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Pluto (mother of Tantalus)

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Revision as of 02:15, 16 February 2025 by imported>Patar knight (Adding local short description: "Greek mythological figure", overriding Wikidata description "mythological Greek character, mother of Tantalus")
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In Greek mythology, Pluto or Plouto (Ancient Greek: Πλουτώ) was the mother of Tantalus, usually by Zeus, though the scholion to line 5 of Euripides' play Orestes, names Tmolos as the father.<ref>Junk, s.v. Pluto 1; Gantz, p. 536; Hard, pp. 502, 674 n. 126; Bell, s.v. Pluto 2; Parada, s.v. Pluto 3; Smith, s.v. Pluto 2; Pausanias 2.22.3; Hyginus, Fabulae 82, 155; Antoninus Liberalis, 36 (Trzaskoma, Smith, and Brunet, p. 15); Nonnus, Dionysiaca 1.145–146, 7.119, 48.729-731.</ref> According to Hyginus, Pluto's father was Himas,<ref>Gantz, p. 536; Parada, s.v. Pluto 3; Hyginus, Fabulae 155</ref> while other sources give her father as Cronus.<ref>Junk, s.v. Pluto 1 (citing a scholion to Pindar, Olympian 3.41); Tripp, s.v. Tantalus 1; Grimal, s.v. Tantalus 1; Rutherford, p. 431.</ref>

According to the Clementine Recognitions, the mother of Tantalus, called either Plutis or Plute, was the daughter of Atlas.<ref>Junk, s.v. Pluto 1; Clementine Recognitions 10.21, 10.23.</ref> Nonnus, calling her "Berecyntian Pluto", associates her with Berecyntus, a mountain in Phrygia sacred to Cybele.<ref>Junk, s.v. Pluto 1; Nonnus, Dionysiaca 48.729-731; Lewis and Short, s.v. Bĕrĕcyntus.</ref> Nonnus has Zeus, hurrying "to Pluto's bed", to sire Tantalus, hide his thunderbolts in a cave, which the monster Typhon found and stole, precipitating Typhon's cataclysmic battle with Zeus.<ref>Nonnus, Dionysiaca, 1.145–164.</ref>

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