The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

3636


Z


eus’s victory in the war
with the Titans had been
hard won but decisive. He
and his brothers held unchallenged
sway over the heavens, Earth, and
sea. The usurper of a usurper,
he had seized supremacy by
dethroning Kronos, who had
himself toppled the tyrant Ouranos.
No ruler could afford to become
complacent, however seemingly
unassailable their position—and a
challenge to the authority of Zeus
was fast approaching.

Spirit of rebellion
Prometheus, a young Titan and
therefore a survivor of the old
regime, was the son of Iapetus and

IN BRIEF


THEME
Origin of humanity

SOURCES
Theogony and Works and
Days, Hesiod, ca.700 bce;
Library, Apollodorus, ca.100 ce

SETTING
Greece, the Aegean, and
the Caucasus Mountains,
Western Asia.

KEY FIGURES
Zeus King of the gods.

Iapetus The youngest Titan,
son of Ouranos and Gaia.

Klymene A sea nymph,
daughter of the Titan Oceanus.

Prometheus Son of Iapetus
and Klymene.

Deukalion Human son of
Prometheus.

Pyrrha Wife of Deukalion.

Hephaestus The blacksmith
god.

HE BOUND CUNNING


PROMETHEUS IN


INESCAPABLE


FETTERS


PROMETHEUS HELPS MANKIND


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ANCIENT GREECE 37


Zeus and his subjects. Despite
this, all sources regard him as
a central part of the conflict.
Self-confident in his cleverness,
Prometheus was independent-
minded, irreverent, and defiant.
His contempt for Zeus’s authority
was all too clear. Worse still, he
appeared to pass on this rebellious
spirit to Zeus’s human subjects.

From clay to stone
According to Apollodorus’s Library,
Prometheus was the creator of
humanity, shaping the first man
and woman from moist clay. This
first race of humans walked the
Earth for only a single generation
before being swept away by an
angry Zeus in a worldwide flood.
Prometheus’s human son,
Deukalion, and his wife, Pyrrha,
were the only survivors. Typically,
Prometheus had outmaneuvered
Zeus, prompting his son and his

See also: Origin of the universe 18–23 ■ The war of the gods and Titans 32–33 ■ Pandora’s box 40–41 ■ The many affairs
of Zeus 42–47

daughter-in-law to save themselves
by building a floating wooden chest
in which to ride out the deluge.
Deukalion survived the great
flood and its aftermath by showing
more tact than his father. He
thanked Zeus for letting him and
Pyrrha live, built an altar, and
offered sacrifice. Zeus was so
pleased to see this submissive
spirit that he not only allowed
Deukalion and Pyrrha to go on
living but told Deukalion how
he could re-create humanity.
He and his wife were told to ❯❯

Prometheus Carrying Fire, by the
Flemish painter Jan Cossiers (1671),
shows the young Titan stealing the
precious resource for mankind.

Klymene’s children


According to Hesiod’s Theogony,
“Iapetus took Klymene,
Oceanus’s elegant-ankled
daughter to his bed.” Other
ancient authors, however,
referred to her as “Asia.” With
Iapetus, Klymene bore four sons,
each of whom was, ultimately,
fated for misery.
During the war of the Titans,
Zeus killed Klymene’s prideful
son, Menoetius, by hurling him
into the underworld with a
lightning bolt. Following the
victory of the Olympian gods,

another of Klymene’s sons, Atlas,
was made to suffer for his role in
leading the Titan forces. He was
sentenced by Zeus to carry the
heavens on his shoulders as
punishment for resisting the
Olympian ascendancy.
Epimetheus, Klymene’s third
son, was every bit as foolish as
Prometheus was cunning. Against
his brother’s advice, he was duped
into accepting Pandora as a gift
and marrying her. He had no idea
that she had been created to
be both beautiful and deceitful,
and was sent by Zeus to bring all
manner of sorrows into the world.

Klymene, celebrated for quick
intelligence, dexterity, and skill.
Prometheus’s very name meant
“Thinking Ahead”: he was an
inventor and a strategist. Different
sources disagree on the precise
part Prometheus played in the
continuing struggle between

Atlas carries the heavens on
his shoulders. Although commonly
mistaken for an Earth globe, the
round structure weighing on Atlas
represents the celestial sphere.

Prometheus shaped
men out of
water and clay.
Library

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