X-Nico

7 unusual facts about Acheron


Acheron

The same words were used by Sigmund Freud as the dedicatory motto for his seminal book The Interpretation of Dreams, figuring Acheron as psychological underworld beneath the conscious mind.

Acheron-class destroyer

Three River-class destroyers of the Royal Australian Navy were laid down in British yards, with a further three built in Australia.

Acheron-class torpedo boat

By 1885 they were in a state of disrepair and were docked at Cockatoo Island.

Cobble Hill Tunnel

:The old tunnel, that used to lie there under ground, a passage of Acheron-like solemnity and darkness, now all closed and filled up, and soon to be utterly forgotten, with all its reminiscences; however, there will, for a few years yet be many dear ones, to not a few Brooklynites, New Yorkers, and promiscuous crowds besides.

Dragon Quest Retsuden: Roto no Monshō

After death she stands still at the side of Acheron, where for the dead to go across, and advised Arus not missing himself and pulled him back.

GWR Hawthorn Class

The name Acheron comes from a Greek river and had previously been carried by a Fire Fly Class locomotive.

Lucky Bag

For variety of contents, a regular Lucky Bag may vie with the caldron that witches boil and bubble “at the pit of Acheron.”


Acheron Empire

Acheron was first mentioned in Robert E. Howard's novel The Hour of the Dragon as an ancient empire in the history of the setting.

Roy Thomas used the fallen Acheron Empire from time to time in Marvel Comics publications.

John Jackson Oakden

He then purchased Acheron Bank Station near Lake Coleridge in the Canterbury Region, which he successfully developed and held until 1877, when he sold up to enjoy an affluent retirement at Riccarton.

Lyall Bay

It is more commonly believed that it is named after Dr David Lyall of the survey ship HMS Acheron.

Pools of Darkness

These include Thorne's Cave, Kalistes' Land, a visit to then sleeping Moander's colossus body in Astral Plane, and finally Bane's Land itself in Acheron.

The Far Side of the World

The novel provided much of the overall plot-structure for the 2003 Peter Weir film, Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, though the fictional USS Norfolk morphed into the fictional American-built French privateer Acheron, and episodes also migrated from other books in the series, including Master and Commander and HMS Surprise.

The design and size of the fictional Acheron reflect those of the USS Constitution.

The Hour of the Dragon

To accomplish this they resort to necromancy, resurrecting Xaltotun, an ancient sorcerer from the pre-Hyborian empire of Acheron.


see also