The Great Gods: Olympians and Others
name the fates
-clotho - spun the bright threads of youth -lachesis - wound them on her distaff or spindle, distributing and directing them along the course of each human destiny -atropos - the eldest, somber symbol of death, who cut the threads with her sharp slender shears
aeneas
aphrodite's son; a mortal man, considered to be the ancestor of the romans
eros
aphrodite's son; the roman cupid, shoots arrows which causes men and women to fall in love.
artemis
apollo's twin sister; goddess of hunting and of wild things; she is associated with the moon; she is sometimes called 'cynthia'
athena
daughter of zeus [born, it is said, from his brain, when he had a bad headache]; she is the goddess of wisdom and war, patriotism and good citizenship; she is the protector and namesake for the city of athens
Dionysus
god of wine and revelry, dancing and drama; myths tell of his coming from faraway lands, bringing with him a new ecstatic [emotionally rapturous] religion and dancing followers of wild behavior, including the maenads ["raving women"], satyrs [half goat, like pan], and sileni [half horse]. his opponenets, defenders of more dignified old-time religions, despised his cult and fought it. but in the end, dionysus was recognized as a god --perhaps the most popular of all gods.
Pan
god of woods and fields, who was a half man [his upper part] and half goat [lower part]. he was not often seen , but when he played on the pipes the woods were full of rather eerie music, which, especially at twilight, often scared people just to hear it, causing them to panic. the word panic comes from the name PAN.
Zeus
king of the gods; he is sometimes angry at the behavior of gods and people, but he can also be a gentle and caring ruler; he is particularly fond of beautiful women, regardless of whether they are goddesses or mortals.
urania
muse of astronomy
thalia
muse of comic drama
calliope
muse of epic poetry
clio
muse of history
erato
muse of love poetry
euterpe
muse of lyric poetry
polyhymnia
muse of sacred poetry [hymns]
melpomene
muse of tragic drama
hephaestus
son of zeus and hera, the lame blacksmith god of fire
apollo
son of zeus; god of poetry, music, and medicine, and god of light; he is associated with the sun
hermes
son of zeus; messenger of the gods, he is also the god of science and invention
ares
son of zeus; terrible god of war
aphrodite
the wife of hephaestus, she is the goddess of love and beauty; she is said to have been born of the sea foam
fates
three goddesses who controlled the destiny of every mortal person, man, or woman
poseidon
zeus's brother; god of the ocean and of earthquakes; he is often distinguished in art by the fisherman's trident he carries -- a 3-pronged spear
hades
zeus's older brother, more commonly known as Pluto; lord of the dead and the underworld where the dead go
hestia
zeus's sister; goddess of the hearth and home
demeter
zeus's sister; she is the very important goddess of grain and agriculture; she is a kind of bond between heaven and earth
hera
zeus's wife; queen of the gods, guardian of marriage; she is a great lady and diplomat; though she is often jealous and nags her husband, she can also be a tender and loving wife
muses
(9) daughters of zeus and mnemosyne who lived on the heights of mounts parnassus, pindos, and helicon, whose springs and streams were sacred to them, as were the palm tree and the laurel. apollo was their patron and leader. they were goddesses of various arts, mostly literary.
terpsichore
a muse of choral song and dance
