Poseidon appeared to have strained patience for his brother Zeus and his many affairs, as he held Zeus, who was also his king, to high standards and expected him to abide by the laws and rules Zeus had established otherwise, they were a pointless joke. Poseidon has golden yellow eyes and wears a golden crown that could possibly signify him being king of the seas. He appears to wear a turquoise sash and multiple golden accessories. He has long, silky silver hair and a long, silky silver beard that appears to twist at the end.
Poseidon is shown to have a large, muscular build and is one of the tallest Olympians. After the Giants' defeat with their souls taken by Hermes into the Cauldron, Poseidon cast their bodies into the ocean, to be forever swallowed by the tides. Poseidon, however, did not possess the tremendous authority over the lesser Olympians, gods and humans unlike Zeus (ex: controlling their powers, taking and granting immortality, punishing them etc.), and in that respect, remained inferior to him.In A Call to Arms, a flashback showed Poseidon participating in the Gigantomachy where he witnessed the birth of the Giants from the last Titan's blood spilled on the sea and fought them alongside his fellow Gods including the final assault led by Zeus. Unlike other gods, Poseidon enjoyed a greater level of autonomy and Zeus rarely exercised control over him. Poseidon was a patron god to majority of the Greek cities and ports, and thus earned the title of "Protector of Greece". Since then, the Greeks stripped women of their right to vote. Poseidon retaliated by massacring the local river gods, flooding the entire city and subjecting to drought. The god once again lost control of Argos against Hera, when she won by one vote. Since then, Athenians gave equal worship to Poseidon. But when the people chose Athena, Poseidon unleashed a powerful flood. He fought for the patronship of many cities, mainly Athens. Before the horse, Poseidon created the hippo, the camel, the giraffe and the zebra, then refined the shape to create the first horses, out of sea waves. Poseidon posted one of them, Proteus to the icy regions in the north, to rule over these lands. Poseidon was more powerful than other sea deities combined and the latter were his subordinates. He controlled every aspect of the oceans and aquatic regions. Poseidon lived in an underwater palace and as such, ruled over the denizens of his watery world. When King Alcinous offended Poseidon, he cut off the Phaeacian's access to the sea, and trapped them in between steep mountains he had caused to rise. Poseidon was also known to cause mental illnesses from time to time, to punish people. He would send powerful storms, winds and floods to kill thousands of people, wreck entire ships on islands or sink them beneath the sea raze entire cities with devastating earthquakes or send terrible sea monsters to maraud cities. But if someone (like Odysseus) offended Poseidon, the god's vengeance knew no bounds. If Poseidon was pleased, he would bless sailors with a safe voyage in the sea, make the agricultural lands fertile, provide abundant supply of freshwater or would allow trade to flourish. The powerful god was also one of the many deities who could make lands fertile.
The Greeks depended on the sea to carry out trade and earn their livelihood out of fishing, and prayed to Poseidon. Poseidon was a dreaded god among the Greeks, and rarely interacted with mortals. Like his brothers, Poseidon can control the earth. According to some folklore, he was saved by his mother Rhea, who concealed him among a flock of lambs and pretended to have given birth to a colt, which was devoured by Kronos.Īs the god of the oceans, Poseidon was one of the three most powerful Greek gods, alongside his brothers, Zeus and Hades. Poseidon was the child of Kronos and Rhea, and brother to Zeus and Hades. He is also called the "t amer of horses," as he created the first horse from the crests of the waves. His symbols are the trident, with which he raises the waves and causes tides, and the bull, which is as aggressive as him. One of his cult titles, Enosichthon, means " Earth Shaker," referring to his role in causing earthquakes. Poseidon is also the patron of seafaring. He held sway over the seas and waters, and is particularly known for causing tempests. Poseidon (Ποσειδων) is the Greek god of the sea, earthquakes, droughts, floods, water, aquatic creatures, marine weather and horses.