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APHRODITE
APOLLO
ARES
ARTEMIS also known as PARTHENOS
ASCLEPIUS
ATHENE also known as ATHENA
CHARON
CRONUS
DEMETER
DIONYSIUS
ERIS
EROS
GAIA
HADES Also PLUTO
HEBE
HECATE also known as HEKATE
HELIOS
HERA
HERMES
HYPNOS
IRIS
MOROS
MORPHEUS
NEMESIS Also ADRASTEIA
NIKE
OCEANUS
PAN
PERSEPHONE Also KORE
POSEIDON
THANATOS
URANUS
ZEUS
ADONIS
Beloved of Aphrodite, the central figure of a widespread fertility cult, god of vegetation
and re-birth. Adonis seems clearly linked with Tammuz, the Assyro-Babylonion god who dies
and rises again. Adonis is the Greek version of the Phoenician term Adon, which means "Lord."
Goddess of fertility, love and beauty. When Zeus killed his father, Uranus, he cut off
his father's genitals and cast them into the sea. The sea foamed and boiled and Aphrodite
arose from the waters. As Aphrodite stepped from the ocean, flowers grew wherever her feet
touched. Paphos, the place where Aphrodite supposedly rose from the waters, was her most
important place of worship, and at Corinth she was worshipped with sacred whores. Aphrodite
is clearly related to Ishtar and Astarte and very much loves the company of the male gods.
While married to Hephaestus, she also dallied with Ares, Poseidon, Adonis, and Dionysius.
Aphrodite is a complex, many faceted deity. Among her many names are Melaina (the Black One),
Androphonos (Killer of Men), Epitymbidia (She Upon the Graves), Anadyomene (Rising from
the Sea), Urania (Sky Borne), and Pandemos (Goddess of All the People).
God of light, god of prophecy and music, god of medicine, god of flocks and herds, the
divine archer, a pastoral god. Wise, beauteous, all-knowing, ever just, ever young.
Apollo urges forgiveness to all offenses, even the blackest of crimes, so long as the
offender was truly penitent. After Zeus and Athene, the greatest of the Gods. Apollo's
most important place of worship was the famous temple at Delphi, where oracles prophesied
in his name. The Sybil at Cumae in southern Italy also foretold the future in his honor.
Paintings and statuary show him with his bow and lyre, which were a gift from the infant
Hermes. Apollo loved young men and young women alike, though his affairs usually ended
unhappily. Artemis is his twin sister, and Horus is his counterpart in the Egyptian
pantheon.
To the Romans, MARS God of war. The Greeks detested Ares. Quarrelsome, spiteful,
unfaithful, Ares loves only hatred, strife and bloodshed. Ares was the first god to be
placed on trial for murder, and the place in Athens where he was supposed to be have been
tried was called the Aeropagus, the Hill of Ares. By custom trials for murder were held
at the Aeropagus. The Romans believed Ares to be the father of Romulus and Remus.
Fertility goddess, patron of maidens, goddess of childbirth. Identified with the moon, as
her brother Apollo is identified with the sun. The Virgin Huntress, Mistress of Beasts,
Lady of All Wild Things, A Lion unto Women. Usually benevolent, but stern and demanding,
dangerous to cross. Artemis lived in Arcadia with a band of nymphs subject to her strict
discipline; those who dallied with men, as did Callisto, might be shot down with an arrow
or otherwise punished. No man or god ever gained the love of Artemis. Artemis is virtually
unbeatable in combat. The only one of the immortals who ever bested her was Hera, who
defeated Artemis on the battlefield at Troy, whipped her with her own bow, and sent her
fleeing in tears.
God of medicine and healing, son of Apollo. Originally a mortal. So great was Asclepius'
skill that he could revive the dead. Zeus killed Asclepius after Hades complained that he
was being cheated of his lawful due, but Asclepius' virtues and good deeds won him a
place among the gods. Those who wished a cure of Asclepius would sleep in his temple,
where he would appear to them in a dream and advise them. Snakes are his symbol and were
allowed to wander freely in his temple at Epidaurus.
ATHENE to the Romans, MINERVA Goddess of wisdom, of architects and sculptors, of weavers,
of oxen and horses. A goddess of war. Like Artemis, an eternal virgin. Often associated
with birds, particularly the owl. Athene taught men to tame horses and invented the
potter's wheel. Her city is Athens, which she won in a contest with Poseidon.
The ferryman who carries dead souls across the river Styx to Hades. His fee is one obol,
which was placed in the mouth of the dead man before he was buried.
The chief of the Titans, the race of giants who preceded the Olympian gods. In very ancient
times, Cronus was probably a corn god. Told that he would be overthrown by one of his own
sons, Cronus devoured them all as they were born until his wife Rhea deceived him to save
Zeus. Wrapping a stone in swaddling clothes, Rhea gave the stone to Cronus and spirited
Zeus away to a hiding place. After defeating Cronus, Zeus imprisoned him and the rest of
the Titans, thus beginning the age of the Olympian gods.
DEMETER to the Romans, CERES Goddess of grain and the fruitful earth. An earth mother who
was certainly one of, if not the oldest of the gods. Demeter's immensely popular festivals,
held twice a year at Eleusis, were so highly revered that no initiate was ever known to
break the vow of secrecy. Demeter gave the gift of grain to men and instituted the
Eleusinian Mysteries. The nature of these Mysteries has been lost to us, though we know
that the mystery cults celebrated the Lesser Mysteries in February of every year and the
Greater Mysteries in September of every fifth year. Most likely the rites included
processions, ritual cleansing and religious dramas.
God of religious ecstasy and wine, accompanied always by satyrs and nymphs. The force
of life in all growing things. Dionysius is the Greek form of Thracian and Phrygian
deities of vegetation and fetility, who followers worked themselves into a frenzy and
ritually tore apart their god in the form of a goat, a bull or a man. The cult survived
the introduction of the Olympian gods and proved so popular that it finally had to be
accepted by the Dorian Greeks. In the dark age which followed the decline of the Myceneans,
the cult of Dionysius spread rapidly, especially among women. His followers were known as
maenads (mad women) and it was best not to be near when their frenzy came upon them.
Animals, and sometimes people, were torn apart and sometimes eaten in the belief that they
were devouring the god himself. Drunk, lawless and noisy, not terribly impressed by
authority or convention, the followers of Dionysius were often unwelcome. His worshippers
danced wildly, and his rites were designed to cleanse men of lowly irrational emotions
and desires.
The dark sister of Eros. Goddess of chaos and discord, Eris loves confusion and conflict.
It was Eris who gave the goddesses the golden apple inscribed "To the Fairest," which set
in motion the chain of events that led to the Trojan War.
God of love both heterosexual and homosexual, though his domain is not limited solely
to sexual love and includes love in all its broadest senses. One of the oldest of the
gods, the center of his worship was at Thespiae. The ancient Greeks feared Eros. Eros
can cause havoc, and there is an air of maliciousness about him. Eros can drive men and
women to noble self-sacrfice, but he can also torture them to madness and drive them to
self-destruction. Lacking wisdom, moderns have made Eros contemptibly cute and sweet,
and somewhat prankish.
"Mother of all things." The Earth itself, mother of the Titans, the old gods. Usually
represented as a giant woman. Before anything else existed, there was only Chaos (the
Void, the Nothingness, the Emptiness) and the Earth. Gaia nurses the ill and watches
over marriages. Gaia is an oracle as well, and the temple at Delphi was hers before it
was Apollo's. The Greeks had no tales about Gaia, because she belonged to the distant
past.
"The Unseen," "the Rich." God of wealth and the underworld. Hades is stern but perfectly
just, and rejects all pleas for mercy, but he is in no sense evil or destructive. His
realm is not a place of flames and torment, as is the Christian hell. Most dead souls
dwell on the plain of Asphodel, where they wander aimlessly as mere shadows of their
earthly selves. The blessed go to the Elysian Fields, a place of great joy and beauty,
while the abominably wicked go to the dismal plain of Tartarus. You're born, you live, you
die, you go to Hades. End of story.
Goddess of youth and beauty. An eternally young girl, Hebe helps the gods wash and dress
themselves, though her main duty is to serve nectar and ambrosia at their feasts. A minor
but charming deity.
Goddess of black magic and evil ghosts. Often portrayed with three faces: maiden, mother
and crone. The poor and down trodden often turned to Hecate for protection or vengance.
Hecate defends children and appears with her dogs at crossroads and tombs.
God of the sun, the charioteer who drives the sun across the sky. From his great height,
Helios sees everything and was often called upon to witness contracts and oaths. From the
fifth century onward, Helios was considered identical with Apollo.
HEPHAESTUS
HEPHAESTUS to the Romans, VULCAN The lame blacksmith god, patron of craftsman and
metalworkers, god of fire. The centers of his cult could be found wherever metalworkers
congregated and near volcanos. Hephaestus was so ugly that his mother Hera kept him out
of sight, and the other gods laughed at his lame gait. In revenge, Hephaestus tricked
the gods into giving him Aphrodite for his wife, though he never succeeded in keeping
her faithful. Some scholars say Hephaestus' lameness was a reflection of an actual
practice. A skillful smith was a rare and valuable man, and tribes or villages would
often cripple a good smith to keep him from leaving or running away.
HERA to the Romans, JUNO. Wife of Zeus, queen of the gods. Zeus is quite a randy god, and
Hera's domestic life with him is always stormy. Zeus and Hera were on opposite sides during
the Trojan War, and they squabble all the way through the Iliad. At first a sky goddess,
Hera later became the embodiment of womanliness. Like Dionysius, Hera is a pre-Olympian
deity whose cult was so strong that it had to be adopted by the Dorian Greeks. Hera was
worshipped in high places, and her temples were built on mountain peaks. Her festival,
held at Argos and called the Heraia, involved athletic contests.
HERMES to the Romans, MERCURY The messenger of the gods, the god of eloquence, the god of
luck. God of travelers, merchants and athletes. Originally a pastoral and fertility god in
Arcadia, in his oldest monuments Hermes is represented simply as a phallus. Easygoing, kind
and obliging, Hermes is quite helpful to both gods and men, though he appears in some
stories as a trickster. Hermes invented the lyre, which he gave to Apollo to get out of
a mess he'd made by stealing Apollo's cattle. Hermes' image was often found at crossroads
and junctions, and he is shown with winged sandals and a winged helmet. Hermes was quite
popular.
God of sleep. Brother of Thanatos (Death). Hypnos has power even over the gods.
Goddess of the rainbow. Like Hermes, a messenger for the gods. The center of her cult was
at Delos, and the proper offerings to her were dried figs and honeycakes.
God of destiny. Dark, unknowable, all powerful. Even the gods are subject to Moros.
God of dreams. His name is the root word of "morphine."
Goddess of destiny and inevitability, the repayment of sin and crime.
NIKE to the Greeks, to the Romans, VICTORIA, Goddess of victory. Generally portrayed as a
winged maiden holding high a wreath of bay leaves, the victor's laurel. Her most famous
temple was in Athens.
Ancient god of the oceans, eventually displaced by Poseidon. With his sister, Tethys, he
had six thousand children, half of them sea spirits, the other half river spirits.
"The Pasturer," "the Feeder of Flocks." God of herds, fertility and male sexuality.
Pan has the horns and legs of a goat and plays a syrinx, a pipe withs seven reeds. An
ancient god, he has no moral or social aspect whatsoever, and is simply the embodiment
of pure, basic instinct. Some said that Pan taught Apollo the art of prophecy. Pan
especially loves mountains and wild country. Pan has a dark aspect as well, causing men
and animals to go suddenly mad with terror in distant, lonely places. His name is
therefore the root word of "panic."
"Maiden." Daughter of Demeter, wife of Hades. Hades kidnapped Persephone and took her to
the underworld to be his queen. When Demeter heard, she wandered the earth in mourning,
abandoning her responsibilities, and the earth grew gray and barren. The growing famine
forced Zeus to demand that Hades return Persephone to the surface world. But Persephone
had eaten part of a pomegranate, and eating of the food of the dead bound her to their
world. Zeus and Hades struck a bargain -- Persephone would spend seven months a year
in the world of the living and five in the world of the dead. When Persephone is in the
world, her mother Demeter is content, and te world blooms and lives. When she is in the
underworld, Demeter mourns, the world languishes, and we have winter.
God of the sea and earthquakes. Horses and bulls are sacred to him. Originally the god
of earth tremors, of vegetation and fecundity, Poseidon fought for the Olympians against the
Titans, and his reward after the victory was dominion over the seas, lakes and rivers.
Poseidon's fits of rage manifest as storms, and seamen dread his anger. Bulls were thrown
into the sea as sacrifices to Poseidon. His amorous adventures played an important role in
Greek mythology, and he loved men no less than women.
God of death. Sometimes portrayed as a winged spirit, at other times as a man robed in black
armed with a sword. Thanatos is not evil or hateful. He is just doing his job.
Heaven personified. The son born to Gaia when she first emerged from Chaos. Uranus' rain
made Gaia fruitful, and she brought forth the Titans. Jealous of his children, Uranus
confined them to the earth, and Gaia conspired wth Cronus, the boldest of her children,
to overthrow him. Cronus castrated Uranus with a sickle, only to be overthrown by Zeus
in his turn.
ZEUS to the Romans, JUPITER. "Cloud Gatherer." The ruler of the Olympian gods, god of the
sky, thunder, and lightening, the upholder of custom and tradition. Zeus had many names.
As Soter, he is know as the father and saviour of mankind; as Herkeios, guardian of the
home; as Xenios, keeper of the rules of hospitality; as Ktesios, protector of property;
as Gamelios, god of marriage; as Zeus Chronius, god of the earth and fertility; as Zeus
Eluetherious, protector of freedom; and as Zeus Polieus, god of the civic virtues.
Despite all these duties, Zeus still had plenty of time to romp with young girls and
boys. His wife Hera persecuted his lovers, both mortal and divine.
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