(Νῖσσος).
1. A son of Pandion (or, according to others, of Deion or Ares) and Pylia, was a brother of Aegeus, Pallas, and Lycus, and husband of Abrote, by whom he became the father of Sevlla. He was king of Megara; and when Minos, on his expedition against Athens, took Megara, Nisus died, because his daughter Seylla, who had fallen in love with Minos, had pulled out the purple or golden hair which grew on the top of her father's head, and on which his life depended. (Apollod. 3.15. §§ 5, 6, 8; Schol. ad Eurip. Hippol. 1090.) Minos, who was horrified at the conduct of the unnatural daughter, ordered Scylla to be fastened to the poop of his ship, and afterwards drowned her in the Saronic gulf. (Apollod. l.c.) According to others, Minos left Megara in disgust, but Scylla leaped into the sea, and swam after his ship; but her father, who had been