The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

23


many daughters, the Oceanids,
who were nymphs of springs, rivers,
lakes, and seas. Her younger sister
Theia, too, took a brother, Hyperion,
for her husband; she bore him
Helios, the sun, and his sister Eos,
goddess of dawn. Helios and Eos
had a sister, Selene, who was a
goddess of the moon, though her
aunt Phoebe—sister to Tethys,
Mnemosyne, and Theia—also
had lunar associations.
Themis, the youngest female
Titan, was associated with reason,
justice, and the orderly conduct of
existence in the universe. Like her
sister Mnemosyne, she would for a
time become consort to her nephew
Zeus. Of their children, the Horae
(“Hours”) would oversee the
measurement and passage of the
seasons and of time. Another
daughter, Nemesis, took her

mother’s association with justice
to violent extremes; as her name
suggests, she became notorious as
the personification of punishment
and divine retribution.
The name of the youngest male
Titan, Iapetus, comes from iapto,
a Greek word meaning “wound” or
“pierce.” The implications of this
translation have long been debated.
Ancient poets seem to have been
unsure whether he was given
this name because he sustained
an injury or because he made
the weapon that inflicted it.
Meanwhile, in classical literature,
Iapetus appears both as a deity of
mortality and of skill in crafts.

Patricidal patriarch
Artists in ancient Greece almost
invariably represented Kronos
carrying a sickle—an emblem

of his attack upon his father. The
sickle also has more mundane and
practical associations. Kronos came
to be seen as the godly guarantor
of a successful harvest. The
connection between these two
functions—the idea that one
generation had effectively to be
destroyed for its successor to
survive and thrive, took an early
hold on the Greek consciousness.
Kronos, having killed his father,
now replaced him as the head of
the household. He then married his
sister Rhea and began to produce
children of his own. Much like his
father, Kronos would soon confront
the idea that human life can only
advance through intergenerational
struggle. This theme runs through
the Greek mythological tradition,
and is most notoriously associated
with the story of King Oedipus. ■

Gaia

Ouranos

Coeus

Demeter

Mnemosyne

Poseidon

Iapetus Tethys

Crius

Hera

Phoebe

Zeus

Kronos Themis

Oceanus

Hestia

Theia

Hades

Hyperion

Thousands of Greek deities,
unanimously descended from Gaia
and Ouranos, all embodied the
values, virtues, and vices of humans,
vividly dramatized in the colorful
mythology of ancient Greece.

Rhea

ANCIENT GREECE


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