Greek Gods (+Monsters and Heroes)

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GuyT
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Last updated: October 9, 2025
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First submittedOctober 8, 2025
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Answer
God of the Skies and Lightning, King of the Olympians
Cronus and Rhea
Zeus
Goddess of Marriage and Women, Queen of the Olympians
Cronus and Rhea
Hera
God of the Seas and Horses
Cronus and Rhea
Poseidon
God of the Dead, King of the Underworld
Cronus and Rhea
Hades
Goddess of Agriculture and Harvest
Cronus and Rhea
Demeter
Goddess of the Hearth and Home
Cronus and Rhea
Hestia
Goddess of Love and Beauty
Zeus and Dione (sometimes Oceanus)
Aphrodite
Goddess of Wisdom and Strategic War
Zeus and Metis
Athena
God of War
Zeus and Hera
Ares
God of the Forge and Fire
Zeus and Hera
Hephaestus
God of Travel and Thievery, Messenger of the Gods
Zeus and Maia
Hermes
God of Light and Music
Zeus and Leto
Apollo
Goddess of the Hunt
Zeus and Leto
Artemis
God of Wine and Fertility
Zeus and Semele
Dionysus
Titan God of the river that encircles the world
Ouranous and Gaia
Oceanus
Titan Goddess of nursing and freshwater
Ouranous and Gaia
Tethys
Titan God of the Sun
Ouranous and Gaia
Hyperion
Titan Goddess of Sight and Jewels
Ouranous and Gaia
Theia
Titan God of Knowledge and Foresight
Ouranous and Gaia
Coeus
Titan Goddess of Prophecy and Intellect
Ouranous and Gaia
Phoebe
Titan God of Time
Ouranous and Gaia
Cronus
Titan Goddess of Nature
Ouranous and Gaia
Rhea
Titan Goddess of Memory
Ouranous and Gaia
Mnemosyne
Titan Goddess of Justice
Ouranous and Gaia
Themis
Titan God of Constellations
Ouranous and Gaia
Crius
Titan God of Mortality
Ouranous and Gaia
Iapetus
Primordial Originator
Unknown
Chaos
Primordial Goddess of Night
Chaos
Nyx
Primordial God of Darkness
Chaos
Erebus
Primordial God of Light
Erebus and Nyx
Aether
Primordial Goddess of Inevitability and Necessity
Unknown
Ananke
Primordial God of Creation
Unknown
Phanes
Primordial God of the Sea
Gaia
Pontus
Primordial God of Love
Ares and Aphrodite ( in some stories, none)
Eros
Primordial God of the Abyss
Aether and Gaia
Tartarus
Primordial Goddess of the Earth
Unknown
Gaia
Primordial God of the Sky
Gaia
Ouranous
Primordial Goddess of Day
Erebus and Nyx
Hemera
Chthonic Goddess of Spring and Queen of the Underworld
Zeus and Demeter
Persephone
Personification of Sleep
Nyx (sometimes with Erebus)
Hypnos
Mystery God thought to be Prince of the Underworld
Hades and Persephone
Zagreus
Goddess of Ghosts
Persephone
Melinoë
Personification of Death
Nyx
Thanatos
Ferryman of the Dead
N/A (sometimes Nyx and Erebus)
Charon
Three-headed guard dog of the Underworld
Echidna and Typhon
Cerberus
Goddess of Magic and Witchcraft
Perses and Asteria
Hecate
Judge of the Underworld who judges Western Shades
Zeus and Aegina or Europa
Aeacus
Judge of the Underworld who judges Eastern shades
Zeus and Europa
Rhadamanthus
Judge of the Underworld who gives the casting vote
Zeus and Europa
Minos
One of the Furies, 'Unceasing Anger'
Gaea and Ouranous (from his blood)
Alecto
One of the Furies, 'Jealous Rage'
Nyx and Acheron
Megaera
One of the Furies, 'Vengeful Destruction'
Unknown?
Tisiphone
What the above 3 were called
N/A
Erinyes
The Fate who spun the thread
Nyx or Zeus and Themis or Ouranous and Gaea
Clotho
The Fate who measures the thread
Nyx or Zeus and Themis
Lachesis
The Fate who cut the thread
Nyx and Erebus or Zeus and Themis
Atropos
What the fates were called
N/A
Moirai
God of the Wild
Hermes and Penelope
Pan
Titan God who created Humanity
Iapetus and Asia or Clymene
Prometheus
Goddess of Motherhood
Coeus and Phoebe
Leto
Nereid Goddess who bathed her mortal son in the River Styx
Nereus and Doris
Thetis
God of the North Wind
Astraeus and Eos
Boreas
God of the East Wind
Astraeus and Eos
Eurus
God of the South Wind
Astraeus and Eos
Notus
God of the West Wind
Astraeus and Eos
Zephyrus
What the above four wind gods were called
N/A
Anemoi
Keeper of the Winds
Hippotes
Aeolus
God of Medicine
Apollo and Coronis
Asclepius
One of the Graces, 'Splendor'
Zeus and Eurynome or Eunomia
Aglaea
One of the Graces, 'Joy'
Zeus and Eurynome or Eunomia
Euphrosyne
One of the Graces, 'Good Cheer'
Zeus and Eurynome or Eunomia
Thalia
What the Graces were called
N/A
Charites
The 'Chief of all Muses', Eloquence and Epic Poetry
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Calliope
The Muse of Lyre-Playing
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Clio
The Muse of Sacred Poetry and Sacred Hymn
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Polyhymnia
The Muse of Lyric Poetry
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Euterpe
The Muse of Dance and Chorus
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Terpsichore
The Muse of Erotic Poetry
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Erato
The Muse of Tragedy
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Melpomene
The Muse of Comedy
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Thalia
The Muse of Astronomy/Astrology
Zeus and Mnemosyne
Urania
Goddess of Rainbows and a messenger of the gods
Thaumas and Electra
Iris
Sea God often referred to as 'Old Man of the Sea'
Pontus and Gaia
Nereus
Titan God of Warcraft
Crius and Eurybia
Pallas
Personification of Envy and Dedication
Pallas and Styx
Zelus
Goddess of Victory
Pallas and Styx
Nike
Personification of Power
Pallas and Styx
Kratos
Personification of Violence
Pallas and Styx
Bia
Titan God of Destruction
Crius and Eurbyia
Perses
Titan Goddess of Mastery of the Sea
Pontus and Gaia
Eurybia
The Goddess of Sea Monsters
Pontus and Gaia
Ceto
Titan God of the Stars
Crius and Eurybia
Astraeus
God of the Morning Star
Astraeus and Eos or Cephalus and Eos or Atlas
Eosphorus
God of the Dangers of the Sea
Pontus and Gaia
Phorcys
God of the Wonders of the Sea
Pontus and Gaia
Thaumas
Titan who holds the world on his shoulders
Iapetus and Asia or Clymene
Atlas
Titan God of the Dawn
Hyperion and Theia
Eos
Goddess of the Moon
Hyperion and Theia
Selene
Goddess of Shooting Stars
Coeus and Phoebe
Asteria
Titan Goddess of Prophecy and the Oracle of Dodona
Ouranous and Gaia or Aether and Gaia or Oceanus and Tethys
Dione
Titan God of Hindsight, married Pandora
Iapetus and Clymene
Epimetheus
Titan God of Foresight, gave fire to humanity
Iapetus and Asia or Clymene
Prometheus
Titan God of the Sun
Hyperion and Theia
Helios
Titan God of Violent Anger
Iapetus and Asia or Clymene
Menoetius
Pre-Olympian Goddess of Wisdom
Oceanus and Tethys
Metis
Goddess of the River Styx
Oceanus and Tethys
Styx
Goddess of the Spring, Buds, and Protector of Youth
Zeus and Themis
Thallo
Goddess of the Summer, Protector of Vegetation
Zeus and Themis
Auxo
Goddess of Autumn who guarded the entrance to Olympus
Zeus and Themis
Carpo
Goddess of Morality
Zeus and Themis
Dike
Goddess of Law and Legislation
Zeus and Themis
Eunomia
Personification of Peace and Wealth
Zeus and Themis
Eirene
What the above six were
N/A
Horae
Personification of First Light
Helios or Chronos
Auge
Personification of Sunrise
Helios or Chronos
Anatole
Personification of the Morning Hour of Music
Helios or Chronos
Musica
Personification of the Morning Hour of Gymnastics
Helios or Chronos
Gymnastica
Personification of the Morning Hour of Bathing
Helios or Chronos
Nymphe
Personification of Noon
Helios or Chronos
Mesembria
Personification of Libations poured after Lunch
Helios or Chronos
Sponde
Personification of the Hour of Prayer
Helios or Chronos
Elete
Personification of the Hour of Eating and Pleasure
Helios or Chronos
Acte
Personification of Evening
Helios or Chronos
Hesperis
Personification of Sunset
Helios or Chronos
Dysis
Personification of the Night Sky
Helios or Chronos
Arctus
What the above 12 were
N/A
Hora
Personification of Strife and Discord
Nyx
Eris
Personification of Rage and Fury
Ouranous and Nyx
Lyssa
Personification of Retribution and Vengeance
Nyx and Erebus or Oceanus or Zeus
Nemesis
Personification of Persuasion
Oceanus and Tethys
Peitho
Personification of Fortune
Oceanus and Tethys or Zeus and Aphrodite or Prometheus
Tyche
Personification of Misery
Nyx
Achlys
Personification of Injustice
Possibly Nyx or Eris
Adikia
Personification of Athletic Contests
Unknown
Agon
Personification of Shame or Modesty
Possibly Prometheus
Aidos
Personification of the War Cry
Polemos
Alala
Personification of Generational Guilt
Unknown
Alastor
Personification of Truth
Zeus or Prometheus
Aletheia
Personification of Labor and Hardship
Eris
Ponos
Personification of Forgetfulness
Eris or Aether and Gaia
Lethe
Personification of Starvation
Eris
Limos
Personification of Pains
Eris
Algea
Personification of Fights
Eris
Hysiminai
The Personifications of Battles
Eris
Machai
The Personifications of Murders
Eris
Phonoi
The Personifications of Manslaughters
Eris
Androktasiai
Personification of Quarrels
Eris
Neikea
Personification of Falsehood
Eris
Pseudea
Personification of Stories
Eris
Logoi
Personification of Disputes
Eris
Amphillogiai
Personification of Anarchy
Eris
Dysnomai
Personification of Delusion, Recklessness, and Folly
Eris
Ate
Personification of Oath
Eris
Horkos
Personification of Shamelessness
Unknown possibly Eris or Nyx
Anaideia
Personification of Report
Hermes
Angelia
Personification of Requited Love
Ares and Aphrodite or Poseidon and Nerites
Anteros
Personification of Deceit
Nyx
Apate
Personification of Simplicity
Unknown
Apheleia
Personification of Goodness
Praxidice and Soter
Arete
Personification of the Lightning Bolt
Zeus
Astrape
Personification of Thunder
Zeus
Bronte
Personification of 'The Right Moment'
Zeus
Caerus
Personification of Surfeit
Hybris and Dyssebeia
Corus
Personification of Fear
Ares and Aphrodite
Deimos
Personification of Impiety
Unknown
Dyssebeia
Personification of Compassion
Nyx and Erebus
Eleos
Personification of Freedom and Liberty
Zeus and Hera
Eleutheria
Personification of Hope
Unknown, possibly Nyx and Erebus
Elpis
Personification of Dew
Zeus and Selene
Ersa
Personification of Caution
Unknown
Eulabeia
Personification of Success
Peitharcia and Soter
Eupraxia
Personification of Laughter
Unknown
Gelos
Personification of Old Age
Nyx, possibly with Erebus
Geras
Personification of Joy and Pleasure
Eros and Psyche
Hedone
Personification of Affectionate Longing
Aphrodite and Ares
Himeros
Personification of Concord
Soter and Praxidike
Homonoia
Personification of Eagerness and Effort
Aether and Gaia
Hormes
Personification of Insolence and Lack of Restraint
Dyssebeia
Hybris
Personification of Hygiene
Asclepius and Epione
Hygieia
Personification of Pursuit
Unknown, possibly Eris
Ioke
Personification of Vice
Unknown, possibly Nyx
Kakia
Personifications of the Inevitability of Death
N/A
Keres
Personifications of Madness
N/A
Maniae
Personification of Drunkenness
Dionysus
Methe
Personification of fault-finding
Nyx
Momus
Personification of Doom and Destiny
Nyx
Moros
Personification of Law
Eusebeia and Zeus
Nomos
Personification of Pain or Distress
Nyx and Erebus
Oizys
Personifications of Dreams
N/A
Oneiroi
God of Dreams
Hypnos and Pasithea
Morpheus
Personification of Wrestling
Hermes
Palaestra
Personification of Obedience
Unknown
Peitharchia
Personification of Poverty
Unknown
Penia
Personification of Grief
Unknown
Penthus
Personification of Rumor
Elpis or Gaia
Pheme
Personification of Affection
Nyx, possibly with Erebus
Philotes
The other Personification of Fear
Ares and Aphrodite
Phobos
Personifications of Killing
N/A
Phonoi
Personification of the Soul
Unknown
Psyche
Personification of Wealth
Demeter and Iasion
Plutus
Personification of Punishment
Aether and Gaia
Poine
Personification of War
Unknown
Polemos
Goddess of Judicial Punishment
Possibly Zeus or Soter
Praxidike
Personification of Excuse
Epimetheus
Prophasis
Personification of Physical Well-being
Zeus or Dionysus or Soter
Soteria
Personification of Safety
Unknown
Soter
Personification of Prudence or Moderation
Unknown
Sophrosyne
Personification of the Sea
Aether and Hemera
Thalassa
Poseidon's Wife
Nereus and Doris
Amphitrite
God of Fertility and Male Genetalia
Dionysus and Aphrodite or Hermes and Aphrodite or Dionysus and Chione or Zeus and Aphrodite or Pan
Priapus
Goddess of Well-being
Asclepius and Epione
Aceso
God of the Acheron River
Helios and Gaia or Demeter
Acheron
Sorceress who turns men into pigs
Helios and Perse, or Aeetes and Hecate
Circe
Goddess of Harmony
Ares and Aphrodite, or Zeus and Electra
Harmonia
Goddess of Youth
Zeus and Hera
Hebe
God of Hermaphroditism and Intersex
Hermes and Aphrodite
Hermaphroditus
God of Marriage
Apollo, possibly with one of the muses
Hymen
Son of Poseidon who blows a horn
Poseidon and Amphitrite
Triton
Giants who use bones as tools
N/A
Aternae
Female Daemon that returns from the Underworld to curse people
N/A
Arae
'Serpent King' who petrifies with a stare
N/A
Basilisk
Buffalo whose breath could kill
N/A
Catoblepas
Centaur who trains warriors
Cronus and Philyra
Chiron
A sea monster who swallows water in a whirlpool to eat ships
Poseidon and Gaia
Charybdis
Fire-Breathing Three-Headed monster, One a Lion, One a Goat, and One a Serpent
N/A
Chimera
Stag-Bodied monster who mimics human voices to lure people into it's jaws
N/A
Crocotta
Tree Spirits
N/A
Dryad
Mother of Monsters
Tartarus and Gaia
Echidna
Female monsters with snakes for hair
N/A
Gorgon
The most popular of the above
Phorcys and Ceto
Medusa
Creature with a Lion's Body and an Eagle's head
N/A
Griffin
Bird-Women
N/A
Harpy
Half-Horse Half-Fish creatures
N/A
Hippocampus
Vampiric creatures who eat young men's youth
N/A
Lamia
Creature with the body of a lion and the face of a man
N/A
Manticore
Bull-Headed monster with the body of a man
Cretan Bull and Pasiphae
Minotaur
Minor Goddesses and Spirits
N/A
Nymph
^ One of the above who kept the creator of the Trojan Horse on her island for a few years
Atlas
Calypso
Immortal self-eating serpent
N/A
Ouroboros
Golden bird who revives in it's own ashes
N/A
Phoenix
Half-Man Half-Goats
N/A
Satyr
Nereid transformed into a multi-headed monster who eats sailors as they sail through her strait
Phorcys and Crataeis
Scylla
Singing bird-women who lure sailors to their doom, sometimes portrayed as fish-women
N/A
Siren
Man-Headed Cat who asks riddles
N/A
Sphinx
Humongous savage monster with snake coils instead of limbs, father of many other monsters
Gaia and Tartarus, or Hera
Typhon
One-Horned Horses
N/A
Unicorn
Men who transform into Wolf-Like creatures during a full moon
N/A
Werewolf
Winged Horse
N/A
Pegasus
Giant humanoid creatures
N/A
Gigantes
^ One of the Above who became a constellation
Poseidon and Euryale
Orion
One-Eyed Giants
N/A
Cyclops
^ One of the above blinded by Nobody
Poseidon and Thoosa
Polyphemus
Man-Eating Giants who swallowed most of the Trojan Horse creator's crew
N/A
Laestrygonian
Dragon killed by the Olympian God of Music
Gaia and Ouranous
Python
Dragon who grew another head anytime one was cut off
N/A
Lernaean Hydra
Men who got stranded on an island after eating an addictive plant
N/A
Lotus Eaters
Greatest Greek Warrior during the Trojan War, died to an arrow in the Heel
Peleus and Thetis
Achilles
Progenitor of Rome and Trojan Hero, one of the few survivors of the Trojan War
Anchises and Aphrodite
Aeneas
The Second Greatest Warrior during the Trojan War, went insane and killed himself
Telamon and Periboea
Telamonian Ajax
Swiftest of the Greeks during the Trojan War, punished by the Olympians and killed at sea after taking advantage of a Trojan Woman
Oileus and Eriopis
Locrian Ajax
Slayer of the Teumessian Fox, married to the mother of a demi-god
Alcaeus and Astydameia
Amphitryon
Greek Warrior during the Trojan War who sacrificed himself for his Father
Nestor and Anaxibia or Eurydice
Antilochus
Rode the winged Horse and slayed the monster with the head of a lion, goat, and snake
Poseidon and Eurynome
Bellerophon
One of two Twins whom were placed among the stars as a constellation following this twin's death
Leda and Tyndareus
Castor
Creator of the Labyrinth
Metion and Alcippe
Daedalus
Brave Greek Warrior during the Trojan War who wounded two Olympians
Tydeus and Deipyle
Diomedes
Trojan Hero and lover of the King of the Gods, became a cup-bearer for the gods
Tros and Callirhoe or Acallaris
Ganymede
Strongest Hero of the Trojans, slain by the Strongest of the Greeks
Priam and Hecuba
Hector
Flew with wax wings but fell to his demise after flying too close to the sun
Daedalus
Icarus
Leader of the Argonauts
Aeson
Jason
Hero who sailed with the Argonauts and slew the Calydonian Boar
Oineus and Althaea
Meleager
Strategic Greek Hero who crafted the Trojan Horse and was lost at sea for 10 years after the Trojan War
Laertes and Anticleia
Odysseus
Legendary musician who ventured into the Underworld to rescue his wife
Oeagrus and Calliope
Orpheus
^ Above's Wife
Hippodamia
Eurydice
Slayer of the most famous Snake-Haired woman
Zeus and Danae
Perseus
Herald of the Highest King of the Greeks in the Trojan War
Unknown
Talthybius
King of Athens who found his way through the labyrinth to kill the Bull-Headed Man creature
Aegeus or Poseidon and Aethra
Theseus
Wife to the strongest Trojan soldier who was taken as a slave after the war
Eetion
Andromache
Wife of the man who slayed the snake-haired woman, became a constellation
Cepheus and Cassiopeia
Andromeda
Daughter of the man cursed to marry his mother
Oedipus and Jocasta
Antigone
Cretan princess who outran the God of Travel
Catreus
Apemosyne
Master-weaver and apprentice to the Goddess of Wisdom who was turned into the first spider
Idmon
Arachne
Daughter of one of the Underworld's judges, became the wife of the God of Wine
Minos and Pasiphae or Crete
Ariadne
Warrior-Woman who participated in the Hunt for the Calydonian Boar
Iasus or Scoeneus or Clymene
Atalanta
Woman the Strongest of the Greeks loved who was taken by the highest King of the Greeks
Briseus
Briseis
Woman transformed into a man who became a mighty warrior
Elatus
Caeneus
Princess and Prophet of Troy who was cursed to never be believed
Priam and Hecuba
Cassandra
Queen of Aethiopia who was arrogant and endangered her daughter who was the wife of the slayer of the snake-haired woman
Unknown, possibly Aeolus
Cassiopeia
Unfaithful wife of the highest King of the Greeks in the Trojan War, who plotted to kill him
Tyndareus and Leda
Clytemnestra
Mother of the king who slayed the snake-haired woman
Acrisius and Eurydice
Danae
Daughter of the highest King of the Greeks who aided her brother in defeating their mother
Agamemnon and Clytemnestra
Electra
Woman abducted by the King of the Gods in the form of a bull
Agenor and Telephassa or Agriope, or Phoenix and Perimede
Europa
The Queen of Troy during the Trojan War and mother of nineteen children
Dymas and Euagora or Glaucippe and Eunoe or Cisseus and Telecleia or Sangarius and Metope or Euagora and Glaucippe
Hecuba
Most beautiful woman in the world who was taken by a Trojan Prince, sparking the Trojan War
Zeus and Leda or Nemesis
Helen
Daughter of above and one of the Greek Kings during the Trojan War
Menelaus and Helen
Hermione
Daughter of the highest King of the Greeks who was sacrificed to the Goddess of the Hunt, sparking her mothers Rage' and eventual murder of her father
Agamemnon and Clytemnestra
Iphigenia
Mother and wife of the man cursed to marry his mother
Menoeceus
Jocasta
A sorceress and the wife of the leader of the Argonauts, killed her own children to punish his infidelity
Aeetes and Idyia
Medea
Woman who declared herself superior to a Goddess of Childbirth because she had more children, this was punished when said Goddess' two children, the god of music and the goddess of the hunt, killed all her children
Tantalus and Dione or Eurythemista or Euryanassa
Niobe
The first woman who was given a box that contained all the worlds monsters
No biological parents
Pandora
Loyal wife of the most Strategic Greek King in the Trojan War, who waited 20 years for him to return home
Icarius and Asterodia
Penelope
Daughter of one of the Judges of the Underworld and wife of the slayer of the Bull-Headed resident of the Labyrinth
Minos and Pasiphae or Crete
Phaedra
Youngest daughter of the Trojan King who was sacrificed to the ghost of the Strongest Greek
Priam and Hecuba
Polyxena
The mortal mother to the God of Wine
Cadmus and Harmonia
Semele
Heroine and Sorceress of Thrace, sister of the woman the King of the Gods chased in the form of a bull
Oceanus and Parthenope
Thrace
Highest of the Greek Kings in the Trojan War who was killed by his wife upon his return home
Atreus and Aerope
Agamemnon
Trojan Seer who fought in the war and was taken as a slave upon it's end, later married the wife to the strongest of the Trojans
Priam and Hecuba
Helenus
King who attempted harm on the Goddess of Marriage and was tied to a flaming wheel in Tartarus as a punishment
Perimele and Ares or Leonteus
Ixion
Father to the creator of the Trojan Horse, a former Argonaut who assisted in the Calydonian Boar Hunt and later helped his son take back his palace from unruly suitors
Arcesius and Chalcomedusa
Laertes
Greek King during the Trojan War whose wife was abducted, sparking the war
Atreus and Aerope
Menelaus
King who wished for anything he touched to turn to gold, after he was cured of this ailment he was punished yet again for his hubris by the God of music after claiming the God of the wild had better music, this resulted in him having the ears of a mule
Gordias and Cybele
Midas
Oldest of the Greek Kings in the Trojan War and King of Pylos, he also sailed with the Argonauts
Neleus and Chloris
Nestor
King of Thebes fated to kill his father and marry his mother
Jocasta and Laius
Oedipus
Son of the highest of the Greek Kings in the Trojan War who killed his mother for her murder of his father
Agamemnon and Clytemnestra
Orestes
Father to the strongest Greek King in the Trojan War, he married a Nereid Queen
Aeacus and Endeis
Peleus
King of Troy during the Trojan War who had many children
Laomedon and Placia or Strymo or Rhoeo or Zeuxippe or Leucippe
Priam
Beloved son of the King of the Gods who assisted the Trojans in the Trojan War before being abandoned by his father and killed
Zeus and Europa
Sarpedon
King of Thrace who sided with the Trojans in the Trojan War, The King who wounded two gods and the Creator of the Trojan Horse stole two of his horses in the middle of the night
Strymon (Eioneus) and Euterpe/Calliope/Terpsichore or Heracles and Bolbe
Rhesus
King who cheated death twice after being punished by the King of the Gods, he tricked the Personification of Death into chaining himself up and later tricked the Queen of the Underworld into setting him free to get a proper burial, he was punished by being forced to push a boulder uphill for all eternity
Aeolus and Enarete
Sisyphus
Greatest Archer of the Greeks during the Trojan War, brother to the Second Strongest of them
Telamon and Hesione
Teucer
Father to the most beautiful woman in the world who made all his daughters suitors swear an oath to fight for her should she be taken from her husband
Oebalus or Perieres and Gorgophone
Tyndareus
Oracle who told the highest King of the Greeks of the Goddess of the Hunt's Anger, and told him he needed to sacrifice his daughter, later told him he had to return one of his stolen women to her father lest the God of Music punish them all
Thestor and Polymela
Calchas
A seer and a lover of the God of Music
Europa
Carnus
Ithacan seer who warned the suitors of the return of their king after 20 years
Mastor
Halitherses
A seer who sailed with the Argonauts
Asteria and Apollo or Abas
Idmon
Blind prophet who was turned into a woman for seven years after attacking copulating snakes which angered the Goddess of Marriage, he changed back after those seven years and after his death he assisted the King of Ithaca in his return voyage home
Everes and Chariclo
Tiresias
Daughter of above from when he was a woman, also given the gift of prophecy
Tiresias
Manto
Cretan King during the Trojan War who fought alongside the Greeks
Deucalion and Cleopatra
Idomeneus
Second-in-command of the beloved son of he King of the Gods during the Trojan War
Hippolochus
Glaucus
Demi-god who completed Twelve Labors
Zeus and Alcmene
Heracles
Daughter of the God of War and a Queen of the Amazons
Ares and Otrera
Hippolyta
King who murdered his son and tried to feed him to the gods, was punished with eternal starvation in Tartarus with food and water just out of reach
Zeus and Pluto, or Tmolus and Pluto
Tantalus
Close friend of the slayer of the bull-headed resident of the Labyrinth, he was bound to a chair and eaten by snakes for the rest of eternity following his attempt to kidnap the Queen of the Underworld
Dia and Ixion or Zeus
Pirithous
Second twin who makes up the constellation Gemini
Leda and Zeus
Pollux
A man regarded as very good-looking who continuously refused his suitors advances, was punished by the gods with an intense self-love
Cephissus and Liriope, or Endymion and Selene
Narcissus
Nymph cursed to only repeat the last word she hears, the reason the above gets punished
Unknown, possibly Ouranous
Echo
Hunter who stumbled upon the Goddess of the Hunt and her hunters bathing and was transformed into a stag, he was then hunted by his own dogs and killed
Aristaeus
Actaeon
A king who defiled a sacred Grove and killed a Nymph, he was punished with an insatiable hunger and eventually ate himself
Triopas and Hiscilla
Erysichthon
Lover of the Greatest Greek King who was killed by the Greatest of the Trojans in a battle
Menoetius
Patroclus
Trojan Prince who judged who the fairest was of three Olympian Goddesses and kidnapped the most beautiful woman in the world, sparking the Trojan War
Priam and Hecuba
Paris
Infant son of the Strongest of the Trojans, thrown from the walls of Troy to end anything left of the King of Troy's bloodline
Hector and Andromache
Astyanax
Son of the Greatest of the Greek Kings who went on a rampage through the city of Troy and in some stories killed the above
Achilles and Deidama, or Achilles and Iphigenia
Neoptolemus
Deified lover of the God of Music, he was accidentally killed by him during a contest, the God created a flower in remembrance of him, and later brought him back to life as an immortal
Amyclas and Diomede, or Oebalus, or Clio and Pierus
Hyacinth
Founder of Thebes and one of the greatest monster slayers before the time of the demi-god who completed Twelve Labors
Agenor and Telephassa
Cadmus
Prince of Ithaca who helps his father take out his mothers suitors
Odysseus and Penelope
Telemachus
Leader of the suitors
Eupeithes
Antinous
The most deceitful of the suitors
Polybus
Eurymachus
The kindest of the suitors
Nisos
Amphinomus
Traitorous swineherd who helps the suitors
Dolius
Melanthius
Loyal cowherd of Ithaca
Unknown
Philoetius
Loyal swineherd of Ithaca
Ctesius
Eumeus
Mother of the Ithacan King
Autolycus and Amphithea
Anticleia
Sister of the Ithacan King
Anticleia and Laertes
Ctimene
Husband of above who is the Ithacan King's second-in-command on his voyage home
Unknown
Eurylochus
The Ithacan King's loyal dog
N/A
Argos
Ithacan King's childhood friend
Unknown
Polites
The youngest of the Ithacan King's crew who died on the island of the Sorceress who turns men into pigs
Unknown
Elpenor
The Ithacan King's advisor while he was off fighting in the Trojan War, specifically in charge of his son
Unknown
Mentor
Chief servant of the Ithacan King's palace, she recognizes the Ithacan King by a scar while bathing him
Ops
Eurycleia
Daughter of the King and Queen of Phaeacia who finds a shipwrecked Ithacan King and brings him to her father
Alcinous and Arete
Nausicaa
The King of Phaeacia who granted the Ithacan King passage home
Nausithous
Alcinous
The Queen of Phaeacia
Rhexenor
Arete
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