Thetis
This article is about the Greek sea nymph. Thetis should not be confused with
Themis, the embodiment of the laws of nature, but see the sea-goddess
Tethys. For other uses, see
Thetis (disambiguation).'' In
Greek mythology, silver-footed Thetis (ancient
Greek ) is a sea
nymph, one of the fifty
Nereids, daughters of "the ancient one of the seas,"
Nereus, and
Doris (
Hesiod, Theogony), a grand-daughter of
Tethys.
See more at Wikipedia.org...
Thetis
[Greek] Thetis was one of the Nereids. Zeus desired her, but she rejected his advances. The goddess Themis then revealed that Thetis was fated to bear a son who was mightier than his father; fearing for his dominion, Zeus gave Thetis as bride to a mortal, Peleus, and all the gods attended the wedding. Thetis bore one son, Achilles, whom she tried unsuccessfully to make immortal. In one version of the story, she anointed the infant's body with ambrosia and then placed it upon a fire in order to burn away the mortal parts; when she was interrupted by the child's horrified father, she deserted their household in a rage. In a later version, she dipped the child in the river Styx holding him by the heel; all the parts that the river touched became invulnerable, but the heel remained dry. Achilles was later killed in the Trojan war.
Thetis
Thetis (Greek) Daughter of sea god Nereus, wife of King Peleus, mother of Achilles. {SD 1:467}
Thetis
Noun
1. (Greek mythology) one of the 50 Nereids; mother of Achilles by Peleus
(hypernym) Nereid
(classification) Greek mythology
thetis
tithes theist