Listed 2 sub titles with search on: Homeric world for wider area of: "CATANIA Province SICILY" .
AETNA (Mountain) SICILY
Typhon (Tuphaon) or Typhoeus (Tuphoeus). A monster of the primitive
world, who is described sometimes as a destructive hurricane, and sometimes as
a fire-breathing giant. According to Homer, he was concealed in the earth in the
country of the Arimi, which was lashed by Zeus with flashes of lightning. In Hesiod,
Typhaon and Typhoeus are two distinct beings. Typhaon is represented as a son
of Typhoeus, and a fearful hurricane, and as having become by Echidna the father
of the dog Orthus, Cerberus, the Lernaean hydra, Chimaera, and the Sphinx. Typhoeus,
on the other hand, is called the youngest son of Tartarus and Gaea, or of Here
alone, because she was indignant at Zeus having given birth to Athene. He is described
as a monster with 100 heads, fearful eyes, and terrible voices, who wanted to
acquire the sovereignty of gods and men, but, after a fearful struggle, was subdued
by Zeus with a thunderbolt. He begot the winds, whence he is also called the father
of the Harpies; but the beneficent winds Notus, Boreas, Argestes, and Zephyrus
were not his sons. He was buried in Tartarus, under Mount Aetna, the workshop
of Hephaestus, whence it is called by the poets Typhois Aetna. Typhus was identified
by the Greeks with the Egyptian god Set, who typified the power of darkness, and
who slew Osiris.
This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Dec 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Typhon : Perseus Project index
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