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Encyclopedia > Vulcan (god)
Topics in Roman mythology
Important Gods:
  • Jupiter
  • Mars
  • Quirinus
  • Vesta
  • Juno
  • Diana
  • Fortuna
Legendary History:
Roman religion
Greek/Roman myth compared


Vulcan, in Roman mythology, is the son of Jupiter and Juno, and husband of Maia and Venus. He was god of fire and volcanoes, and the manufacturer of art, arms, iron, and armor for gods and heroes.


His smithy was believed to be situated underneath Mount Aetna in Sicily. At the Vulcanalia festival, which was held on August 23, fish and small animals were thrown into a fire.


Vulcan's shrine in the Forum Romanum, called the Volcanal, appears to have played an important role in the civic rituals of the archaic Roman Kingdom.


Vulcan was the father of Caeculus.


Vulcan's analogue in Greek mythology is the god Hephaestus, click on link for more details. He is called Mulciber ("softener") in Roman mythology and Sethlans in Etruscan mythology.


A statue of Vulcan located in Birmingham, Alabama, is the largest cast iron statue in the world.


See also

  • Hephaestus

  Results from FactBites:
 
Vulcan (mythology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (159 words)
Vulcan, in Roman mythology, is the son of Jupiter and Juno, and husband of Maia and Venus.
He was god of fire and volcanoes, and the manufacturer of art, arms, iron, and armor for gods and heroes.
Vulcan's analogue in Greek mythology is the god Hephaestus.
Vulcan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (223 words)
Vulcan is the name of several different things, derived from the name of the Roman god of fire and volcanoes, who made weapons for the other gods.
Vulcan of the alchemists, primary 'deity' associated with Paracelsian alchemy
The Vulcan, an occassional magazine from various organs of Young Fine Gael, the youth wing of the Irish political party, Fine Gael
  More results at FactBites »


 

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