In
Greek mythology, 'Pontus' (or 'Pontos', "sea") was an ancient, pre-Olympian sea-god, son of
Gaia and
Aether, the Earth and the Air.
Hesiod (''
Theogony'', line 116) says that
Gaia brought forth Pontos out of herself, without coupling. For Hesiod, Pontos seems little more than a personification of Sea.
With Gaia, he was the father of the Old Man of the Sea,
Nereus and
Thaumas (the awe-striking "wonder" of the Sea), of the Sea's dangerous aspects,
Phorcys and his sister-consort
Ceto, and of the "Strong Goddess"
Eurybia. With
Thalassa— whose own name simply means "Sea" but in a pre-Greek root— he was the father of the
Telchines.
Compare the sea-Titan
Oceanus, who was more vividly realized than Pontus among the Hellenes.