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List of Greek mythological figures

The following is a list of gods, goddesses, and many other divine and semi-divine figures from ancient Greek mythology and ancient Greek religion.

Immortals

The Greeks created images of their deities for many purposes. A temple would house the statue of a god or goddess, or multiple deities, and might be decorated with relief scenes depicting myths. Divine images were common on coins. Drinking cups and other vessels were painted with scenes from Greek myths.

Major gods and goddesses

Deity Description
  Aphrodite (Ἀφροδίτη, Aphroditē)

Goddess of beauty, love, desire, and pleasure. In Hesiod's Theogony (188–206), she was born from sea-foam and the severed genitals of Uranus; in Homer's Iliad (5.370–417), she is daughter of Zeus and Dione. She was married to Hephaestus, but bore him no children. She had many lovers, most notably Ares, to whom she bore Harmonia, Phobos, and Deimos. She was also a lover to Adonis and Anchises, to whom she bore Aeneas. She is usually depicted as a naked or semi-nude beautiful woman. Her symbols include the magical girdle, myrtle, roses, and the scallop shell. Her sacred animals include doves and sparrows. Her Roman counterpart is Venus.[1]

  Apollo (Ἀπόλλων, Apóllōn)

God of music, arts, knowledge, healing, plague, prophecy, poetry, manly beauty, and archery. He is the son of Zeus and Leto, and the twin brother of Artemis. Both Apollo and Artemis use a bow and arrow. Apollo is depicted as young, beardless, handsome and athletic. In myth, he can be cruel and destructive, and his love affairs are rarely happy. He is often accompanied by the Muses. His most famous temple is in Delphi, where he established his oracular shrine. His signs and symbols include the laurel wreath, bow and arrow, and lyre. His sacred animals include roe deer, swans, and pythons. Some late Roman and Greek poetry and mythography identifies him as a sun-god, equivalent to Roman Sol and Greek Helios.[2]

  Ares (Ἄρης, Árēs)

God of courage, war, bloodshed, and violence. The son of Zeus and Hera, he was depicted as a beardless youth, either nude with a helmet and spear or sword, or as an armed warrior. Homer portrays him as moody and unreliable, and as being the most unpopular god on earth and Olympus (Iliad 5.890–1). He generally represents the chaos of war in contrast to Athena, a goddess of military strategy and skill. Ares is known for cuckolding his brother Hephaestus, conducting an affair with his wife Aphrodite. His sacred animals include vultures, venomous snakes, dogs, and boars. His Roman counterpart Mars by contrast was regarded as the dignified ancestor of the Roman people.[3]

  Artemis (Ἄρτεμις, Ártemis)

Virgin goddess of the hunt, wilderness, animals, the Moon and young girls. Both she and Apollo are archery gods. She is the daughter of Zeus and Leto, and twin sister of Apollo. In art she is often depicted as a young woman dressed in a short knee-length chiton and equipped with a silver hunting bow and a quiver of arrows. Her attributes include hunting knives and spears, animal pelts, deer and other wild animals. Her sacred animal is a deer. Her Roman counterpart is Diana.[4]

  Athena (Ἀθηνᾶ, Athēnâ)

Goddess of reason, wisdom, intelligence, skill, peace, warfare, battle strategy, and handicrafts. According to most traditions, she was born from Zeus's forehead, fully formed and armored, after Zeus swallowed her mother, Metis, whole. She is depicted as being crowned with a crested helm, armed with shield and spear, and wearing the aegis over a long dress. Poets describe her as "grey-eyed" or having especially bright, keen eyes. She is a special patron of heroes such as Odysseus. She is the patron of the city Athens (from which she takes her name) and is attributed to various inventions in arts and literature. Her symbol is the olive tree. She is commonly shown as being accompanied by her sacred animal, the owl. Her Roman counterpart is Minerva.[5]

  Demeter (Δημήτηρ, Dēmḗtēr)

Goddess of grain, agriculture, harvest, growth, and nourishment. Demeter, whose Roman counterpart is Ceres, is a daughter of Cronus and Rhea, and was swallowed and then regurgitated by her father. She is a sister of Zeus, by whom she bore Persephone, who is also known as Kore, i.e. "the girl." One of the central myths associated with Demeter involves Hades' abduction of Persephone and Demeter's lengthy search for her. Demeter is one of the main deities of the Eleusinian Mysteries, in which the rites seemed to center around Demeter's search for and reunion with her daughter, which symbolized both the rebirth of crops in spring and the rebirth of the initiates after death. She is depicted as a mature woman, often crowned and holding sheafs of wheat and a torch.[6] Her symbols are the cornucopia, wheat-ears, the winged serpent, and the lotus staff. Her sacred animals include pigs and snakes.

  Dionysus (Διόνυσος, Diónusos)

God of wine, fruitfulness, parties, festivals, madness, chaos, drunkenness, vegetation, ecstasy, and the theater. He is the twice-born son of Zeus and Semele, in that Zeus snatched him from his mother's womb and stitched Dionysus into his own thigh and carried him until he was ready to be born. In art he is depicted as either an older bearded god (particularly before 430 BC) or an effeminate, long-haired youth (particularly after 430 BC). His attributes include the thyrsus, a drinking cup, the grape vine, and a crown of ivy. He is often in the company of his thiasos, a group of attendants including satyrs, maenads, and his old tutor Silenus. The consort of Dionysus was Ariadne. It was once held that Dionysius was a later addition to the Greek pantheon, but the discovery of Linear B tablets confirm his status as a deity from an early period. Bacchus was another name for him in Greek, and came into common usage among the Romans.[7] His sacred animals include dolphins, serpents, tigers, and donkeys.

  Hades (ᾍδης, Háidēs)/Pluto (Πλούτων, Ploutōn)

King of the underworld and the dead. He is also a god of wealth. His consort is Persephone. His attributes are the drinking horn or cornucopia, key, sceptre, and the three-headed dog Cerberus. His sacred animals include the screech owl. He was one of three sons of Cronus and Rhea, and thus sovereign over one of the three realms of the universe, the underworld. As a chthonic god, however, his place among the Olympians is ambiguous. In the mystery religions and Athenian literature, Plouton ("the Rich one") was his preferred name, because of the idea that all riches came from the earth. The term Hades was used in this literature to refer to the underworld itself. The Romans translated Plouton as Dis Pater ("the Rich Father") or Pluto.[8]

  Hephaestus (Ἥφαιστος, Hḗphaistos)

God of fire, metalworking, and crafts. Either the son of Zeus and Hera or Hera alone, he is the smith of the gods and the husband of the adulterous Aphrodite. He was usually depicted as a bearded, crippled man with hammer, tongs, and anvil, and sometimes riding a donkey. His sacred animals include the donkey, the guard dog, and the crane. Among his creations was the armor of Achilles. Hephaestus used the fire of the forge as a creative force, but his Roman counterpart Vulcan was feared for his destructive potential and associated with the volcanic power of the earth.

  Hera (Ἥρα, Hḗra)

Queen of the gods, and goddess of women, marriage, childbirth, heirs, kings, and empires. She is the goddess of the sky, the wife and sister of Zeus, and the daughter of Cronus and Rhea. She was usually depicted as a regal woman in the prime of her life, wearing a diadem and veil and holding a lotus-tipped staff. Although she is the goddess of marriage, Zeus's many infidelities drive her to jealousy and vengefulness. Her sacred animals include the heifer, the peacock, and the cuckoo. Her Roman counterpart is Juno.

  Hermes (Ἑρμῆς, Hērmês)

God of boundaries, travel, trade, communication, language, writing, cunning and thieves. Hermes was also responsible for protecting livestock and presided over the spheres associated with fertility, music, luck, and deception.[9] The son of Zeus and Maia, Hermes is the messenger of the gods, and a psychopomp who leads the souls of the dead into the afterlife. He was depicted either as a handsome and athletic beardless youth, or as an older bearded man. His attributes include the herald's wand or caduceus, winged sandals, and a traveler's cap. His sacred animals include the tortoise. His Roman counterpart is Mercury.

  Hestia (Ἑστία, Hestía)

Virgin goddess of the hearth, home, domesticity and chastity. She is a daughter of Rhea and Cronus, and a sister of Zeus. Not often identifiable in Greek art, she appeared as a modestly veiled woman. Her symbols are the hearth and kettle. She plays little role in Greek myths, and although she is omitted in some lists of the twelve Olympians in favour of Dionysus, no ancient tale tells of her abdicating or giving her seat to Dionysus.[10] Her Roman counterpart Vesta, however, was a major deity of the Roman state.

  Persephone (Περσεφόνη, Persephónē)

Goddess of spring, Queen of the Underworld, wife of Hades and daughter of Demeter and Zeus. Her symbols include the pomegranate, grain, torches, wheat and the asphodelus. After her abduction by Hades, she was forced to split the year between the world of the dead with her husband and the world of the living with her mother. She was worshipped in conjunction with Demeter, especially in the Eleusinian Mysteries. In ancient art she is usually depicted as a young woman, usually in the scene of her abduction.

  Poseidon (Ποσειδῶν, Poseidôn)

God of the sea, rivers, floods, droughts, and earthquakes. He is a son of Cronus and Rhea, and the brother of Zeus and Hades. He rules one of the three realms of the universe, as king of the sea and the waters. In art he is depicted as a mature man of sturdy build, often with a luxuriant beard, and holding a trident. His sacred animals include the horse and the dolphin. His wedding with Amphitrite is often presented as a triumphal procession. In some stories he rapes Medusa, leading to her transformation into a hideous Gorgon and also to the birth of their two children, Pegasus and Chrysaor. His Roman counterpart is Neptune.

  Zeus (Ζεύς, Zeús)

King of the gods, ruler of Mount Olympus, and god of the sky, weather, thunder, lightning, law, order, and justice. He is the youngest son of Cronus and Rhea. He overthrew Cronus and gained the sovereignty of heaven for himself. In art he is depicted as a regal, mature man with a sturdy figure and dark beard. His usual attributes are the royal scepter and the lightning bolt. His sacred animals include the eagle and the bull. His Roman counterpart is Jupiter, also known as Jove.

Greek primordial deities

List of Greek primordial deities
Ancient Greek name English name Description
Ἀχλύς (Akhlús) Achlys The goddess of poisons, and the personification of misery and sadness. Said to have existed before Chaos itself.
Αἰθήρ (Aithḗr) Aether The god of light and the upper atmosphere.
Αἰών (Aiōn) Aion The god of eternity, personifying cyclical and unbounded time. Sometimes equated with Chronos.
Ἀνάγκη (Anánkē) Ananke The goddess of inevitability, compulsion, and necessity.
Χάος (Kháos) Chaos The personification of nothingness from which all of existence sprang. Depicted as a void. Initially genderless, later on described as female.
Χρόνος (Khrónos) Chronos The god of empirical time, sometimes equated with Aion. Not to be confused with the Titan Cronus (Kronos), the father of Zeus.
Ἔρεβος (Érebos) Erebus The god of darkness and shadow, as well as the void that existed between Earth and the Underworld.
Ἔρως (Érōs) Eros The god of love and attraction.
Γαῖα (Gaîa) Gaia Personification of the Earth (Mother Earth); mother of the Titans.
Ἡμέρα (Hēméra) Hemera The personification of the day.
Νῆσοι (Nêsoi) The Nesoi The goddesses of islands.
Νύξ (Núx) Nyx The goddess and personification of the night.
Οὔρεα (Oúrea) The Ourea The gods of mountains.
Φάνης (Phánēs) Phanes The god of procreation in the Orphic tradition.
Πόντος (Póntos) Pontus The god of the sea, father of the fish and other sea creatures.
Τάρταρος (Tártaros) Tartarus The god of the deepest, darkest part of the underworld, the Tartarean pit (which is also referred to as Tartarus itself).
Θάλασσα (Thálassa) Thalassa Personification of the sea and consort of Pontus.
Οὐρανός (Ouranós) Uranus The god of the heavens (Father Sky); father of the Titans.

Titans and Titanesses

The Titan gods and goddesses are depicted in Greek art less commonly than the Olympians.

Titans and titanesses
Greek name English name Description
The Twelve Titans
Κοῖος (Koîos) Coeus God of intellect and the axis of heaven around which the constellations revolved.
Κρεῖος (Kreîos) Crius The least individualized of the Twelve Titans, he is the father of Astraeus, Pallas, and Perses. Implied to be the god of constellations.
Κρόνος (Krónos) Cronus God of harvests and personification of destructive time. The leader of the Titans, who overthrew his father Uranus only to be overthrown in turn by his son, Zeus. Not to be confused with Chronos.
Ὑπερίων (Hyperíōn) Hyperion God of light. With Theia, he is the father of Helios (the Sun), Selene (the Moon), and Eos (the Dawn).
Ἰαπετός (Iapetós) Iapetus God of mortality and father of Prometheus, Epimetheus, Menoetius, and Atlas.
Mνημοσύνη (Mnēmosýnē) Mnemosyne Goddess of memory and remembrance, and mother of the Nine Muses.
Ὠκεανός (Ōceanós) Oceanus God of the all-encircling river Oceans around the Earth, the fount of all the Earth's fresh-water.
Φοίβη (Phoíbē) Phoebe Goddess of the "bright" intellect and prophecy, and consort of Coeus.
Ῥέα (Rhéa) Rhea Goddess of fertility, motherhood and the mountain wilds. She is the sister and consort of Cronus, and mother of Zeus, Hades, Poseidon, Hera, Demeter, and Hestia.
Τηθύς (Tēthýs) Tethys Goddess of fresh-water, and the mother of the rivers, springs, streams, fountains, and clouds.
Θεία (Theía) Theia Goddess of sight and the shining light of the clear blue sky. She is the consort of Hyperion, and mother of Helios, Selene, and Eos.
Θέμις (Thémis) Themis Goddess of divine law and order.
Other Titans
Ἄνυτος (Ánytos) Anytos God who reared the young goddess Despoina, the daughter of Demeter.
Ἀστερία (Astería) Asteria Goddess of nocturnal oracles and falling stars.
Ἀστραῖος (Astraîos) Astraeus God of dusk, stars, and planets, and the art of astrology.
Ἄτλας (Átlas) Atlas God forced to carry the heavens upon his shoulders by Zeus. Presumed to be the god of endurance and astronomy. Also Son of Iapetus.
Διώνη (Diṓnē) Dione Goddess of the oracle of Dodona.
Ἥλιος (Hḗlios) Helios God of the Sun and guardian of oaths.
Ἠώς (Ēṓs) Eos Goddess of the Dawn.
Ἐπιμηθεύς (Epimētheús) Epimetheus God of afterthought and the father of excuses.
Λήλαντος (Lēlantos) Lelantos God of moving unseen and The father of the nymph Aura by Periboea
Λητώ (Lētṓ) Leto Goddess of motherhood and mother of the twin Olympians, Artemis and Apollo.
Μενοίτιος (Menoítios) Menoetius God of violent anger, rash action, and human mortality. Killed by Zeus.
Μῆτις (Mē̂tis) Metis Goddess of good counsel, advice, planning, cunning, craftiness, and wisdom. Mother of Athena.
Πάλλας (Pállas) Pallas God of warcraft. He was killed by Athena during the Titanomachy.
Πέρσης (Pérsēs) Perses Son of Crius and Eurybia.
Προμηθεύς (Promētheús) Prometheus God of forethought and crafty counsel, and creator of mankind.
Σελήνη (Selḗnē) Selene Goddess of the Moon.
Στύξ (Stýx) Styx Goddess of the Underworld river Styx and personification of hatred.
Συκεύς (Sykeús) Syceus God whom Gaia turned into a fig tree to help him escape from Zeus.
Τιτὰν (Titan) Titan God of The calendar of the seasons brother of Helios, usually just Helios himself

Gigantes

 
Athena (left) fighting Enceladus (inscribed retrograde) on an Attic red-figure dish, c. 550–500 BC (Louvre CA3662).[11]

The Gigantes were the offspring of Gaia (Earth), born from the blood that fell when Uranus (Sky) was castrated by their Titan son Cronus, who fought the Gigantomachy, their war with the Olympian gods for supremacy of the cosmos, they include:

Other "giants"

  • Aloadae (Ἀλῳάδαι), twin giants who attempted to climb to Olympus by piling mountains on top of each other.
    • Otus or Otos (Ότος).
    • Ephialtes (Εφιάλτης).
  • Anax (Αναξ) was a giant of the island of Lade near Miletos in Lydia, Anatolia.
  • Antaeus (Ἀνταῖος), a Libyan giant who wrestled all visitors to the death until he was slain by Heracles.
  • Antiphates (Ἀντιφάτης), the king of the man-eating giants known as Laestrygones which were encountered by Odysseus on his travels.
  • Argus Panoptes (Ἄργος Πανόπτης), a hundred-eyed giant tasked with guarding Io.
  • Asterius (Αστεριος), a Lydian giant.
  • Cacus (Κακος), a fire-breathing Latin giant slain by Heracles.
  • Cyclopes (Hesiodic), three one-eyed giants who forged the lightning bolts of Zeus and Helmet and Bident of Hades.
    • Arges (Ἄργης).
    • Brontes (Βρόντης).
    • Steropes (Στερόπης).
  • Cyclopes (Homeric), a tribe of one-eyed, man-eating giants who herded flocks of sheep on the island of Sicily.
    • Polyphemus (Πολύφημος), a Cyclops who briefly captured Odysseus and his men, only to be overcome and blinded by the hero.
  • The Gegenees (Γηγενέες), a tribe of six-armed giants fought by the Argonauts on Bear Mountain in Mysia.
  • Geryon (Γηρυων), a three-bodied giant who dwelt on the sunset isle at the ends of the earth. He was slain by Heracles when the hero arrived to fetch the giant's cattle as one of his twelve labours.
  • The Hekatoncheires (Ἑκατόγχειρες), or Centimanes (Latin), the Hundred-Handed Ones, giant gods of violent storms and hurricanes. Three sons of Uranus and Gaia, each with his own distinct characters.[12]
    • Briareus (Βριάρεως) or Aigaion (Αἰγαίων), The Vigorous.
    • Cottus (Κόττος), The Furious.
    • Gyges (Γύγης), The Big-Limbed.
  • The Laestrygonians (Λαιστρυγόνες), a tribe of man-eating giants encountered by Odysseus on his travels.
  • Orion (Ὠρίων), a giant huntsman whom Zeus placed among the stars as the constellation of Orion.
  • Talos (Τάλως), a giant forged from bronze by Hephaestus, and given by Zeus to his lover Europa as her personal protector.
  • Tityos (Τίτυος), a giant slain by Apollo and Artemis when he attempted to violate their mother Leto.
  • Typhon (Τυφῶν), a monstrous immortal storm-giant who attempted to launch an attack on Mount Olympus but was defeated by the Olympians and imprisoned in the pits of Tartarus.

Personified concepts

  • Achlys (Ἀχλύς), spirit of the death-mist, personification of sadness, misery and poison
  • Adephagia (Ἀδηφαγία), spirit of satiety and gluttony
  • Adikia (Ἀδικία), spirit of injustice and wrongdoing
  • Aergia (Ἀεργία), spirit of idleness, laziness, indolence and sloth
  • Agathodaemon (Ἀγαθοδαίμων), spirit of the vineyards and grainfields; ensuring good luck, health, and wisdom
  • Agon (Ἀγών), spirit of contest, who possessed an altar at Olympia, site of the Olympic Games
  • Aidos (Αἰδώς), spirit of modesty, reverence and respect
  • Aisa (Αἴσα), personification of lot and fate
  • Alala (Ἀλαλά), spirit of the war cry
  • Alastor (Ἀλάστωρ), spirit of blood feuds and vengeance
  • Aletheia (Ἀλήθεια), spirit of truth, truthfulness and sincerity
  • The Algea (Ἄλγεα), spirits of pain and suffering
    • Achos (Ἄχος) "trouble, distress"
    • Ania (Ἀνία) "ache, anguish"
    • Lupe (Λύπη) "pain, grief, sadness"
  • Alke (Ἀλκή), spirit of prowess and courage (one of the Machai)
  • Amechania (Ἀμηχανία), spirit of helplessness and want of means
  • The Amphilogiai (Ἀμφιλογίαι), spirits of disputes, debate, and contention
  • Anaideia (Ἀναίδεια), spirit of ruthlessness, shamelessness, and unforgivingness
  • The Androktasiai (Ἀνδροκτασίαι), spirits of battlefield slaughter
  • Angelia (Ἀγγελία), spirit of messages, tidings and proclamations
  • Apate (Ἀπάτη), spirit of deceit, guile, fraud and deception
  • Apheleia (Ἀφέλεια), spirit of simplicity
  • The Arae (Ἀραί), spirits of curses
  • Arete (Ἀρετή), spirit of virtue, excellence, goodness, and valour
  • Atë (Ἄτη), spirit of delusion, infatuation, blind folly, recklessness, and ruin
  • Bia (Βία "Violence"), the personification of force and raw energy
  • Caerus (Καιρός), spirit of opportunity
  • Corus (Κόρος), spirit of surfeit
  • Deimos (Δεῖμος), spirit of fear, dread, and terror
  • Dikaiosyne (Δικαιοσύνη), spirit of justice and righteousness
  • Dike (Δίκη), spirit of justice, fair judgement, and the rights established by custom and law
  • Dolos (Δόλος), spirit of trickery, cunning deception, craftiness, treachery, and guile
  • Dysnomia (Δυσνομία), spirit of lawlessness and poor civil constitution
  • Dyssebeia (Δυσσέβεια), spirit of impiety
  • Eirene (Εἰρήνη), goddess of peace
  • Eiresione (Ειρεσιώνη), personification of the olive branch
  • Ekecheiria (Ἐκεχειρία), spirit of truce, armistice, and the cessation of all hostilities; honoured at the Olympic Games
  • Eleos (Ἔλεος), spirit of mercy, pity, and compassion
  • Eleutheria (Ἐλευθερία), personification of liberty
  • Elpis (Ἐλπίς), spirit of hope and expectation
  • Epiphron (Ἐπίφρων), spirit of prudence, shrewdness, thoughtfulness, carefulness, and sagacity
  • Eris (Ἔρις), spirit of strife, discord, contention, and rivalry
  • The Erotes (ἔρωτες)
    • Anteros (Ἀντέρως), god of requited love
    • Eros (Ἔρως), god of love and sexual intercourse
    • Hedylogos (Ἡδύλογος), god of sweet talk and flattery
    • Hermaphroditus (Ἑρμαφρόδιτος), god of unions, androgyny, marriage, sexuality and fertility
    • Himeros (Ἵμερος), god of sexual desire
    • Hymen (Ὑμήν) or Hymenaeus (Ὑμεναιος), god of marriage ceremonies, inspiring feasts and song
    • Pothos (Πόθος), god of sexual longing, yearning, and desire
  • Eucleia (Εὔκλεια), spirit of good repute and glory
  • Eulabeia (Εὐλάβεια), spirit of discretion, caution, and circumspection
  • Eunomia (Εὐνομία), goddess of good order and lawful conduct
  • Eupheme (Εὐφήμη), spirit of words of good omen, acclamation, praise, applause, and shouts of triumph
  • Eupraxia (Eὐπραξία), spirit of well-being
  • Eusebeia (Eὐσέβεια), spirit of piety, loyalty, duty, and filial respect
  • Euthenia (Εὐθενία), spirit of prosperity, abundance, and plenty
  • Gelos (Γέλως), spirit of laughter
  • Geras (Γῆρας), spirit of old age
  • Harmonia (Ἁρμονία), goddess of harmony and concord
  • Hedone (Ἡδονή), spirit of pleasure, enjoyment, and delight
  • Heimarmene (Εἵμαρμένη), personification of share destined by fate
  • Hesychia spirit of quiet
  • Homados (Ὅμαδος), spirit of the din of battle
  • Homonoia (Ὁμόνοια), spirit of concord, unanimity, and oneness of mind
  • Horkos (Ὅρκος), spirit of oaths
  • Horme (Ὁρμή), spirit of impulse or effort (to do a thing), eagerness, setting oneself in motion, and starting an action
  • Hybris (Ὕβρις), spirit of outrageous behaviour
  • Hypnos (Ὕπνος), god of sleep
  • The Hysminai (Ὑσμῖναι), spirits of fighting and combat
  • Ioke (Ἰωκή), spirit of pursuit in battle
  • Kairos (καιρός), god of signifies a proper or opportune time for action.
  • Kakia (Kακία), spirit of vice and moral badness
  • The Keres (Κῆρες), spirit of violent or cruel death
  • Koalemos (Κοάλεμος), spirit of stupidity and foolishness
  • Kratos (Κράτος), spirit of strength, might, power, and sovereign rule
  • Kydoimos (Κυδοιμός), spirit of the din of battle, confusion, uproar, and hubbub
  • Lethe (Λήθη), spirit of forgetfulness and oblivion, and of the river of the same name
  • Limos (Λιμός), spirit of hunger and starvation
  • The Litae (Λιταί), spirits of prayer
  • Lyssa (Λύσσα), spirit of rage, fury and rabies in animals
  • The Machai (Μάχαι), spirits of fighting and combat
  • Mania (Μανία), spirit or spirits of madness, insanity, and frenzy
  • The Moirai, or "Fates" (Μοίραι)
    • Clotho (Κλωθώ), the spinner of the life thread
    • Lachesis (Λάχεσις), the measurer of the life thread
    • Atropos (Άτροπος), the severer of the life thread
  • Momus (Μῶμος), spirit of mockery, blame, censure and stinging criticism
  • Moros (Μόρος), spirit of doom
  • The Neikea (τὰ Νείκη), spirits of quarrels, feuds and grievances
  • Nemesis (Νέμεσις), goddess of revenge, balance, righteous indignation, and retribution
  • Nike (Νίκη), goddess of victory
  • Nomos (Νόμος), spirit of law
  • Oizys (Ὀϊζύς), spirit of woe and misery
  • The Oneiroi (Ὄνειροι), Dreams
  • Palioxis (Παλίωξις), spirit of backrush, flight and retreat from battle
  • Peitharchia (Πειθαρχία), spirit of discipline
  • Peitho (Πειθώ), spirit of persuasion and seduction
  • Penia (Πενία), spirit of poverty and need
  • Penthus (Πένθος), spirit of grief, mourning, and lamentation
  • Pepromene (Πεπρωμένη), personification of the destined share, similar to Heimarmene
  • Pheme (Φήμη), spirit of rumour, report, and gossip
  • Philophrosyne (Φιλοφροσύνη), spirit of friendliness, kindness, and welcome
  • Philotes (Φιλότης), spirit of friendship, affection, and sexual intercourse
  • Phobos (Φόβος), spirit of panic fear, flight, and battlefield rout
  • The Phonoi (Φόνοι), spirits of murder, killing, and slaughter
  • Phrike (Φρίκη), spirit of horror and trembling fear
  • Phthonus (Φθόνος), spirit of envy and jealousy
  • Pistis (Πίστις), spirit of trust, honesty, and good faith
  • Poine (Ποίνη), spirit of retribution, vengeance, recompense, punishment, and penalty for the crime of murder and manslaughter
  • Polemos (Πόλεμος), personification of war
  • Ponos (Πόνος), spirit of hard labour and toil
  • Poros (Πόρος), spirit of expediency, the means of accomplishing or providing, contrivance and device
  • Praxidike (Πραξιδίκη), spirit of exacting justice
  • Proioxis (Προίωξις), spirit of onrush and battlefield pursuit
  • Prophasis (Πρόφασις), spirit of excuses and pleas
  • Ptocheia (Πτωχεία), spirit of beggary
  • Roma, a female deity who personified the city of Rome
  • Soter (Σωτήρ), male spirit of safety, preservation, and deliverance from harm
  • Soteria (Σωτηρία), female personification of safety, preservation, and deliverance from harm
  • Sophrosyne (Σωφροσύνη), spirit of moderation, self-control, temperance, restraint, and discretion
  • Tekhne (Τεχνη) personification of art, craft and technical skill
  • Thanatos (Θάνατος), personification of death and mortality
  • Thrasos (Θράσος), spirit of boldness
  • Tyche (Τύχη), goddess of fortune, chance, providence, and fate
  • Zelos ( Ζῆλος), spirit of eager rivalry, emulation, envy, jealousy, and zeal

Chthonic deities

  • Amphiaraus (Ἀμφιάραος), a seer, and one of the Seven against Thebes who became an oracular spirit of the Underworld after his death
  • Angelos (Ἄγγελος), a daughter of Zeus and Hera who became an underworld goddess
  • Askalaphos (Ἀσκάλαφος), the son of Acheron and Orphne who tended the Underworld orchards before being transformed into a screech owl by Demeter
  • Charon (Χάρων), ferryman of Hades
  • Cronus (Κρόνος), deposed king of the Titans; after his release from Tartarus he was appointed king of the Island of the Blessed
  • Erebos (Ἔρεβος), the primeval god of darkness, his mists encircled the underworld and filled the hollows of the earth
  • The Erinyes (Ἐρινύες), the Furies, goddesses of retribution, known as "The Kindly Ones"
    • Alecto (Ἀληκτώ), the unceasing one
    • Tisiphone (Τισιφόνη), avenger of murder
    • Megaera (Μέγαιρα), the jealous one
  • Hades (¨Αδης) God of underworld and all things beneath the earth
  • Hecate (Ἑκάτη), goddess of magic, witchcraft, the night, the Moon, ghosts, and necromancy
  • Judges of the Dead
    • Aiakos (Αἰακός), former mortal king of Aegina, guardian of the keys of Hades and judge of the men of Europe
    • Minos (Μίνως), former mortal king of Crete and judge of the final vote
    • Rhadamanthys (Ῥαδάμανθυς), former mortal lawmaker and judge of the men of Asia
  • Keuthonymos (Κευθόνυμος), an Underworld spirit and father of Menoetes
  • Lampades (Λαμπάδες), torch-bearing Underworld nymphs
    • Gorgyra (Γοργύρα)
    • Orphne (Ορφνη), a Lampad nymph of Hades, mother of Askalaphos
  • Macaria (Μακαρία), daughter of Hades and goddess of blessed death (not to be confused with the daughter of Heracles)
  • Melinoe (Μελινόη), daughter of Persephone and Zeus who presided over the propitiations offered to the ghosts of the dead
  • Menoetes (Μενοίτης), an Underworld spirit who herded the cattle of Hades
  • Nyx (Νύξ), the primeval goddess of night
  • Persephone (Περσεφόνη), queen of the underworld, wife of Hades and goddess of spring growth
  • Rivers of the Underworld
    • Acheron (Αχέρων), the river of woe
    • Alpheus (Ἀλφειός), the white river
    • Eridanos (Ἠριδανός), the river of amber
    • Kokytos (Kωκυτός), the river of wailing
    • Lethe (Λήθη), the river of forgetfulness (its counterpart was the waters of Mnemosyne)
    • Phlegethon (Φλεγέθων), the river of fire
    • Styx (Στύξ), the river of hatred and oaths
  • Tartarus (Τάρταρος), the primeval god of the dark, stormy pit of Hades
  • Thanatos (Θάνατος), personification of death
  • Zagreus (Ζαγρεύς), an underworld god, possibly a son of Zeus and Persephone

Sea deities

  • Aegaeon (Αιγαίων), god of violent sea storms and ally of the Titans
  • Amphitrite (Αμφιτρίτη), sea goddess and consort of Poseidon
  • Benthesikyme (Βενθεσικύμη), daughter of Poseidon, who resided in Ethiopia
  • Brizo (Βριζώ), patron goddess of sailors, who sent prophetic dreams
  • Ceto (Κῆτώ), goddess of the dangers of the ocean and of sea monsters
  • Cymopoleia (Κυμοπόλεια), a daughter of Poseidon married to the Giant Briareus
  • Delphin (Δελφιν), dolphin god or daimone [13]
  • Eidothea (Ειδοθέα), prophetic sea nymph and daughter of Proteus
  • Glaucus (Γλαῦκος), the fisherman's sea god and oracle
  • Leucothea (Λευκοθέα), a sea goddess who aided sailors in distress
  • Nereids (Νηρηίδες), sea nymphs
    • Arethusa (Αρετούσα), a daughter of Nereus who was transformed into a fountain
    • Dynamene (Δυναμένη), associated with the might and power of great ocean swells
    • Galene (Γαλήνη), goddess of calm seas
    • Psamathe (Ψαμάθη), mother of Phocus by Aeacus
    • Thetis (Θέτις), leader of the Nereids who presided over the spawning of marine life in the sea
  • Nereus (Νηρέας), the old man of the sea, and the god of the sea's rich bounty of fish
  • Nerites (Νερίτης), a sea spirit who was transformed into a shell-fish by Aphrodite
  • Oceanides (Ωκεανίδες), sea nymphs, and patronesses of bodies of fresh water
    Some notable Oceanides include:
  • For a more complete list, see List of Oceanids
  • Oceanus (Ὠκεανός), god of the Earth-encircling river Oceanus (the ocean), the fountain of all the Earth's freshwater
  • Potamoi (Ποταμοί), Gods of rivers and streams of the earth
    Some notable river gods include:
  • Palaemon (Παλαίμων), a young sea god who aided sailors in distress
  • Phorcys (Φόρκυς), god of the hidden dangers of the deep
  • Pontus (Πόντος), primordial god of the sea, father of the fish and other sea creatures, son of Gaia alone
  • Proteus (Πρωτεύς), a shape-shifting, prophetic old sea god, and the herdsman of Poseidon's seals
  • Poseidon (Ποσειδῶν), king of the sea and lord of the sea gods; also god of rivers, flood and drought, earthquakes, and horses
  • Sangarius (Σαγγάριος), a river-god
  • The Telchines (Τελχινες), sea spirits native to the island of Rhodes; the gods killed them when they turned to evil magic; They built the Trident of Poseidon.
    • Actaeus (Ακταίος)
    • Argyron (Αργυρών)
    • Atabyrius (Αταβύριος)
    • Chalcon (Χαλκών)
    • Chryson (Χρυσών)
    • Damon (Δαμων) or Demonax (Δημώναξ)
    • Damnameneus (Δαμναμενεύς)
    • Dexithea (Δεξιθέα), mother of Euxanthios by Minos
    • Lycos (Λύκος) or Lyktos (Λύκτος)
    • Lysagora (Λυσαγόρα)?
    • Makelo (Μακελώ)
    • Megalesius (Μεγαλήσιος)
    • Mylas (Μύλας)
    • Nikon (Νίκων)
    • Ormenos (Ορμενος)
    • Simon (Σίμων)
    • Skelmis (Σκελμις)
  • Tethys (Τηθύς), goddess of the sources of fresh water, and the mother of the rivers, springs, streams, fountains, and clouds
  • Thalassa (Θάλασσα), primeval goddess of the sea and consort of Pontos
  • Thaumas (Θαῦμας), god of the wonders of the sea
  • Thoosa (Θόοσα), goddess of swift currents
  • Triteia (Τριτεια), daughter of Triton and companion of Ares
  • Triton (Τρίτων), fish-tailed son and herald of Poseidon
  • Tritones (Τρίτωνες), fish-tailed spirits in Poseidon's retinue
 
Poseidon and Amphitrite framed by erotes and riding in a chariot drawn by hippocamps; below them are fishermen at work, with nymphs and creatures of the sea in the waters (color-enhanced Roman-era mosaic)

Sky deities

  • Aeolus (Aiolos) (Αίολος), god of the winds
  • Aether (Αιθήρ), primeval god of the upper air
  • Alectrona (Αλεκτρονα), solar goddess of the morning or waking up
  • Anemoi, (Άνεμοι), gods of the winds
    • Aparctias (Απαρκτίας), another name for the north wind (not identified with Boreas)
    • Apheliotes (Αφηλιώτης), god of the east wind (when Eurus is considered southeast)
    • Argestes (Αργέστης), another name for the west or northwest wind
    • Boreas (Βορέας), god of the north wind and of winter
    • Caicias (Καικίας), god of the northeast wind
    • Circios (Κίρκιος) or Thraskias (Θρασκίας), god of the north-northwest wind
    • Euronotus (Ευρονότος), god of the southeast wind
    • Eurus (Εύρος), god of the unlucky east or southeast wind
    • Lips (Λίψ), god of the southwest wind
    • Notus (Νότος) god of the south wind
    • Skeiron (Σκείρων), god of the northwest wind
    • Zephyrus (Ζέφυρος), god of the west wind
  • Arke (Άρκη), messenger of the Titans and sister of Iris
  • Astraios (Ἀστραῖος), god of stars and planets, and the art of astrology
  • The Astra Planeti (Αστρα Πλανετοι), gods of the five wandering stars or planets
  • Astrape and Bronte, goddesses of lightning and thunder respectively
  • Aurai (Αὖραι), nymphs of the cooling breeze
    • Aura (Αὖρα), goddess of the breeze and the fresh, cool air of early morning
  • Chione (Χιόνη), goddess of snow and daughter of Boreas
  • Eos (Ἠώς), goddess of the Dawn
  • Ersa (Ἕρση), goddess of the morning dew
  • Helios (Ἥλιος), god of the Sun and guardian of oaths
  • Hemera (Ημέρα), primeval goddess of the day
  • Hera (Ήρα), queen of the gods
  • The Hesperides, (´Εσπερίδες), nymphs of the evening and sunset
  • Iris (Ίρις), goddess of the rainbow and divine messenger
  • Men (Μήν), a lunar deity worshiped in the western interior parts of Anatolia
  • Nephele (Νεφέλη), cloud nymph
  • Nyx, (Νύξ), goddess of night
  • Pandia (Πανδία), daughter of Selene and Zeus
  • The Pleiades (Πλειάδες), goddesses of the star cluster Pleiades and were associated with rain
  • Sabazios (Σαβάζιος), the nomadic horseman and sky father god of the Phrygians and Thracians
  • Selene (Σελήνη), goddess of the Moon
  • Uranus (Ουρανός), primeval god of the heavens
  • Zeus (Ζεύς), King of Heaven and god of the sky, clouds, thunder, and lightning

Rustic deities

  • Aetna (Αἴτνη), goddess of the volcanic Mount Etna in Sicily
  • Agreus and Nomios two goat-legged daimones of hunting & hurding
  • Amphictyonis (Αμφικτυονίς), goddess of wine and friendship between nations, a local form of Demeter
  • Anthousai (Ανθούσαι), flower nymphs
  • Aristaeus (Ἀρισταῖος), god of bee-keeping, cheese-making, herding, olive-growing, and hunting
  • Attis (Άττις), vegetation god and consort of Cybele
  • Britomartis (Βριτόμαρτις), Cretan goddess of hunting and nets used for fishing, fowling and the hunting of small game
  • Meliseus, god of bees and bee-keeping in Crete.
  • Cabeiri (Κάβειροι), gods or spirits who presided over the Mysteries of the islands of Lemnos and Samothrace
    • Aitnaios (Αιτναιος)
    • Alkon (Αλκων)
    • Eurymedon (Ευρυμεδών)
    • Onnes (Όννης)
    • Tonnes (Τόννης)
  • Chloris (Χλωρίς), minor flower nymph and wife of Zephyrus
  • Comus (Κόμος), god of revelry, merrymaking, and festivity
  • Corymbus (Κόρυμβος), god of the fruit of the ivy
  • The Curetes (Κουρέτες), guardians of infant Zeus on Mount Ida, barely distinguished from the Dactyls and the Corybantes
  • Cybele (Κυβέλη), a Phrygian mountain goddess
  • The Dactyls (Δάκτυλοι) "fingers", minor deities originally representing fingers of a hand
    • Acmon (Ακμών)
    • Damnameneus (Δαμναμενεύς)
    • Delas (Δήλας)
    • Epimedes (Επιμήδης)
    • Heracles (not to be confused with the hero Heracles)
    • Iasios (Ιάσιος)
    • Kelmis (Κελμις)
    • Skythes (Σκύθης)
    • companions of Cybele
      • Titias (Τιτίας)
      • Cyllenus (Κύλληνος)
  • Dionysus (Διόνυσος), god of wine, drunken orgies, and wild vegetation
  • Dryades (Δρυάδες), tree and forest nymphs
  • Gaia (Γαία), primeval goddess of the earth
  • Epimeliades (Επιμελίδες), nymphs of highland pastures and protectors of sheep flocks
  • Hamadryades (Αμαδρυάδες), oak tree dryades
  • Hecaterus (Ηεκατερος), minor god of the hekateris — a rustic dance of quickly moving hands — and perhaps of the skill of hands in general
  • Hermes (Ερμής), god of herds and flocks, of roads and boundary stones, and the god of thieves
  • Korybantes (Κορύβαντες), the crested dancers who worshipped Cybele
    • Damneus (Δαμνεύς) "the one who tames(?)"
    • Idaios (Ιδαίος) "of Mount Ida"
    • Kyrbas (Κύρβας), whose name is probably a variant of Korybas, singular for "Korybantes"
    • Okythoos (Ωκύθοος) "the one running swiftly"
    • Prymneus (Πρυμνεύς) "of lower areas(?)"
    • Pyrrhichos (Πυρῥιχος), god of the rustic dance
  • Ma, a local goddess at Comana in Cappadocia
  • Maenades (μαινάδες), crazed nymphs in the retinue of Dionysus
    • Methe (Μέθη), nymph of drunkenness
  • Meliae (Μελίαι), nymphs of honey and the ash tree
  • Naiades (Ναιάδες), fresh water nymphs
  • The Nymphai Hyperboreioi (Νύμφαι Υπερβόρειοι), who presided over aspects of archery
    • Hekaerge (Εκαέργη), represented distancing
    • Loxo (Λοξώ), represented trajectory
    • Oupis (Ουπις), represented aim
  • Oreades (Ὀρεάδες), mountain nymphs
    • Adrasteia (Αδράστεια), a nursemaid of the infant Zeus
    • Cyllene, the mountain-nymph who nursed the infant Hermes
    • Echo (Ηχώ), a nymph cursed never to speak except to repeat the words of others
  • The Ourea (Ούρος), primeval gods of mountains
  • The Palici (Παλικοί), a pair of rustic gods who presided over the geysers and thermal springs in Sicily
  • Pan (Πάν), god of shepherds, pastures, and fertility
  • Pan Sybarios (Παν Συβαριος) god of Woods and vales
  • Phaunos god of forests not identified with Faunus
  • Potamoi (Ποταμοί), river gods
For a more complete list, see Potamoi#List of potamoi
  • Priapus (Πρίαπος), god of garden fertility
  • Satyrs (Σάτυροι) / Satyress, rustic fertility spirits
    • Krotos (Κρότος), a great hunter and musician who kept the company of the Muses on Mount Helicon
  • Silenus (Σειληνός), an old rustic god of the dance of the wine-press
  • Telete (Τελέτη), goddess of initiation into the Bacchic orgies
  • Zagreus (Ζαγρεύς), in the Orphic mysteries, the first incarnation of Dionysus

Agricultural deities

  • Adonis (Άδωνις), a life-death-rebirth deity
  • Aphaea (Αφαία), minor goddess of agriculture and fertility
  • Cyamites (Κυαμίτης), demi-god of the bean
  • Demeter (Δημήτηρ), goddess of fertility, agriculture, grain, and harvest
  • Despoina (Δέσποινη), daughter of Poseidon and Demeter, goddess of mysteries in Arcadia
  • Dionysus (Διόνυσος), god of viticulture and wine
  • Eunostus (Εύνοστος), goddess of the flour mill
  • Opora, goddess of autumn and wine
  • Persephone (Περσεφόνη), queen of the underworld, wife of Hades and goddess of spring growth
  • Philomelus (Φιλόμελος), agricultural demi-god inventor of the wagon and the plough
  • Plutus (Πλοῦτος), god of wealth, including agricultural wealth, son of Demeter
  • Promylaia (Προμυλαια) a goddess of the flower mill
  • Triptolemus (Τριπτόλεμος), god of farming and agriculture, he brought agriculture to Greece
  • Trokhilos (Τροχιλος) god of the mill stone

Health deities

  • Apollo (Ἀπόλλων), god of archery, music and dance, truth and prophecy, healing and diseases, the Sun and light, poetry, and more.
  • Asclepius (Ασκληπιός), god of medicine
  • Aceso (Ἀκεσώ), goddess of the healing of wounds and the curing of illnesses
  • Aegle (Αἴγλη), goddess of radiant good health
  • Chiron (Χείρων), god of healing (up for debate if it is a god)
  • Darrhon (Δάρρων), Macedonian god of health
  • Epione (Ἠπιόνη), goddess of the soothing of pain
  • Hygieia (Ὑγεία), goddess of cleanliness and good health
  • Iaso (Ἰασώ), goddess of cures, remedies, and modes of healing
  • Paean (Παιάν), physician of the gods
  • Panacea (Πανάκεια), goddess of healing
  • Telesphorus (Τελεσφόρος), demi-god of convalescence, who "brought to fulfillment" recuperation from illness or injury

Sleep deities

  • Empusa (Ἔμπουσα), goddess of shape-shifting
  • Epiales (Ἐφιάλτης), goddess of nightmares
  • Hypnos (Ὕπνος) god of sleep
  • Pasithea (Πασιθέα) goddess of relaxing meditation and hallucinations
  • Oneiroi (Ὀνείρων) god of dreams
  • Morpheus (μορφή) god of dreaming

Charities

  • Charites (Χάριτες), goddesses of charm, beauty, nature, human creativity, and fertility
    • Aglaea (Αγλαΐα), goddess of beauty, adornment, splendor, and glory
    • Euphrosyne (Εὐφροσύνη), goddess of good cheer, joy, mirth, and merriment
    • Thalia (Θάλεια), goddess of festive celebrations and rich and luxurious banquets
    • Hegemone (Ηγεμόνη) "mastery"
    • Antheia (Άνθεια), goddess of flowers and flowery wreaths
    • Pasithea (Πασιθέα), goddess of rest and relaxation
    • Cleta (Κλήτα) "the glorious"
    • Phaenna (Φαέννα) "the shining"
    • Eudaimonia (Ευδαιμονία) "happiness"
    • Euthymia (Ευθυμία) "good mood"
    • Calleis (Καλλείς) "beauty"
    • Paidia (Παιδία) "play, amusement"
    • Pandaisia (Πανδαισία) "banquet for everyone"
    • Pannychis (Παννυχίς) "all-night (festivity)"

Horae

  • The Horae (Ώρες), The Hours, the goddesses of natural order
    • Eunomia (Ευνομία), spirit of good order, and springtime goddess of green pastures
    • Dike (Δίκη), spirit of justice, may have represented springtime growth
    • Eirene (Ειρήνη), spirit of peace and goddess of the springtime
    • The goddesses of springtime growth
      • Thallo (Θαλλώ), goddess of spring buds and shoots, identified with Eirene
      • Auxo (Αυξώ), goddess of spring growth
      • Karpo (Καρπώ), goddess of the fruits of the earth
    • The goddesses of welfare
      • Pherousa (Φέρουσα) "the bringer"
      • Euporie (Ευπορίη) "abundance"
      • Orthosie (Ορθοσίη) "prosperity"
    • The goddesses of the natural portions of time and the times of day
      • Auge (Αυγή), first light of the morning
      • Anatole (Ανατολή) or Anatolia (Ανατολία), sunrise
      • Mousika or Musica (Μουσική), the morning hour of music and study
      • Gymnastika, Gymnastica (Γυμναστίκή) or Gymnasia (Γυμνασία), the morning hour of gymnastics/exercise
      • Nymphe (Νυμφή), the morning hour of ablutions (bathing, washing)
      • Mesembria (Μεσημβρία), noon
      • Sponde (Σπονδή), libations poured after lunch
      • Elete, prayer, the first of the afternoon work hours
      • Akte, Acte (Ακτή) or Cypris (Κυπρίς), eating and pleasure, the second of the afternoon work hours
      • Hesperis (Έσπερίς), evening
      • Dysis (Δύσις), sunset
      • Arktos (Άρκτος), night sky, constellation
    • The goddesses of seasons of the year
      • Eiar (Είαρ), spring
      • Theros (Θέρος), summer
      • Pthinoporon (Φθινόπωρον), autumn
      • Cheimon (Χειμών), winter

Muses

Muses (Μούσαι), goddesses of music, song and dance, and the source of inspiration to poets
Name
Titan Muses
Aoide (Ἀοιδή) muse of song
Arche (Αρχή) muse of origins
Melete (Μελέτη) muse of meditation and practice
Mneme (Μνήμη) muse of memory
Thelxinoe (Θελξινόη) muse "charmer of minds"
Olympian Muses, daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne
Calliope (Καλλιόπη) muse of epic poetry
Clio (Κλειώ) muse of history
Euterpe (Ευτέρπη) muse of musical poetry
Erato (Ερατώ) muse of lyric poetry
Melpomene (Μελπομένη) muse of tragedy
Polyhymnia (Πολυμνία) or (Πολύμνια) muse of sacred poetry
Terpsichore (Τερψιχόρη) muse of dance and choral poetry
Thalia (Θάλεια) muse of comedy and bucolic poetry
Urania (Ουρανία) muse of astronomy
Muses worshiped at Delphi, daughters of Apollo
Cephisso (Κεφισσώ) also Hypate (Υπάτη), "the upper (chord of the lyre)"
Apollonis (Απολλωνίς) also Mese (Μέση), "the middle (chord of the lyre)"
Borysthenis (Βορυσθενίς) also Nete (Νήτη), "the lowest (chord of the lyre)"
Muses worshiped at Sicyon
Polymatheia (Πολυμάθεια) muse of knowledge

Other deities

  • Acratopotes (Ἀκρατοπότης), god of unmixed wine
  • Agdistis (Ἄγδιστις), Phrygian hermaphroditic deity
  • Alexiares and Anicetus (Αλεξιαρης and Ανικητος), twin sons of Heracles who presided over the defence of fortified towns and citadels
  • Aphroditus (Ἀφρόδιτος), Cyprian hermaphroditic Aphrodite
  • Astraea (Αστραία), virgin goddess of justice
  • Auxesia (Αὐξησία) and Damia (Δαμία), two local fertility goddesses
  • Bendis (Βένδις), Thracian goddess of the hunt and the Moon. Her worship seems to have been introduced into Attica around 430 BC.[14]
  • Ceraon (Κεραων), demi-god of the meal, specifically the mixing of wine
  • Chrysus (Χρύσος), spirit of gold
  • Circe (Κίρκη), goddess-witch of Aeaea
  • Daemones Ceramici (Δαίμονες Κεραμικοί), five malevolent spirits who plagued the craftsman potter
    • Syntribos (Σύντριβος), the shatterer
    • Smaragos (Σμάραγος), the smasher
    • Asbetos (Ασβετος), the charrer
    • Sabaktes (Σαβάκτης), the destroyer
    • Omodamos (Ωμόδαμος), crudebake
  • Deipneus (Δειπνεύς), demi-god of the preparation of meals, specifically the making of bread
  • Eileithyia (Εἰλείθυια), goddess of childbirth
  • Enodia, Thessalian goddess of crossroads
  • Enyalius (Ενυάλιος), minor god of war
  • Enyo (Ἐνυώ), goddess of destructive war
  • Epidotes (Ἐπιδώτης), a divinity who was worshipped at Lacedaemon[15]
  • Glycon (Γλύκων), a snake god
  • Harpocrates (Ἁρποκράτης), god of silence
  • Hebe (Ήβη), goddess of youth and cup-bearer to the Olympians
  • Hermaphroditus (Ἑρμάφρόδιτός), god of hermaphrodites and effeminate men
  • Hymenaios (Ὑμέναιος), god of marriage and marriage feasts
  • Ichnaea (Ἰχναία), goddess of tracking
  • Iynx (Ιύνξ), goddess of the love charm
  • Matton (Μάττων), demi-god of the meal, specifically the kneading of dough
  • Mene (Μήνη), goddess of the months
  • Palaestra (Παλαίστρα), goddess of wrestling
  • Pasiphaë (Πασιφάη), witch-goddess and queen of Crete
  • Rhapso (Ραψώ), minor goddess or nymph whose name apparently refers to sewing
  • Sosipolis (god), a native god at Elis, son of the goddess Eileithyia
  • Tritopatores, wind and marriage ancestor-gods

Deified mortals

 
Athena pouring a drink for Heracles, who wears the skin of the Nemean Lion
  • Achilles (Ἀχιλλεύς), hero of the Trojan War
  • Aiakos (Αἰακός), a king of Aegina, appointed as a Judge of the Dead in the Underworld after his death
  • Aeolus (Αἴολος), a king of Thessaly, made the immortal king of all the winds by Zeus
  • Alabandus (Ἀλάβανδος), he was the founder of the town of Alabanda
  • Amphiaraus (Ἀμφιάραος), a hero of the war of the Seven against Thebes who became an oracular spirit of the Underworld after his death
  • Ariadne (Αριάδνη), a Cretan princess who became the immortal wife of Dionysus
  • Aristaeus (Ἀρισταῖος), a Thessalian hero, his inventions saw him immortalised as the god of bee-keeping, cheese-making, herding, olive-growing, and hunting
  • Asclepius (Ἀσκληπιός), a Thessalian physician who was struck down by Zeus for reviving the dead, to be later recovered by his father Apollo
  • Attis (Ἄττις), a consort of Cybele, granted immortality as one of her attendants
  • Bolina (Βολίνα), a mortal woman transformed into an immortal nymph by Apollo
  • The Dioscuri (Διόσκουροι), divine twins
  • Endymion (Ἐνδυμίων), lover of Selene, granted eternal sleep so as never to age or die
  • Ganymede (Γανυμήδης), a handsome Trojan prince, abducted by Zeus and made cup-bearer of the gods
  • Glaucus (Γλαῦκος), the fisherman's sea god, made immortal after eating a magical herb
  • Hemithea (Ἡμιθέα) and Parthenos (Παρθένος), princesses of the Island of Naxos who leapt into the sea to escape their father's wrath; Apollo transformed them into demi-goddesses
  • Heracles (Ἡρακλῆς), ascended hero
  • Ino (Ἰνώ), a Theban princess who became the sea goddess Leucothea
  • Lampsace (Λαμψάκη), a semi-historical Bebrycian princess honored as goddess for her assistance to the Greeks
  • The Leucippides (Λευκιππίδες), wives of the Dioscuri
    • Phoebe (Φοίβη), wife of Pollux
    • Hilaera (Ἱλάειρα), wife of Castor
  • Minos (Μίνως), a king of Crete, appointed as a Judge of the Dead in the Underworld after his death
  • Orithyia (Ὠρείθυια), an Athenian princess abducted by Boreas and made the goddess of cold, gusty mountain winds
  • Palaemon (Παλαίμων), a Theban prince, made into a sea god along with his mother, Ino
  • Philoctetes (Ancient Greek: Φιλοκτήτης), was the son of King Poeas of Meliboea in Thessaly, a famous archer, fought at the Trojan War
  • Phylonoe (Φυλονόη), daughter of Tyndareus and Leda, made immortal by Artemis
  • Psyche (Ψυχή), goddess of the soul
  • Semele (Σεμελη), mortal mother of Dionysus, who later was made the goddess Thyone (Θυωνη)
  • Tenes (Τέννης), was a hero of the island of Tenedos

Mortals

Heroes

  • Abderus, aided Heracles during his eighth labour and was killed by the Mares of Diomedes
  • Achilles (Αχιλλεύς or Αχιλλέας), hero of the Trojan War and a central character in Homer's Iliad
  • Aeneas (Αινείας), a hero of the Trojan War and progenitor of the Roman people
  • Ajax the Great (Αίας ο Μέγας), a hero of the Trojan War and king of Salamis
  • Ajax the Lesser (Αίας ο Μικρός), a hero of the Trojan War and leader of the Locrian army
  • Amphitryon (Αμφιτρύων), Theban general who rescued Thebes from the Teumessian fox; his wife was Alcmene, mother of Heracles
  • Antilochus (Ἀντίλοχος), Son of Nestor sacrificed himself to save his father in the Trojan War along with other deeds of valor
  • Bellerophon (Βελλεροφῶν), hero who slew the Chimera
  • Bouzyges, a hero credited with inventing agricultural practices such as yoking oxen to a plough
  • Castor, the mortal Dioscuri twin; after Castor's death, his immortal brother Pollux shared his divinity with him in order that they might remain together
  • Chrysippus (Χρύσιππος), a divine hero of Elis
  • Daedalus (Δαίδαλος), creator of the labyrinth and great inventor, until King Minos trapped him in his own creation
  • Diomedes (Διομήδης), a king of Argos and hero of the Trojan War
  • Eleusis (Ἐλευσῖνι or Ἐλευσῖνα), eponymous hero of the town of Eleusis
  • Eunostus, a Boeotian hero
  • Ganymede (Γανυμήδης), Trojan hero and lover of Zeus, who was given immortality and appointed cup-bearer to the gods
  • Hector (Ἕκτωρ), hero of the Trojan War and champion of the Trojan people
  • Icarus (Ἴκαρος), the son of the master craftsman Daedalus
  • Iolaus (Ἰόλαος), nephew of Heracles who aided his uncle in one of his Labors
  • Jason (Ἰάσων), leader of the Argonauts
  • Meleager (Μελέαγρος), a hero who sailed with the Argonauts and killed the Calydonian boar
  • Odysseus (Ὀδυσσεύς or Ὀδυσεύς), a hero and king of Ithaca whose adventures are the subject of Homer's Odyssey; he also played a key role during the Trojan War
  • Orpheus (Ὀρφεύς), a legendary musician and poet who attempted to retrieve his dead wife from the Underworld
  • Pandion (Πανδίων), the eponymous hero of the Attic tribe Pandionis, usually assumed to be one of the legendary Athenian kings Pandion I or Pandion II
  • Perseus (Περσεύς), son of Zeus and the founder-king of Mycenae and slayer of the Gorgon Medusa
  • Theseus (Θησεύς), son of Poseidon and a king of Athens and slayer of the Minotaur

Notable women

  • Alcestis (Άλκηστις), daughter of Pelias and wife of Admetus, who was known for her devotion to her husband
  • Amymone, the one daughter of Danaus who refused to murder her husband, thus escaping her sisters' punishment
  • Andromache (Ανδρομάχη), wife of Hector
  • Andromeda (Ανδρομέδα), wife of Perseus, who was placed among the constellations after her death
  • Antigone (Αντιγόνη), daughter of Oedipus and Jocasta
  • Apemosyne (Ἀπημοσύνη), a Cretan princess who ran faster than Hermes
  • Arachne (Αράχνη), a skilled weaver, transformed by Athena into a spider for her blasphemy
  • Ariadne (Αριάδνη), daughter of Minos, king of Crete, who aided Theseus in overcoming the Minotaur and became the wife of Dionysus
  • Atalanta (Αταλάντη), fleet-footed heroine who participated in the Calydonian boar hunt and the quest for the Golden Fleece
  • Briseis, a princess of Lyrnessus, taken and given to Achilles as a war prize
  • Caeneus, formerly Caenis, a woman who was transformed into a man and became a mighty warrior
  • Cassandra, a princess of Troy cursed to see the future but never to be believed
  • Cassiopeia (Κασσιόπεια), queen of Æthiopia and mother of Andromeda
  • Clytemnestra, sister of Helen and unfaithful wife of Agamemnon
  • Danaë, the mother of Perseus by Zeus
  • Deianeira, the third wife and unwitting killer of Heracles
  • Electra, daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, she aided her brother Orestes in plotting revenge against their mother for the murder of their father
  • Europa, a Phoenician woman, abducted by Zeus
  • Hecuba (Ἑκάβη), wife of Priam, king of Troy, and mother of nineteen of his children
  • Helen, daughter of Zeus and Leda, whose abduction brought about the Trojan War
  • Hermione (Ἑρμιόνη), daughter of Menelaus and Helen; wife of Neoptolemus, and later Orestes
  • Iphigenia, daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra; Agamemnon sacrificed her to Artemis in order to appease the goddess
  • Ismene, sister of Antigone
  • Jocasta, mother and wife of Oedipus
  • Medea, a sorceress and wife of Jason, who killed her own children to punish Jason for his infidelity
  • Medusa, a mortal woman transformed into a hideous gorgon by Athena
  • Niobe, a daughter of Tantalus who declared herself to be superior to Leto, causing Artemis and Apollo to kill her fourteen children
  • Pandora, the first woman
  • Penelope, loyal wife of Odysseus
  • Phaedra, daughter of Minos and wife of Theseus
  • Polyxena, the youngest daughter of Priam, sacrificed to the ghost of Achilles
  • Semele, mortal mother of Dionysus
  • Thrace, the daughter of Oceanus and Parthenope, and sister of Europa

Kings

Seers/oracles

  • Amphilochus (Ἀμφίλοχος), a seer and brother of Alcmaeon who died in the war of the Seven against Thebes
  • Anius, son of Apollo who prophesied that the Trojan War would be won in its tenth year
  • Asbolus, a seer Centaur
  • Bakis
  • Branchus, a seer and son of Apollo
  • Calchas, an Argive seer who aided the Greeks during the Trojan War
  • Carnus, an Acarnanian seer and lover of Apollo
  • Carya, a seer and lover of Dionysus
  • Cassandra, a princess of Troy cursed to see the future but never to be believed
  • Ennomus, a Mysian seer, killed by Achilles during the Trojan War
  • Halitherses, an Ithacan seer who warned Penelope's suitors of Odysseus' return
  • Helenus, seer and twin brother of Cassandra, who later became king of Epirus
  • Iamus, a son of Apollo possessing the gift of prophecy, he founded the Iamidai
  • Idmon, a seer who sailed with the Argonauts
  • Manto, seer and daughter of Tiresias
  • Melampus, a legendary soothsayer and healer, and king of Argos
  • Mopsus, the name of two legendary seers
  • Polyeidos, a Corinthian seer who saved the life of Glaucus
  • Pythia, the oracle of Delphi
  • Telemus, a seer who foresaw that the Cyclops Polyphemus would be blinded by Odysseus
  • Theoclymenus, an Argive seer
  • Tiresias, blind prophet of Thebes

Amazons

  • Aegea, a queen of the Amazons
  • Aella (Ἄελλα), an Amazon who was killed by Heracles
  • Alcibie (Ἀλκιβίη), an Amazonian warrior, killed by Diomedes at Troy
  • Antandre (Ἀντάνδρη), an Amazonian warrior, killed by Achilles at Troy
  • Antiope (Ἀντιόπη), a daughter of Ares and sister of Hippolyta
  • Areto (Ἀρετώ), an Amazon
  • Asteria (Ἀστερία), an Amazon who was killed by Heracles
  • Bremusa (Βρέμουσα), an Amazonian warrior, killed by Idomeneus at Troy
  • Celaeno (Κελαινώ), an Amazonian warrior, killed by Heracles
  • Eurypyle (Εὐρυπύλη), an Amazon leader who invaded Ninus and Babylonia
  • Hippolyta (Ἱππολύτη), a queen of Amazons and daughter of Ares
  • Hippothoe (Ἱπποθόη), an Amazonian warrior, killed by Achilles at Troy
  • Iphito (Ἰφιτώ), an Amazon who served under Hippolyta
  • Lampedo (Λαμπεδώ), an Amazon queen who ruled with her sister Marpesia
  • Marpesia (Μαρπεσία), an Amazon queen who ruled with her sister Lampedo
  • Melanippe (Μελανίππη), a daughter of Ares and sister of Hippolyta and Antiope
  • Molpadia (Μολπαδία), an Amazon who killed Antiope
  • Myrina (Μύρινα), a queen of the Amazons
  • Orithyia (Ὠρείθυια), an Amazon queen
  • Otrera (Ὀτρήρα), an Amazon queen, consort of Ares and mother of Hippolyta
  • Pantariste (Πανταρίστη), an Amazon who fought with Hippolyta against Heracles
  • Penthesilea (Πενθεσίλεια), an Amazon queen who fought in the Trojan War on the side of Troy
  • Thalestris (Θάληστρις), a queen of the Amazons
 
Achilles and Penthesileia (Lucanian red-figure bell-krater, late 5th century BC)

Inmates of Tartarus

  • The Danaides, forty-nine daughters of Danaus who murdered their husbands and were condemned to an eternity of carrying water in leaky jugs
  • Ixion, a king of the Lapiths who attempted to rape Hera and was bound to a flaming wheel in Tartarus
  • Sisyphus, a king of Thessaly who attempted to cheat death and was sentenced to an eternity of rolling a boulder up a hill, only to watch it roll back down
  • Tantalus, a king of Anatolia who butchered his son Pelops and served him as a meal to the gods; he was punished with the torment of starvation, food and drink eternally dangling just out of reach

Minor figures

See also

References

  1. ^ March, Jennifer (2014). Dictionary of classical mythology. "Aphrodite". ISBN 9781782976356.
  2. ^ March, Jennifer (2014). Dictionary of classical mythology. "Apollo". ISBN 9781782976356.
  3. ^ March, Jennifer (2014). Dictionary of classical mythology. "Ares". ISBN 9781782976356.
  4. ^ March, Jennifer (2014). Dictionary of classical mythology. "Artemis". ISBN 9781782976356.
  5. ^ March, Jennifer (2014). Dictionary of classical mythology. "Athena". ISBN 9781782976356.
  6. ^ March, Jennifer (2014). Dictionary of classical mythology. "Demeter". ISBN 9781782976356.
  7. ^ March, Jennifer (2014). Dictionary of classical mythology. "Dionysus". ISBN 9781782976356.
  8. ^ March, Jennifer (2014). Dictionary of classical mythology. "Hades". ISBN 9781782976356.
  9. ^ "12 Greek Gods and Goddesses". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on Jan 26, 2024.
  10. ^ Kereny, p. 92: "There is no story of Hestia's ever having taken a husband or ever having been removed from her fixed abode."
  11. ^ Beazley Archive 200059, LIMC Gigantes 342 2015-12-27 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ Guirand, Felix, ed. (16 December 1987). New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology. Crescent Books. ISBN 978-0-517-00404-3.
  13. ^ Oppian, Halieutica 1. 383 ff (trans. Mair) (Greek poet C3rd A.D.) : "The Delphines (Dolphins) both rejoice in the echoing shores and dwell in the deep seas, and there is no sea without Delphines (Dophins); for Poseidon loves them exceedingly, inasmuch as when he was seeking Amphitrite the dark-eyed daughter of Nereus who fled from his embraces, Delphines (the Dolphins) marked her hiding in the halls of Okeanos (Oceanus) and told Poseidon; and the god of the dark hair straightway carried off the maiden and overcame her against her will. Her he made his bride, queen of the sea, and for their tidings he commended his kindly attendants and bestowed on them exceeding honour for their portion."
  14. ^ A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), BENDIDEIA
  15. ^   Leonhard Schmitz (1870). "Epidotes". In Smith, William (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.

External links

  •   Media related to Characters in Greek mythology at Wikimedia Commons

list, greek, mythological, figures, following, list, gods, goddesses, many, other, divine, semi, divine, figures, from, ancient, greek, mythology, ancient, greek, religion, contents, immortals, major, gods, goddesses, greek, primordial, deities, titans, titane. The following is a list of gods goddesses and many other divine and semi divine figures from ancient Greek mythology and ancient Greek religion Contents 1 Immortals 1 1 Major gods and goddesses 1 2 Greek primordial deities 1 3 Titans and Titanesses 1 4 Gigantes 1 4 1 Other giants 1 5 Personified concepts 1 6 Chthonic deities 1 7 Sea deities 1 8 Sky deities 1 9 Rustic deities 1 10 Agricultural deities 1 11 Health deities 1 12 Sleep deities 1 13 Charities 1 14 Horae 1 15 Muses 1 16 Other deities 1 17 Deified mortals 2 Mortals 2 1 Heroes 2 2 Notable women 2 3 Kings 2 4 Seers oracles 2 5 Amazons 2 6 Inmates of Tartarus 2 7 Minor figures 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksImmortalsThe Greeks created images of their deities for many purposes A temple would house the statue of a god or goddess or multiple deities and might be decorated with relief scenes depicting myths Divine images were common on coins Drinking cups and other vessels were painted with scenes from Greek myths Major gods and goddesses Deity Description nbsp Aphrodite Ἀfrodith Aphrodite Goddess of beauty love desire and pleasure In Hesiod s Theogony 188 206 she was born from sea foam and the severed genitals of Uranus in Homer s Iliad 5 370 417 she is daughter of Zeus and Dione She was married to Hephaestus but bore him no children She had many lovers most notably Ares to whom she bore Harmonia Phobos and Deimos She was also a lover to Adonis and Anchises to whom she bore Aeneas She is usually depicted as a naked or semi nude beautiful woman Her symbols include the magical girdle myrtle roses and the scallop shell Her sacred animals include doves and sparrows Her Roman counterpart is Venus 1 nbsp Apollo Ἀpollwn Apollōn God of music arts knowledge healing plague prophecy poetry manly beauty and archery He is the son of Zeus and Leto and the twin brother of Artemis Both Apollo and Artemis use a bow and arrow Apollo is depicted as young beardless handsome and athletic In myth he can be cruel and destructive and his love affairs are rarely happy He is often accompanied by the Muses His most famous temple is in Delphi where he established his oracular shrine His signs and symbols include the laurel wreath bow and arrow and lyre His sacred animals include roe deer swans and pythons Some late Roman and Greek poetry and mythography identifies him as a sun god equivalent to Roman Sol and Greek Helios 2 nbsp Ares Ἄrhs Ares God of courage war bloodshed and violence The son of Zeus and Hera he was depicted as a beardless youth either nude with a helmet and spear or sword or as an armed warrior Homer portrays him as moody and unreliable and as being the most unpopular god on earth and Olympus Iliad 5 890 1 He generally represents the chaos of war in contrast to Athena a goddess of military strategy and skill Ares is known for cuckolding his brother Hephaestus conducting an affair with his wife Aphrodite His sacred animals include vultures venomous snakes dogs and boars His Roman counterpart Mars by contrast was regarded as the dignified ancestor of the Roman people 3 nbsp Artemis Ἄrtemis Artemis Virgin goddess of the hunt wilderness animals the Moon and young girls Both she and Apollo are archery gods She is the daughter of Zeus and Leto and twin sister of Apollo In art she is often depicted as a young woman dressed in a short knee length chiton and equipped with a silver hunting bow and a quiver of arrows Her attributes include hunting knives and spears animal pelts deer and other wild animals Her sacred animal is a deer Her Roman counterpart is Diana 4 nbsp Athena Ἀ8hnᾶ Athena Goddess of reason wisdom intelligence skill peace warfare battle strategy and handicrafts According to most traditions she was born from Zeus s forehead fully formed and armored after Zeus swallowed her mother Metis whole She is depicted as being crowned with a crested helm armed with shield and spear and wearing the aegis over a long dress Poets describe her as grey eyed or having especially bright keen eyes She is a special patron of heroes such as Odysseus She is the patron of the city Athens from which she takes her name and is attributed to various inventions in arts and literature Her symbol is the olive tree She is commonly shown as being accompanied by her sacred animal the owl Her Roman counterpart is Minerva 5 nbsp Demeter Dhmhthr Demḗter Goddess of grain agriculture harvest growth and nourishment Demeter whose Roman counterpart is Ceres is a daughter of Cronus and Rhea and was swallowed and then regurgitated by her father She is a sister of Zeus by whom she bore Persephone who is also known as Kore i e the girl One of the central myths associated with Demeter involves Hades abduction of Persephone and Demeter s lengthy search for her Demeter is one of the main deities of the Eleusinian Mysteries in which the rites seemed to center around Demeter s search for and reunion with her daughter which symbolized both the rebirth of crops in spring and the rebirth of the initiates after death She is depicted as a mature woman often crowned and holding sheafs of wheat and a torch 6 Her symbols are the cornucopia wheat ears the winged serpent and the lotus staff Her sacred animals include pigs and snakes nbsp Dionysus Dionysos Dionusos God of wine fruitfulness parties festivals madness chaos drunkenness vegetation ecstasy and the theater He is the twice born son of Zeus and Semele in that Zeus snatched him from his mother s womb and stitched Dionysus into his own thigh and carried him until he was ready to be born In art he is depicted as either an older bearded god particularly before 430 BC or an effeminate long haired youth particularly after 430 BC His attributes include the thyrsus a drinking cup the grape vine and a crown of ivy He is often in the company of his thiasos a group of attendants including satyrs maenads and his old tutor Silenus The consort of Dionysus was Ariadne It was once held that Dionysius was a later addition to the Greek pantheon but the discovery of Linear B tablets confirm his status as a deity from an early period Bacchus was another name for him in Greek and came into common usage among the Romans 7 His sacred animals include dolphins serpents tigers and donkeys nbsp Hades ᾍdhs Haides Pluto Ploytwn Ploutōn King of the underworld and the dead He is also a god of wealth His consort is Persephone His attributes are the drinking horn or cornucopia key sceptre and the three headed dog Cerberus His sacred animals include the screech owl He was one of three sons of Cronus and Rhea and thus sovereign over one of the three realms of the universe the underworld As a chthonic god however his place among the Olympians is ambiguous In the mystery religions and Athenian literature Plouton the Rich one was his preferred name because of the idea that all riches came from the earth The term Hades was used in this literature to refer to the underworld itself The Romans translated Plouton as Dis Pater the Rich Father or Pluto 8 nbsp Hephaestus Ἥfaistos Hḗphaistos God of fire metalworking and crafts Either the son of Zeus and Hera or Hera alone he is the smith of the gods and the husband of the adulterous Aphrodite He was usually depicted as a bearded crippled man with hammer tongs and anvil and sometimes riding a donkey His sacred animals include the donkey the guard dog and the crane Among his creations was the armor of Achilles Hephaestus used the fire of the forge as a creative force but his Roman counterpart Vulcan was feared for his destructive potential and associated with the volcanic power of the earth nbsp Hera Ἥra Hḗra Queen of the gods and goddess of women marriage childbirth heirs kings and empires She is the goddess of the sky the wife and sister of Zeus and the daughter of Cronus and Rhea She was usually depicted as a regal woman in the prime of her life wearing a diadem and veil and holding a lotus tipped staff Although she is the goddess of marriage Zeus s many infidelities drive her to jealousy and vengefulness Her sacred animals include the heifer the peacock and the cuckoo Her Roman counterpart is Juno nbsp Hermes Ἑrmῆs Hermes God of boundaries travel trade communication language writing cunning and thieves Hermes was also responsible for protecting livestock and presided over the spheres associated with fertility music luck and deception 9 The son of Zeus and Maia Hermes is the messenger of the gods and a psychopomp who leads the souls of the dead into the afterlife He was depicted either as a handsome and athletic beardless youth or as an older bearded man His attributes include the herald s wand or caduceus winged sandals and a traveler s cap His sacred animals include the tortoise His Roman counterpart is Mercury nbsp Hestia Ἑstia Hestia Virgin goddess of the hearth home domesticity and chastity She is a daughter of Rhea and Cronus and a sister of Zeus Not often identifiable in Greek art she appeared as a modestly veiled woman Her symbols are the hearth and kettle She plays little role in Greek myths and although she is omitted in some lists of the twelve Olympians in favour of Dionysus no ancient tale tells of her abdicating or giving her seat to Dionysus 10 Her Roman counterpart Vesta however was a major deity of the Roman state nbsp Persephone Persefonh Persephone Goddess of spring Queen of the Underworld wife of Hades and daughter of Demeter and Zeus Her symbols include the pomegranate grain torches wheat and the asphodelus After her abduction by Hades she was forced to split the year between the world of the dead with her husband and the world of the living with her mother She was worshipped in conjunction with Demeter especially in the Eleusinian Mysteries In ancient art she is usually depicted as a young woman usually in the scene of her abduction nbsp Poseidon Poseidῶn Poseidon God of the sea rivers floods droughts and earthquakes He is a son of Cronus and Rhea and the brother of Zeus and Hades He rules one of the three realms of the universe as king of the sea and the waters In art he is depicted as a mature man of sturdy build often with a luxuriant beard and holding a trident His sacred animals include the horse and the dolphin His wedding with Amphitrite is often presented as a triumphal procession In some stories he rapes Medusa leading to her transformation into a hideous Gorgon and also to the birth of their two children Pegasus and Chrysaor His Roman counterpart is Neptune nbsp Zeus Zeys Zeus King of the gods ruler of Mount Olympus and god of the sky weather thunder lightning law order and justice He is the youngest son of Cronus and Rhea He overthrew Cronus and gained the sovereignty of heaven for himself In art he is depicted as a regal mature man with a sturdy figure and dark beard His usual attributes are the royal scepter and the lightning bolt His sacred animals include the eagle and the bull His Roman counterpart is Jupiter also known as Jove Greek primordial deities List of Greek primordial deities Ancient Greek name English name DescriptionἈxlys Akhlus Achlys The goddess of poisons and the personification of misery and sadness Said to have existed before Chaos itself Aἰ8hr Aithḗr Aether The god of light and the upper atmosphere Aἰwn Aiōn Aion The god of eternity personifying cyclical and unbounded time Sometimes equated with Chronos Ἀnagkh Ananke Ananke The goddess of inevitability compulsion and necessity Xaos Khaos Chaos The personification of nothingness from which all of existence sprang Depicted as a void Initially genderless later on described as female Xronos Khronos Chronos The god of empirical time sometimes equated with Aion Not to be confused with the Titan Cronus Kronos the father of Zeus Ἔrebos Erebos Erebus The god of darkness and shadow as well as the void that existed between Earth and the Underworld Ἔrws Erōs Eros The god of love and attraction Gaῖa Gaia Gaia Personification of the Earth Mother Earth mother of the Titans Ἡmera Hemera Hemera The personification of the day Nῆsoi Nesoi The Nesoi The goddesses of islands Ny3 Nux Nyx The goddess and personification of the night Oὔrea Ourea The Ourea The gods of mountains Fanhs Phanes Phanes The god of procreation in the Orphic tradition Pontos Pontos Pontus The god of the sea father of the fish and other sea creatures Tartaros Tartaros Tartarus The god of the deepest darkest part of the underworld the Tartarean pit which is also referred to as Tartarus itself 8alassa Thalassa Thalassa Personification of the sea and consort of Pontus Oὐranos Ouranos Uranus The god of the heavens Father Sky father of the Titans Titans and Titanesses The Titan gods and goddesses are depicted in Greek art less commonly than the Olympians nbsp Eos Dawn and the hero Memnon 490 480 BC nbsp Helios in his four horse chariot 3rd century BC nbsp Themis from the Temple of Nemesis ca 300 BC nbsp Oceanus wearing crab claw horns with Tethys Roman era mosaic nbsp Athena watches Prometheus create humans 3rd century AD Titans and titanesses Greek name English name DescriptionThe Twelve TitansKoῖos Koios Coeus God of intellect and the axis of heaven around which the constellations revolved Kreῖos Kreios Crius The least individualized of the Twelve Titans he is the father of Astraeus Pallas and Perses Implied to be the god of constellations Kronos Kronos Cronus God of harvests and personification of destructive time The leader of the Titans who overthrew his father Uranus only to be overthrown in turn by his son Zeus Not to be confused with Chronos Ὑperiwn Hyperiōn Hyperion God of light With Theia he is the father of Helios the Sun Selene the Moon and Eos the Dawn Ἰapetos Iapetos Iapetus God of mortality and father of Prometheus Epimetheus Menoetius and Atlas Mnhmosynh Mnemosyne Mnemosyne Goddess of memory and remembrance and mother of the Nine Muses Ὠkeanos Ōceanos Oceanus God of the all encircling river Oceans around the Earth the fount of all the Earth s fresh water Foibh Phoibe Phoebe Goddess of the bright intellect and prophecy and consort of Coeus Ῥea Rhea Rhea Goddess of fertility motherhood and the mountain wilds She is the sister and consort of Cronus and mother of Zeus Hades Poseidon Hera Demeter and Hestia Th8ys Tethys Tethys Goddess of fresh water and the mother of the rivers springs streams fountains and clouds 8eia Theia Theia Goddess of sight and the shining light of the clear blue sky She is the consort of Hyperion and mother of Helios Selene and Eos 8emis Themis Themis Goddess of divine law and order Other TitansἌnytos Anytos Anytos God who reared the young goddess Despoina the daughter of Demeter Ἀsteria Asteria Asteria Goddess of nocturnal oracles and falling stars Ἀstraῖos Astraios Astraeus God of dusk stars and planets and the art of astrology Ἄtlas Atlas Atlas God forced to carry the heavens upon his shoulders by Zeus Presumed to be the god of endurance and astronomy Also Son of Iapetus Diwnh Diṓne Dione Goddess of the oracle of Dodona Ἥlios Hḗlios Helios God of the Sun and guardian of oaths Ἠws Eṓs Eos Goddess of the Dawn Ἐpimh8eys Epimetheus Epimetheus God of afterthought and the father of excuses Lhlantos Lelantos Lelantos God of moving unseen and The father of the nymph Aura by PeriboeaLhtw Letṓ Leto Goddess of motherhood and mother of the twin Olympians Artemis and Apollo Menoitios Menoitios Menoetius God of violent anger rash action and human mortality Killed by Zeus Mῆtis Me tis Metis Goddess of good counsel advice planning cunning craftiness and wisdom Mother of Athena Pallas Pallas Pallas God of warcraft He was killed by Athena during the Titanomachy Pershs Perses Perses Son of Crius and Eurybia Promh8eys Prometheus Prometheus God of forethought and crafty counsel and creator of mankind Selhnh Selḗne Selene Goddess of the Moon Sty3 Styx Styx Goddess of the Underworld river Styx and personification of hatred Sykeys Sykeus Syceus God whom Gaia turned into a fig tree to help him escape from Zeus Titὰn Titan Titan God of The calendar of the seasons brother of Helios usually just Helios himselfGigantes See also Giants Greek mythology Named Giants nbsp Athena left fighting Enceladus inscribed retrograde on an Attic red figure dish c 550 500 BC Louvre CA3662 11 The Gigantes were the offspring of Gaia Earth born from the blood that fell when Uranus Sky was castrated by their Titan son Cronus who fought the Gigantomachy their war with the Olympian gods for supremacy of the cosmos they include Alcyoneus Ἀlkyoneys a giant usually considered to be one of the Gigantes slain by Heracles Chthonius X8onios Damysus Damysos the fastest of all the Giants in Greek mythology Enceladus Ἐgkelados typically slain by Athena said to be buried under Mount Etna in Sicily Mimas Mimas according to Apollodorus he was killed by Hephaestus or by others Zeus or Ares Pallas Pallas according to Apollodorus he was flayed by Athena who used his skin as a shield Picolous Pikoloos who fled the battle but was slain by Helios Polybotes Polybwths typically slain by Poseidon Porphyrion Porfyriwn one of the leaders of the Gigantes typically slain by Zeus Thoas Thoon 8own he was killed by the Moirai Other giants Aloadae Ἀlῳadai twin giants who attempted to climb to Olympus by piling mountains on top of each other Otus or Otos Otos Ephialtes Efialths Anax Ana3 was a giant of the island of Lade near Miletos in Lydia Anatolia Antaeus Ἀntaῖos a Libyan giant who wrestled all visitors to the death until he was slain by Heracles Antiphates Ἀntifaths the king of the man eating giants known as Laestrygones which were encountered by Odysseus on his travels Argus Panoptes Ἄrgos Panopths a hundred eyed giant tasked with guarding Io Asterius Asterios a Lydian giant Cacus Kakos a fire breathing Latin giant slain by Heracles Cyclopes Hesiodic three one eyed giants who forged the lightning bolts of Zeus and Helmet and Bident of Hades Arges Ἄrghs Brontes Bronths Steropes Sterophs Cyclopes Homeric a tribe of one eyed man eating giants who herded flocks of sheep on the island of Sicily Polyphemus Polyfhmos a Cyclops who briefly captured Odysseus and his men only to be overcome and blinded by the hero The Gegenees Ghgenees a tribe of six armed giants fought by the Argonauts on Bear Mountain in Mysia Geryon Ghrywn a three bodied giant who dwelt on the sunset isle at the ends of the earth He was slain by Heracles when the hero arrived to fetch the giant s cattle as one of his twelve labours The Hekatoncheires Ἑkatogxeires or Centimanes Latin the Hundred Handed Ones giant gods of violent storms and hurricanes Three sons of Uranus and Gaia each with his own distinct characters 12 Briareus Briarews or Aigaion Aἰgaiwn The Vigorous Cottus Kottos The Furious Gyges Gyghs The Big Limbed The Laestrygonians Laistrygones a tribe of man eating giants encountered by Odysseus on his travels Orion Ὠriwn a giant huntsman whom Zeus placed among the stars as the constellation of Orion Talos Talws a giant forged from bronze by Hephaestus and given by Zeus to his lover Europa as her personal protector Tityos Tityos a giant slain by Apollo and Artemis when he attempted to violate their mother Leto Typhon Tyfῶn a monstrous immortal storm giant who attempted to launch an attack on Mount Olympus but was defeated by the Olympians and imprisoned in the pits of Tartarus Personified concepts Achlys Ἀxlys spirit of the death mist personification of sadness misery and poison Adephagia Ἀdhfagia spirit of satiety and gluttony Adikia Ἀdikia spirit of injustice and wrongdoing Aergia Ἀergia spirit of idleness laziness indolence and sloth Agathodaemon Ἀga8odaimwn spirit of the vineyards and grainfields ensuring good luck health and wisdom Agon Ἀgwn spirit of contest who possessed an altar at Olympia site of the Olympic Games Aidos Aἰdws spirit of modesty reverence and respect Aisa Aἴsa personification of lot and fate Alala Ἀlala spirit of the war cry Alastor Ἀlastwr spirit of blood feuds and vengeance Aletheia Ἀlh8eia spirit of truth truthfulness and sincerity The Algea Ἄlgea spirits of pain and suffering Achos Ἄxos trouble distress Ania Ἀnia ache anguish Lupe Lyph pain grief sadness Alke Ἀlkh spirit of prowess and courage one of the Machai Amechania Ἀmhxania spirit of helplessness and want of means The Amphilogiai Ἀmfilogiai spirits of disputes debate and contention Anaideia Ἀnaideia spirit of ruthlessness shamelessness and unforgivingness The Androktasiai Ἀndroktasiai spirits of battlefield slaughter Angelia Ἀggelia spirit of messages tidings and proclamations Apate Ἀpath spirit of deceit guile fraud and deception Apheleia Ἀfeleia spirit of simplicity The Arae Ἀrai spirits of curses Arete Ἀreth spirit of virtue excellence goodness and valour Ate Ἄth spirit of delusion infatuation blind folly recklessness and ruin Bia Bia Violence the personification of force and raw energy Caerus Kairos spirit of opportunity Corus Koros spirit of surfeit Deimos Deῖmos spirit of fear dread and terror Dikaiosyne Dikaiosynh spirit of justice and righteousness Dike Dikh spirit of justice fair judgement and the rights established by custom and law Dolos Dolos spirit of trickery cunning deception craftiness treachery and guile Dysnomia Dysnomia spirit of lawlessness and poor civil constitution Dyssebeia Dyssebeia spirit of impiety Eirene Eἰrhnh goddess of peace Eiresione Eiresiwnh personification of the olive branch Ekecheiria Ἐkexeiria spirit of truce armistice and the cessation of all hostilities honoured at the Olympic Games Eleos Ἔleos spirit of mercy pity and compassion Eleutheria Ἐley8eria personification of liberty Elpis Ἐlpis spirit of hope and expectation Epiphron Ἐpifrwn spirit of prudence shrewdness thoughtfulness carefulness and sagacity Eris Ἔris spirit of strife discord contention and rivalry The Erotes ἔrwtes Anteros Ἀnterws god of requited love Eros Ἔrws god of love and sexual intercourse Hedylogos Ἡdylogos god of sweet talk and flattery Hermaphroditus Ἑrmafroditos god of unions androgyny marriage sexuality and fertility Himeros Ἵmeros god of sexual desire Hymen Ὑmhn or Hymenaeus Ὑmenaios god of marriage ceremonies inspiring feasts and song Pothos Po8os god of sexual longing yearning and desire Eucleia Eὔkleia spirit of good repute and glory Eulabeia Eὐlabeia spirit of discretion caution and circumspection Eunomia Eὐnomia goddess of good order and lawful conduct Eupheme Eὐfhmh spirit of words of good omen acclamation praise applause and shouts of triumph Eupraxia Eὐpra3ia spirit of well being Eusebeia Eὐsebeia spirit of piety loyalty duty and filial respect Euthenia Eὐ8enia spirit of prosperity abundance and plenty Gelos Gelws spirit of laughter Geras Gῆras spirit of old age Harmonia Ἁrmonia goddess of harmony and concord Hedone Ἡdonh spirit of pleasure enjoyment and delight Heimarmene Eἵmarmenh personification of share destined by fate Hesychia spirit of quiet Homados Ὅmados spirit of the din of battle Homonoia Ὁmonoia spirit of concord unanimity and oneness of mind Horkos Ὅrkos spirit of oaths Horme Ὁrmh spirit of impulse or effort to do a thing eagerness setting oneself in motion and starting an action Hybris Ὕbris spirit of outrageous behaviour Hypnos Ὕpnos god of sleep The Hysminai Ὑsmῖnai spirits of fighting and combat Ioke Ἰwkh spirit of pursuit in battle Kairos kairos god of signifies a proper or opportune time for action Kakia Kakia spirit of vice and moral badness The Keres Kῆres spirit of violent or cruel death Koalemos Koalemos spirit of stupidity and foolishness Kratos Kratos spirit of strength might power and sovereign rule Kydoimos Kydoimos spirit of the din of battle confusion uproar and hubbub Lethe Lh8h spirit of forgetfulness and oblivion and of the river of the same name Limos Limos spirit of hunger and starvation The Litae Litai spirits of prayer Lyssa Lyssa spirit of rage fury and rabies in animals The Machai Maxai spirits of fighting and combat Mania Mania spirit or spirits of madness insanity and frenzy The Moirai or Fates Moirai Clotho Klw8w the spinner of the life thread Lachesis Laxesis the measurer of the life thread Atropos Atropos the severer of the life thread Momus Mῶmos spirit of mockery blame censure and stinging criticism Moros Moros spirit of doom The Neikea tὰ Neikh spirits of quarrels feuds and grievances Nemesis Nemesis goddess of revenge balance righteous indignation and retribution Nike Nikh goddess of victory Nomos Nomos spirit of law Oizys Ὀizys spirit of woe and misery The Oneiroi Ὄneiroi Dreams Palioxis Paliw3is spirit of backrush flight and retreat from battle Peitharchia Pei8arxia spirit of discipline Peitho Pei8w spirit of persuasion and seduction Penia Penia spirit of poverty and need Penthus Pen8os spirit of grief mourning and lamentation Pepromene Peprwmenh personification of the destined share similar to Heimarmene Pheme Fhmh spirit of rumour report and gossip Philophrosyne Filofrosynh spirit of friendliness kindness and welcome Philotes Filoths spirit of friendship affection and sexual intercourse Phobos Fobos spirit of panic fear flight and battlefield rout The Phonoi Fonoi spirits of murder killing and slaughter Phrike Frikh spirit of horror and trembling fear Phthonus F8onos spirit of envy and jealousy Pistis Pistis spirit of trust honesty and good faith Poine Poinh spirit of retribution vengeance recompense punishment and penalty for the crime of murder and manslaughter Polemos Polemos personification of war Ponos Ponos spirit of hard labour and toil Poros Poros spirit of expediency the means of accomplishing or providing contrivance and device Praxidike Pra3idikh spirit of exacting justice Proioxis Proiw3is spirit of onrush and battlefield pursuit Prophasis Profasis spirit of excuses and pleas Ptocheia Ptwxeia spirit of beggary Roma a female deity who personified the city of Rome Soter Swthr male spirit of safety preservation and deliverance from harm Soteria Swthria female personification of safety preservation and deliverance from harm Sophrosyne Swfrosynh spirit of moderation self control temperance restraint and discretion Tekhne Texnh personification of art craft and technical skill Thanatos 8anatos personification of death and mortality Thrasos 8rasos spirit of boldness Tyche Tyxh goddess of fortune chance providence and fate Zelos Zῆlos spirit of eager rivalry emulation envy jealousy and zeal Chthonic deities Amphiaraus Ἀmfiaraos a seer and one of the Seven against Thebes who became an oracular spirit of the Underworld after his death Angelos Ἄggelos a daughter of Zeus and Hera who became an underworld goddess Askalaphos Ἀskalafos the son of Acheron and Orphne who tended the Underworld orchards before being transformed into a screech owl by Demeter Charon Xarwn ferryman of Hades Cronus Kronos deposed king of the Titans after his release from Tartarus he was appointed king of the Island of the Blessed Erebos Ἔrebos the primeval god of darkness his mists encircled the underworld and filled the hollows of the earth The Erinyes Ἐrinyes the Furies goddesses of retribution known as The Kindly Ones Alecto Ἀlhktw the unceasing one Tisiphone Tisifonh avenger of murder Megaera Megaira the jealous one Hades Adhs God of underworld and all things beneath the earth Hecate Ἑkath goddess of magic witchcraft the night the Moon ghosts and necromancy Judges of the Dead Aiakos Aἰakos former mortal king of Aegina guardian of the keys of Hades and judge of the men of Europe Minos Minws former mortal king of Crete and judge of the final vote Rhadamanthys Ῥadaman8ys former mortal lawmaker and judge of the men of Asia Keuthonymos Key8onymos an Underworld spirit and father of Menoetes Lampades Lampades torch bearing Underworld nymphs Gorgyra Gorgyra Orphne Orfnh a Lampad nymph of Hades mother of Askalaphos Macaria Makaria daughter of Hades and goddess of blessed death not to be confused with the daughter of Heracles Melinoe Melinoh daughter of Persephone and Zeus who presided over the propitiations offered to the ghosts of the dead Menoetes Menoiths an Underworld spirit who herded the cattle of Hades Nyx Ny3 the primeval goddess of night Persephone Persefonh queen of the underworld wife of Hades and goddess of spring growth Rivers of the Underworld Acheron Axerwn the river of woe Alpheus Ἀlfeios the white river Eridanos Ἠridanos the river of amber Kokytos Kwkytos the river of wailing Lethe Lh8h the river of forgetfulness its counterpart was the waters of Mnemosyne Phlegethon Flege8wn the river of fire Styx Sty3 the river of hatred and oaths Tartarus Tartaros the primeval god of the dark stormy pit of Hades Thanatos 8anatos personification of death Zagreus Zagreys an underworld god possibly a son of Zeus and Persephone Sea deities Aegaeon Aigaiwn god of violent sea storms and ally of the Titans Amphitrite Amfitrith sea goddess and consort of Poseidon Benthesikyme Ben8esikymh daughter of Poseidon who resided in Ethiopia Brizo Brizw patron goddess of sailors who sent prophetic dreams Ceto Kῆtw goddess of the dangers of the ocean and of sea monsters Cymopoleia Kymopoleia a daughter of Poseidon married to the Giant Briareus Delphin Delfin dolphin god or daimone 13 Eidothea Eido8ea prophetic sea nymph and daughter of Proteus Glaucus Glaῦkos the fisherman s sea god and oracle Leucothea Leyko8ea a sea goddess who aided sailors in distress Nereids Nhrhides sea nymphs Arethusa Aretoysa a daughter of Nereus who was transformed into a fountain Dynamene Dynamenh associated with the might and power of great ocean swells Galene Galhnh goddess of calm seas Psamathe PSama8h mother of Phocus by Aeacus Thetis 8etis leader of the Nereids who presided over the spawning of marine life in the sea Nereus Nhreas the old man of the sea and the god of the sea s rich bounty of fish Nerites Neriths a sea spirit who was transformed into a shell fish by Aphrodite Oceanides Wkeanides sea nymphs and patronesses of bodies of fresh waterSome notable Oceanides include Asia Clymene wife of Iapetus Clymene mother of the demigod Phaethon Clytie who turned into a heliotropium when Helios left her Doris the wife of the sea god Nereus Idyia Idyia wife of the Colchian king Aeetes mother of Medea Leuce first wife of Hades became a white poplar tree Metis Zeus first wife whom Zeus impregnated with Athena and then swallowed Styx goddess of the river Styx Theia mother of the Cercopes For a more complete list see List of Oceanids Oceanus Ὠkeanos god of the Earth encircling river Oceanus the ocean the fountain of all the Earth s freshwater Potamoi Potamoi Gods of rivers and streams of the earthSome notable river gods include Achelous the god of the Achelous River the largest river in Greece who gave his daughter in marriage to Alcmaeon Alpheus who fell in love with the nymph Arethusa Inachus the first king of Argos and progenitor of Argive line through his son grandson Argus Nilus Egyptian river god and the father of numerous daughters that mingled with the descendants of Inachus Peneus river god of Thessaly flowing from the foot of Pindus father of Daphne and Stilbe Scamander who fought on the side of the Trojans during the Trojan War Palaemon Palaimwn a young sea god who aided sailors in distress Phorcys Forkys god of the hidden dangers of the deep Pontus Pontos primordial god of the sea father of the fish and other sea creatures son of Gaia alone Proteus Prwteys a shape shifting prophetic old sea god and the herdsman of Poseidon s seals Poseidon Poseidῶn king of the sea and lord of the sea gods also god of rivers flood and drought earthquakes and horses Sangarius Saggarios a river god The Telchines Telxines sea spirits native to the island of Rhodes the gods killed them when they turned to evil magic They built the Trident of Poseidon Actaeus Aktaios Argyron Argyrwn Atabyrius Atabyrios Chalcon Xalkwn Chryson Xryswn Damon Damwn or Demonax Dhmwna3 Damnameneus Damnameneys Dexithea De3i8ea mother of Euxanthios by Minos Lycos Lykos or Lyktos Lyktos Lysagora Lysagora Makelo Makelw Megalesius Megalhsios Mylas Mylas Nikon Nikwn Ormenos Ormenos Simon Simwn Skelmis Skelmis Tethys Th8ys goddess of the sources of fresh water and the mother of the rivers springs streams fountains and clouds Thalassa 8alassa primeval goddess of the sea and consort of Pontos Thaumas 8aῦmas god of the wonders of the sea Thoosa 8oosa goddess of swift currents Triteia Triteia daughter of Triton and companion of Ares Triton Tritwn fish tailed son and herald of Poseidon Tritones Tritwnes fish tailed spirits in Poseidon s retinue nbsp Poseidon and Amphitrite framed by erotes and riding in a chariot drawn by hippocamps below them are fishermen at work with nymphs and creatures of the sea in the waters color enhanced Roman era mosaic Sky deities Aeolus Aiolos Aiolos god of the winds Aether Ai8hr primeval god of the upper air Alectrona Alektrona solar goddess of the morning or waking up Anemoi Anemoi gods of the winds Aparctias Aparktias another name for the north wind not identified with Boreas Apheliotes Afhliwths god of the east wind when Eurus is considered southeast Argestes Argesths another name for the west or northwest wind Boreas Boreas god of the north wind and of winter Caicias Kaikias god of the northeast wind Circios Kirkios or Thraskias 8raskias god of the north northwest wind Euronotus Eyronotos god of the southeast wind Eurus Eyros god of the unlucky east or southeast wind Lips Lips god of the southwest wind Notus Notos god of the south wind Skeiron Skeirwn god of the northwest wind Zephyrus Zefyros god of the west wind Arke Arkh messenger of the Titans and sister of Iris Astraios Ἀstraῖos god of stars and planets and the art of astrology The Astra Planeti Astra Planetoi gods of the five wandering stars or planets Stilbon Stilbwn god of Hermaon the planet Mercury Eosphorus Hwsforos god of Venus the morning star Hesperus Ἓsperos god of Venus the evening star Pyroeis Pyroeis god of Areios the planet Mars Phaethon Fae8wn god of Dios the planet Jupiter Phaenon Fainwn god of Kronion the planet Saturn Astrape and Bronte goddesses of lightning and thunder respectively Aurai Aὖrai nymphs of the cooling breeze Aura Aὖra goddess of the breeze and the fresh cool air of early morning Chione Xionh goddess of snow and daughter of Boreas Eos Ἠws goddess of the Dawn Ersa Ἕrsh goddess of the morning dew Helios Ἥlios god of the Sun and guardian of oaths Hemera Hmera primeval goddess of the day Hera Hra queen of the gods The Hesperides Esperides nymphs of the evening and sunset Iris Iris goddess of the rainbow and divine messenger Men Mhn a lunar deity worshiped in the western interior parts of Anatolia Nephele Nefelh cloud nymph Nyx Ny3 goddess of night Pandia Pandia daughter of Selene and Zeus The Pleiades Pleiades goddesses of the star cluster Pleiades and were associated with rain Alcyone Alkyonh Sterope Steroph Celaeno Kelainw Electra Hlektra Maia Maia Merope Merwph Taygete Taygeth Sabazios Sabazios the nomadic horseman and sky father god of the Phrygians and Thracians Selene Selhnh goddess of the Moon Uranus Oyranos primeval god of the heavens Zeus Zeys King of Heaven and god of the sky clouds thunder and lightning Rustic deities Aetna Aἴtnh goddess of the volcanic Mount Etna in Sicily Agreus and Nomios two goat legged daimones of hunting amp hurding Amphictyonis Amfiktyonis goddess of wine and friendship between nations a local form of Demeter Anthousai An8oysai flower nymphs Aristaeus Ἀristaῖos god of bee keeping cheese making herding olive growing and hunting Attis Attis vegetation god and consort of Cybele Britomartis Britomartis Cretan goddess of hunting and nets used for fishing fowling and the hunting of small game Meliseus god of bees and bee keeping in Crete Cabeiri Kabeiroi gods or spirits who presided over the Mysteries of the islands of Lemnos and Samothrace Aitnaios Aitnaios Alkon Alkwn Eurymedon Eyrymedwn Onnes Onnhs Tonnes Tonnhs Chloris Xlwris minor flower nymph and wife of Zephyrus Comus Komos god of revelry merrymaking and festivity Corymbus Korymbos god of the fruit of the ivy The Curetes Koyretes guardians of infant Zeus on Mount Ida barely distinguished from the Dactyls and the Corybantes Cybele Kybelh a Phrygian mountain goddess The Dactyls Daktyloi fingers minor deities originally representing fingers of a hand Acmon Akmwn Damnameneus Damnameneys Delas Dhlas Epimedes Epimhdhs Heracles not to be confused with the hero Heracles Iasios Iasios Kelmis Kelmis Skythes Sky8hs companions of Cybele Titias Titias Cyllenus Kyllhnos Dionysus Dionysos god of wine drunken orgies and wild vegetation Dryades Dryades tree and forest nymphs Gaia Gaia primeval goddess of the earth Epimeliades Epimelides nymphs of highland pastures and protectors of sheep flocks Hamadryades Amadryades oak tree dryades Hecaterus Hekateros minor god of the hekateris a rustic dance of quickly moving hands and perhaps of the skill of hands in general Hermes Ermhs god of herds and flocks of roads and boundary stones and the god of thieves Korybantes Korybantes the crested dancers who worshipped Cybele Damneus Damneys the one who tames Idaios Idaios of Mount Ida Kyrbas Kyrbas whose name is probably a variant of Korybas singular for Korybantes Okythoos Wky8oos the one running swiftly Prymneus Prymneys of lower areas Pyrrhichos Pyrῥixos god of the rustic dance Ma a local goddess at Comana in Cappadocia Maenades mainades crazed nymphs in the retinue of Dionysus Methe Me8h nymph of drunkenness Meliae Meliai nymphs of honey and the ash tree Naiades Naiades fresh water nymphs Daphne Dafnh Metope Metwph Minthe Min8h The Nymphai Hyperboreioi Nymfai Yperboreioi who presided over aspects of archery Hekaerge Ekaergh represented distancing Loxo Lo3w represented trajectory Oupis Oypis represented aim Oreades Ὀreades mountain nymphs Adrasteia Adrasteia a nursemaid of the infant Zeus Cyllene the mountain nymph who nursed the infant Hermes Echo Hxw a nymph cursed never to speak except to repeat the words of others The Ourea Oyros primeval gods of mountains The Palici Palikoi a pair of rustic gods who presided over the geysers and thermal springs in Sicily Pan Pan god of shepherds pastures and fertility Pan Sybarios Pan Sybarios god of Woods and vales Phaunos god of forests not identified with Faunus Potamoi Potamoi river gods Achelous Axeloys Acis Akis Alpheus Alfeios Asopus Aswpos Cladeus Kladeos Eurotas Eyrwtas Nilus Neilos Peneus Phneios Scamander Skamandros For a more complete list see Potamoi List of potamoi dd Priapus Priapos god of garden fertility Satyrs Satyroi Satyress rustic fertility spirits Krotos Krotos a great hunter and musician who kept the company of the Muses on Mount Helicon Silenus Seilhnos an old rustic god of the dance of the wine press Telete Teleth goddess of initiation into the Bacchic orgies Zagreus Zagreys in the Orphic mysteries the first incarnation of Dionysus Agricultural deities Adonis Adwnis a life death rebirth deity Aphaea Afaia minor goddess of agriculture and fertility Cyamites Kyamiths demi god of the bean Demeter Dhmhthr goddess of fertility agriculture grain and harvest Despoina Despoinh daughter of Poseidon and Demeter goddess of mysteries in Arcadia Dionysus Dionysos god of viticulture and wine Eunostus Eynostos goddess of the flour mill Opora goddess of autumn and wine Persephone Persefonh queen of the underworld wife of Hades and goddess of spring growth Philomelus Filomelos agricultural demi god inventor of the wagon and the plough Plutus Ploῦtos god of wealth including agricultural wealth son of Demeter Promylaia Promylaia a goddess of the flower mill Triptolemus Triptolemos god of farming and agriculture he brought agriculture to Greece Trokhilos Troxilos god of the mill stone Health deities Apollo Ἀpollwn god of archery music and dance truth and prophecy healing and diseases the Sun and light poetry and more Asclepius Asklhpios god of medicine Aceso Ἀkesw goddess of the healing of wounds and the curing of illnesses Aegle Aἴglh goddess of radiant good health Chiron Xeirwn god of healing up for debate if it is a god Darrhon Darrwn Macedonian god of health Epione Ἠpionh goddess of the soothing of pain Hygieia Ὑgeia goddess of cleanliness and good health Iaso Ἰasw goddess of cures remedies and modes of healing Paean Paian physician of the gods Panacea Panakeia goddess of healing Telesphorus Telesforos demi god of convalescence who brought to fulfillment recuperation from illness or injury Sleep deities Empusa Ἔmpoysa goddess of shape shifting Epiales Ἐfialths goddess of nightmares Hypnos Ὕpnos god of sleep Pasithea Pasi8ea goddess of relaxing meditation and hallucinations Oneiroi Ὀneirwn god of dreams Morpheus morfh god of dreaming Charities Charites Xarites goddesses of charm beauty nature human creativity and fertility Aglaea Aglaia goddess of beauty adornment splendor and glory Euphrosyne Eὐfrosynh goddess of good cheer joy mirth and merriment Thalia 8aleia goddess of festive celebrations and rich and luxurious banquets Hegemone Hgemonh mastery Antheia An8eia goddess of flowers and flowery wreaths Pasithea Pasi8ea goddess of rest and relaxation Cleta Klhta the glorious Phaenna Faenna the shining Eudaimonia Eydaimonia happiness Euthymia Ey8ymia good mood Calleis Kalleis beauty Paidia Paidia play amusement Pandaisia Pandaisia banquet for everyone Pannychis Pannyxis all night festivity Horae The Horae Wres The Hours the goddesses of natural order Eunomia Eynomia spirit of good order and springtime goddess of green pastures Dike Dikh spirit of justice may have represented springtime growth Eirene Eirhnh spirit of peace and goddess of the springtime The goddesses of springtime growth Thallo 8allw goddess of spring buds and shoots identified with Eirene Auxo Ay3w goddess of spring growth Karpo Karpw goddess of the fruits of the earth The goddesses of welfare Pherousa Feroysa the bringer Euporie Eyporih abundance Orthosie Or8osih prosperity The goddesses of the natural portions of time and the times of day Auge Aygh first light of the morning Anatole Anatolh or Anatolia Anatolia sunrise Mousika or Musica Moysikh the morning hour of music and study Gymnastika Gymnastica Gymnastikh or Gymnasia Gymnasia the morning hour of gymnastics exercise Nymphe Nymfh the morning hour of ablutions bathing washing Mesembria Meshmbria noon Sponde Spondh libations poured after lunch Elete prayer the first of the afternoon work hours Akte Acte Akth or Cypris Kypris eating and pleasure the second of the afternoon work hours Hesperis Esperis evening Dysis Dysis sunset Arktos Arktos night sky constellation The goddesses of seasons of the year Eiar Eiar spring Theros 8eros summer Pthinoporon F8inopwron autumn Cheimon Xeimwn winterMuses Muses Moysai goddesses of music song and dance and the source of inspiration to poets NameTitan MusesAoide Ἀoidh muse of songArche Arxh muse of originsMelete Meleth muse of meditation and practiceMneme Mnhmh muse of memoryThelxinoe 8el3inoh muse charmer of minds Olympian Muses daughters of Zeus and MnemosyneCalliope Kallioph muse of epic poetryClio Kleiw muse of historyEuterpe Eyterph muse of musical poetryErato Eratw muse of lyric poetryMelpomene Melpomenh muse of tragedyPolyhymnia Polymnia or Polymnia muse of sacred poetryTerpsichore Terpsixorh muse of dance and choral poetryThalia 8aleia muse of comedy and bucolic poetryUrania Oyrania muse of astronomyMuses worshiped at Delphi daughters of ApolloCephisso Kefissw also Hypate Ypath the upper chord of the lyre Apollonis Apollwnis also Mese Mesh the middle chord of the lyre Borysthenis Borys8enis also Nete Nhth the lowest chord of the lyre Muses worshiped at SicyonPolymatheia Polyma8eia muse of knowledgeOther deities Acratopotes Ἀkratopoths god of unmixed wine Agdistis Ἄgdistis Phrygian hermaphroditic deity Alexiares and Anicetus Ale3iarhs and Anikhtos twin sons of Heracles who presided over the defence of fortified towns and citadels Aphroditus Ἀfroditos Cyprian hermaphroditic Aphrodite Astraea Astraia virgin goddess of justice Auxesia Aὐ3hsia and Damia Damia two local fertility goddesses Bendis Bendis Thracian goddess of the hunt and the Moon Her worship seems to have been introduced into Attica around 430 BC 14 Ceraon Kerawn demi god of the meal specifically the mixing of wine Chrysus Xrysos spirit of gold Circe Kirkh goddess witch of Aeaea Daemones Ceramici Daimones Keramikoi five malevolent spirits who plagued the craftsman potter Syntribos Syntribos the shatterer Smaragos Smaragos the smasher Asbetos Asbetos the charrer Sabaktes Sabakths the destroyer Omodamos Wmodamos crudebake Deipneus Deipneys demi god of the preparation of meals specifically the making of bread Eileithyia Eἰlei8yia goddess of childbirth Enodia Thessalian goddess of crossroads Enyalius Enyalios minor god of war Enyo Ἐnyw goddess of destructive war Epidotes Ἐpidwths a divinity who was worshipped at Lacedaemon 15 Glycon Glykwn a snake god Harpocrates Ἁrpokraths god of silence Hebe Hbh goddess of youth and cup bearer to the Olympians Hermaphroditus Ἑrmafroditos god of hermaphrodites and effeminate men Hymenaios Ὑmenaios god of marriage and marriage feasts Ichnaea Ἰxnaia goddess of tracking Iynx Iyn3 goddess of the love charm Matton Mattwn demi god of the meal specifically the kneading of dough Mene Mhnh goddess of the months Palaestra Palaistra goddess of wrestling Pasiphae Pasifah witch goddess and queen of Crete Rhapso Rapsw minor goddess or nymph whose name apparently refers to sewing Sosipolis god a native god at Elis son of the goddess Eileithyia Tritopatores wind and marriage ancestor gods Deified mortals nbsp Athena pouring a drink for Heracles who wears the skin of the Nemean LionAchilles Ἀxilleys hero of the Trojan War Aiakos Aἰakos a king of Aegina appointed as a Judge of the Dead in the Underworld after his death Aeolus Aἴolos a king of Thessaly made the immortal king of all the winds by Zeus Alabandus Ἀlabandos he was the founder of the town of Alabanda Amphiaraus Ἀmfiaraos a hero of the war of the Seven against Thebes who became an oracular spirit of the Underworld after his death Ariadne Ariadnh a Cretan princess who became the immortal wife of Dionysus Aristaeus Ἀristaῖos a Thessalian hero his inventions saw him immortalised as the god of bee keeping cheese making herding olive growing and hunting Asclepius Ἀsklhpios a Thessalian physician who was struck down by Zeus for reviving the dead to be later recovered by his father Apollo Attis Ἄttis a consort of Cybele granted immortality as one of her attendants Bolina Bolina a mortal woman transformed into an immortal nymph by Apollo The Dioscuri Dioskoyroi divine twins Castor Kastwr Pollux Polydeykhs Endymion Ἐndymiwn lover of Selene granted eternal sleep so as never to age or die Ganymede Ganymhdhs a handsome Trojan prince abducted by Zeus and made cup bearer of the gods Glaucus Glaῦkos the fisherman s sea god made immortal after eating a magical herb Hemithea Ἡmi8ea and Parthenos Par8enos princesses of the Island of Naxos who leapt into the sea to escape their father s wrath Apollo transformed them into demi goddesses Heracles Ἡraklῆs ascended hero Ino Ἰnw a Theban princess who became the sea goddess Leucothea Lampsace Lampsakh a semi historical Bebrycian princess honored as goddess for her assistance to the Greeks The Leucippides Leykippides wives of the Dioscuri Phoebe Foibh wife of Pollux Hilaera Ἱlaeira wife of Castor Minos Minws a king of Crete appointed as a Judge of the Dead in the Underworld after his death Orithyia Ὠrei8yia an Athenian princess abducted by Boreas and made the goddess of cold gusty mountain winds Palaemon Palaimwn a Theban prince made into a sea god along with his mother Ino Philoctetes Ancient Greek Filokthths was the son of King Poeas of Meliboea in Thessaly a famous archer fought at the Trojan War Phylonoe Fylonoh daughter of Tyndareus and Leda made immortal by Artemis Psyche PSyxh goddess of the soul Semele Semelh mortal mother of Dionysus who later was made the goddess Thyone 8ywnh Tenes Tennhs was a hero of the island of TenedosMortalsHeroes Abderus aided Heracles during his eighth labour and was killed by the Mares of Diomedes Achilles Axilleys or Axilleas hero of the Trojan War and a central character in Homer s Iliad Aeneas Aineias a hero of the Trojan War and progenitor of the Roman people Ajax the Great Aias o Megas a hero of the Trojan War and king of Salamis Ajax the Lesser Aias o Mikros a hero of the Trojan War and leader of the Locrian army Amphitryon Amfitrywn Theban general who rescued Thebes from the Teumessian fox his wife was Alcmene mother of Heracles Antilochus Ἀntiloxos Son of Nestor sacrificed himself to save his father in the Trojan War along with other deeds of valor Bellerophon Bellerofῶn hero who slew the Chimera Bouzyges a hero credited with inventing agricultural practices such as yoking oxen to a plough Castor the mortal Dioscuri twin after Castor s death his immortal brother Pollux shared his divinity with him in order that they might remain together Chrysippus Xrysippos a divine hero of Elis Daedalus Daidalos creator of the labyrinth and great inventor until King Minos trapped him in his own creation Diomedes Diomhdhs a king of Argos and hero of the Trojan War Eleusis Ἐleysῖni or Ἐleysῖna eponymous hero of the town of Eleusis Eunostus a Boeotian hero Ganymede Ganymhdhs Trojan hero and lover of Zeus who was given immortality and appointed cup bearer to the gods Hector Ἕktwr hero of the Trojan War and champion of the Trojan people Icarus Ἴkaros the son of the master craftsman Daedalus Iolaus Ἰolaos nephew of Heracles who aided his uncle in one of his Labors Jason Ἰaswn leader of the Argonauts Meleager Meleagros a hero who sailed with the Argonauts and killed the Calydonian boar Odysseus Ὀdysseys or Ὀdyseys a hero and king of Ithaca whose adventures are the subject of Homer s Odyssey he also played a key role during the Trojan War Orpheus Ὀrfeys a legendary musician and poet who attempted to retrieve his dead wife from the Underworld Pandion Pandiwn the eponymous hero of the Attic tribe Pandionis usually assumed to be one of the legendary Athenian kings Pandion I or Pandion II Perseus Perseys son of Zeus and the founder king of Mycenae and slayer of the Gorgon Medusa Theseus 8hseys son of Poseidon and a king of Athens and slayer of the Minotaur Notable women Alcestis Alkhstis daughter of Pelias and wife of Admetus who was known for her devotion to her husband Amymone the one daughter of Danaus who refused to murder her husband thus escaping her sisters punishment Andromache Andromaxh wife of Hector Andromeda Andromeda wife of Perseus who was placed among the constellations after her death Antigone Antigonh daughter of Oedipus and Jocasta Apemosyne Ἀphmosynh a Cretan princess who ran faster than Hermes Arachne Araxnh a skilled weaver transformed by Athena into a spider for her blasphemy Ariadne Ariadnh daughter of Minos king of Crete who aided Theseus in overcoming the Minotaur and became the wife of Dionysus Atalanta Atalanth fleet footed heroine who participated in the Calydonian boar hunt and the quest for the Golden Fleece Briseis a princess of Lyrnessus taken and given to Achilles as a war prize Caeneus formerly Caenis a woman who was transformed into a man and became a mighty warrior Cassandra a princess of Troy cursed to see the future but never to be believed Cassiopeia Kassiopeia queen of AEthiopia and mother of Andromeda Clytemnestra sister of Helen and unfaithful wife of Agamemnon Danae the mother of Perseus by Zeus Deianeira the third wife and unwitting killer of Heracles Electra daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra she aided her brother Orestes in plotting revenge against their mother for the murder of their father Europa a Phoenician woman abducted by Zeus Hecuba Ἑkabh wife of Priam king of Troy and mother of nineteen of his children Helen daughter of Zeus and Leda whose abduction brought about the Trojan War Hermione Ἑrmionh daughter of Menelaus and Helen wife of Neoptolemus and later Orestes Iphigenia daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra Agamemnon sacrificed her to Artemis in order to appease the goddess Ismene sister of Antigone Jocasta mother and wife of Oedipus Medea a sorceress and wife of Jason who killed her own children to punish Jason for his infidelity Medusa a mortal woman transformed into a hideous gorgon by Athena Niobe a daughter of Tantalus who declared herself to be superior to Leto causing Artemis and Apollo to kill her fourteen children Pandora the first woman Penelope loyal wife of Odysseus Phaedra daughter of Minos and wife of Theseus Polyxena the youngest daughter of Priam sacrificed to the ghost of Achilles Semele mortal mother of Dionysus Thrace the daughter of Oceanus and Parthenope and sister of Europa Kings Abas a king of Argos Acastus a king of Iolcus who sailed with the Argonauts and participated in the Calydonian boar hunt Acrisius a king of Argos Actaeus first king of Attica Admetus Admhtos a king of Pherae who sailed with the Argonauts and participated in the Calydonian boar hunt Adrastus Adrastos a king of Argos and one of the Seven against Thebes Aeacus Aiakos a king of the island of Aegina in the Saronic Gulf after he died he became one of the three judges of the dead in the Underworld Aeetes a king of Colchis and father of Medea Aegeus Aigeys a king of Athens and father of Theseus Aegimius a king of Thessaly and progenitor of the Dorians Aegisthus Aigis8os lover of Clytemnestra with whom he plotted to murder Agamemnon and seized the kingship of Mycenae Aegyptus Aigyptos a king of Egypt Aeson father of Jason and rightful king of Iolcus whose throne was usurped by his half brother Pelias Aethlius first king of Elis Aetolus Aitwlos a king of Elis Agamemnon Ἀgamemnwn a king of Mycenae and commander of the Greek armies during the Trojan War Agasthenes a king of Elis Agenor Aghnwr a king of Phoenicia Alcinous Alkinoys or Ἀlkinoos a king of Phaeacia Alcmaeon a king of Argos and one of the Epigoni Aleus a king of Tegea Amphiaraus Ἀmfiaraos a seer and king of Argos who participated in the Calydonian boar hunt and the war of the Seven against Thebes Amphictyon Ἀmfiktywn a king of Athens Amphion and Zethus twin sons of Zeus and kings of Thebes who constructed the city s walls Amycus son of Poseidon and king of the Bebryces Anaxagoras Ἀna3agoras a king of Argos Anchises Agxishs a king of Dardania and father of Aeneas Arcesius a king of Ithaca and father of Laertes Argeus a king of Argos Argus a son of Zeus and king of Argos after Phoroneus Assaracus a king of Dardania Asterion a king of Crete Athamas Ἀ8amas a king of Orchomenus Atreus Ἀtreys a king of Mycenae and father of Agamemnon and Menelaus Augeas Aygeias a king of Elis Autesion a king of Thebes Bias a king of Argos Busiris a king of Egypt Cadmus founder king of Thebes Car a king of Megara Catreus a king of Crete prophesied to die at the hands of his own son Cecrops an autochthonous king of Athens Ceisus a king of Argos Celeus a king of Eleusis Cephalus a king of Phocis who accidentally killed his own wife Cepheus a king of Ethiopia Cepheus a king of Tegea and an Argonaut Charnabon a king of the Getae Cinyras a king of Cyprus and father of Adonis Codrus a king of Athens Corinthus founder king of Corinth Cranaus a king of Athens Creon a king of Thebes brother of Jocasta and uncle of Oedipus Creon a king of Corinth who was hospitable towards Jason and Medea Cres an early Cretan king Cresphontes a king of Messene and descendant of Heracles Cretheus founder king of Iolcus Criasus a king of Argos Cylarabes a king of Argos Cynortas a king of Sparta Cyzicus king of the Dolionians mistakenly killed by the Argonauts Danaus a king of Egypt and father of the Danaides Dardanus founder king of Dardania and son of Zeus and Electra Deiphontes a king of Argos Demophon of Athens a king of Athens Diomedes a king of Argos and hero of the Trojan War Echemus a king of Arcadia Echetus a king of Epirus Eetion a king of Cilician Thebe and father of Andromache Electryon a king of Tiryns and Mycenae son of Perseus and Andromeda Elephenor a king of the Abantes of Euboea Eleusis eponym and king of Eleusis Attica Epaphus a king of Egypt and founder of Memphis Egypt Epopeus a king of Sicyon Erechtheus a king of Athens Erginus a king of Minyean Orchomenus in Boeotia Erichthonius a king of Athens born of Hephaestus attempt to rape Athena Eteocles a king of Thebes and son of Oedipus he and his brother Polynices killed each other Eteocles son of Andreus a king of Orchomenus Eurotas a king of Sparta Eurystheus a king of Tiryns Euxantius a king of Ceos son of Minos and Dexithea Gelanor a king of Argos Haemus a king of Thrace Helenus seer and twin brother of Cassandra who later became king of Epirus Hippothoon a king of Eleusis Hyrieus a king of Boeotia Ilus founder king of Troy Ixion a king of the Lapiths who attempted to rape Hera and was bound to a flaming wheel in Tartarus Laertes father of Odysseus and king of the Cephallenians he sailed with the Argonauts and participated in the Calydonian boar hunt Laomedon a king of Troy and father of Priam Lycaon of Arcadia a deceitful Arcadian king who was transformed by Zeus into a wolf Lycurgus of Arcadia a king of Arcadia Lycurgus a king of Nemea and or a priest of Zeus at Nemea Makedon a king of Macedon Megareus of Onchestus a king of Onchestus in Boeotia Megareus of Thebes a king of Thebes Melampus a legendary soothsayer and healer and king of Argos Melanthus a king of Messenia Memnon a king of Ethiopia who fought on the side of Troy during the Trojan War Menelaus a king of Sparta and the husband of Helen Menestheus a king of Athens who fought on the side of the Greeks during the Trojan War Midas a king of Phrygia granted the power to turn anything to gold with a touch Minos a king of Crete after his death became one of the judges of the dead in the Underworld Myles a king of Laconia Nestor a king of Pylos who sailed with the Argonauts participated in the Calydonian boar hunt and fought with the Greek armies in the Trojan War Nycteus a king of Thebes Odysseus a hero and king of Ithaca whose adventures are the subject of Homer s Odyssey he also played a key role during the Trojan War Oebalus a king of Sparta Oedipus a king of Thebes fated to kill his father and marry his mother Oeneus a king of Calydon Oenomaus a king of Pisa Oenopion a king of Chios Ogygus a king of Thebes Oicles a king of Argos Oileus a king of Locris Orestes a king of Argos and a son of Clytemnestra and Agamemnon he killed his mother in revenge for her murder of his father Oxyntes a king of Athens Pandion I a king of Athens Pandion II a king of Athens Peleus king of the Myrmidons and father of Achilles he sailed with the Argonauts and participated in the Calydonian boar hunt Pelias a king of Iolcus and usurper of Aeson s rightful throne Pelops a king of Pisa and founder of the House of Atreus Pentheus a king of Thebes who banned the worship of Dionysus and was torn apart by Maenads Periphas legendary king of Attica who Zeus turned into an eagle Perseus Perseys founder king of Mycenae and slayer of the Gorgon Medusa Phineus a king of Thrace Phlegyas a king of the Lapiths Phoenix son of Agenor founder king of Phoenicia Phoroneus a king of Argos Phyleus a king of Elis Pirithoos king of the Lapiths and husband of Hippodamia at whose wedding the Battle of Lapiths and Centaurs occurred Pittheus a king of Troezen and grandfather of Theseus Polybus of Corinth a king of Corinth Polybus of Sicyon a king of Sicyon and son of Hermes Polybus of Thebes a king of Thebes Polynices a king of Thebes and son of Oedipus he and his brother Eteocles killed each other Priam king of Troy during the Trojan War Proetus a king of Argos and Tiryns Pylades a king of Phocis and friend of Orestes Rhadamanthys a king of Crete after his death he became a judge of the dead in the Underworld Rhesus a king of Thrace who sided with Troy in the Trojan War Sarpedon a king of Lycia and son of Zeus who fought on the side of the Greeks during the Trojan War Sisyphus a king of Thessaly who attempted to cheat death and was sentenced to an eternity of rolling a boulder up a hill only to watch it roll back down Sithon a king of Thrace Talaus a king of Argos who sailed with the Argonauts Tegyrios a king of Thrace Telamon a king of Salamis and father of Ajax he sailed with the Argonauts and participated in the Calydonian boar hunt Telephus a king of Mysia and son of Heracles Temenus a king of Argos and descendant of Heracles Teucer founder king of Salamis who fought alongside the Greeks in the Trojan War Teutamides a king of Larissa Teuthras a king of Mysia Thersander a king of Thebes and one of the Epigoni Theseus a king of Athens and slayer of the Minotaur Thyestes a king of Mycenae and brother of Atreus Tisamenus a king of Argos Mycenae and Sparta Tyndareus a king of Sparta Seers oracles Amphilochus Ἀmfiloxos a seer and brother of Alcmaeon who died in the war of the Seven against Thebes Anius son of Apollo who prophesied that the Trojan War would be won in its tenth year Asbolus a seer Centaur Bakis Branchus a seer and son of Apollo Calchas an Argive seer who aided the Greeks during the Trojan War Carnus an Acarnanian seer and lover of Apollo Carya a seer and lover of Dionysus Cassandra a princess of Troy cursed to see the future but never to be believed Ennomus a Mysian seer killed by Achilles during the Trojan War Halitherses an Ithacan seer who warned Penelope s suitors of Odysseus return Helenus seer and twin brother of Cassandra who later became king of Epirus Iamus a son of Apollo possessing the gift of prophecy he founded the Iamidai Idmon a seer who sailed with the Argonauts Manto seer and daughter of Tiresias Melampus a legendary soothsayer and healer and king of Argos Mopsus the name of two legendary seers Polyeidos a Corinthian seer who saved the life of Glaucus Pythia the oracle of Delphi Telemus a seer who foresaw that the Cyclops Polyphemus would be blinded by Odysseus Theoclymenus an Argive seer Tiresias blind prophet of Thebes Amazons Aegea a queen of the Amazons Aella Ἄella an Amazon who was killed by Heracles Alcibie Ἀlkibih an Amazonian warrior killed by Diomedes at Troy Antandre Ἀntandrh an Amazonian warrior killed by Achilles at Troy Antiope Ἀntioph a daughter of Ares and sister of Hippolyta Areto Ἀretw an Amazon Asteria Ἀsteria an Amazon who was killed by Heracles Bremusa Bremoysa an Amazonian warrior killed by Idomeneus at Troy Celaeno Kelainw an Amazonian warrior killed by Heracles Eurypyle Eὐrypylh an Amazon leader who invaded Ninus and Babylonia Hippolyta Ἱppolyth a queen of Amazons and daughter of Ares Hippothoe Ἱppo8oh an Amazonian warrior killed by Achilles at Troy Iphito Ἰfitw an Amazon who served under Hippolyta Lampedo Lampedw an Amazon queen who ruled with her sister Marpesia Marpesia Marpesia an Amazon queen who ruled with her sister Lampedo Melanippe Melanipph a daughter of Ares and sister of Hippolyta and Antiope Molpadia Molpadia an Amazon who killed Antiope Myrina Myrina a queen of the Amazons Orithyia Ὠrei8yia an Amazon queen Otrera Ὀtrhra an Amazon queen consort of Ares and mother of Hippolyta Pantariste Pantaristh an Amazon who fought with Hippolyta against Heracles Penthesilea Pen8esileia an Amazon queen who fought in the Trojan War on the side of Troy Thalestris 8alhstris a queen of the Amazons nbsp Achilles and Penthesileia Lucanian red figure bell krater late 5th century BC Inmates of Tartarus The Danaides forty nine daughters of Danaus who murdered their husbands and were condemned to an eternity of carrying water in leaky jugs Ixion a king of the Lapiths who attempted to rape Hera and was bound to a flaming wheel in Tartarus Sisyphus a king of Thessaly who attempted to cheat death and was sentenced to an eternity of rolling a boulder up a hill only to watch it roll back down Tantalus a king of Anatolia who butchered his son Pelops and served him as a meal to the gods he was punished with the torment of starvation food and drink eternally dangling just out of reachMinor figures Main article List of minor Greek mythological figuresSee also nbsp Ancient Greece portal nbsp Religion portalClassical mythology Family tree of the Greek gods List of Trojan War characters Lists of deities List of Roman deities List of Mycenaean deities Lists of legendary creatures List of Greek mythological creaturesReferences March Jennifer 2014 Dictionary of classical mythology Aphrodite ISBN 9781782976356 March Jennifer 2014 Dictionary of classical mythology Apollo ISBN 9781782976356 March Jennifer 2014 Dictionary of classical mythology Ares ISBN 9781782976356 March Jennifer 2014 Dictionary of classical mythology Artemis ISBN 9781782976356 March Jennifer 2014 Dictionary of classical mythology Athena ISBN 9781782976356 March Jennifer 2014 Dictionary of classical mythology Demeter ISBN 9781782976356 March Jennifer 2014 Dictionary of classical mythology Dionysus ISBN 9781782976356 March Jennifer 2014 Dictionary of classical mythology Hades ISBN 9781782976356 12 Greek Gods and Goddesses Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on Jan 26 2024 Kereny p 92 There is no story of Hestia s ever having taken a husband or ever having been removed from her fixed abode Beazley Archive 200059 LIMC Gigantes 342 Archived 2015 12 27 at the Wayback Machine Guirand Felix ed 16 December 1987 New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology Crescent Books ISBN 978 0 517 00404 3 Oppian Halieutica 1 383 ff trans Mair Greek poet C3rd A D The Delphines Dolphins both rejoice in the echoing shores and dwell in the deep seas and there is no sea without Delphines Dophins for Poseidon loves them exceedingly inasmuch as when he was seeking Amphitrite the dark eyed daughter of Nereus who fled from his embraces Delphines the Dolphins marked her hiding in the halls of Okeanos Oceanus and told Poseidon and the god of the dark hair straightway carried off the maiden and overcame her against her will Her he made his bride queen of the sea and for their tidings he commended his kindly attendants and bestowed on them exceeding honour for their portion A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities 1890 BENDIDEIA nbsp Leonhard Schmitz 1870 Epidotes In Smith William ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology External links nbsp Media related to Characters in Greek mythology at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Greek mythological figures amp oldid 1207154902, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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