Fig. 9.Fig. 10.Fig. 11.
Helios (Sol). Poseidon (Neptune).

Sometimes he stands resting on his trident, and sometimes he wields it on high as if about to strike. Occasionally he is seen on horseback armed with his trident. He is called Poseidon Hippios [(Fig. 13)].

Fig. 12.Fig. 13.Fig. 14.
Poseidon (Neptune).Dionysos.

Dionysos (Bacchus). The head of Dionysos is either youthful or bearded, and is encircled by a wreath of ivy (Figs. [14], [15, and 16]). His full-length figure is usually naked, or with merely a fawn skin hanging from his shoulder. He holds a wine cup (kantharos), or a bunch of grapes or the Bacchic staff (thyrsus), surmounted by a pine cone.

Sometimes he has bull’s horns growing from his forehead, and on coins of Neapolis he appears as a bull with a human head (Dionysos Hebon).

Fig. 15.Fig. 16.Fig. 17.
Dionysos (Bacchus).Hermes (Mercury).