In
Greek mythology,
Phoroneus (Φορωνεύς) was a
culture-hero of the
Argolid, fire-bringer, primordial king of Argos and son of the
river god Inachus and either
Melia, the primordial
ash-tree nymph or Argia, the embodiment of the Argolid itself: "
Inachus, son of
Oceanus, begat Phoroneus by his sister Argia," wrote
Hyginus, in
Fabulae 143. Hyginus' genealogy expresses the position of Phoroneus as one of the primordial men, whose local identities differed in the various regions of Greece, and who had for a mother the essential spirit of the very earth of Argos herself,
Argia. He was the primordial king in the
Peloponnesus, authorized by Zeus: "Formerly Zeus himself had ruled over men, but Hermes
created a confusion of human speech, which spoiled Zeus' pleasure in this Rule". Phoroneus introduced both the worship of
Hera and the use of fire and the forge. Poseidon and Hera had vied for the land: when the primeval waters had receded, Phoroneus "was the first to gather the people together into a community; for they had up to then been living as scattered and lonesome families". (
Pausanias).