He was autochthonous (born from the earth), like his predecessor. During his reign the flood of the Deucalion story was thought to have occurred. He married Pedias, a Spartan woman, with whom he had Cranae, Cranaechme, and Atthis. Atthis gave her name to Attica after dying, possibly as a young girl, although in other traditions she was the mother, by Hephaestus, of Erichthonius.
Cranaus was deposed by Amphictyon son of Deucalion, who was himself later deposed by Erichthonius.
ATTHIS (an adjective meaning " Attic "), the name given to a monograph or special treatise on the religious and political history, antiquities and topography of Attica and Athens.
During the 4th and 3rd centuries B.C., a class of writers arose, who, making these subjects their particular study, were called atthidographi, or compilers of atthides.