The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

20 ORIGIN OF THE UNIVERSE


I


n the beginning was Chaos,
an open chasm of emptiness—
infinitely deep, dark, and
silent. In his vision of the universe’s
origin, set down in Theogony, the
Greek poet Hesiod saw creation as
the imposition of a positive reality
on this negativity and absence. Key
to that reality was the capacity for
change. The nothingness of Chaos
could have continued, eternally
unaltered, but existence, once
created, brought with it endless
cycles—the comings and goings
of the seasons, generations of
humans, birth, and death. These
cycles were set in motion by the
making of the original division
between night and day; time was
now measurable and meaningful.

Earth mother
The first Greek goddess, Gaia, was
the earth in its mineral form—its
rocks and soils, its mountains and
its plains. From its solid and
seemingly inert state, it became
vibrant with the potential for new
life. The first manifestation of that
new vitality was Ouranos, god of
the sky, spontaneously conceived
within the womb of the great Earth
Mother Gaia, with whom he would
subsequently father children.
Though he was Gaia’s son,
Ouranos was her equal. Hesiod
wrote that she bore him specifically
so that he could “cover her.” While
this was a statement of fact—the
sky lies above the earth—it adds
more than a hint of sexuality to the
relationship between the earth and
heaven. The Greeks were as
horrified at the idea of incest as we
are. Its function in their mythology
appears to have been to show that
all the different aspects of existence
are intensely conflicted, yet
intimately linked. The sky was not
simply positioned above the earth; it
conjoined with it dynamically and,

ultimately, creatively, just as night
does with day, darkness with light,
and death with life.

Kinship and conflict
While creative, these conjunctions
inevitably cast opposing principles
into a never-ending struggle for
supremacy. Hesiod’s portrayal
of primal sexual relations was
essentially violent: male and female
forces as complementary but also
competing. It was far from an
idealized world view, and the
depiction of Ouranos was even
more extreme; the despotic
patriarch would brook no rival—
not even his own children.
Ouranos’s jealousy of his sons
and daughters was such that, at
each birth, he took them away and
stowed each one in some hidden
recess of the earth—which was
actually his wife’s body. He did this
to establish his ownership of Gaia.

IN BRIEF


THEME
Creation by Mother Earth

SOURCES
Theogony, Hesiod, ca. 700 bce;
Argonautica, Apollonius of
Rhodes, ca. 250 bce; Natural
History, Pliny the Elder, 79 ce;
Library, Pseudo-Apollodorus,
ca. 10 0 ce.

SETTING
Chaos—a vast and infinitely
dark void at the origin of the
universe.

KEY FIGURES
Gaia The primordial earth-
mother goddess, and
personification of the
solid world.

Ouranos The sky god, Gaia’s
spontaneously conceived
son; later father of the Titans,
the Hecatoncheires, the
Kyklopes, the Erinyes,
Aphrodite, and many other
gods and goddesses.

Kronos A Titan who castrated
his father, Ouranos; also
associated with the harvest.

Gaia, the Earth Mother, sits with
her two godly progeny at her side in
an ancient Greek stone relief. It was
said that an oath sworn by Gaia
would prove irrevocable.

Out of the Chasm came
Night, and from Night in
turn came Day.
Theogony

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ANCIENT GREECE 21


Her sexual attentions had to be
entirely and eternally available to
him, so their offspring could not
be allowed to see the light of day.
Successive infants were consigned
to subterranean depths.
First came the 12 Titans—the
sisters Theia, Mnemosyne, Phoebe,
Themis, Tethys, and Rhea, and
their brothers Oceanus, Coeus,
Crius, Hyperion, Iapetus, and
Kronos. Each in his or her turn
was rammed into some convenient
crack or crevice of the earth and
left there, trapped. After the Titans
came three giant brothers, the
Kyklopes, each of whom had a
single eye at the center of his
forehead. Like their siblings, they
were consigned at birth to be
buried in the heart of the earth.
Then came three more giants
of even greater strength—the
Hecatoncheires, whose name ❯❯

See also: The Olympian gods 24–31 ■ The war of gods and Titans 32–33 ■ The many affairs of Zeus 42–47 ■ The fate of
Oedipus 86–87

The sky god Ouranos is depicted as
a benign father with offspring draped
around him in a wood engraving after
a fresco by the Prussian artist Karl
Friedrich Schinkel (1781–1841).

Hesiod and his
Theogony

The ancient Greek poet Hesiod
may well be a myth in his own
right, for there is no evidence that
any such person actually existed.
The works attributed to him—
assorted poetry from the 8th and
7th centuries bce—may simply
have been conveniently bundled
together. They include a
miscellany of poems, from brief
narratives to genealogies that
record the heroic ancestries
of important families.
The importance of these works
in tracing back traditions and
uncovering origins is undeniable.
The genealogical poems discuss

human beginnings, while the
Theogony, Hesiod’s most famous
work, focuses on the birth of the
gods and is the source for much
of what we know about Greek
myth. Hesiod was not the only
available authority; other more
mystic-minded thinkers and
writers promoted an alternative
“Orphic” tradition, built around
the myth of Orpheus, the bard
and musician. For the most part,
however—and for well over
2,000 years now—it has been
the version of mythical events
attributed to Hesiod that has
held sway.

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