Aegaeus — Lewis & Short
Aegaeus, a, um, adj.,
insula Delos in Aegaeo mari posita,Cic. Imp. Pomp. 18.—In the poets also absol.: Aegaeum, i, n., for Aegaeum mare:
in patenti Aegaeo,Hor. C. 2, 16, 1; Pers. 5, 142; cf. Burm. Prop. 3, 5, 51. [The etymol. was unknown even to the ancients. Acc. to some, from Ægeus, father of Theseus, who threw himself into this sea; acc. to Varr. L. L. 6, 2 fin., from ai)=ges, goats, since the sea, from the many islands rising out of it, resembled a flock of goats; Strabo derives the name from Ægææ, a town in Eubœa.]—Hence, adj.: Aegaeus, a, um, pertaining to the Ægean Sea:
gurges,Cic. Arat. 422:
tumultus,Hor. C. 3, 29, 63:
Neptunus,Verg. A. 3, 74:
Cyclades, which lie in it,Ov. Tr. 1, 11, 8:
Venus, since she was said to have sprung from the Ægean Sea,Stat. Th. 8, 478.