Brotheus

single tradition · 1

In the poem "Anakhronismos," Brotheus is called a philosopher and attends the cinema with the poem's speaker, the fictional Aponius Maso. He is identified as the "deformed son of Vulcan and Minerva who burned himself because of the ridicule he suffered."

Relationships

child of
Minerva, Vulcan

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Sources

wikipedia (1)

Source passages

“In the poem, Brotheus is called a philosopher and attends the cinema with the poem's speaker, the fictional Aponius Maso. The note identifies Brotheus as the "deformed son of Vulcan and Minerva who burned himself because of the ridicule he suffered."”

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