To Astraeus, the Titan of the stars!
NAME: Astraeus. It literally means "starry" and comes from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ster- - "star" - which in itself comes from *h₂eh₁s- - "to burn".
GENDER: Male
DOMAIN: Stars, planets, astrology
CONSORT: Eos
EPITHETS: (NOTE: THESE ARE ALL MY OWN EPITHETS AS ASTRAEUS DOES NOT HAVE ANY, HE IS A RELATIVELY MINOR DEITY) Father of the winds, father of the stars, husband of Eos, the starry one, the heavenly one, the celestial, the astrologer, Guide of Astrology, Teacher of the Stars
MYTHS: In the Dionysiaca, Astraeus is presented as an oracular god whom Demeter visits out of concern for Persephone. He tells her that she will be ravished by a serpent and bear children from that. This...upsets Demeter, of course. Servius, a fourth to fifth-century grammarian, wrote that he fought the gods, but he may have been conflated with the giant of the same name. He is also conflated with Aeolus - this is partially because winds increase around dusk, but we can also see this in Book 10 of the Odyssey where Aeolus is the father of all the winds. (Homer has some different ideas on genealogy than other authors of his time, like Hesiod. This doesn't make either of these wrong! Simply different ideas from different writers.)
PARENTS: Crius and Eurybia
CHILDREN: Zephyrus, Boreas, Notos, Eurus, Eosphoros, Astraea, and the stars
SIBLINGS: Pallas (the Warrior), Perses (the Destroyer)