overthrew Cronus and the other Titans.
After the battle with the Titans, Zeus shared
the world with his elder brothers,
Poseidon and
Hades by drawing lots: Zeus got the land,
Poseidon the sea and Hades the world of the
shadows (the
dead). (See also:
Penthus)
Soon after taking the throne as King of the
gods, Zeus fought the
monsters
Typhon and
Echidna, defeating them. He left them and
their children alive as challenges for future
heroes.
Adulthood
Zeus was brother and husband of
Hera. Their son was
Hephaistos. Zeus is famous for his many
extramarital affairs with various goddesses -
notably
Demeter,
Latona,
Dione and
Maia -- and mortal women -- notably
Semele,
Io,
Europa and
Leda (for more details, see "Affairs"
below). His wife,
Hera, was very jealous and consistently
tried to harm Zeus' mistresses and their
children by him. For a time, a
nymph named
Echo had the job of distracting Hera from
his affairs by incessantly talking. When Hera
discovered the deception, she cursed Echo to
only speak the words of others (hence our modern
word "echo").
Though Zeus was often petty and malicious, he
also had a righteous streak, perhaps best
exemplified in his aid on behalf of
Atreus and his murder of
Capaneus for unbridled arrogance.
Zeus turned
Pandareus to stone for stealing a
bronze
dog from one of his
temples on
Crete.
Zeus killed
Salmoneus with a thunderbolt for attempting
to equal him, riding around on a
bronze
chariot and loudly imitating
thunder.
As a child, Zeus had had a friend named
Celmis. Many years later, Rhea became
offended by the antics of Celmis and asked Zeus
to turn him into a lump of
steel or
diamond. Zeus obliged.
Zeus turned
Periphas into an
eagle after his
death, as a reward for being righteous and
just.
At the marriage of Zeus and Hera, a nymph
named
Chelone was disrespectful (or refused to
attend). Zeus condemned her to eternal silence.
When
Memnon died, Zeus felt pity for his mother,
Eos, the
dawn-goddess,
and granted him
immortality.
Zeus made the decision to
marry
Aphrodite off to
Hephaestus in order to prevent violence over
her between the many gods who lusted after the
goddess of beauty.
Zeus, with Hera, turned King
Haemus and Queen
Rhodope into
mountains (Balkan and Despoto, respectively)
for their vanity.
Zeus exchanged a
caduceus for the first
flute with
Hermes.
Zeus turned
Atalanta and
Hippomenes (or
Melanion) into lions because they had s-- in
one of his temples.
Lycaon
Lycaon, son of
Pelasgus and
Meliboea was the mythical first king of
Arcadia. He was the father of
Callisto and, according to some, he raised
her son
Arcas. He, or his fifty impious sons,
entertained Zeus and set before him a dish of
human flesh; the god pushed away the dish in
disgust and either killed the king and his sons
by lightning or turned them into
wolves (Apollodorus
iii. 8 ;
Ovid,
Metamorphoses i. 198). Some say that Lycaon
slew and dished up his own son
Nyctimus (Clem. Alex. Protrept. ii. 36 ;
Nonnus, Dionys. xviii. 20 ; Arnobius iv. 24).
Pausanias (viii. 2) says that Lycaon
sacrificed a child to Zeus on the altar on mount
Lycaeus, and immediately after the sacrifice was
turned into a wolf. This gave rise to the story
that a man was turned into a wolf at each annual
sacrifice to Zeus Lycaeus, but recovered his
human form if he abstained from human flesh
for ten years. The oldest city, the oldest cult
(that of Zeus Lycaeus), and the first
civilization of
Arcadia are attributed to Lycaon. His story
has been variously interpreted. He was an old
Pelasgian or pre-Hellenic god, to whom human
sacrifice was offered, bearing a non-Hellenic
name similar to Avkos, whence the story
originated of his
metamorphosis into a wolf. His cult was
driven out by that of the Hellenic Zeus, and
Lycaon himself was afterwards represented as an
evil spirit, who had insulted the new deity
by setting human flesh before him. Robertson
Smith considers the sacrifices offered to the
wolf-Zeus in Arcadia to have been originally
cannibal feasts of a wolf-tribe, who recognized
the wolf as their
totem. Usener and others identify Lycaon
with Zeus Lycaeus, the god of light, who slays
his son
Nyctimus (the dark) or is succeeded by him,
in
allusion to the perpetual succession of
night and day. According to Ed. Meyer, the
belief that Zeus Lycaeus accepted human
sacrifice in the form of a wolf was the origin
of the myth that Lycaon, the founder of his
cult, became a wolf, i.e. participated in the
nature of the god by the act of sacrifice, as
did all who afterwards duly performed it.
Tiresias
As a young man, Tiresias found two
snakes mating and hit them with a stick. He
was then transformed into a woman. Seven years
later, Tiresias did the same thing again and
became a man again. A time later, Zeus and
Hera asked him which s--,
male or
female, experienced more pleasure during
s--ual intercourse. Zeus claimed it was
women and vice versa. Tiresias sided with Zeus.
Hera struck him
blind. Since Zeus could not undo what she
had done, he gave him the gift of
prophecy.
Affairs
Callisto/Arcas
Arcas was the son of Zeus and the
nymph
Callisto, whom Hera turned into a
bear. Arcas unknowningly attempted to kill
his mother during a hunt, not recognizing her.
Zeus put them both in the sky as
Ursa Major (Callisto) and
Ursa Minor (Arcas).
An alternate version: One of Artemis'
companions, Callisto lost her virginity to Zeus,
who had come disguised as Artemis. Enraged,
Artemis changed her into a bear. Callisto's son,
Arcas, nearly killed his mother while hunting,
but Zeus or Artemis stopped him and placed them
both in the sky as
Ursa Major and
Ursa Minor.
Alcmene/Heracles
Heracles was a son of Zeus and
Alcmene, wife of
Amphitryon. Zeus seduced Alcmene in the
disguise of her husband.
One account of the origin of the
Milky Way is that Zeus had tricked Hera into
nursing the infant
Heracles: discovering who he was, she had
pulled him from her
breast, and a spurt of her
milk formed the smear across the sky that
can be seen to this day.
Aegina
He wooed
Aegina, daughter of
Asopus by abducting her and taking her to an
island near
Attica, thereafter known by her name.
Kidnapping was a frequent method of Zeus' to
attract women. Aegina eventually gave birth to a
son
Aeacus, who became king of the island.
Taygete
Zeus pursued
Taygete, one of the
Pleiades, who prayed to
Artemis. The goddess turned Taygete into a
doe but Zeus raped her when she was
unconscious. She thus conceived
Lacedaemon, the
mythical founder of
Sparta.
Elara
Zeus hid one lover,
Elara, from Hera by hiding her under the
earth. His son by Elara, the
giant
Tityas, is therefore sometimes said to be a
son of
Gaia, the earth goddess, and Elara.
Asteria
When Zeus pursued
Asteria, she flung herself into the
ocean to escape him and became the island of
the same name. Alternatively, she changed
herself into a
quail to avoid him.
Danae
Disappointed by his lack of male heirs, King
Acrisius of
Argos asked an
oracle if this would change. The oracle told
him that one day he would be killed by his
daughter's child. She was childless and, meaning
to keep her so, he shut her up in a
bronze tower or
cave. But Zeus came to her in the form of
rain or a shower of
gold, and
impregnated her. Soon after, their child
Perseus was born.
None too happy, but unwilling to provoke the
wrath of the gods by killing his offspring,
Acrisius cast the two into the
sea in a wooden chest. The sea was calmed by
Poseidon at the request of Zeus and the pair
survived. They washed ashore on the island of
Seriphos, where they were taken in by
Dictys, the brother of King
Polydectes, who raised the boy to manhood.
Io
Zeus loved the
Argive princess Io and changed her into a
cow to protect her from Hera. Hera suspected
his deception and asked for the cow as a
present. Zeus was unable to refuse and she
placed the watchman
Argus to guard the cow.
Hermes, at the request of Zeus, lulled Argus
to sleep and rescued Io but Hera sent a gadfly
to sting her as she wandered the
Earth in cow form. Zeus eventually changed
her back to human form, and she became, through
her son with Zeus,
Epaphus, the ancestress of
Heracles.
Lamia
Lamia was a queen of
Libya, whom Zeus loved. Hera turned her into
a
monster (or she killed Lamia's children and
the grief turned her into a monster) and
murdered their children. Lamia was cursed with
the inability to close her
eyes so that she would always obsess over
the image of her dead children. Zeus gave her
the gift to be able to take her eyes out to
rest, and then put them back in. Lamia was
envious of other mothers and
ate their children.
Ganymede
Eos, the
goddess of the dawn, kidnapped
Ganymede and
Tithonus to be her lovers. Zeus decided he
wanted the beautiful youth Ganymede for himself
but to repay Eos he promised to fulfill one
wish. She asked for Tithonus to be immortal, but
forgot to ask for eternal youth. Tithonus indeed
lived forever but grew more and more ancient,
eventually turning into a
cricket. Ganymede became Zeus' lover and
cupbearer. Some say that Ganymede was taken by
Zeus himself in the form of an eagle (or by
Zeus' eagle) to satisy the god's lust. Then the
king of the gods had to appease Ganymede's upset
father, by giving him gifts in exchange for the
boy. To reward Ganymede for his services Zeus
put him in the heavens as the constellation
Aquarius.
Consorts/Children
- Deific Mother
-
Aegina
-
Aeacus
-
Ananke
-
Adrasteia
-
Moirae
-
Atropos
-
Clotho
-
Lachesis
-
Demeter
-
Dionysus
-
Persephone
-
Dione
-
Aphrodite
-
Eos
-
Ersa
-
Eris
-
Ate
-
Litae
-
Hera
-
Ares
-
Eileithyia
-
Hephaestus
-
Hebe
-
Leto
-
Apollo
-
Artemis
-
Maia
-
Hermes
-
Metis
-
Athena
-
Mnemosyne
-
Muses (Original three)
-
Aoide
-
Melete
-
Mneme
-
Muses (Later nine)
-
Calliope
-
Clio
-
Erato
-
Euterpe
-
Melpomene
-
Polyhymnia
-
Terpsichore
-
Thalia
-
Urania
-
Selene
-
Nemean Lion
-
Pandia
-
Thalassa
-
Aphrodite
-
Themis
-
Astraea
-
Dike
-
Horae
- First Generation
-
Auxo
-
Carpo
-
Thallo
- Second Generation
-
Dike
-
Eirene
-
Eunomia
-
Moirae
-
Atropos
-
Clotho
-
Lachesis
- Mortal/Nymph/Other Mother
-
Aegina
-
Aeacus
-
Alcmene
-
Heracles
-
Antiope
-
Amphion
-
Zethus
-
Callisto
-
Arcas
-
Carme
-
Britomartis
-
Danae
-
Perseus
-
Elara
-
Tityas
-
Electra
-
Dardania
-
Harmonia
-
Iasion
-
Europa
-
Minos
-
Rhadamanthys
-
Sarpedon
-
Eurynome
-
Charites
-
Aglaea
-
Euphrosyne
-
Thalia
-
Himalia
- Cronius
-
Iodame
-
Thebe
-
Io
-
Epaphus
-
Lamia
- ???
-
Laodamia
-
Sarpedon
-
Leda
-
Polydeuces
-
Helen
-
Maera
-
Locrus
-
Niobe
-
Argos
-
Pelasgus
-
Olympias
-
Alexander the Great
-
Plouto
-
Tantalus
-
Podarge
-
Balius
-
Xanthus
-
Pyrrha
-
Hellen
-
Semele
-
Dionysus
-
Taygete
-
Lacedaemon
-
Thalia
-
Palici
- Male lovers
-
Ganymede
- Unknown Mother
-
Nemesis
-
Tyche