Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Introduction to Greek Mythology. What is Greek Mythology? n The people of ancient Greece shared stories called myths about the gods, goddesses, and heroes.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Greek Mythology. What is Greek Mythology? n The people of ancient Greece shared stories called myths about the gods, goddesses, and heroes."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Greek Mythology

2 What is Greek Mythology? n The people of ancient Greece shared stories called myths about the gods, goddesses, and heroes in which they believed. n Each god or goddess was worshipped as a deity and ruled over certain areas of the Greeks’ lives. n These exciting stories explained natural phenomena that could not be explained by science in the ancient world.

3 Why Should We Study Greek Mythology? n The Ancient Greek culture has been kept alive by the oral and later written stories handed down through thousands of years. n Modern plays, novels, television programs, movies and even advertisements refer to Greek gods, goddesses, heroes and their stories. n Adventurous and exciting stories delight and entertain us.

4 In the beginning... n …was Chaos (shapeless nothingness) n Chaos had two children: –Night (darkness) –Erebus (death) n “All was black, empty, silent, endless.” n Mysteriously, Love was born of darkness and death.

5 And then... n When Love was born, order and beauty began to flourish. n Love created Light and Day. n Earth was created. –She was the solid ground, but also a personality. n The Earth bore Heaven to cover her and be a home for the gods.

6 The First Parents n Mother Earth = Gaea (Gaia) n Father Heaven = Ouranos (Uranus) n They had three kinds of children: –Three monsters with 100 hands and 50 heads –Three cyclopes –The titans n These were the first characters that had the appearance of life, although it was unlike any life known to man.

7 The Titans (The Elder Gods) n There were many of them. n Enormous size, incredible strength n Cronos (Saturn): Ruler of the titans n Rhea: Wife of Cronos n Oceanus: River that encircled the world n Iapetus: Father of Prometheus, Epimetheus, and Atlas (also titans)

8 The Principal Gods n Cronos and Rhea were parents of –Zeus (Jupiter, Jove) –Poseidon (Neptune) –Hades (Pluto) –Hera (Juno) –Hestia (Vesta) –Demeter (Ceres) n Other Olympians include –Athena (Minerva) –Ares (Mars) –Hebe (Juventas) –Hephaestus (Vulcan) –Apollo (Apollo) –Artemis (Diana) –Hermes (Mercury) –Aphrodite (Venus) –Dionysus (Bacchus) –Persephone

9 The Olympians

10 Zeus He ruled the Olympians. He ruled the Olympians. He was the god of the sky, lightning and thunder carrying a thunderbolt as his symbol. He was the god of the sky, lightning and thunder carrying a thunderbolt as his symbol. He married Hera, his sister, which was a family habit. He married Hera, his sister, which was a family habit. He fathered many children with various goddesses and mortals. He fathered many children with various goddesses and mortals.

11 Zeus

12 Hera n She was the protector of marriage and the home. n She was associated with the peacock, because of her great beauty. n She and Zeus were always quarreling. n She was called the queen of intriguers, a vindictive and jealous wife, who frequently outwitted her husband, Zeus.

13 Hera

14 Poseidon n He built an underwater palace with a great pearl and coral throne. n Although he chose Thetis, a beautiful water nymph, as his queen, he, like his brother Zeus, was a great wanderer fathering hundreds of children. n He was a difficult god, changeful and quarrelsome, but created many curious forms for his sea creatures. n He invented the horse for his sister Demeter, whom he loved.

15 Poseidon

16 Hades n He was the jealous brother to Zeus and Poseidon. n He made Persephone his wife after stealing her from her mother, Demeter, who was his sister. n Because he was a violent god, who was also very possessive of every new soul, he rarely left his underworld domain.

17 Hades

18 Hestia n She was the sister of Zeus and the daughter of Cronos and Rhea. n She represented personal and communal security and happiness. n She was thought of as the kindest and mildest of the goddesses. n She was of little mythological importance, appearing in few stories

19 Hestia

20 Demeter n She was the goddess of growing things. n She was the mother of Persephone, whose father was Zeus. n Her daughter was kidnapped by Hades and taken to the Underworld for six months of the year causing the change of seasons.

21 Demeter

22 Athena n She was born full grown out of the head of Zeus. n She taught man to use tools and taught man’s wife to spin and weave. n She was the best-loved goddess on Olympus. n She hated Ares, god of war, often besting him in battle. n The Greek city of Athens is named after her. n She was said to have created the spider.

23 Athena

24 Ares n He was a ruthless and murderous god, who displayed the worst of humanity’s traits. n He, along with grief, strife, panic, and terror roams the earth. n Ironically, he was a coward, who fled the field of battle.

25 Ares

26 Hephaestus n He was the ugliest of the gods, who was rejected by his mother, Hera, when she hurled him off of Mount Olympus crippling him. n He fashioned the armor and tools of the gods on a broken mountain near Mount Olympus. n He made beautiful jewelry for the goddesses.

27 Hephaestus

28 Apollo n He was the twin brother of Artemis and the most handsome of the gods. n He was also the god of the healing arts and of medicine. n He drove his chariot across the sky to pull the sun each day. n His son, Phaethon, drives Apollo’s sun chariot with disastrous results.

29 Apollo

30 Artemis n She was the twin sister of Apollo, whose mother was Leto and father was Zeus. n She was a chaste huntress, who always carried a silver bow and arrows. n She ruled over the untamed places of the earth.

31 Artemis

32 Hermes n He was the precocious son of Zeus and Maia, a Titaness. n As a baby, he made a lyre and pipe for his half-brother, Apollo. n He carried Apollo’s golden staff and flew around the heavens and earth on winged sandals.

33 Hermes

34 Aphrodite n She is the goddess of desire born from sea foam. Another myth credits her mother as Dione and her father as Zeus. n After all the gods on Mount Olympus courted her, she married Hephaestus, the ugliest of the gods. n Because she was judged the most beautiful of all the goddesses on Mount Olympus by Paris, the other goddesses envied her.

35 Aphrodite

36 Dionysus n He is said to be the only god on Olympus with a mortal parent. n His creation of wine brings ecstasy and drunkenness to his revelers. n Much of the ancient world’s greatest poetry was created in his honor.

37 Dionysus

38 Persephone n Roman Name: Proserpina n Daughter of Zeus and Demeter n Goddess of Springtime n Abducted by Hades, and became goddess of the Underworld n The mint and pomegranate are sacred to her.

39 Persephone

40 Hebe n Roman Name: Juventas n Goddess of Youth n Cupbearer to the Gods n Restored youth to the aged

41 Eros n Roman Name: Cupid n Young God of Love n Son of Aphrodite and Hephaestus

42 Iris n Goddess of the Rainbow n Messenger for Zeus and Hera n Daughter of the titan Thaumus and the nymph Electra

43 The Muses n Nine daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne n Inspired artists of all kinds n Goddesses who presided over the arts and sciences n “He is happy whom the muses love.” Clio, Urania, Thalia, Melpomene, Erato, Calliope, Euterpe, Terpsichore, Polyhymnia

44 The Graces n Three Goddesses of Grace and Beauty n “They give life its bloom.” n Aglaia (Splendor) n Euphrosyne (Mirth) n Thalia (Good Cheer)

45 The Erinnyes (The Furies) n Roman Name: Furiae or Dirae (The Furies) n Three Goddesses of Vengeance –Tisiphone –Alecto –Megaera n They punish evildoers.

46 The Fates n Roman Name: Parcae, Moirae n Three sisters –Clotho (“The Spinner”) –Lachesis (“The disposer of lots”) –Atropos (“The cutter”) n They weave, measure, and cut the thread of life for humans.

47 The Satyrs n Gods of the woods and mountains n “Shepherd gods” n Goat men n Companions of Dionysus n They like to drink, dance, and chase nymphs.

48 The Gorgons n Three snake- haired monsters n Medusa is most well-known n Their look turns men to stone.

49 The Centaurs n Half man, half horse n Savage creatures (except Chiron) n Followers of Dionysus

50

51 `

52 Sources n Graphics in this presentation were taken from the following web sites: –http://www.bulfinch.org/fables/search.html –http://www.pantheon.org/ –http://www.messagenet.com/myths/ –http://mythman.com/ –http://web.uvic.ca/grs/bowman/myth/index.html –http://www.paleothea.com/ –http://www.entrenet.com/%7Egroedmed/greekm/myth.html n This presentation is for educational purposes only; it has not been and should not be sold or used as a vehicle to make money.


Download ppt "Introduction to Greek Mythology. What is Greek Mythology? n The people of ancient Greece shared stories called myths about the gods, goddesses, and heroes."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google