Picolous



In Greek mythology, Picolous (Πικόλοος, ) is the name of one of the Gigantes, the offspring of the earth goddess Gaia and the sky god Uranus. Picolous fought against the Olympian gods during the Gigantomachy. He fled the battle, only to be slain shortly thereafter by Helios the sun god when the giant attempted to attack his daughter Circe. Picolous's role in the Gigantomachy is attested by two Byzantine scholars of the Middle Ages, Eustathius of Thessalonica and Patriarch Photios I of Constantinople, both of which quote earlier writers, Alexander of Paphos and Ptolemaeus Chennus respectively.

Mythology
Patriarch Photius, who attributes the tale to Ptolemy Chennus, writes of an unnamed giant that attacked Circe and was killed by her father the sun god Helios, who was protecting his daughter; from his blood sprang a white herb, named moly after the hard battle (=môlos in Ancient Greek) that took place between the giant and the god.

In greater detail, the homeric scholiast Eustathius of Thessalonica, quoting Alexander of Paphos, writes that Picolous fought alongside the other Giants against Zeus during the war that was known as the Gigantomachy, but fled the battle; he went to Aeaea, the home island of the sorceress goddess Circe and attempted to chase her away from her land, but then her father Helios slew him. From the blood of the giant that seeped on the ground a herb, moly, was sprang that had a black root for the black blood of Picolous, and a white flower for the white Sun that killed him, or for that fact that Circe grew white out of terror.

The plant that sprang from Picolous' death, moly, has been identified with the Prometheion, the special plant Medea used for her potion, which has a similar origin story as both were said to have grown from blood, that of Picolous and Prometheus respectively, as well as the Κιρκαῖον, "Circe's plant", another magical herb connected to Circe. As for real-world identifications, the plant that grew from Picolous's blood has been suggested to be the snowdrop, a flower that counteracts amnesia, hallucinations, and delusions, which are hypothesized to be the real physics behind Circe's magic.