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Page 1: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

The OlympiansThe Divine Family of Greek and

Roman Myth, part I

Page 2: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

•The Greek gods were a family, led by Zeus (Roman name Jupiter), whose authority commanded his two brothers, three sisters and eight children. In myth, the family squabbled and fought, a macrocosm of real families; the goddesses, while under paternal authority, often pursued their own agendas.

•Older appearance

•Thunderbolt or Lightning

•God of the sky

•Called upon to provide Justice

•Many love affairs

•You’ll learn a lot more about Zeus later in this section!

Zeus (Jupiter)Zeus (Jupiter)

Page 3: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

•Zeus’s brother Poseidon was

god of the sea, armed with a

trident.

•Father of the Cyclopes

•He is also a god of

earthquakes, and associated

with horses.

Poseidon (Neptune)Poseidon (Neptune)

Page 4: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

•He features in few myths and is seldom pictured without his wife,

Persephone, whose femininity and fertility make the Death god less

appalling.

•“Hades” is the word for the underworld, so Hades is almost an elemental power like the Titans.

Hades (Pluto)Hades (Pluto)

Page 5: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

ApolloApollo Apollo was a very important

god to both the Greeks and Romans, as shown by the fact that he is the only god with the same name in both cultures

Apollo is the god of prophecy and had two very important oracles: Delphi in Greece and Cumae in Italy

Apollo is also god of music and can be easily recognized by his lyre

Apollo also had many affairs, most of which ended badly

Apollo was a very important god to both the Greeks and Romans, as shown by the fact that he is the only god with the same name in both cultures

Apollo is the god of prophecy and had two very important oracles: Delphi in Greece and Cumae in Italy

Apollo is also god of music and can be easily recognized by his lyre

Apollo also had many affairs, most of which ended badly

Page 6: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

•Hephaestus, god of the forge and craftsmanship, was married to Aphrodite – the ugliest god married to the most beautiful.

•Either Hera or Zeus threw him off Olympus and he fell for seven days, crashing into the island of Lemnos and was forever crippled

•He was born of Hera, in some versions, without any father.

•Hephaestus often provided comic relief in myth with his appearance and speech.

Hephaestos (Vulcan)

Page 7: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

Ares, son of Zeus and Hera, was the god of war, but his warfare was more brutish and less respected than Athena’s.

He was also Aphrodite’s lover – a mixture of Love and War.

He was not much worshipped in the Greek world, mainly only in sacrifices before battle.

But the Romans honored him as Mars.

Roman myth portrayed both Mars and his lover, Venus, as ancestors of their race.

Ares (Mars)Ares (Mars)

Page 8: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

Hermes (Mercury)Hermes (Mercury)

Hermes is the messenger god He delivers the will of Zeus to

those it affects He guides the souls of the dead

to the underworld He appears in more myths than

any other deity He can be easily identified by

his helmet (which brought the wearer invisibility), his winged sandals, and the caduceus, now a symbol of medicine

Page 9: The Olympians The Divine Family of Greek and Roman Myth, part I

•Dionysus was the last born of the gods. Like Athena, he was born directly from Zeus: this time from his thigh.

•Dionysus was the god of wine and madness, and was both loved and distrusted by the Greeks.

•He was often portrayed with grapes

•His chariot was drawn by two panthers

Dionysus (Bacchus)


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