Damastor
Latin
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Greek, probably from Ancient Greek ἀδαμάστωρ (adamástōr) (attested as an epithet of Hekate),[1] probably from the same root as Ancient Greek ἀδάμαστος (adámastos, “indomitable”), ending in the agent-noun suffix -τωρ (-tōr).
Proper noun
Damā̆stō̆r m sg (genitive Damā̆storis); third declension
- (Greek mythology) name of a giant
- 5th century AD, Sidonius Apollinaris, Carmina XV Epithalamium.20:
- hic rotat excussum vibrans in sidera Pindum
Enceladus, rabido fit missilis Ossa Typhoeo;
Porphyrion Pangaea rapit, Rhodopenque Damastor
Strymonio cum fonte levat, veniensque superne
intorto calidum restinguit flumine fulmen- 1936 translation by W. B. Anderson
- In one part Enceladus brandishes Pindus, torn from its base, and sends it whirling to the stars, while Ossa is the missile of frenzied Typhoeus; Porphyrion snatches up Pangaeus, Damastor lifts up Rhodope along with Strymon’s spring, and when the glowing thunderbolt comes down he hurls the river at it and quenches it.
- 1936 translation by W. B. Anderson
- hic rotat excussum vibrans in sidera Pindum
- c. 1562, Giuseppe Sporeni, Carmina 1.2. Crucis adoratio.107:
- Fronte dolor, qualem peritura Belides urna
Porphyrionque Athamasque ferunt saevusque Damastor
Et Coeo cum fratre Dymas, qualem excipit ingens
Sisyphus Aegeonque et opaca silentia durae
Persephones atroque gementes sulphure manes.
- Fronte dolor, qualem peritura Belides urna
Declension
Third-declension noun, singular only.
Case | Singular |
---|---|
Nominative | Damā̆stō̆r |
Genitive | Damā̆storis |
Dative | Damā̆storī |
Accusative | Damā̆storem Damā̆stora |
Ablative | Damā̆store |
Vocative | Damā̆stō̆r |
References
- Hilton, John (2009) “Adamastor, Gigantomachies, and the Literature of Exile in Camões' Lusíads”, in Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association
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