Mythology Book

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ROUGHLY HERE,


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MOUNT OLYMPUS


O


riginally, the dwellings of
the ancient Greek deities
were not in the heavens
but in the heart of the earth. Once
Zeus and his siblings defeated the
Titans, however, the Greeks turned
their eyes heavenward to worship
the new generation of gods and
goddesses. Hephaestus, god of fire
and the forge, built them palaces
in the sheltered ravines of Mount
Olympus. Hesiod described the
mountain as “many-folded,” a
phrase suggestive of a sky-high
stronghold full of secrets.
The palaces were built of stone
on bronze foundations. They were
both gigantic and luxurious, their
floors inlaid with gold and precious
stones. Zeus set up his throne at
the top of the peak of Stefani. From

there, he hurled his thunderbolts at
those who displeased him in the
world below.

Life on Olympus
The council of the gods typically
met in Zeus’s golden courtyard to
discuss their rule of the cosmos,
and gathered in Zeus’s hall to while
away the evenings with feasting.
Apollo sang to them, accompanying
himself upon his lyre. Sometimes
the Muses came up from their
home at the foot of Olympus to
sing, dance, and tell stories.

IN BRIEF


THEME
Home of the gods

SOURCES
Theogony, Hesiod, ca.700 bce;
Illiad and Odyssey, Homer,
ca.800 bce; Description of
Greece, Pausanias, ca.150 ce.

SETTING
Mount Olympus,
northeastern Greece.

KEY FIGURES
Zeus King of the Greek gods.

Hera Wife and sister of Zeus;
queen of the gods.

Hephaestus The blacksmith
god; son of Hera.

The Muses Children of Zeus.

The Horai Three sisters;
goddesses of time and
the seasons.

The Moirae Three sisters;
goddesses of fate.

Mount Olympus, home of the Greek
gods, rises from the Plain of Thessaly.
Thessaly was the site of the decade-long
war the Titans fought against Zeus and
his siblings.

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ANCIENT GREECE 35
See also: The Olympian gods 24–31 ■ The war of the gods and Titans 32–33 ■ Cupid and Psyche 112–13 ■
Pangu and the creation of the world 214–15 ■ The legendary foundation of Korea 228–29

There were separate stables for
the creatures that drew the gods’
chariots—most famously, those
that pulled the blazing chariot of
Apollo, the sun god. Zeus had one
drawn by the four Anemoi, gods
of the winds—Boreas (north), Euros
(east), Notos (south), and Zephyros
(west). Poseidon’s chariot was
pulled along by fishtailed horses
of the sea, while Aphrodite’s was
drawn by a team of doves.
The Horai—the sisters Eirene,
Eunomia, and Dike—guarded the
gates to Olympus and saw to the
orderly passage of time and the
seasons. Another trio of goddesses,
the Moirae (Fates), sat at the foot
of Zeus’s throne and watched over
the lives of mortals.

Physical and symbolic
What we refer to today as “Mount”
Olympus is actually a massif,
with over 50 distinct peaks almost
9,850 feet (3,000 m) above sea level.

Much of the time, its upper slopes
are wreathed in snow or dense
cloud, cutting off the summit from
the view of mortals down below.
It is no wonder that the ancient
Greeks held this to be the royal seat
of their reigning dynasty of gods.
The idea of the sacred mountain
existed long before the Greeks
began to worship the Olympians,
and is found in many other cultures.
Mount Meru, for example, towered
at the cosmological center of Indian
religions; Mount Fuji dominated the

Japanese religious scheme; and
Inca priests in Peru offered sacrifice
high up on the Andean summits.
In mythology, the mountain
peak has often seemed to occupy
a separate physical space from the
Earth. Homer underlined this by
showing Mount Olympus from
different perspectives. Viewed from
Earth, it was described as “snow-
topped” or “cloud-enveloped”; for
the gods, however, their home
was a place of permanent sunshine
and clear blue sky. ■

The council of the gods meets
among the clouds on Olympus in
this fresco by Italian Renaissance
master Raphael (1518), which shows
Zeus conferring immortality on Psyche.

Changing gods


Anthropologists use the term
“syncretism” to describe the
merging of strands from different
religious systems. Ancient
Greece had many examples of
this. The sanctuary of Dodona,
in northwestern Greece, lay in a
valley surrounded by a grove of
oak trees. The site seems to have
been sacred to a matriarchal
earth goddess since at least the
2nd millennium bce—before
the idea of Zeus took root.
After the ascendancy of the
Olympians, the earth goddess

was supplanted and one of
Zeus’s many wives, Dione, was
worshipped at Dodona.
Isthmia—on the narrow land
connecting the Peloponnese
peninsula with the rest of
Greece—was the obvious site
for a shrine to Poseidon, god of
the sea, beset on the narrow
strip of land by roaring waves
on either side. Yet archaeologists
have found remains at Isthmia
dating back long before the era
of the Olympians, dedicated to
a deity or deities unknown.

The gods pressed
fa r-seei ng Zeu s
of Olympus to reign
over them.
Theogony

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