Detective Calderwood

Season: 1, Episodes: 1, Faction: N/A

Overview

Detective Calderwood interrogated Sawyer in a Sydney police station on the day of the flight.

Sky (Wind)

Fertility (Water)

1×23 – Exodus, Part 1

   

His mug had been broken by Sawyer three nights before when Sawyer had been arrested in a bar fight with the Australian Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries & Forestry.

   

He decided to deport Sawyer back to the USA instead of incarceration in Australia and provided him with his Oceanic 815 ticket. 

Images Source | Source 

Related Character Images 

   

Decoded Family Members & Associated Characters

James Sawyer

Boone Carlyle

Shannon Rutherford

Bryan

Key Episode(s) to Decoding the Character

1x23 "Exodus, Part 1"











Wiki info

Skeiron, or Skiron, was the Greek god of the northwest wind. His name is related to Skirophorion, the last of the three months of spring in the Attic festival calendar. He is depicted as a bearded man tilting a cauldron, representing the onset of winter.

His Roman counterpart is Caurus, or Corus. Corus was also one of the oldest Roman wind-deities, and numbered among the di indigetes (“indigenous gods”), a group of abstract and largely minor numinous entities.

Anemoi Thuellai (“Tempest-Winds”)

Four lesser wind deities appear in a few ancient sources, such as at the Tower of the Winds in Athens. Originally, as attested in Hesiod and Homer, these four minor Anemoi were the Anemoi Thuellai (“Tempest-Winds”), wicked and violent daemons (spirits) created by the monster Typhon, and male counterparts to the harpies, who were also called thuellai. These were the winds held in Aeolus’s stables; the other four, “heavenly” Anemoi were not kept locked up. However, later writers confused and conflated the two groups of Anemoi, and the distinction was largely forgotten.

Minor Winds

The four lesser Anemoi were sometimes referenced and represent:

  • Skeiron (Northwest Wind)
  • Kaikias (Northeast Wind)
  • Apeliotes (Southeast Wind)
  • Lips (Southwest Wind)

Image & Source








ANEMOI (Greek Wind Gods)

In Greek mythology, the Anemoi (“winds”) were Greek wind gods who were each ascribed a cardinal direction from which their respective winds came (see Classical compass winds), and were each associated with various seasons and weather conditions. They were sometimes represented as mere gusts of wind, at other times were personified as winged men, and at still other times were depicted as horses kept in the stables of the storm god Aeolus, who provided Odysseus with the Anemoi in the Odyssey. Astraeus, the astrological deity sometimes associated with Aeolus, and Eos, the goddess of the dawn, were the parents of the Anemoi, according to the Greek poet Hesiod.

The four chief Anemoi

  • Boreas was the north wind and bringer of cold winter air
  • Notus was the south wind and bringer of the storms of late summer and autumn
  • Zephyrus was the west wind and bringer of light spring and early summer breezes
  • Eurus was the east wind, and was not associated with any of the three Greek seasons, and is the only one of these four Anemoi not mentioned in Hesiod’s Theogony or in the Orphic Hymns.

The deities equivalent to the Anemoi in Roman mythology were the Venti (in Latin, “winds”). These gods had different names, but were otherwise very similar to their Greek counterparts, borrowing their attributes and being frequently conflated with them.

Source

Mythological Family Members & Associated Deities

BOREAS

ZEPHYRUS

EURUS

NOTUS

APELIOTES

KAIKIAS

TYPHON

AEOLUS

ODYSSEUS

ASTRAEUS

EOS