He likewise caused medals to be struck with two faces, to shew that his dominions should be governed by the joint counsels of himself and Saturn. […] Afterwards, misbehaving himself, Jupiter, with one kick of his foot, precipitated him from heaven. […] He is represented by the poets, as possessing the faculty of changing himself into whatever forms he chose. […] Here the God was supposed to come to repose himself; hence it has been inferred that the Babylonians regarded him as the Supreme God. […] Others have imagined that Saturn was Noah himself, and that his sons Jupiter, Neptune, and Pluto, were Ham, Japhet, and Shem, the founders of Nations.