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means “hundred-handed” in
Greek. Each was also said to
have 50 heads, making them
formidable—they, too, were
incarcerated by Ouranos deep
inside the earth.
The upstart son
As for Gaia, the Earth Mother felt
both physically burdened by the
number of infant bodies literally
forced back inside her and also
deeply upset by the attempted
suppression of her children. Finally,
she rebelled and appealed to her
sons for help. She secretly made a
sickle out of adamant—by legend
an unbreakable mineral—and gave
it to Kronos. The next time Ouranos
spread himself over her, attempting
to force her into intercourse, Kronos
leapt out from his hiding place to
aid his mother. Wielding his sickle,
and with one fell swoop, he sliced
off his father’s genitals.
It was the ultimate patriarchal
nightmare—the father not just
supplanted by his son but castrated
by him, with the connivance of
his wife. Even now, however,
Ouranos’s potency was not quite
spent. The splashes of blood and
semen that flew from his wound
sowed spirit life wherever they
landed, bringing into being
a vast assortment of new-born
nymphs and giants, good and bad.
The Erinyes, three baleful sisters
better known to us now as the
Furies, were angry and avenging
spirits. Aphrodite was a deity of
a very different kind. Where
Ouranos’s wound-spatter landed in
the ocean, this most beautiful of
goddesses was born. She stepped
from the waves, bringing with her
all the delights of erotic love.
Titans of all trades
When Kronos had finally freed his
brothers and sisters from captivity in
the earth, the Titans were to serve a
twofold mythic function. First, they
were living, breathing, loving, and
fighting personalities. Each of them
symbolized a different aspect of
existence, so that collectively they
represented a way of ordering and
enriching the world. The eldest
daughter, Mnemosyne, for instance,
stood for the faculty of memory and
all it brought with it in terms of
history, culture, and heritage. Later,
having lain with her nephew Zeus,
she would give birth to the nine
Muses—divine patronesses of
scientific study, historical study,
poetry, and the performing arts.
Tethys, who married her brother
Oceanus, went on to bear him
3,000 sons—all river gods—and as
Beautiful Aphrodite emerges from
the ocean, where the seed of her brutal
father had fallen. The Birth of Venus
(her name in Roman mythology) was
painted by Peter Paul Rubens (ca. 1637).
ORIGIN OF THE UNIVERSE
A white foam arose where
the immortal skin touched
water: amidst the waves,
a beautiful maiden took form.
Theogony
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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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