Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Canens (mythology)

In Roman mythology, Canens was the personification of song. A nymph from Latium, she was the daughter of Janus and Venilia.[1]

Because Canens' husband Picus scorned the love of the witch Circe, she turned him into a woodpecker. Canens searched for her husband for six days and then threw herself into the Tiber river. She sang one final song and then died. They had one son, Faunus.

  1. ^ Ovid. "Metamorphoses Book XIV (A. S. Kline's Version)". The Ovid Collection. University of Virginia.

Previous Page Next Page






كانينس Arabic Canent Catalan Canens Czech Canens (Mythologie) German Canente Spanish Canens (mythologie) French Canente Italian カネーンス Japanese Kanenta LT Canens (mitologia rzymska) Polish

Responsive image

Responsive image