess.
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