Castor and Pollux
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Roman marble statue in Hellenizing style of one of the Dioskouroi.
Castor (pronounced
/ˈkæstər/;
Latin:
Castōr;
Greek:
Κάστωρ,
Kastōr, "beaver") and
Pollux (
/ˈpɒləks/;
Latin:
Pollūx) or
Polydeuces (
/ˌpɒlɨˈdjuːsiːz/;
Greek:
Πολυδεύκης,
Poludeukēs, "much sweet wine"
[1]) were twin brothers in
Greek and
Roman mythology and collectively known as the
Dioskouroi. They were the sons of
Leda by
Tyndareus and
Zeus respectively, the brothers of
Helen of Troy and
Clytemnestra, and the half-brothers of
Timandra,
Phoebe,
Heracles, and
Philonoe. They are known collectively in Greek as the
Dioscuri (
/daɪˈɒskjəraɪ/;
Latin:
Dioscūrī;
Greek:
Διόσκουροι,
Dioskouroi, "sons of Zeus") and in Latin as the
Gemini (
/ˈdʒɛmɨnaɪ/; "twins") or
Castores (
/ˈkæstəriːz/). They are sometimes also termed the
Tyndaridae or
Tyndarids (
/tɪnˈdɛrɨdiː/ or
/ˈtɪndərɪdz/; Τυνδαρίδαι,
Tundaridai), later seen as a reference to their father and stepfather
Tyndareus.
In the myth the twins shared the same mother but had different fathers which meant that Pollux was immortal and Castor was mortal. When Castor died, Pollux asked
Zeus to let him share his own immortality with his twin to keep them together and they were transformed into the
Gemini constellation. The pair were regarded as the patrons of sailors, to whom they appeared as
St. Elmo's fire.