The Greek Mythology
The Greek Mythology
The Greek Mythology
st
Quarter 2: World Literature
The Greek Mythology
Short Review
What is Myth?
Myths are a part of every culture in the world and
are used to explain natural phenomena, where a
people came from and how their civilization
developed, and why things happen as they do. At
their most basic level, myths comfort by giving a
sense of order and meaning to what can
sometimes seem a chaotic world.
What is Mythology?
• Mythology (from the Greek mythos for story-of-the-people,
and logos for word or speech, so the spoken story of a
people) is the study and interpretation of often sacred tales
or fables of a culture known as myths or the collection of
such stories which deal with various aspects of the human
condition: good and evil; the meaning of suffering; human
origins; the origin of place-names, animals, cultural values,
and traditions; the meaning of life and death; the afterlife;
and celestial stories of the gods or a god. Myths express the
beliefs and values about these subjects held by a certain
culture.
Greek Mythology
• Ancient Greek mythology is a vast and fascinating group of legends
about gods and goddesses, heroes and monsters, warriors and fools,
that were an important part of everyday life in the ancient world.
Greek myths explained everything from religious rituals to the
weather, and gave meaning to the world that people saw around
them.
• There is no single original text, like the Christian Bible or the Hindu
Vedas, that introduces all Greek myths’ characters and stories.
Instead, the earliest Greek myths were part of an oral tradition that
began in the Bronze Age, and their plots and themes unfolded
gradually in the written literature of the archaic and classical periods
of the ancient Mediterranean world.
Greek Origin Story: The Titans
and the Gods of Olympus
SUMMARY
The Greek God Family Tree
• In the beginning there was Chaos, a yawning
nothingness. Out of the void emerged Gaia (the
Earth) and other divine beings — Eros (love), the
Abyss (part of the underworld), and the Erebus
(the unknowable place where death dwells).
Without male assistance, Gaia gave birth to
Uranus (the Sky), who then fertilized her.
The Greek God Family Tree
• From that union the first Titans were born
— six males: Coeus, Crius, Cronus,
Hyperion, Iapetus, and Oceanus, and six
females: Mnemosyne, Phoebe, Rhea, Theia,
Themis, and Tethys. After Cronus (time) was
born, Gaia and Uranus decreed no more
Titans were to be born.
The Greek God Family Tree
• Cronus castrated his father and threw the
severed genitals into the sea, from which
arose Aphrodite, goddess of love, beauty
and sexuality. Cronus became the ruler of
the gods with his sister-wife, Rhea, as his
consort. The other Titans became his court.
The Greek God Family Tree
• Because Cronus had betrayed his father, he
feared that his offspring would do the same.
So each time Rhea gave birth, Cronus
snatched up the child and ate it. Rhea hated
this and tricked him by hiding one child,
Zeus, and wrapping a stone in a baby’s
blanket so that Cronus ate the stone instead
of the baby.
Source:https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=3k4w_yNlE1g&feature=youtu.be
Via World History Encyclopedia.
The Titanomachy
• When Zeus was grown, he fed his father a
drugged drink, which caused Cronus to
vomit, throwing up Rhea’s other children
and the stone. Zeus then challenged Cronus
to war for the kingship of the gods. At last
Zeus and his siblings, the Olympians, were
victorious, and the Titans were hurled down
to imprisonment in the Abyss.
The Titanomachy
• Zeus was plagued by the same concern as his father
had been and, after a prophecy that his first wife,
Metis, would give birth to a god greater than he, he
swallowed Metis. But she was already pregnant with
Athena, and they both made him miserable until
Athena, the goddess of wisdom, civilization and
justice, burst from his head — fully grown and dressed
for war. Zeus was able to fight off all challenges to his
power and to remain the ruler of Mt. Olympus, the
home of the gods.
The Titanomachy
• One son of Titans, Prometheus, did not fight
with fellow Titans against Zeus and was
spared imprisonment; he was given the task
of creating man. Prometheus shaped man
out of mud, and Athena breathed life into
the clay figure. Prometheus made man
stand upright as the gods did and gave him
fire.
The Titanomachy
• Prometheus tricked Zeus, and to punish him,
Zeus created Pandora, the first woman, of
stunning beauty, wealth, and a deceptive heart
and lying tongue. He also gave Pandora a box
she was commanded never to open, but
eventually her curiosity got the best of her, and
she opened the box to release all kinds of evil,
plagues, sorrows, and misfortunes, and also
hope, which lay at the bottom of the box.
What is Titanomachy?
• The Titanomachy, in Greek mythology, was the
great war that occurred between the Titans, the
old generation of Greek gods, and the Olympian
gods, led by Zeus. The war lasted for a total of
ten years, ending in the defeat of the old
pantheon, which was based on Mount Othrys,
and the establishment of the new one, based on
Mount Olympus.
The Olympian Gods and Goddesses
• Although today we describe the most significant Gods
and Goddesses as numbering 12, there was in fact no
definitive list. The reason for this, is that over the
centuries some Gods and Goddesses rose in favor,
whilst others were discarded. In addition, Hades is not
technically defined as an Olympian God as he did not
reside on Mount Olympus but instead lived in the
Underworld. The result is that there were actually 13
‘Main’ Gods and Goddesses in Greek Mythology, but
only ever 12 Olympians.
Who were the Olympian Gods?
1. 2. 3. 4.
13.
5. 6. 7. 8.
14.