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The Acheron ( or ; Acheron or Ἀχερούσιος Acherousios; Acherontas) is a in the Epirus region of northwest .

In , Acheron is often depicted as the entrance to the where souls must be ferried across by (although some later sources, such as poets, assign this role to the river ).


Description
It is long, and has a drainage area of . The river's source is located near the village Zotiko, in the southwestern part of the Ioannina regional unit. The Acheron flows into the in Ammoudia, near .


Mythology
Ancient saw the Acheron, sometimes known as the "river of woe", as one of the five rivers of the . For example:
(2008). 9780141920597, Penguin UK. .
The name is of uncertain etymology.R. S. P. Beekes, Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009, p. 182.

Most classical accounts, including Pausanias (10.28) and later 's Inferno (3.78), portray the Acheron as the entrance to the Underworld and depict ferrying the souls of the dead across it. Ancient Greek literary sources such as , , , , and also place Charon on the Acheron. Roman poets, including , , and , name the river as the , perhaps following the geography of 's underworld in the , where Charon is associated with both rivers.

The poems describe the Acheron as a river of , into which and both flowed., x. 513Pausanias, Description of Greece i. 17, § 5

The Roman poet called the Acheron the principal river of , from which the Styx and the Cocytus both sprang., vi. 297 The newly dead would be ferried across the Acheron by Charon in order to enter the Underworld.Virgil, Aeneid 6. 323

The describes the river as "a place of healing, not a place of punishment, cleansing and purging the sins of humans". Suda On Line

According to later traditions, Acheron had been a son of and either Gaia or , who was turned into the Underworld river bearing his name after he refreshed the Titans with drink during their contest with .. Mythologiae, 3.1 By this myth, Acheron is also the father of Ascalaphus by either , Metamorphoses 5. 539 or .Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 1. 33

The river called Acheron with the nearby ruins of the (oratory of the dead) is found near on the mainland of Greece opposite . Another branch of Acheron was believed to surface at the Acherusian cape (now Karadeniz Ereğli in ) and was seen by the according to Apollonius of Rhodes. Greeks who settled in Italy identified the Acherusian lake into which Acheron flowed with Lake . in his Phaedo identified Acheron as the second greatest river in the world, excelled only by .

He claimed that Acheron flowed in the opposite direction from beneath the earth under desert places. The word is also occasionally used as a for Hades itself. mentions Acheron with the other infernal rivers in his description of the underworld in Book VI of the . In Book VII, line 312Line 312 in the conventional lineation, see J.W. Mackail (Editor and Translator), The AEneid (Clarendon press, Oxford: 1930), p. 271. he gives to Juno the famous saying, flectere si nequeo superos, Acheronta movebo: 'If I cannot bend the will of Heaven, I shall move Hell.' The same words were used by as the dedicatory motto for his seminal book The Interpretation of Dreams, figuring Acheron as psychological underworld beneath the conscious mind.

The Acheron was sometimes referred to as a lake or swamp in Greek literature, as in ' and ' .

In 's Inferno, the Acheron river forms the border of . Following Greek mythology, Charon ferries souls across this river to Hell. Those who were neutral in life sit on the banks.


In culture
  • In 's Inferno, ferries newly deceased sinners across Acheron.
  • In Christopher Marlowe's play, The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus, Acheron is mentioned in Act I, scene iii, wherein conjures : Sint mihi dei Acherontis propitii, or "May the gods of Hell (Acheron) be propitious unto me."
  • In Shakespeare's play, , Acheron is referenced as a euphemism for the gates of hell by in Act III, scene v: "Get you gone, and at the pit of Acheron meet me i' th' morning.


Namesake
in is named after the mythical river.

Several ships have been named .

There is a stream named the Dry Acheron in Canterbury, New Zealand.

The turtle genus of the in North America was named in reference to the Acheron mythos.

In , a character within the story nicknames herself after the river Acheron.

==Gallery==

bridge over the Acheron river]]


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