Saturn Cronus occupies a distinctive and frequently contested position within the depth-psychology corpus, functioning simultaneously as mythological figure, archetypal structure, planetary principle, and cultural complex. The passages gathered here reveal at least three interlocking interpretive traditions. First, the classical Hellenic genealogy — Cronus castrating Uranus, devouring his own children, only to be overthrown by Zeus — serves authors from Sasportas to Sullivan as a template for the psychodynamics of inhibition, conservatism, and the compulsive destruction of one’s own creative progeny. Second, the Ficinian-astrological stream, represented most fully by Hillman’s Senex and Puer and Moore’s work on Marsilio Ficino, treats Saturn not simply as malefic tyrant but as the ruling archetype of limit, form, time, melancholy, and the senex pole of the puer-senex polarity — an indispensable structural principle within psychic life. Third, Jung’s identification of Wotan as a functionally cognate Germanic deity introduces a parallel axis: where Saturn-Cronus names the Graeco-Roman experience of sovereign time and devouring authority, Wotan names an unconscious eruption of storm, frenzy, and mantic power in the Northern European psyche. The tension between these traditions — Mediterranean limit versus Germanic frenzy, impotent tyranny versus ecstatic unleasher — constitutes the conceptual drama animating much of the corpus.