The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1
Euripides’s The
Bacchae explores
the dual nature of
man—the rational
versus the instinctual.

Xenophon’s
Anabasis contains
the story of King
Midas and his
golden touch.

Apollonius of
Rhodes depicts the
adventures of Jason
and his band of men
in the Argonautica.

Greece is defeated
in battle and faces
Roman rule, leading
to the integration of
the two cultures.

Diodorus Siculus
includes the myth of
Icarus and Daedalus
in his 40-book
Historical Library.

Plato’s dialogues
Timaeus and Critias
introduce the idea
of the legendary
city of Atlantis.

The Library of
Pseudo-Apollodorus
documents a variety
of Greek myths
and legends.

Pausanias explores
famous sites and
Greek identity
in Description
of Greece.

the Great built his empire. Thanks
to Alexander’s conquests, Greek
culture and mythology were
exported as far as Asia Minor,
Egypt, Mesopotamia, and India.

The major deities
It was the poets Homer and Hesiod
who imposed order upon the myriad
gods and beliefs inherited from
earlier times. Homer set down his
poetry from oral tradition around
800 BCE, after the migrations that
followed the collapse of the
Mycenaean culture. His two epic
poems, the Iliad and Odyssey, gave
the Greeks a history, a pantheon,
and guidelines for how to live their
lives. As the Olympian family of 12
principal gods dwelling on Mount
Olympus gradually replaced older
beliefs, Homer and Hesiod gave
them distinct characters and

appearances. Because Homer’s epic
poems were set in an aristocratic
and feudal society—which preceded
the birth of democracy in Athens
in the 5th century BCE—his gods
behaved like chieftains, motivated
solely by their own desires.
Like other ancient agrarian
peoples, the Greeks were local in
their focus. They ordered their
religious life around local places,
identifying different hills, streams,
and plains with different deities.
This mythic lore invested every
corner of the land with spiritual
significance. The Earth was the
source of existence: divine power
originated in its depths, as did
the crops. Myths sought to explain
aspects of agrarian life. The tale
of Persephone—daughter of the
harvest goddess Demeter—and her
imprisonment in the Underworld by

Hades was a way of accounting
for the changing cycles of the
agricultural year.

The rise of the cult
At the end of the 5th century BCE,
various mystery cults arose in
the Greek-speaking world. Chief
among these were the Eleusinian
mysteries, an ancient agrarian cult
honoring Demeter and Persephone
and promising paradise for the
dead. The Dionysian cult, which
originated in Asia, worshipped
Dionysus and involved wild
dancing, drinking, and ecstasy.
Unlike the public worship of the
gods, which was well documented,
these mystery cults consisted of
secret rites and doctrines that
remain enigmatic to this day, but
would go on to influence the beliefs
and myths of ancient Rome. ■

ANCIENT GREECE


408–405 BCE


CA. 370 BCE CA. 250 BCE CA. 30 BCE CA. 150 CE


CA. 360 BCE 146 BCE CA. 100 CE


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