Aiolos (), Latinized as Æolus, Eolus, Æolos, or Aiolus, was the name of three personages in Greek Mythology. These three personages are often difficult to tell apart, and even the ancient mythographers appear to have been perplexed about which Æolus was which. Diodorus made an attempt to define each of these three (although it is clear he also became muddled), and his opinion is followed here. Briefly, the first Æolus was a son of Hellen and founder of the Æolian race; the second was a son of Poseidon, who led a colony to the Tyrrhenian sea; and the third Æolus was a son of Hippotes who is mentioned in the Odyssey as Keeper of the Winds in Greek Mythology. All three men named Æolus appear to be connected genealogically, although the precise relationship is often ambiguous. The traditions regarding the second and third Æolus are especially entangled.
Æolus (son of Hellen)
This
Æolus was son of Hellen and the nymph Orseis, and a brother of
Dorus,
Xuthus and
Amphictyon. He is described as the ruler of
Aeolia (later called
Thessaly) and held to be the founder of the
Aeolic branch of the Greek/Hellenic nation. Æolus married
Enarete, daughter of Deimachus (otherwise unknown). Æolus and Enarete had many children, although the precise number and identities of these children vary from author to author in the ancient sources. Those listed as the sons of Æolus and Enarete include
Cretheus,
Sisyphus,
Deioneus,
Salmoneus,
Athamas,
Perieres,
Cercaphas and perhaps
Magnes (who is usually regarded as a brother of
Macedon). Another son is named
Mimas, who provides a link to the third Æolus (see below) in a genealogy that seems very contrived.
Calyce,
Peisidice,
Perimele and
Alcyone were counted among the daughters of Æolus and Enarete. This
Aeolus also had an illegitimate daughter named
Arne, begotten on
Melanippe, daughter of the Centaur
Cheiron. This Arne became the mother of the second Æolus, by the god Poseidon. Aeolus is often described as god of Wind.
Æolus (son of Poseidon)
This
Æolus was a son of Poseidon by Arne, daughter of Æolus. He had a twin brother named
Boeotus. Arne confessed to her father that she was with child by the god Poseidon; Æolus, however, did not believe her, and handed her over to a man named
Metapontus, King of Icaria. When Bœotus and Æolus were born, they were raised by Metapontus; but their stepmother (
Autolyte, wife of Metapontus) quarrelled with their mother Arne, prompting Bœotus and Æolus to kill Autolyte and flee from Icaria. Bœotus (accompanied by Arne) went to southern Thessaly, and founded
Boeotia; but Æolus went to a group of islands in the Tyrrhenian sea, which received from him the name of the
Aeolian Islands; according to some accounts this Æolus founded the town of Lipara. Although his home has been traditionally identified as one of the Æolian Islands (there is little consensus as to which), near
Sicily, an alternative location has been suggested at
Gramvousa off the northwest coast of
Crete. Æolus had six sons and six daughters, and the family lived happily together - that is until the day Æolus learned that one of his sons, named
Macareus, had committed incest with his sister
Canace. Horrified, Æolus expelled Macareus (Canace killed herself in shame) and threw the child borne of this incestuous union to the dogs. (Other accounts claim that the child, a daughter named
Amphissa, was rescued and later beloved by
Apollo.)
Æolus (son of Hippotes)
This
Æolus is most frequently conflated with Æolus, the son of Poseidon. It is difficult to delineate this Æolus from the second Æolus, as their identities seem to have been merged by many ancient writers. The father of this third Æolus is given as Mimas, a son of the first Æolus (son of Hellen). According to some accounts, Mimas married the same Melanippe who was the mother of Arne! This Æolus lived on the floating island of
Aeolia and was visited by
Odysseus and his crew in the
Odyssey. He gave hospitality for a month and provided for a west wind to carry them home. Unfortunately he also provided a gift of a bag containing each of the four winds, which Odysseus's crew members opened just before their home was reached. They were blown back to
Aeolia, where Æolus refused to provide any further help. (
Odyssey X, 2;
Virgil I, 52). This Æolus was perceived by later authors (i.e., after Homer) as a god, rather than as a mortal and simple Keeper of the Winds (as in the
Odyssey).
In Roman mythology, this Æolus also instigates a storm at the request of Juno (Hera) at the beginning of the Aeneid.
Television
- In Class of the Titans, a new kid's show, Aeolus #3 makes a guest appearance when the villain takes control of his winds. He is depicted as a pot-bellied middle-aged man with an english accent.
Greek gods | Characters in the Odyssey
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