Character Archive

Myths featuring Ares

Explore myths where Ares appears across cultures, conflicts, sacred places, and recurring themes.

13 myths currently featured for Ares.

Meenakshi, the Warrior Princess

🕉️ Hindu MythologyMeenakshi Amman Temple, Madurai, IndiaMeenakshi • Shiva (Sundareswarar) • King Malayadwaja Pandya

Born from a sacrificial fire with three breasts, Meenakshi was a warrior queen destined to rule the Pandya kingdom. A divine prophecy foretold that her third breast would vanish upon meeting her future husband. After a world-conquering campaign, she encountered Lord Shiva on Mount Kailash, leading to her transformation and their eternal union in the city of Madurai.

Adonis Gored by a Wild Boar

🏛️ Greek MythologyAphaca (Afqa), Mount LebanonAdonis • Aphrodite • Ares

The beautiful youth Adonis, loved by the goddess Aphrodite, meets a tragic end during a hunt near the sacred grotto of Afqa. Despite warnings to avoid dangerous beasts, Adonis is mortally gored by a giant wild boar. From his blood, the first anemone flowers grow, and the river flowing from the cave turns red every spring in his memory.

Hermes’ Rescue of Ares from the Bronze Jar

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Ossa, Thessaly, GreeceHermes • Ares • Otus

When the giant twin sons of Poseidon, the Aloadae, captured Ares and imprisoned him within a bronze jar, the god of war languished for thirteen months. It was the messenger god Hermes who eventually discovered his location and used his divine cunning to steal the weakened Ares away from his captors. This myth highlights the transition from brute primitive force to the strategic intelligence...

Hephaestus’ Fall from Mount Olympus

🏛️ Greek MythologyLemnos Island, GreeceHephaestus • Hera • Zeus

Cast out from the heights of Mount Olympus due to his perceived physical imperfections, the god Hephaestus plummeted for a full day before landing on the volcanic island of Lemnos. Rescued by the local Sintian people, he transformed his exile into a legacy of unparalleled craftsmanship and mastery over fire. This narrative explores his descent, his recovery among mortals, and his eventual...

Pelops’ Chariot Race Against King Oenomaus

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Olympia, Peloponnese, GreecePelops • Oenomaus • Hippodamia

To win the hand of Hippodamia, the hero Pelops challenged King Oenomaus to a deadly chariot race. Using a divine golden chariot from Poseidon and a secret betrayal involving the king's charioteer Myrtilus, Pelops defeated the king and established the foundation of the Olympic Games. However, his betrayal of Myrtilus also brought a lasting curse upon his bloodline, known as the House of Atreus.

The Punishment of Sisyphus in Tartarus

🏛️ Greek MythologyAcrocorinthSisyphus • Zeus • Thanatos

Sisyphus, the clever and hubristic King of Corinth, was condemned by the gods for outsmarting death and betraying divine secrets. His eternal punishment in Tartarus involves pushing a massive boulder up a steep hill, only for it to roll back down just as it reaches the summit. This myth explores themes of mortality, the consequences of trickery, and the eternal struggle against the inevitable.

Tereus, Procne, and Philomela’s Tragic Cycle of Revenge

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Daulis, Phocis, GreeceTereus • Procne • Philomela

A haunting tale of betrayal and vengeance where the Thracian King Tereus violates his sister-in-law Philomela and silences her by cutting out her tongue. Philomela communicates the crime through weaving, leading her sister Procne to execute a gruesome revenge involving their son, Itys. The tragedy concludes with the divine transformation of the three protagonists into birds, forever echoing...

Cadmus’ Slaying of the Ismenian Dragon and the Founding of Thebes

🏛️ Greek MythologyCadmea (Acropolis of Thebes)Cadmus • Europa • Agenor

Following the disappearance of his sister Europa, the Phoenician prince Cadmus was led by a prophetic cow to the site of Boeotian Thebes. There, he slew a monstrous dragon guarding a sacred spring and sowed its teeth into the earth, giving rise to the Spartoi, the legendary ancestors of the Theban nobility. This founding myth explains the establishment of the Cadmea and the introduction of...

The Aristeia of Diomedes: The Wounding of Aphrodite and Ares

🏛️ Greek MythologyArchaeological Site of Troy (Hisarlik)Diomedes • Athena • Aphrodite

During the Trojan War, the Greek hero Diomedes undergoes a period of divine empowerment granted by the goddess Athena. With his vision cleared to perceive the gods themselves, he dares to attack and wound the goddess Aphrodite and later the god of war, Ares, on the battlefield. This rare instance of a mortal striking deities highlights the intersection of human courage and divine will in the...

The Ninth Labor: The Girdle of Hippolyta

🏛️ Greek MythologyThemiscyra (Terme River), TurkeyHeracles • Hippolyta • Admete

Heracles is tasked by King Eurystheus to retrieve the magical girdle of Hippolyta, Queen of the Amazons, for his daughter Admete. Though the Queen initially agrees to gift the belt peacefully, the goddess Hera intervenes by inciting a riot, leading to a tragic battle. Heracles eventually secures the artifact and returns it to Mycenae after a series of further adventures in the East.