|
Hint
|
|
Parentage
|
|
Answer
|
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God of the Skies and Lightning, King of the Olympians
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Cronus and Rhea
|
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Zeus
|
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Goddess of Marriage and Women, Queen of the Olympians
|
|
Cronus and Rhea
|
|
Hera
|
|
God of the Seas and Horses
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|
Cronus and Rhea
|
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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
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|
Cronus and Rhea
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|
Hestia
|
|
Goddess of Love and Beauty
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Zeus and Dione (sometimes Oceanus)
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|
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
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|
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
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|
Ouranous and Gaia
|
|
Coeus
|
|
Titan Goddess of Prophecy and Intellect
|
|
Ouranous and Gaia
|
|
Phoebe
|
|
Titan God of Time
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|
Ouranous and Gaia
|
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Cronus
|
|
Titan Goddess of Nature
|
|
Ouranous and Gaia
|
|
Rhea
|
|
Titan Goddess of Memory
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|
Ouranous and Gaia
|
|
Mnemosyne
|
|
Titan Goddess of Justice
|
|
Ouranous and Gaia
|
|
Themis
|
|
Titan God of Constellations
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Ouranous and Gaia
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Crius
|
|
Titan God of Mortality
|
|
Ouranous and Gaia
|
|
Iapetus
|
|
Primordial Originator
|
|
Unknown
|
|
Chaos
|
|
Primordial Goddess of Night
|
|
Chaos
|
|
Nyx
|
|
Primordial God of Darkness
|
|
Chaos
|
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Erebus
|
|
Primordial God of Light
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|
Erebus and Nyx
|
|
Aether
|
|
Primordial Goddess of Inevitability and Necessity
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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)
|
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Eros
|
|
Primordial God of the Abyss
|
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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
|