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Greek Mythology

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Greek Mythology
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Greek Mythology

Zeus

 God of the gods

 Hurled thunderbolts at

those who displeased

him.

 Famous for having

multiple affairs and http://www.lclark.edu/~ndsmith/Zeus.JPG





fathering many

other gods.







http://www005.thinkquest.dk/images/zeus.gif

Hera

 Goddess of marriage

and wife of Zeus.

 Most stories dealing

with Hera involve her

getting back at Zeus for

http://web.uncg.edu/dcl/de

his cheating. mo/images/unit3/hera.jpg









http://ias.berkeley.edu/oria

s/visuals/polytheism/hera.j

pg

Hades

 God of the Underworld.

 Wore invisible helmet.

 Also the god of

metals because

metals came from

the earth.



http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/Mythology/Images/

hades.jpg









http://www.crystalinks.com/hades.jpg

Athena

http://blesius.org/gallery/images/1286/athena-profile-with-spear-3.jpg









 Goddess of Wisdom

 Zeus was once married to

Metis, a daughter of Ocean

who was renowned for her

wisdom. When Metis

became pregnant, Zeus

was warned by Earth that a

son born to Metis would

overthrow him, just as he

had usurped his own

father's throne. So Zeus

swallowed Metis. In time he

was overcome with a

splitting headache from

which he birthed Athena.

 Goddess of Athens

http://www.softass

teel.com/myth/stor

y3/4.jpg

http://www.students.sbc.edu/mdavis04/Parthenon-02.jpg









http://www.vrac.iastate.edu/ArchVR/parthenon/snaps/parth_ext_treas.jpg

Ares

 God of war

 Though an

immortal deity,

he was bested

by Heracles in

battle and was

almost killed

when stuffed

into a jar by two

giants. When

another hero

wounded him

during the

Trojan War, he

received scant http://web.uncg.edu/dcl/demo/images/unit3/ares.jpg

sympathy from

his father Zeus.

*Mythw eb.com









http://www.theoi.com/image/K9.5Ares.jpg

Demeter

 Goddess of agriculture and fertility.

 Demeter as the sister of Zeus and the

mother of Persephone. Persephone

was gathering flowers in a meadow

one day when a huge crack opened

up in the earth and Hades, King of the

Dead, emerged from the Underworld.

He seized Persephone and carried her

off in his chariot, back down to his his

realm below, where she became his

queen. Demeter was heartbroken. She

wandered the length and breadth of

the earth in search of her daughter,

during which time the crops withered

and it became perpetual winter.

 At length Hades was persuaded to

surrender Persephone for one half of

every year, the spring and summer

seasons when flowers bloom and the http://members.tripod.com/~Pos

eidon64/demeter.jpg

earth bears fruit once more. The half

year that Persephone spends in the

Underworld as Hades' queen

coincides with the barren season.

*Mythw eb.com









http://www.croneways.c

om/demeter.jpg

Poseidon

 God of the Sea

 Poseidon was brother

to Zeus and Hades.

These three gods

divided up creation.

Zeus was ruler of the http://www.linsdomain.com/g



sky, Hades had ods&goddesses/pictures/pos

eidon.jpg





dominion of the

Underworld and

Poseidon was given all

water, both fresh and

salt. *Mythw eb.com http://www.comedi

x.de/lexikon/db/im

g/poseidon.jpg

Hermes

 Messenger of the gods

and guide of dead

souls to the

Underworld.





http://www.chem.harv

ard.edu/herschbach/h

ermes.gif









http://www.uni-

tuebingen.de/hermes/i

mg/he2a.jpg

Aphrodite

 Goddess of love and

beauty

 Born of Zeus and Deoni

(nymph).

 Also Cronus cuts off the

genitals of Uranus and

hurls them into the sea http://www.holycross.edu/departments/c

lassics/jhamilton/mythology/aphrodite/C

74.jpg



gives rise to her birth.







http://web.uncg.edu/dcl/demo

/images/unit3/aphrodite.jpg

Apollo

 God of Music

 When someone died

suddenly, he was said

to have been struck

down by one of Apollo's http://www.thegreekforum.com/images/Apollo.jpg



arrows. Homer's epic of

the Trojan War begins

with the god causing a

plague by raining

arrows down upon the

Greek camp.

*Mythw eb.com









http://www.crystal

inks.com/apolloro

me.jpg

Dionysus

 God of Wine

 Dionysus was the son

of Zeus and the mortal

heroine Semele. http://www.crystalinks.co

m/dionysus.gif

 Most theatrical

productions were

dedicated to him.









http://www.utexas.edu/courses/larrymyth/i

mages/dionysus/IB-

Dionysus%20Kleophrades.jpg

Artemis

 Goddess of the hunt

and the moon.

 Daughter of Zeus and

Leto, twin of Apollo. http://www.windows.ucar.ed

u/mythology/images/artemis

_sm.jpg

 Major goddess

in the city of

Ephesus. http://fdrouin.free.fr/photos/uncategorized

/artemis.jpg









http://ce.eng.usf.edu/pharos/wonders/Gall

ery/artemis_bw.jpg

Greek Mythology

Do Now: Can you think of examples of

Greek gods and goddesses in other

cultures?

Places We See Greek Mythology



 Ever seen the image of god zapping you with

a thunderbolt?

 Multiple companies use Greek names.

 Multiple expressions used from Greek

mythology.

The Significance of Greek Mythology



 Many of Western civilization’s symbols,

metaphors, words, and idealized images

come from ancient Greek mythology.

Nike – Goddess of Victory









http://chaussures-

nike.edorefsite.com/uploaded_images

/swoosh-796141.jpg









http://www.theoi.com/Gallery/T24.2.html

Atlas



 Doomed to hold the

heavens on his

shoulders.

 Atlas travel company

and Atlas Van Lines

Apollo



 God of music

 Apollo Theatre

Medusa



 Terrible monster whose

stare would freeze her

enemies.

 Medusa Concrete

Company

Trident

 The three-pronged spear of

Poseidon, god of the seas;

Trident Gum is a popular

gum. (Note: 'Tria' is Greek for

'three' and 'donti' means

'tooth'; hence, Trident

translates literally as 'three-

teeth', or 'triple-toothed'.

Trident Gum, if one is to

believe the advertising, helps

to clean your teeth, thus the

allusion.)

Argus



 Giant watchmen with

hundred eyes.

 Argus Security Corp.

Terms and Expressions from the Greeks



 Aphrodisiac - Arousing or intensifying sexual desire.

 Narcissistic - inordinate fascination with oneself;

excessive self-love; vanity.

 Titanic - Of or relating to the Titans. Having great

stature or enormous strength.

 “Rich as King Midas” – everything he touched turned

to gold. “The Midas touch.”

 The Achilles heel or tendon – named after the Greek

hero of the Trojan war who was killed when struck in

the heel, his one weak spot.

The Significance of Greek Mythology



 Often there were multiple, opposite stories

about the gods and goddesses.

 This is possible because there is no sacred text,

no single set of beliefs could be elevated as

supreme.

 Therefore people are fairly religiously tolerant,

there are no heretics.

 Heretic = anyone that does not conform to the

 Religion brought the community together,

faith was a more personal affair.

Reflection



 Why is it important that powerful religious

institutions never developed in Greek

society? How may that affect the way the

Greeks examine their own world?


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