Cocytus
In Greek mythology, Cocytus, meaning river of wailing (Greek kokutos, "lamentation") was the river in the underworld on the banks of which the dead who could not pay Charon wandered, according to most accounts for one hundred years. It flowed into the river Acheron, across which lay Hades, the mythological abode of the dead.
In the Divine Comedy (Inferno), Cocytus is the ninth and lowest circle of Hell and is frozen by the flapping wings of Lucifer, or Satan. Dante described it as being the home of traitors and those who committed acts of complex fraud. It is divided into four descending "rounds," or sections:
- Caina, after the Biblical Cain; traitors to blood relatives.
- Antenora, after Antenor from the Iliad; traitors to country.
- Ptolomea, after Ptolemy, governor of Jericho, who murdered his guests (1 Maccabees); traitors to guests.
- Judecca, after Judas Iscariot; traitors to masters and benefactors.
Lucifer, who betrayed God, is at the center of the circle, and is depicted with three mouths. Two mouths gnaw on Brutus and Cassius, the leading conspirators against Julius Caesar, and are chewed feet foremost with their heads protruding. Judas is chewed head foremost in the middle of the three mouths.