Character Summary of
Homer's THE ILIAD
The Gods
The Mortals
Summary
of the plot of The lliad
The plot of Homer's ILIAD centers around the Trojan War which rages for ten years between the Greeks (or Achaeans) and the Trojans. The war is caused by the irresponsible actions of Paris, son of Priam, who is called upon to judge a beauty contest between the goddesses Aphrodite, Hera and Athena. All three of the goddesses offer bribes in order to tilt Paris' decision in their favor, but Paris declares the winner to be Aphrodite, who has promised him the hand of the beautiful Helen. Helen, as it turns out, is the wife of Menelaus, an Achaean chieftain, and the Achaean expedition to recover her escalates into a full-fledged war against the city of Troy.
However, there are conflicts within the Achaean ranks. A fight breaks out between King Agamemnon and star warrior Achilles when Agamemnon endangers the Achaean forces by disrespecting the priest of Apollo. The priest, Chryses, offers a healthy ransom to Agamemnon in exchange for the return of his daughter, Chryseis, who Agamemnon has taken as a prize. Agamemnon stubbornly refuses, and asks Apollo to cut down the Achaeans with a plague.
Achilles is appalled by Agamemnon's selfish behavior and demands that the girl returned to her father or he will not participate in Agamemnon and Menelaus' war. Agamemnon agrees to return Chryseis, but takes Achilles' wife Briseis in her place. Heartbroken, Achilles calls upon his mother, the sea nymph Thetis, and begs her to intercede on his behalf, calling up an old debt owed her by Zeus and asking him to impede the Achaeans' progress to punish Agamemnon.
Thetis approaches Zeus and fulfills her son's request. Zeus agrees, though he is cautious of provoking the wrath of his wife Hera, who is sympathetic to the Achaean cause.
As Achilles sulks at home, the war continues. Even without his talents, the Achaeans are able to bear down so hard upon the Trojans that Trojan leader Hector has to return home to request special prayers and sacrifices to the gods in order to shift their luck. While he is in the city, he visits his family, and his brother Paris, who is also sulking at home. Soon after this, the tide turns in the Trojans favor, and the Achaeans are left with no recourse but to ask Achilles to return to the battle. Achilles refuses, but grants his dear friend Patroclus permission to lead in his stead, garbed in his own personal armor.
Patroclus fights gallantly and turns the tide of battle in the Achaeans' favor once again, but through the intervention of Apollo, he is killed by Hector. After an intense struggle, the Achaeans gain possession of Patroclus' body and flee back to their camp. Achilles is distraught when he learns of his friend's demise and decides to return to the battle in order to wreak vengeance upon Hector. However, he has no gear to fight in as Hector has stripped his armor from Patroclus' corpse. This problem is solved by the intervention of Thetis, who begs the smith of the gods, Hephaestus to forge a new armor and a mighty shield for Achilles.
Achilles returns to the battle, slaying a great number of Trojans in his pursuit of Hector. Finally, the two arch-foes come face-to -face in a head on charge and Hector's throat is impaled by Achilles' spear. With his dying breath, Hector begs Achilles not to defile his corpse. Achilles nonetheless drags the body from the back of his chariot, much to the dismay of Apollo. Zeus recommends that a ransom be given to Achilles in exchange for the body, and reluctantly, Achilles surrenders the body to Priam, Hector's father.
Hector's body is taken back to Troy and given a grand cremation worthy of a man of his stature.
The Shield of Achilles (Book XVIII)
"And first Hephaestus makes a great and massive shield, blazoning well-wrought emblems..." The contrasts between war and peace are sharp. The pictures on the shield of Achilles are symbols representing the Greek Ethos and its antithesis. It is about the city at war and the city at peace. The city at peace is prosperous. Peace allows joy, love, sexuality, continuance of the species, law and justice, festivals and harvest, all life in perfect balance. The antithesis is the city at war, where hate, chaos, death and destruction conflict with the Greek Ethos.
"And he forged the Ocean River's mighty power girdling round the outmost rim..." The Ocean is the eternal symbol of change. In life, change is the only constant factor. The symbolism on the shield of Achilles is the essence of Greek culture, hence it becomes a theme for Homer.
The ancient Greeks of Homer's time were very concerned with proper death rites. In book XIX, Achilles is concerned about the body of his beloved friend Patroclus, slain in battle. Achilles says, "...worms will breed and seethe, defile the man's corpse..." The Greeks believed that the spirit of the dead person would be chased by dogs around the earth unless it was burned on the funeral pire. In this section (XIX), Thetis, Achilles demi-god mother, preserves the flesh of the slain Patroclus, until the proper death rites can be performed.
In book XXIV, Hector, Trojan enemy of Achilles, slayer of Patroclus, is slain by Achilles. The god Apollo pities the dead Hector and protects his flesh from "all corruption", even from ripping apart, as Achilles drags him about intending to dishonor the corpse. Priam, Hector's father, pleads with Achilles for the body of his son, in order that Hector may have the proper death rites performed.
Homer's THE ILIAD is a great representation of the impact that women have on society. Not only are the women in this book portrayed as beautiful, they also have immense strength, power, craft and skill. THE ILIAD is a story narrating the events of the Trojan war, but if we take a deeper look, much of this story revolves around feminism. The war is a result of the retaliation of the Acheans for the kidnapping of Helen. Helen is the wife of the Achean Chieftain Menelaus. She was taken to Troy and to win back his wife, Menelaus must go to war with the Trojans. If we take a look into the underlying issues, the war was fought for a woman, and she plays a very important role in THE ILIAD.
Pęleus). A king of Thessaly, son of Aeacus, monarch of Aegina, and the nymph Endeďs, the daughter of Chiron. Having been accessory, [p. 1191] along with Telamon, to the death of their brother Phocus, he was banished from his native island, but found an asylum at the court of Eurytus, son of Actor, king of Phthia in Thessaly. He married Antigoné, the daughter of Eurytus, and received with her, as a marriage portion, the third part of the kingdom. Peleus was present with Eurytus at the chase of the Calydonian boar; but having unfortunately killed his father-in-law with the javelin which he had hurled against the animal, he was again doomed to be a wanderer. His second benefactor was Acastus, king of Iolcos; but here again he was involved in trouble through a false charge brought against him by Astydamia, or, as Horace calls her, Hippolyte, the queen of Acastus. (See Acastus.) To reward the virtue of Peleus, as fully shown by his resisting the blandishments of Astydamia, the gods resolved to give him a goddess in marriage. The spouse selected for him was the sea-nymph Thetis, who had been wooed by Zeus himself and his brother Poseidon; but Themis having declared that her child would be greater than his sire, the gods withdrew ( Isth. viii. 58 foll.). Others say that she was courted by Zeus alone till he was informed by Prometheus that, if he had a son by her, that son would dethrone him. Others, again, maintain that Thetis, who was reared by Heré, would not assent to the wishes of Zeus, and that the god, in his anger, condemned her to espouse a mortal; or that Heré herself selected Peleus for her spouse ( Il.xxiv. 59). Chiron, being made aware of the will of the gods, advised Peleus to aspire to the favour of the nymph of the sea, and instructed him how to win her. He therefore lay in wait, and seized and held her fast, though she changed herself into every variety of form, becoming fire, water, a serpent, and a lioness. The wedding was solemnized on Mount Pelion; the gods all honoured it with their presence, and bestowed armour on the bridegroom. Chiron gave him the famous ashen spear afterwards wielded by his son; and Poseidon bestowed on him the immortal Harpyborn steeds Balius and Xanthus. The offspring of this union was the celebrated Achilles. According to one account, Peleus was deserted by his goddess-wife for not allowing her to cast the infant Achilles into a caldron of boiling water, to try if he were mortal. (See Achilles.) This, however, is a post-Homeric fiction, since Homer represents Peleus and Thetis as dwelling together all the lifetime of their son. Of Peleus it is farther related that he survived his son and even grandson ( Od.xi. 493), and died in misery in the island of Cos. It was at the wedding of Peleus and Thetis that the goddess of Discord threw the apple of gold into the middle of the assembled deities, with which was connected so much misfortune for both the Trojans and the Greeks. See Helené; Paris.
01.
Zeus, in Greek mythology, the god of the sky and ruler of the Olympian
gods. Zeus corresponds to the Roman god Jupiter. Zeus was considered, according to Homer, the father of
the gods and of mortals. He did not create either gods or mortals; he was their
father in the sense of being the protector and ruler both of the Olympian
family and of the human race. He was lord of the sky, the rain god, and the
cloud gatherer, who wielded the terrible thunderbolt. His breastplate was the
aegis, his bird the eagle, his tree the oak. Zeus presided over the gods on Mount
Olympus in Thessaly
(Thessalia). His principal shrines were at Dodona, in Epirus, the land of the
oak trees and the most ancient shrine, famous for its oracle, and at Olympia,
where the Olympic Games were celebrated in his honor every fourth year. The
Nemean games, held at Nemea, northwest of Árgos, were also dedicated to Zeus.
Zeus was the youngest son of the Titans Cronus and Rhea and the brother of the deities Poseidon, Hades, Hestia, Demeter, and Hera. According to one of the ancient myths of the birth of Zeus, Cronus, fearing that he might be dethroned by one of his children, swallowed them as they were born. Upon the birth of Zeus, Rhea wrapped a stone in swaddling clothes for Cronus to swallow and concealed the infant god in Crete (Kríti), where he was fed on the milk of the goat Amalthaea and reared by nymphs. When Zeus grew to maturity, he forced Cronus to disgorge the other children, who were eager to take vengeance on their father. In the war that followed, the Titans fought on the side of Cronus, but Zeus and the other gods were successful, and the Titans were consigned to the abyss of Tartarus. Zeus henceforth ruled over the sky, and his brothers Poseidon and Hades were given power over the sea and the underworld, respectively. The earth was to be ruled in common by all three.
Beginning with the writings of the Greek poet Homer, Zeus is pictured in two very different ways. He is represented as the god of justice and mercy, the protector of the weak, and the punisher of the wicked. As husband to his sister Hera, he is the father of Ares, the god of war; Hebe, the goddess of youth; Hephaestus, the god of fire; and Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth. At the same time, Zeus is described as falling in love with one woman after another and resorting to all kinds of tricks to hide his infidelity from his wife. Stories of his escapades were numerous in ancient mythology, and many of his offspring were a result of his love affairs with both goddesses and mortal women. It is believed that, with the development of a sense of ethics in Greek life, the idea of a lecherous, sometimes ridiculous father god became distasteful, so later legends tended to present Zeus in a more exalted light. His many affairs with mortals are sometimes explained as the wish of the early Greeks to trace their lineage to the father of the gods.
05. Hera, in Greek mythology, queen of the gods, the daughter of the Titans Cronus and Rhea, and the sister and wife of the god Zeus. Hera was the goddess of marriage and the protector of married women. She was the mother of Ares, god of war; Hephaestus, god of fire; Hebe, goddess of youth; and Eileithyia, goddess of childbirth. Hera was a jealous wife, who often persecuted Zeus's mistresses and children. She never forgot an injury and was known for her vindictive nature. Angry with the Trojan prince Paris for preferring Aphrodite, goddess of love, to herself, Hera aided the Greeks in the Trojan War and was not appeased until Troy was finally destroyed. Hera is often identified with the Roman goddess Juno.
06. Aphrodite governs desire and sexuality. She is also known as Cytherea, Cypris, and Venus (Roman). She is often pictured with a sceptre or a mirror.
07. Athene (also spelled Athena) is the patron of wisdom, military victory, and women's crafts. She is also known as Tritogeneia and Minerva (Roman) and is also called Pallas Athene. Her attributes in iconography include the aegis (a fringed cloak, sometimes decorated with a Gorgon's head), the helmet, and the spear.
Apollo is associated principally with music, prophecy, sickness, and medicine. He is also known as Phoebus Apollo and is called the Far Shooter and the Pythian. (He has no separate Roman name.) His attributes in iconography are the cithara, or sometime the lyre, the bow, the fawn, and the tripod. He is often depicted with his sister, Artemis.
Ares is the god of war and conflict. He is also known as Mars (Roman). Ares is depicted as a warrior but, as he has no unique attributes in iconography, he can only be identified by context or inscription.
Demeter is the giver of grain. She is also known as Ceres (Roman) and sometimes Deo. Her attributes in iconography can include a torch, a crown, a sceptre, and stalks of grain. She is often portrayed with her daughter, Persephone/Kore.
Dionysos is the god of wine, intoxication, and creative ecstasy. He is also known as Dionysus, Bacchus or Bakchos, and Liber (Roman). His attributes in iconography include a drinking vessel, an ivy wreath, grape vines, and the thyrsos (a long fennel stalk topped with ivy leaves).
Hades is the god of the underworld. He is also known as Pluto, Plouton, Dis (Roman), and Aidoneus. His attributes in iconography are the cornucopia and the sceptre.
Poseidon is the god of the sea. He is also known as Neptune (Roman) and the Earth-shaker. His attributes in iconography include the trident and the fish.
The Principal
Gods
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Gaia
Gaia, known as Earth or Mother Earth (the Greek common noun for
"land" is ge or ga). She was an early earth goddess and it is written
that Gaia was born from Chaos, the great void of emptiness within the universe,
and with her came Eros. She gave birth to Pontus (the Sea) and Uranus (the
Sky). This was achieved parthenogenetically (without male intervention). Other
versions say that Gaia had as siblings Tartarus (the lowest part of the earth,
below Hades itself) and Eros, and without a mate, gave birth to Uranus (Sky),
Ourea (Mountains) and Pontus (Sea).
Gaia took as her husband Uranus, who was also her son, and their offspring
included the Titans, six sons and six daughters. She gave birth to the Cyclopes
and to three monsters that became known as the "Hecatonchires". The
spirits of punishment known as the Erinyes were also offspring of Gaia and
Uranus. The Gigantes, finally, were conceived after Uranus had been castrated
by his son Cronus, and his blood fell to earth from the open wound.
To protect her children from her husband, (the Cyclopes and the Hecatoncheires,
as he was fearful of their great strength), Gaia hid them all within herself.
One version says that Uranus was aghast at the sight of his offspring so he hid
them away in Tartarus, which are the bowels of the earth. Gaia herself found
her offspring uncomfortable and at times painful, when the discomfort became to
much to bear she asked her youngest son Cronus to help her. She asked him to
castrate Uranus, thus severing the union between the Earth and Sky, and also to
prevent more monstrous offspring. To help Cronus achieve his goal Gaia produced
an adamantine sickle to serve as the weapon. Cronus hid until Uranus came to
lay with Gaia and as Uranus drew near, Cronus struck with the sickle, cutting
the genitalia from Uranus. Blood fell from the severed genitals and came in
contact with the earth and from that union was born the Erinyes (Furies), the
Giants and the Meliae (Nymphs of the manna ash trees).
After the separation of the Earth from the Sky, Gaia gave birth to other
offspring, these being fathered by Pontus. Their names were the sea-god Nereus,
Thaumas, Phorcys, Ceto and Eurybia. In other versions Gaia had offspring to her
brother Tartarus; they were Echidna and Typhon, the later being an enemy of
Zeus. Apollo killed Typhon when he took control of the oracle at Delphi, which
Gaia originally provided, and then the "Sibyl" sang the oracle in
Gaia's shrine.
It was Gaia who saved Zeus from being swallowed by Cronus, after Zeus had been
born, Gaia helped Rhea to wrap a stone in swaddling clothes, this was to trick
Cronus in to thinking it was Zeus, because Cronus had been informed that one of
his children would depose him, and so to get rid of his children he had
swallowed them, Gaia's trick worked and Zeus was then taken to Crete.
Gaia being the primordial element from which all the gods originated was
worshiped throughout Greece, but later she went into decline and was supplanted
by other gods. In Roman mythology she was known as Tellus or Terra.
====================
Uranus
Uranus, also known as Ouranos, was the embodiment of the sky or heavens, and
known as the god of the sky. He was the first son of Gaia (the earth) and he
also became her husband. According to Hesiod, their children included the
Titans: six sons (Oceanus, Coeus, Crius, Hyperion, Iapetus and Cronus) and six
daughters (Theia, Rhea, Themis, Mnemosyne, Phoebe and Tethys). There were other
offspring: the Cyclopes, (who were named Brontes, Steropes and Arges and were
later known as "one eyed giants"), and also the three monsters known
as the Hecatonchires, who each had one hundred hands and fifty heads. Their
names were Briareus, Cottus and Gyes. Other offspring of Uranus and Gaia were
the Erinyes, who were spirits of punishment and goddesses of vengeance. The Erinyes
avenged wrongs which were done to family, especially murder within a family.
After Uranus had been castrated, his blood fell to earth (Gaia) and conceived
the Giants. These were of monstrous appearance and had great strength .
Similiarly, in some versions Aphrodite is believed to have risen from the foam
created by the sex organs of Uranus after they were thrown into the sea by his
son Cronus.
Uranus was aghast by the sight of his offspring, the Cronus.
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Tethys
The personification of the fertile ocean. She married her brother Oceanus and
had over 3000 children by him, they were the springs, lakes, rivers of the
world. Tethys was the god-mother of Rhea and raised her during the civil war
between the Titans and the Olympians.
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Oceanus
The personification of the vast ocean. As geography became more precise,
Oceanus began to refer to the water outside of the Pillars of Heracles, or the
Atlantic Ocean. He was the eldest of the Titans and a son of Uranus and Gaia.
He was the father of all rivers by his sister Tethys. The couple also had the
Oceanids which personified springs and smaller bodies of waters, like lakes and
ponds.
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Phoebe
1.The daughter of Uranus and Gaia. She married her brother Coeus and with him
she became the mother of Leto and Asteria. It is said that she owned the oracle
of Delphi before Apollo took it over.
2.Another name for Artemis as moon-goddess. The name is the feminine form of
Phoebus, the name of her twin brother Apollo as sun-god.
3.The daughter of Leda and sister of Helen.
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Coeus
One of the Titans, Coeus was the father of Leto, husband of Phoebe and the
grandfather of Apollo, Artemis and Asteria.
====================
Rhea
In Greek mythology, Rhea is the mother of the gods, daughter of Uranus and
Gaia. She is married to her brother Cronus and is the mother of Demeter, Hades,
Hera, Hestia, Poseidon and Zeus.
Cronus, jealous of the future power of his children and to secure his dominion,
ate his own children but Rhea managed to rescue one son, Zeus. She hid him in
the Dictean Cave in Crete and gave Cronus a stone wrapped in the clothes of the
infant, which he swallowed. Thus Rhea succeeded in making him believe that he
had killed all of his children. When Zeus reached maturity he overpowered and
dethroned his father and made Cronus disgorge his siblings.
Rhea is identified with mother goddess Cybele from Asia Minor and is also known
as Rhea Cybele and Magna Mater ("great mother"). She was worshipped
with orgiastic rites. Rhea is depicted between two lions or on a chariot pulled
by lions.
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Cronus
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Cronus, the son of Uranus and Gaia and the youngest of the twelve Titans. His
wife was also one of the Titans, since he married his sister Rhea. Their offspring
were Demeter, Hestia, Hera, Hades, Poseidon and Zeus.
It is written that Uranus, who in one version, hid his children away in the
bowels of the earth (Tartarus) as he was aghast at the sight of them, in
reality he was fearful of their great strength and power. Gaia found her
offspring uncomfortable and also painful and when she found the discomfort too
much to bear she hatched a plan, which was to end the passions of Uranus, so no
more offspring could be produced and that would be the ending of her hurt. But
to achieve this she required the help from one of her children. She asked them
all, but only her youngest child Cronus would heed her call. To help Cronus
accomplish his task Gaia gave him a adamantine sickle to serve as his weapon.
Cronus lay in wait hidden from view, and when Uranus came to lay with Gaia
Cronus struck. With one mighty blow from the sickle Cronus severed the genitals
from Uranus' body. From the blood which fell to the earth (Gaia) where born the
Erinyes (Furies), the Giants and also the Meliae (Nymphs of the manna ash
trees). In other versions Aphrodite was born from the foam created from the sex
organs of Uranus, after they had been thrown into the sea by Cronus.
Once Cronus had castrated Uranus, he and his wife Rhea took the throne. Under
their power a time of harmony and prosperity began, which became known as the
"Golden Age"; a time when it was said that people lived without greed
or violence, and without toil or the need for laws. But not all was well for Cronus,
as it was fated that he would be overthrown by one of his own children. To
prevent this from happening he began to swallow his newborn, taking them at
birth then swallowing them whole, retaining them inside his own body where they
could do him no harm.
Rhea did not like the thoughts of losing all her children, and with the help of
Gaia she saved Zeus from this fate. Rhea wrapped a stone in Zeus' swaddling
clothes which Cronus took and immediately swallowed thinking it was the child.
Gaia and Rhea's plan worked well and the baby Zeus was taken to Crete, and
there, in a cave on Mount Dicte, the divine goat Amaltheia suckled and raised
the infant Zeus. When Zeus had grown into a young man he returned to his
fathers domain, and with the help of Gaia, compelled Cronus to regurgitate the
five children he had previously swallowed. (In some versions Zeus received help
from Metis who gave Cronus an emetic potion, which made him vomit up Zeus'
brothers and sisters). Zeus led the revolt against his father and the dynasty of
the Titans, defeated and then banished them.
The Romans compared Cronus with their Saturn, who was to the Romans a corn god.
This is from the association of the "Golden Age". In Athens on the
12th day of the month Hekatombaion a festival was held in honour of Cronus,
which was known as the "Kronia". It was a celebration of the harvest.
In art, Cronus was depicted carrying a sickle used to gather the harvest, but
this was also the weapon he used to castrate his father.
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Zeus

Zeus, the youngest son of Cronus and Rhea, he was the supreme ruler of Mount
Olympus and of the Pantheon of gods who resided there. Being the supreme ruler
he upheld law, justice and morals, and this made him the spiritual leader of
both gods and men. Zeus was a celestial god, and originally worshiped as a
weather god by the Greek tribes. These people came southward from the Balkans
circa 2100 BCE. He has always been associated as being a weather god, as his
main attribute is the thunderbolt, he controlled thunder, lightning and rain.
Theocritus wrote circa 265 BCE: "sometimes Zeus is clear, sometimes he
rains". He is also known to have caused thunderstorms. In Homer's epic
poem the Iliad he sent thunderstorms against his enemies. The name Zeus is
related to the Greek word dios, meaning "bright". His other
attributes as well as lightning were the scepter, the eagle and his aegis (this
was the goat-skin of Amaltheia).
Before the abolition of monarchies, Zeus was protector of the king and his
family. Once the age of Greek kings faded into democracy he became chief judge
and peacemaker, but most importantly civic god. He brought peace in place of
violence, Hesiod (circa 700 BCE) describes Zeus as "the lord of
justice", Zeus was also known as "Kosmetas" (orderer),
"Soter" (savior), "Polieos" (overseer of the polis -city)
and also "Eleutherios" (guarantor of political freedoms). His duties
in this role were to maintain the laws, protect suppliants, to summon festivals
and to give prophecies (his oldest and most famous oracle was at Dodona, in
Epirus -northwestern Greece). As the supreme deity Zeus oversaw the conduct of
civilized life. But the "father of gods and men" as Homer calls him,
has many mythological tales.
His most famous was told by Hesiod in his Theogony, of how Zeus usurped the
kingdom of the immortals from his father. This mythological tale of Zeus'
struggle against the Titans (Titanomachy) had been caused by Cronus, after he
had been warned that one of his children would depose him. Cronus knowing the
consequences, as he had overthrown his father Uranus. To prevent this from
happening Cronus swallowed his newborn children Hestia, Demeter, Hera, Hades
and Poseidon, but his wife Rhea (who was also his sister) and Gaia her mother,
wrapped a stone in swaddling clothes in place of the infant Zeus. Cronus
thinking it was the newborn baby swallowed the stone. Meanwhile Rhea had her
baby taken to Crete, and there, in a cave on Mount Dicte, the divine goat
Amaltheia suckled and raised the infant Zeus.
When Zeus had grown into a young man he returned to his fathers domain, and
with the help of Gaia, compelled Cronus to regurgitate the five children he had
previously swallowed (in some versions Zeus received help from Metis who gave
Cronus an emetic potion, which made him vomit up Zeus' brothers and sisters).
However, Zeus led the revolt against his father and the dynasty of the Titans,
defeated and then banished them. Once Zeus had control, he and his brothers
divided the universe between them: Zeus gaining the heavens, Poseidon the sea
and Hades the underworld. Zeus had to defend his heavenly kingdom. The three
separate assaults were from the offspring of Gaia: they were the Gigantes,
Typhon (Zeus fought them with his thunder-bolt and aegis) and the twin brothers
who were called the Aloadae. The latter tried to gain access to the heavens by
stacking Mount Ossa on top of Mount Olympus, and Mount Pelion on top of Mount
Ossa, but the twins still failed in their attempt to overthrow Zeus. As he did
with the Titans, Zeus banished them all to "Tartarus", which is the
lowest region on earth, lower than the underworld.
According to legend, Metis, the goddess of prudence, was the first love of
Zeus. At first she tried in vain to escape his advances, but in the end
succumbed to his endeavor, and from their union Athena was conceived. Gaia
warned Zeus that Metis would bear a daughter, whose son would overthrow him. On
hearing this Zeus swallowed Metis, the reason for this was to continue to carry
the child through to the birth himself. Hera (his wife and sister) was outraged
and very jealous of her husband's affair, also of his ability to give birth
without female participation. To spite Zeus she gave birth to Hephaestus
parthenogenetically (without being fertilized) and it was Hephaestus who, when
the time came, split open the head of Zeus, from which Athena emerged fully
armed.
Zeus had many offspring; his wife Hera bore him Ares, Hephaestus, Hebe and
Eileithyia, but Zeus had numerous liaisons with both goddesses and mortals. He
either raped them, or used devious means to seduce the unsuspecting maidens.
His union with Leto (meaning the hidden one) brought forth the twins Apollo and
Artemis. Once again Hera showed her jealousy by forcing Leto to roam the earth
in search of a place to give birth, as Hera had stopped her from gaining
shelter on terra-firma or at sea. The only place she could go was to the isle
of Delos in the middle of the Aegean, the reason being that Delos was, as
legend states, a floating island. One legend says that Aphrodite was the
daughter of Zeus and Dione
Besides deities, he also fathered many mortals. In some of his human liaisons
Zeus used devious disguises. When he seduced the Spartan queen Leda, he
transformed himself into a beautiful swan, and from the egg which Leda
produced, two sets of twins were born: Castor and Polydeuces and Clytemnestra
and Helen of Troy. He visited princess Danae as a shower of gold, and from this
union the hero Perseus was born. He abducted the Phoenician princess Europa,
disguised as a bull, then carried her on his back to the island of Crete where
she bore three sons: Minos, Rhadamanthys and Sarpedon. Zeus also took as a
lover the Trojan prince Ganymede. He was abducted by an eagle sent by Zeus
(some legends believe it was Zeus disguised as an eagle). The prince was taken
to Mount Olympus, where he became Zeus' cup-bearer. Zeus also used his charm
and unprecedented power to seduce those he wanted, so when Zeus promised Semele
that he would reveal himself in all his splendor, in order to seduce her, the
union produced Dionysus, but she was destroyed when Zeus appeared as thunder
and lightening. Themis, the goddess of justice bore the three Horae, goddesses
of the seasons to Zeus , and also the three Moirae, known as the Fates. When
Zeus had an affair with Mnemosyne, he coupled with her for nine consecutive
nights, which produced nine daughters, who became known as the Muses. They
entertained their father and the other gods as a celestial choir on Mount
Olympus. They became deities of intellectual pursuits. Also the three Charites
or Graces were born from Zeus and Eurynome. From all his children Zeus gave man
all he needed to live life in an ordered and moral way.
Zeus had many Temples and festivals in his honor, the most famous of his
sanctuaries being Olympia, the magnificent "Temple of Zeus", which
held the gold and ivory statue of the enthroned Zeus, sculpted by Phidias and
hailed as one of the "Seven Wonders of the Ancient World". Also the
Olympic Games were held in his honor. The Nemean Games, which were held every
two years, were to honor Zeus. There were numerous festivals throughout Greece:
in Athens they celebrated the marriage of Zeus and Hera with the Theogamia (or
Gamelia). The celebrations were many: in all, Zeus had more than 150 epithets,
each one being celebrated in his honor.
In art, Zeus was usually portrayed as bearded, middle aged but with a youthful
figure. He would look very regal and imposing. Artists always tried to
reproduce the power of Zeus in their work, usually by giving him a pose as he
is about to throw his bolt of lightening. There are many statues of Zeus, but
without doubt the Artemisium Zeus is the most magnificent. Iit was previously
thought to be Poseidon, and can be seen in the Athens National Archaeological
Museum.
====================
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Leto, the daughter of the Titans Phoebe and Coeus. Known as the hidden one and
bright one, her name came to be used for the moon Selene. Hera was jealous of
Leto because Zeus, the husband of Hera, had fallen in love with her. From their
union Leto bore the divine twins, Artemis and Apollo. Leto found this to be an
arduous task, as Hera had refused Leto to give birth on either terra firma or
on an island out at sea. The only place safe enough to give birth was Delos
because Delos was a floating island. Therefore, Leto did not refute the wishes
of Hera. In some versions, Leto was refused by other vicinities because they
feared the great power of the god she would bear. To show her gratitude, Leto
anchored Delos to the bottom of the Aegean with four columns, to aid its
stability. A conflict of legends arises when in one version it says that
Artemis was born one day before Apollo, and the birth took place on the island
of Ortygia. Then the next day, Artemis helped Leto to cross to the island of
Delos, and aided Leto with the delivery of Apollo.
Leto, being the mother of Artemis and Apollo, figured as the motive for the
slaughter was Niobe's children was that Niobe had been bragging to Leto about
bearing fourteen children (in some versions six or seven). Leto had only born
two, and to make matters worse, Niobe then had the audacity to say, it must
make her more significant than Leto. When the divine twins were told of this
insult, they killed all Niobe's children with their deadly arrows. After which
Niobe wept for her dead children so much that she turned into a pillar of
stone. From one version of how Apollo slew the monster Python, it was said that
while Leto was still pregnant with the divine twins, Python tried to molest
her. As punishment, Apollo killed him and then took control of the oracle of
Delphi.
Leto was worshiped throughout Greece, but principally in Lycia (Asia Minor). In
Delos and Athens, there were temples dedicated to her, although in most regions
she was worshiped in conjunction with her children, Artemis and Apollo. In
Egypt there is the Temple of Leto (Wadjet) at Buto, which was described by
Herodotus as being connected to an island which floated. On this island
(Khemmis) stood a temple to Apollo, but Herodotus dismissed the claim that it
floated as merely the legend of Delos brought to Egypt from Greek tradition.
The Romans called Leto "Latona".
====================
Hera
The queen of the Olympian deities. She is a daughter of Cronus and Rhea, and
wife and sister of Zeus. Hera was mainly worshipped as a goddess of marriage
and birth. It is said that each year Hera's virginity returns by bathing in the
well Canathus. The children of Hera and Zeus are the smith-god Hephaestus, the
goddess of youth Hebe, and the god of war Ares. According to some sources,
however, her children were conceived without the help of a man, either by
slapping her hand on the ground or by eating lettuce: thus they were born, not
out of love but out of lust and hatred.
Writers represented Hera as constantly being jealous of Zeus's various amorous
affairs. She punished her rivals and their children, among both goddesses and
mortals, with implacable fury. She placed two serpents in the cradle of Heracles;
she had Io guarded by a hundred-eyed giant; she drove the foster-parents of
Dionysus mad, and tried to prevent the birth of Apollo and Artemis. Even Zeus
usually could not stand up to her. Sometimes when he got angry, he chained her
to the mountain of Olympus by fastening anvils to her feet. However, most of
the time Zeus resorted to stratagems: he either hid his illegitimate children,
or he changed them into animals.
Hera's main sanctuary was at Argos in the Peloponnesus, where she was worshipped
as the town goddess. Also, in this town the Heraia, public festivities, were
celebrated. Other temples stood in Olympia, Mycene, Sparta, Paestum, Corinth,
Tiryns, Perachora, and on the islands of Samos and Delos.
The peacock (the symbol of pride; her wagon was pulled by peacocks) and the cow
(she was also known as Bopis, meaning "cow-eyed", which was later
translated as "with big eyes") are her sacred animals. The crow and
the pomegranate (symbol of marriage) are also dedicated to her. Other
attributes include a diadem and a veil. Hera is portrayed as a majestic, solemn
woman.
Her Roman counterpart is Juno.
====================
Hestia
Hestia is the Greek goddess of the hearth fire, hence presiding over domestic
life. She is the eldest sister of Zeus and the oldest daughter of Rhea and
Cronus.
She was a virgin-goddess, and when wooed by Poseidon and Apollo, swore by the
head of Zeus to remain a virgin. She had no throne, but tended the sacred fire
in the hall on the Olympus and every hearth on Earth was her altar. She is the
gentlest of all the Olympians.
Hestia also symbolized the alliance of the Metropolis ("mother-city")
with the smaller settlements which were founded in the colonies. The colonists
took fire from the hearth in the prytaneion and kept it burning in their new
towns. The Romans called her Vesta, and build a temple for her in the Forum.
====================
Hades

Hades is the lord of the dead and ruler of the nether world, which is referred
to as the domain of Hades or, by transference, as Hades alone. He is the son of
Cronus and Rhea. When the three sons of Cronus divided the world among each
other, Hades was given the underworld, while his brothers Zeus and Poseidon
took the upperworld and the sea respectively. He ruled the underworld together
with Persephone, whom he abducted from the upperworld. Zeus ordered him to
release Persephone back into the care of her mother Demeter, but before she
left he gave her a pomegranate. When she ate it, it bound her to the underworld
forever/
Hades sits on a throne made of ebony, and carries a scepter. He also has a
helmet, given to him by the Cyclopes, which makes him invisible. Hades rules
the dead, assisted by various (demonic) helpers, such as Thanatos and Hypnos,
the ferryman Charon, and the hound Cerberus. Many heroes from Greek mythology
have descended into the underworld, either to question the shades or trying to
free them. Although Hades does not allow his subjects to leave his domain, on
several occasions he has granted permission, such as the time Orpheus requested
the return of his beloved Eurydice.
Hades possesses the riches of the earth, and is referred to as 'the Rich One'.
Possibly also because, as Sophocles writes, 'the gloomy Hades enriches himself
with our sighs and our tears'. Of all the gods, Hades is the one who is liked
less and even the gods themselves have an aversion of him. People avoided speaking
his name lest they attracted his unwanted attention. With their faces averted
they sacrificed black sheep, whose blood they let drip into pits, and when they
prayed to him, they would bang their hands on the ground. The narcissus and the
cypress are sacred to him.
Other names include Clymenus ('notorious'), Eubuleus ('well-guessing') and
Polydegmon ('who receives many').
====================
Poseidon

Poseidon is a god of many names. He is most famous as the god of the sea. The
son of Cronus and Rhea, Poseidon is one of six siblings who eventually
"divided the power of the world." His brothers and sisters include:
Hestia, Demeter, Hera, Hades, and Zeus. The division of the universe involved
him and his brothers, Zeus and Hades. Poseidon became ruler of the sea, Zeus
ruled the sky, and Hades got the underworld. The other divinities attributed to
Poseidon involve the god of earthquakes and the god of horses. The symbols
associated with Poseidon include: dolphins, tridents, and three-pronged fish
spears.
Poseidon was relied upon by sailors for a safe voyage on the sea. Many men
drowned horses in sacrifice of his honor. He lived on the ocean floor in a
palace made of coral and gems, and drove a chariot pulled by horses. However,
Poseidon was a very moody divinity, and his temperament could sometimes result
in violence. When he was in a good mood, Poseidon created new lands in the water
and a calm sea. In contrast, when he was in a bad mood, Poseidon would strike
the ground with a trident and cause unruly springs and earthquakes, ship
wrecks, and drownings.
Poseidon was similar to his brother Zeus in exerting his power on women and in
objectifying masculinity. He had many love affairs and fathered numerous
children. Poseidon once married a Nereid, Amphitrite, and produced Triton who
was half-human and half-fish. He also impregnated the Gorgon Medusa to conceive
Chrysaor and Pegasus, the flying horse. The rape of Aethra by Poseidon resulted
in the birth of Theseus; and he turned Caeneus into a man, at her request,
after raping her. Another rape involved Amymone when she tried to escape from a
satyr and Poseidon saved her. Other offspring of Poseidon include: Eumolpus,
the Giant Sinis, Polyphemus, Orion, King Amycus, Proteus, Agenor and Belus from
Europa, Pelias, and the King of Egypt, Busiris.
One of the most notorious love affairs of Poseidon involves his sister,
Demeter. Poseidon pursued Demeter and to avoid him she turned herself into a
mare. In his lust for her, Poseidon transformed himself into a stallion and
captured her. Their procreation resulted in a horse, Arion. Poseidon is Greek
for "Husband" (possibly of wheat), and therefore it is thought that
he and Demeter (goddess of wheat) are a good match because they reign as the
god and goddess of fertility.
Another infamous story of Poseidon involves the competition between him and the
goddess of war, Athena, for the city of Athens. To win the people of the city
over, Poseidon threw a spear at the ground and produced the Spring at the
Acropolis. However, Athena won as the result of giving the people of Athens the
olive tree. In his anger over the decision, Poseidon flooded the Attic Plain.
Eventually, Athena and Poseidon worked together by combining their powers. Even
though Poseidon was the god of horses, Athena built the first chariot. Athena
also built the first ship to sail on the sea over which Poseidon ruled.
Poseidon often used his powers of earthquakes, water, and horses to inflict
fear and punishment on people as revenge. Though he could be difficult and
assert his powers over the gods and mortals, Poseidon could be cooperative and
it was he who helped the Greeks during the Trojan War. Poseidon is an essential
character in the study of Greek mythology.
====================
Demeter

The Greek earth goddess par excellence, who brings forth the fruits of the
earth, particularly the various grains. She taught mankind the art of sowing
and ploughing so they could end their nomadic existence. As such, Demeter was
also the goddess of planned society. She was very popular with the rural
population. As a fertility goddess she is sometimes identified with Rhea and
Gaia.
In systematized theology, Demeter is a daughter of Cronus and Rhea and sister
of Zeus by whom she became the mother of Persephone. When Persephone was
abducted by Hades, lord of the underworld, Demeter wandered the earth in search
of her lost child. During this time the earth brought forth no grain. Finally
Zeus sent Hermes to the underworld, ordering Hades to restore Persephone to her
mother. However, before she left, Hades gave her a pomegranate (a common
fertility symbol). When she ate from it, she was bound to spend a third of the
year with her husband in the infernal regions. Only when her daughter is with
her, Demeter lets things grow (summer). The dying and blossoming of nature was
thus connected with Demeter.
In the Eleusinian mysteries, Demeter and Persephone were especially venerated.
When she was looking for her daughter, in the shape of an old woman called
Doso, she was welcomed by Celeus, the king of Eleusis (in Attica). He requested
her to nurse his sons Demophon and Triptolemus 1. To reward his hospitality she
intended to make the boy Demophon immortal by placing him each night in the
hearth, to burn his mortal nature away. The spell was broken one night because
Metanira, the wife of Celeus, walked in on her while she was performing this
ritual. Demeter taught the other son, Triptolemus, the principles of
agriculture, who, in turn, taught others this art. In Demeter's honor as a goddess
of marriage, women in Athens, and other centers in Greece, celebrated the feast
of Thesmophoria (from her epithet Thesmophoros, "she of the regular
customs"). Throughout Classical times members of all social strata came
from all parts of the Mediterranean world to be initiated in and celebrate her
Mysteries at Eleusis.
In ancient art, Demeter was often portrayed (sitting) as a solemn woman, often
wearing a wreath of braided ears of corn. Well-known is the statue made by
Knidos (mid forth century BCE). Her usual symbolic attributes are the fruits of
the earth and the torch, the latter presumably referring to her search for
Persephone. Her sacred animals were the snake (an earth-creature) and the pig
(another symbol of fertility). Some of her epithets include Auxesia, Deo,
Chloe, and Sito. The Romans equated her with the goddess Ceres.
=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=
Athena

Athena, the Greek goddess of wisdom, war, the arts, industry, justice and
skill. She was the favorite child of Zeus. She had sprung fully grown out of
her father's head. Her mother was Metis, goddess of wisdom and Zeus' first
wife. In fear that Metis would bear a son mightier than himself. Zeus swallowed
her and she began to make a robe and helmet for her daughter. The hammering of
the helmet caused Zeus great pain in the form of headaches and he cried out in
agony. Skilled Hephaestus ran to his father and split his skull open and from
it emerged Athena, fully grown and wearing her mother's robe and helmet. She is
the virgin mother of Erichthnonius.
Athena and her uncle Poseidon were both very fond of a certain city in Greece.
Both of them claimed the city and it was decided that the one that could give
the finest gift should have it. Leading a procession of citizens, the two gods
mounted the Acropolis. Poseidon struck the side of the cliff with his trident
and a spring welled up. The people marveled, but the water was as salty as
Poseidon's sea and it was not very useful. Athena's gift was an olive tree,
which was better because it gave the people food, oil and wood. Athena named
her city Athens.
Athena's companion was the goddess of victory, Nike, and her usual attribute is
the owl. Athena possessed the Aegis.
====================
Persephone
Persephone is the goddess of the underworld in Greek mythology. She is the
daughter of Zeus and Demeter, goddess of the harvest. Persephone was such a
beautiful girl that everyone loved her, even Hades wanted her for himself. When
she was a little girl, she and the Oceanids were collecting flowers on the
plain of Enna, when suddenly the earth opened and Hades rose up from the gap
and abducted her. None but Zeus had noticed it.
Broken-hearted, Demeter wandered the earth, looking for her daughter until
Helios, the all-seeing, revealed what had happened. Demeter was so angry that
she withdrew herself in loneliness, and all fertility on earth stopped.
Finally, Zeus sent Hermes down to Hades to make him release Persephone. Hades
grudgingly agreed, but before she went back he gave Persephone a pomegranate to
eat, thus she would always be connected to his realm and had to stay there
one-third of the year. The other months she remained with her mother. When
Persephone was in Hades, Demeter refused to let anything grow and winter began.
This myth is a symbol of the budding and dying of nature. In the Eleusinian
mysteries, this happening was celebrated in honor of Demeter and Persephone, who
was known in this cult as Kore.
The Romans called her Proserpina.
=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=
Ares

Ares, the Greek god of war, is tall and handsome, but vain and as cruel as his
brother Hephaestus was kind. His sister Eris, the goddess of strife, is his
constant companion, but he is also attended by his sons Deimos and Phobos, as
well as Enyo, an old war-goddess.
When Ares heard the clashing of arms, he grinned with glee, put on his gleaming
helmet, and leapt into his war chariot. Brandishing his sword, he rushed into
the thick of battle, not caring who won or lost as long as blood was shed. A
vicious crowd followed at his heels, carrying with them Pain, Panic, Famine and
Oblivion. Once in a while, Ares was wounded. He was immortal but whenever he
would get hurt he would run back to his father, Zeus and was healed. Needless
to say, Zeus was very disgusted with his son. Ares was mainly worshipped in
Thracia, a region known for its fierce people.
====================
Hebe
Hebes is the goddess of youth, and the daughter of Zeus and Hera. She poured
the nectar of the gods on the Olympus until Ganymede replaced her. Hebe also
prepared Ares' bath, and helped Hera to her chariot. After Heracles became a
god, he married her. The Romans called her Juventas ("youth").
She was portrayed as a young woman, wearing a sleeveless dress. On various
vases she is shown as cup bearer of the gods, or as bride of Heracles. Famous
was the --now lost -- statue of Hebe, made of ivory and gold, by Naucydes
(brother of Polycletus) in the 5th century BCE. This statue was also shown on
more recent coins from Argos.
====================
Hephaestus

Hephaestus, the god of fire, especially the blacksmith's fire, was the patron
of all craftsmen, principally those working with metals. He was worshiped
predominantly in Athens, but also in other manufacturing centres. He was the
god of volcanos. Later, the fire within them represented the smith's furnace.
Hephaestus was associated with Mount Etna, which is on the island of Sicily.
Known as the lame god, Hephaestus was born weak and crippled. Displeased by the
sight of her son, Hera threw Hephaestus from Mount Olympus, and he fell for a
whole day before landing in the sea. Nymphs rescued him and took him to Lemnos,
where the people of the island cared for him. But other versions say Zeus threw
him from Mount Olympus after Hephaestus had sided with his mother in a quarrel.
This legend says that Hephaestus fell for nine days and nine nights, and he
landed on the island of Lemnos. It was on Lemnos where he built his palace and
his forges under a volcano.
To gain revenge for his rejection by Hera, Hephaestus fashioned a magic throne,
which was presented to her on Mount Olympus. When Hera sat on the throne, it
entrapped her, making her a prisoner. The gods on Mount Olympus pleaded with
Hephaestus to return to their heavenly domain, as to release Hera, but he
refused. Dionysus gave the smith god wine, and when Hephaestus was intoxicated,
Dionysus took him back to Mount Olympus slumped over the back of a mule. This
scene was a favourite in Greek art. Hephaestus released Hera after being given
the beautiful Aphrodite as his bride. Dionysus was rewarded by being made one
of the Olympian Pantheon.
Hephaestus is known as the son of Hera and Zeus, although Zeus had nothing to
do with the conception. Hephaestus was parthenogenetic, meaning he was
conceived without male fertilisation. Hera was jealous of Zeus after he had an
affair with Metis, from which the goddess of prudence was pregnant with Athena.
However, Gaia had warned Zeus that Metis would bear a daughter, whose son would
overthrow him. To prevent this, Zeus swallowed Metis, so he could carry the
child through to the birth himself, although Zeus could not give birth
naturally. For retribution Hera produced (parthenogeny) Hephaestus, and legend
says, that Hephaestus split the head of Zeus with an axe, from which Athena
appeared fully armed.
One particular legend says that Hephaestus wished to marry Athena, who was also
a patron of smiths, but she refused because she found him ugly. Another legend
says that Athena disappeared from their bridal bed but Hephaestus did not see
her vanish, and spilt his seed on the floor. In a similiar version the semen
fell from Athena's thigh and from it was produced Erechtheus, who became a king
of Athens. (This relates to Erechtheus being the son of Gaia, Earth.)
Aphrodite, in some versions, was the wife of Hephaestus, and he was suspicious
that Aphrodite had been committing adultery. To catch her being unfaithful he
fashioned an extraordinary chain-link net, so fine and strong no one could
escape from it. Then one day he surprised Aphrodite and the war god Ares as
they lay together in bed. He threw his magic net over them and hauled them
before the Olympian gods and exhibited them as they were, naked and wrapped in
each others arms. Hephaestus asked the assembled gods for just retribution, but
they did the total opposite. The gods roared with laughter at the sight of the
naked lovers, after which they allowed the couple to go free. According to
Homer's Iliad Hephaestus had a wife called Aglaea, who was one of the Charites
(Graces).
Being a great craftsman Hephaestus manufactured wonderful articles from various
materials, primarily from metal. With help from the Cyclopes, who were his
workmen and assistants, he fashioned the thunderbolts for Zeus and his sceptre.
He made weapons and armour for the other gods and heroes. For Athena, he made
her shield or aegis and for the god of love, Eros, he made the arrows. The
wonderful chariot which the sun god Helios rode across the sky was made by
Hephaestus and in some versions it was a golden cup or goblet. He also
fashioned the invincible armour of Achilles. Hephaestus helped to create the
first woman, with the assistance of other gods, after Zeus had ordered that
there be a new kind of human. Zeus plotted against Prometheus because he and
his race of mortals had only included one gender, which was male, and so
Hephaestus formed the first woman from clay. Her name was Pandora (all gifts)
and from a supernatural jar, she released the evils of the world on mankind.
Hephaestus is usually shown as an animated cripple bent over his anvil. He
wears a beard and is normally depicted as being ugly, and in some art forms he
walks with the aid of a stick. Homer describes Hephaestus as lame and walking
with the aid of a stick. Hepheastus was worshiped mainly in Athens, where the
Temple of Hephaestus and Athena (the Hephaesteum, also known as the Theseum)
still stands. It is the most complete example of a "Doric" temple
(one of the three orders in Greek architecture). It was built in 449 BCE and
stands on a hill close to the Agora at the foot of the Acropolis. Hephaestus
and Athena Ergane (protectress of craftsman and artisans) were honoured with the
festival "Chalceia" on the 30th day of the month Pyanopsion. The
Romans took Hephaestus as one of their own gods attaching the myth and cult to
their god of fire and calling him Vulcan (Volcanus).
====================
Apollo

The son of Zeus and Leto, and the twin brother of Artemis. Apollo was the god
of music (principally the lyre, and he directed the choir of the Muses) and
also of prophecy, colonization, medicine, archery (but not for war or hunting),
poetry, dance, intellectual inquiry and the carer of herds and flocks. He was
also a god of light, known as "Phoebus" (radiant or beaming, and he
was sometimes identified with Helios the sun god). He was also the god of
plague and was worshiped as Smintheus (from sminthos, rat) and as Parnopius
(from parnops, grasshopper) and was known as the destroyer of rats and locust,
and according to Homer's Iliad, Apollo shot arrows of plague into the Greek
camp. Apollo being the god of religious healing would give those guilty of
murder and other immoral deeds a ritual purification. Sacred to Apollo are the
swan (one legend says that Apollo flew on the back of a swan to the land of the
Hyperboreans, he would spend the winter months among them), the wolf and the
dolphin. His attributes are the bow and arrows, on his head a laurel crown, and
the cithara (or lyre) and plectrum. But his most famous attribute is the
tripod, the symbol of his prophetic powers.
When the goddesss Hera, the wife of Zeus (it was he who had coupled with Leto)
found out about Leto's pregnancy, she was outraged with jealousy. Seeking
revenge Hera forced Leto to roam the earth in search of a place to give birth.
Sicne Hera had forbidden Leto to stay anywhere on earth, either on terra-ferma
or an island at sea, the only place to seek shelter was Delos, being in the
center of the Aegean, and also difficult to reach, as there were strong
under-currents, because it was said to be a floating island. Because it was a
floating island, it was not considered either of Hera's prohibitions, and so
Leto was able to give birth to the divine twins Apollo and Artemis (before Leto
gave birth to Apollo, the island was encircled by a flock of swans, this is why
the swan was sacred to him). As a gesture of thanks Delos was secured to the
sea-bed by four columns to give it stability, and from then on it became one of
the most important sanctuaries to Apollo. (A variation of Apollo's birth was that
the jealous Hera had incarcerated Ilithyia, the goddess of childbirth, but the
other gods intervened forcing Hera to release Ilithyia, which allowed Leto to
give birth ).
Apollo's first achievement was to rid Pytho (Delphi) of the serpent (or dragon)
Python. This monstrous beast protected the sanctuary of Pytho from its lair
beside the Castalian Spring. There it stood guard while the "Sibyl"
gave out her prophecies as she inhaled the trance inducing vapors from an open
chasm. Apollo killed Python with his bow and arrows (Homer wrote "he
killed the fearsome dragon Python, piercing it with his darts"). Apollo
not only took charge of the oracle but rid the neighboring countryside of
widespread destruction, as Python had destroyed crops, sacked villages and polluted
streams and springs. However, to make amends for killing Python, as the
fearsome beast was the son of Gaia, Apollo had to serve king Admetus for nine
years (in some versions eight) as a cowherd. This he did, and when he returned
to Pytho he came in the guise of a dolphin bringing with him priests from Crete
(Apollo's cult title "Delphinios" meaning dolphin or porpoise, is
probably how Delphi was so named). After killing Python and taking possession
of the oracle, the god of light (Phobus) became known as "Pythian
Apollo". He dedicated a bronze tripod to the sanctuary and bestowed divine
powers on one of the priestesses, and she became known as the
"Pythia". It was she who inhaled the hallucinating vapors from the
fissure in the temple floor, while she sat on a tripod chewing laurel leaves.
After she mumbled her answer, a male priest would translate it for the
supplicant. Delphi became the most important oracle center of Apollo, there
were several including Clarus and Branchidae.
Apollo, as with Zeus his father, had many love affairs with goddesses and
mortals. Apollo's infatuation for the nymph Daphne, which had been invoked by
the young god of love Eros, because Apollo had mocked him, saying his archery
skills were pathetic, and Apollo's singing had also irritated him. Daphne was
the beautiful daughter of the river god Ladon, and she was constantly pursued
by Apollo. To escape from Apollo's insistent behavior, she fled to the
mountains, but the persistent Apollo followed her. Annoyed by this, she asked
the river god Peneus for help, which he did. As soon as Apollo approached
Daphne, he tried to embrace her, but when he stretched out his arms she
transformed into a laurel tree. Apollo, distraught by what had happened, made
the laurel his sacred tree. Apollo also loved Cyrene, she was another nymph,
and she bore Apollo a son: Aristaeus, a demi-god, who became a protector of
cattle and fruit trees, and a deity of hunting, husbandry and bee-keeping. He
taught men dairy skills and the use of nets and traps in hunting.
The most famous mortal loves of Apollo was Hecuba, she was the wife of Priam,
the king of Troy. She bore him Troilius. Foretold by an oracle, as long as
Troilius reached the age of twenty, Troy could not be defeated. But the hero
Achilles ambushed and killed him, when the young prince and his sister Polyxena
secretly visited a spring. Apollo also fell in love with Cassandra, the sister
of Troilius, and daughter of Hecuba and Priam. He seduced Cassandra on the
promise that he would teach her the art of prophecy, but having learnt the
prophetic art she rejected him. Apollo, being angry of her rejection punished
her, by declaring her prophecies never to be accepted or believed.
Asclepius, the god of healing, was also Apollo's offspring, after his union
with Coronis, who was daughter of Phlegyas, king of the Lapiths. While she was
pregnant by Apollo, Coronis fell in love with Ischys, son of Elatus, but a crow
informed Apollo of the affair. Apollo sent his twin sister Artemis to kill
Coronis, and Artemis carried out he brothers wishes. While her body was burning
on the funeral pyre, Apollo removed the unborn child, and took him to Chiron,
who raised the child Asclepius.
Apollo also, as did his father Zeus, fall in love with one of his own gender,
Hyacinthus, a Spartan prince. He was very handsome and athletic, which inflamed
the passions of Apollo. One day while Apollo and Hyacinthus were practicing
throwing the discus, Zephyrus, the god of the west wind, who was also attracted
to the young prince, and jealous of Apollo's amorous affection towards the boy,
made the discus veer off course by blowing an ill wind. The discus, which
Apollo had thrown, hit Hyacinthus, smashing his skull. Apollo rushed to him,
but he was dead. The god was overcome with grief, but to immortalize the love
he had for the beautiful youth, he had a flower grow were his blood had stained
the earth. Apollo also loved the young boy Cyparissus, a descendant of
Heracles. The impassioned Apollo gave Cyparissus a sacred deer, as a love
token. The young deer became tame, and was the constant companion of the boy,
until a tragic accident occurred. As the young deer lay sleeping in the shade
of the undergrowth, Cyparissus threw his javelin, which by chance hit, and
killed the deer. Grief-stricken by what had happened, Cyparissus wanted to die.
He asked Apollo to let his tears fall for all eternity. With apprehension
Apollo transformed the boy into a tree, the cypress, which became the symbol of
sorrow, as the sap on its trunk forms droplets, like tears.
Apollo could also be ruthless when he was angered. The mortal Niobe, boasted to
Apollo's mother Leto, that she had fourteen children (in some versions six or
seven), which must make her more superior than Leto, who had only bore two.
Apollo greatly angered by this slew her sons, and Artemis killed Niobe's
daughters. Niobe wept so much that she turned into a pillar of stone. Apollo
was infuriated when the satyr Marsyas challenged Apollo to music contest. After
winning the competition, Apollo had Marsyas flayed alive, for being so
presumptuous, as to challenge a god.
Apollo was worshiped throughout the Greek world, at Delphi every four years
they held the Pythian Games in his honor. He had many epithets, including
"Pythian Apollo" (his name at Delphi), "Apollo Apotropaeus"
(Apollo who averts evil), and "Apollo Nymphegetes" (Apollo who looks
after the Nymphs). As the god of shepherds he also had the cult titles
"Lukeios" (from lykos; wolf), protecting the flocks from wolfs, and
"Nomius" (of pastures, belonging to shepherds). Being the god of
colonists, Apollo influenced his priests at Delphi to give divine guidance, as
to where the expedition should proceed. This was during the height of the
colonizing era circa 750-550 BCE. Apollo's title was "Archigetes"
(leader of colonists). According to one legend, it was Apollo who helped either
Cretan or Arcadian colonists found the city of Troy.
In art Apollo is at most times depicted as a handsome young man, clean shaven
and carrying either a lyre, or his bow and arrows. There are many sculptures of
Apollo and one of the most famous is the central figure from the west pediment
of the Temple of Zeus, at Olympia, showing Apollo declaring victory in favor of
the Lapiths in their struggle against the Centaurs.
====================
Artemis

The daughter of Leto and Zeus, and twin sister of Apollo. Artemis is the
goddess of the wilderness, the hunt and wild animals, and fertility (she became
a goddess of fertility and childbirth mainly in cities). She was often depicted
with the crescent of the moon above her forehead and was sometimes identified
with Selene (goddess of the moon). Artemis was one of the Olympians and a
virgin goddess. Her main vocation was to roam mountain forests and uncultivated
land with her nymphs in attendance hunting for lions, panthers, hinds and
stags. Contradictory to the later, she helped in protecting and seeing to their
well-being, also their safety and reproduction. She was armed with a bow and
arrows which were made by Hephaestus and the Cyclopes.
In one legend, Artemis was born one day before her brother Apollo. Her mother
gave birth to her on the island of Ortygia, then, almost immediately after her
birth, she helped her mother to cross the straits over to Delos, where she then
delivered Apollo. This was the beginning of her role as guardian of young
children and patron of women in childbirth. Being a goddess of contradictions,
she was the protectress of women in labor, but it was said that the arrows of
Artemis brought them sudden death while giving birth. As was her brother,
Apollo, Artemis was a divinity of healing, but also brought and spread diseases
such as leprosy, rabies and even gout.
Being associated with chastity, Artemis at an early age (in one legend she was
three years old) asked her father, the great god Zeus, to grant her eternal
virginity. Also, all her companions were virgins. Artemis was very protective
of her purity, and gave grave punishment to any man who attempted to dishonor
her in any form. Actaeon, while out hunting, accidentally came upon Artemis and
her nymphs, who bathing naked in a secluded pool. Seeing them in all their naked
beauty, the stunned Actaeon stopped and gazed at them, but when Artemis saw him
ogling them, she transformed him into a stag. Then, incensed with disgust, she
set his own hounds upon him. They chased and killed what they thought was
another stag, but it was their master. As with Orion, a giant and a great
hunter, there are several legends which tell of his death, one involving
Artemis. It is said that he tried to rape the virgin goddess, so killed him
with her bow and arrows. Another says she conjured up a scorpion which killed
Orion and his dog. Orion became a constellation in the night sky, and his dog
became Sirius, the dog star. Yet another version says it was the scorpion which
stung him and was transformed into the constellation with Orion, the later being
Scorpio. Artemis was enraged when one of her nymphs, Callisto, allowed Zeus to
seduce her, but the great god approached her in one of his guises; he came in
the form of Artemis. The young nymph was unwittingly tricked, and she gave
birth to Arcas, the ancestor of the Arcadians, but Artemis showed no mercy and
changed her into a bear. She then shot and killed her. As Orion, she was sent
up to the heavens, and became the constellation of the Great Bear (which is
also known as the Plough).
Artemis was very possessive. She would show her wrath on anyone who disobeyed
her wishes, especially against her sacred animals. Even the great hero
Agamemnon came upon the wrath of Artemis, when he killed a stag in her sacred
grove. His punishment came when his ships were becalmed, while he made his way
to besiege Troy. With no winds to sail his ships he was told by the seer
Calchas that the only way Artemis would bring back the winds was for him to
sacrifice his daughter Iphigenia. Some versions say he did sacrifice Iphigenia,
others that Artemis exchanged a deer in her place, and took Iphigenia to the
land of the Tauri (the Crimea) as a priestess, to prepare strangers for
sacrifice to Artemis.
Artemis with her twin brother, Apollo, put to death the children of Niobe. The
reason being that Niobe, a mere mortal, had boasted to Leto, the mother of the
divine twins, that she had bore more children, which must make her superior to
Leto. Apollo being outraged at such an insult on his mother, informed Artemis.
The twin gods hunted them down and shot them with their bows and arrows; Apollo
killed the male children and Artemis the girls.
Artemis was worshiped in most Greek cities but only as a secondary deity.
However, to the Greeks in Asia Minor (modern day Turkey) she was a prominent
deity. In Ephesus, a principal city of Asia Minor, a great temple was built in
her honor, which became one of the "Seven Wonders of the Ancient
World". But at Ephesus she was worshiped mainly as a fertility goddess,
and was identified with Cybele the mother goddess of eastern lands. The cult
statues of the Ephesian Artemis differ greatly from those of mainland Greece,
whereas she is depicted as a huntress with her bow and arrows. Those found at
Ephesus show her in the eastern style, standing erect with numerous nodes on
her chest. There have been many theories as to what they represent. Some say
they are breasts, others that they are bulls testes which were sacrificed to
her. Which is the true interpretation remains uncertain, but each represent
fertility.
There were festivals in honor of Artemis, such as the Brauronia, which was held
in Brauron; and the festival of Artemis Orthia, held at Sparta, when young
Spartan boys would try to steal cheeses from the altar. As they tried they
would be whipped, the meaning of Orthia and the nature of the ritual whipping
has been lost and there is no logical explanation or translation. Among the
epithets given to Artemis are: Potnia Theron (mistress of wild animals) this
title was mentioned by the great poet Homer; Kourotrophos (nurse of youth's);
Locheia (helper in childbirth); Agrotera (huntress); and Cynthia (taken from
her birthplace on Mount Cynthus on Delos). When young girls reached puberty
they were initiated into her cult, but when they decided to marry, which
Artemis was not against, they were asked to lay in front of the altar all the
paraphernalia of their virginity, toys, dolls and locks of their hair, they
then left the domain of the virgin goddess.
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Iapetus
Iapetus is the son Uranus and Gaia. Iapetus' wife is Clymene, with whom he has
four children - Atlas, Menoetius, Prometheus and Epimetheus. He is occasionally
called the husband of Asia or Asopis.
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Prometheus

Prometheus was the son of Iapetus who was one of the Titans. He tricked the
gods into eating bare bones instead of good meat. He stole the sacred fire from
Zeus and the gods. Prometheus did not tell Zeus the prophecy that one of Zeus's
sons will overthrow him. In punishment, Zeus commanded that Prometheus be
chained for eternity in the Caucasus. There, an eagle (or, according to other
sources, a vulture) would eat his liver, and each day the liver would be
renewed. So the punishment was endless, until Heracles finally killed the bird.
Prometheus is known to be one of the most interesting characters in Greek
Mythology.
====================
Atlas

Atlas is a scion of the Titans, the Greek race of giants, and the son of
Iapetus and the nymph Clymene. He is the father of the Hesperides, the Hyades
and the Pleiades. He was also thought to be the king of legendary Atlantis
("Land of Atlas").
In the revolt of the Titans against the gods of the Olympic, Atlas stormed the
heavens and Zeus punished him for this deed by condemning him to forever bear
the heavens upon his shoulders. Hence his name, which means "bearer"
or "endurer".
To complete the eleventh of his twelve labors, Heracles had to obtain the
golden apples of the Hesperides, and he asked Atlas for help. Heracles offered
to bear Atlas's burden in his absence, when he went to retrieve the apples.
Atlas agreed to perform the task readily enough, since he did not plan on ever
bearing that burden again. When Atlas returned with the apples, Heracles
requested him to assume the load for a moment, saying he needed to adjust the
pad to ease the pressure on his shoulders. After Atlas bore the heavens again,
Heracles walked off with the golden apples.
When Atlas refused to give shelter to Perseus, the latter changed Atlas into
stone, using Medusa's head. On the place where Atlas stood, now lie Mount Atlas
(north-western Africa). In art, Atlas is usually depicted as a man bearing a
globe.
====================
Epimetheus
Epimetheus ("afterthought") is the son of Iapetus and Clymene. He
foolishly ignored his brother Prometheus' warnings to beware of any gifts from
Zeus. He accepted Pandora as his wife, thereby bringing ills and sorrows to the
world.
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Maia
"The Pleiades" was the name given to the seven daughters of Atlas and
Pleione. Maia was the eldest of the daughters, and said to be the most
beautiful. Being shy, she lived quietly and alone in a cave on Mount Cyllene,
in Arcadia.
Zeus, however, discovered the beautiful young woman, and fell in love with her.
He came to her cave at night, to make love to her away from the jealous eyes of
his wife, Hera. As a result, Maia bore Zeus a son, Hermes.
When still an infant, Hermes stole some cattle from the god Apollo, and hid
them in his mother's cave. When Apollo stormed into Maia's cave, she showed him
the tiny baby to prove he could not have been the cattle thief. Apollo was not
fooled, however, and angrily appealed to Zeus to punish Hermes. Zeus arbitrated
by requiring Hermes to give back the cattle. During the feud, baby Hermes played
the lyre, and Apollo was so enchanted by the music that he dropped the charges,
and even gave some of the cattle to Hermes, as well as other gifts.
Some time later, Maia helped Zeus when Hera had caused the death of one of his
other mistresses, Callisto, who had borne him a son, named Arcas. Zeus ordered
Hermes to give Arcas to Maia to raise as her own, which she did.
Arcas and Callisto were eventually placed in the sky, becoming the
constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor (Big and Little Bear) to escape the
wrath of the ever-jealous Hera.
====================
Dione
According to certain traditions, the goddess or Titaness Dione became by Zeus
the mother of Aphrodite. Actually, her name is a feminine form of Zeus (dios).
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Hermes
Hermes, the herald of the Olympian gods, is son of Zeus and the nymph Maia,
daughter of Atlas and one of the Pleiades. Hermes is the god of shepherds, land
travel, merchants, weights and measures, oratory, literature, athletics and
thieves, and known for his cunning and shrewdness. Most importantly, he is the
messenger of the gods. Besides that he was also a minor patron of poetry. He
was worshiped throughout Greece -- especially in Arcadia -- and festivals in
his honor were called Hermoea.
According to legend, Hermes was born in a cave on Mount Cyllene in Arcadia.
Zeus had impregnated Maia at the dead of night while all other gods slept. When
dawn broke amazingly he was born. Maia wrapped him in swaddling bands, then
resting herself, fell fast asleep. Hermes, however, squirmed free and ran off
to Thessaly. This is where Apollo, his brother, grazed his cattle. Hermes stole
a number of the herd and drove them back to Greece. He hid them in a small
grotto near to the city of Pylos and covered their tracks. Before returning to
the cave he caught a tortoise, killed it and removed its entrails. Using the
intestines from a cow stolen from Apollo and the hollow tortoise shell, he made
the first lyre. When he reached the cave he wrapped himself back into the
swaddling bands. When Apollo realized he had been robbed he protested to Maia
that it had been Hermes who had taken his cattle. Maia looked to Hermes and
said it could not be, as he is still wrapped in swaddling bands. Zeus the all
powerful intervened saying he had been watching and Hermes should return the
cattle to Apollo. As the argument went on, Hermes began to play his lyre. The
sweet music enchanted Apollo, and he offered Hermes to keep the cattle in
exchange for the lyre. Apollo later became the grand master of the instrument,
and it also became one of his symbols. Later while Hermes watched over his herd
he invented the pipes known as a syrinx (pan-pipes), which he made from reeds.
Hermes was also credited with inventing the flute. Apollo, also desired this
instrument, so Hermes bartered with Apollo and received his golden wand which
Hermes later used as his heralds staff. (In other versions Zeus gave Hermes his
heralds staff).
Being the herald (messenger of the gods), it was his duty to guide the souls of
the dead down to the underworld, which is known as a psychopomp. He was also
closely connected with bringing dreams to mortals. Hermes is usually depicted
with a broad-brimmed hat or a winged cap, winged sandals and the heralds staff
(kerykeion in Greek, or Caduceus in Latin). It was often shown as a shaft with
two white ribbons, although later they were represented by serpents intertwined
in a figure of eight shape, and the shaft often had wings attached. The clothes
he donned were usually that of a traveler, or that of a workman or shepherd.
Other symbols of Hermes are the @#%$, tortoise and purse or pouch.
Originally Hermes was a phallic god, being attached to fertility and good
fortune, and also a patron of roads and boundaries. His name coming from herma,
the plural being hermaiherm was a square or rectangular pillar in either stone
or bronze, with the head of Hermes (usually with a beard), which adorned the
top of the pillar, and male genitals near to the base of the pillar. These were
used for road and boundary markers. Also in Athens they stood outside houses to
help fend off evil. In Athens of 415 BCE, shortly before the Athenian fleet set
sail against Syracuse (during the Peloponnesian War), all the herms throughout
Athens were defaced. This was attributed to people who were against the war.
Their intentions were to cast bad omens on the expedition, by seeking to offend
the god of travel. (This has never been proved as the true reason for the
mutilation of the herms.)
The offspring of Hermes are believed to be Pan, Abderus and Hermaphroditus.
Hermes as with the other gods had numerous affairs with goddesses, nymphs and
mortals. In some legends even sheep and goats. Pan, the half man half goat, is
believed to be the son of Hermes and Dryope, the daughter of king Dryops. Pan
terrified his mother when he was born, so much so that she fled in horror at
the sight of her new born son. Hermes took Pan to Mount Olympus were the gods
reveled in his laughter and his appearance and became the patron of fields,
woods, shepherds and flocks. Abderus, a companion of the hero Heracles, is also
thought to be a son of Hermes, he was devoured by the Mares of Diomedes, after
Heracles had left him in charge of the ferocious beasts. Hermaphroditus (also known
as Aphroditus) was conceived after the union of Hermes and Aphrodite. He was
born on Mount Ida but he was raised by the Naiads (nymphs of freshwater). He
was a androgynous (having the characteristics of both sexes) deity, depicted as
either a handsome young man but with female breasts, or as Aphrodite with male
genitals.
It was Hermes who liberated Io, the lover of Zeus, from the hundred-eyed giant
Argus, who had been ordered by Hera, the jealous wife of Zeus, to watch over
her. Hermes charmed the giant with his flute, and while Argos slept Hermes cut
off his head and released Io. Hera, as a gesture of thanks to her loyal
servant, scattered the hundred eyes of Argos over the tail of a peacock (Heras'
sacred bird). Hermes also used his ingenuity and abilities to persuade the
nymph Calypso to release Odysseus, the wandering hero, from her charms. She had
kept Odysseus captive, after he was shipwrecked on her island Ogygia, promising
him immortality if he married her, but Zeus sent Hermes to release Odysseus.
Legend says that Calypso died of grief when Odysseus sailed away. Hermes also
saved Odysseus and his men from being transformed into pigs by the goddess and
sorceress Circe. He gave them a herb which resisted the spell. Hermes also
guided Eurydice back down to the underworld after she had been allowed to stay
for one day on earth with her husband Orpheus.
Known for his swiftness and athleticism, Hermes was given credit for inventing
foot-racing and boxing. At Olympia a statue of him stood at the entrance to the
stadium and his statues where in every gymnasium throughout Greece. Apart from
herms, Hermes was a popular subject for artists. Both painted pottery and
statuary show him in various forms, but the most fashionable depicted him as a
good-looking young man, with an athletic body, and winged sandals and his
heralds staff. His Roman counterpart Mercury inherited his attributes, and
there are many Roman copies of Greek artistic creations of Hermes.
====================
Aphrodite
In Greek mythology, Aphrodite is the goddess of love, beauty and sexual
rapture. According to Hesiod, she was born when Uranus (the father of the gods)
was castrated by his son Cronus. Cronus threw the severed genitals into the
ocean which began to churn and foam about them. From the aphros ("sea
foam") arose Aphrodite, and the sea carried her to either Cyprus or
Cythera. Hence she is often referred to as Kypris and Cytherea. Homer calls her
a daughter of Zeus and Dione.
After her birth, Zeus was afraid that the gods would fight over Aphrodite's
hand in marriage so he married her off to the smith god Hephaestus, the
steadiest of the gods. He could hardly believe his good luck and used all his
skills to make the most lavish jewels for her. He made her a girdle of finely
wrought gold and wove magic into the filigree work. That was not very wise of
him, for when she wore her magic girdle no one could resist her, and she was
all too irresistible already. She loved gaiety and glamour and was not at all
pleased at being the wife of sooty, hard-working Hephaestus.
Aphrodite loved and was loved by many gods and mortals. Among her mortal
lovers, the most famous was perhaps Adonis. Some of her sons are Eros, Anteros,
Hymenaios and Aeneas (with her Trojan lover Anchises). She is accompanied by
the Graces.
Her festival is the Aphrodisiac which was celebrated in various centers of
Greece and especially in Athens and Corinth. Her priestesses were not
prostitutes but women who represented the goddess and sexual intercourse with
them was considered just one of the methods of worship. Aphrodite was
originally an old-Asian goddess, similar to the Mesopotamian Ishtar and the
Syro-Palestinian goddess Ashtart. Her attributes are a.o. the dolphin, the
dove, the swan, the pomegranate and the lime tree.
In Roman mythology Venus is the goddess of love and beauty and Cupid is love's
messenger.