Character Archive

Myths featuring Ino

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

20 myths currently featured for Ino.

Polyidus Resurrecting Glaucus with the Magic Herb

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Knossos, Crete, GreecePolyidus • Glaucus • Minos

Glaucus, the young son of King Minos of Crete, tragically drowns in a storage jar filled with honey. The seer Polyidus is tasked by the king to find the boy and, eventually, to restore him to life. Through the observation of a snake using a miraculous herb to revive its mate, Polyidus discovers the secret to resurrection and successfully brings the prince back from the dead.

The Resurrection of Glaucus in the Palace of Knossos

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Knossos, Crete, GreeceGlaucus • Minos • Polyidus

Glaucus, the young son of King Minos, accidentally drowns in a large pithos of honey while playing in the palace storerooms. Through the wisdom of the seer Polyidus and the observation of a magical herb used by a serpent, the boy is miraculously restored to life. The myth explores themes of resurrection, the weight of prophecy, and the fleeting nature of divine knowledge.

The Drowning of Helle

🏛️ Greek MythologyHellespont (Dardanelles Strait)Helle • Phrixus • Athamas

Helle and her brother Phrixus escape their murderous stepmother Ino by flying away on the back of a magical Golden Ram. During their flight across the narrow strait between Europe and Asia, Helle loses her balance, falls into the sea, and perishes. The waters were thereafter named the Hellespont in her memory, while her brother continued on to reach the land of Colchis.

Daedalus Building the Temple of Apollo

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Cumae, ItalyDaedalus • Icarus • Apollo

After the tragic death of his son Icarus, the master inventor Daedalus fled to Italy, landing on the heights of Cumae. In gratitude for his survival and in mourning for his loss, he dedicated his wings to the god Apollo and constructed a magnificent temple featuring golden doors that depicted the history of his life and his many inventions.

Odysseus and the Phaeacians at Scheria

🏛️ Greek MythologyPaleokastritsa, Corfu, GreeceOdysseus • Nausicaa • Alcinous

After escaping the goddess Calypso and surviving a devastating storm sent by Poseidon, Odysseus washes ashore on the island of Scheria. He is discovered by the princess Nausicaa, who shows him kindness and guides him to the palace of her father, King Alcinous. This pivotal moment marks the end of Odysseus's solitary wanderings and the beginning of his final voyage home to Ithaca.

Talos

🏛️ Greek MythologySouda Bay, Crete, GreeceTalos • Hephaestus • Minos

Talos was a colossal bronze automaton created by the god Hephaestus to protect the island of Crete from invaders and pirates. He patrolled the island's shores three times daily, hurling massive boulders at approaching ships and heating his metal body to incinerate enemies in a lethal embrace. His downfall came at the hands of the sorceress Medea and the Argonauts, who exploited his single...

Minos, Pasiphae, and the Birth of the Minotaur

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Knossos, Crete, GreeceKing Minos • Queen Pasiphae • Poseidon

Following his ascent to the throne of Crete, King Minos fails to honor a sacred vow to Poseidon, leading to a divine curse upon his wife, Queen Pasiphae. Cursed with an unnatural passion for a white bull, Pasiphae enlists the inventor Daedalus to help her, resulting in the birth of the monstrous Minotaur. To hide the shame of the half-man, half-bull creature, Minos commissions the...

Idomeneus’ Rash Vow to Poseidon and the Tragic Sacrifice of His Son

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Knossos, Crete, GreeceIdomeneus • Poseidon • The Son of Idomeneus

Upon returning from the Trojan War, King Idomeneus of Crete was caught in a terrifying storm and vowed to sacrifice the first living thing he saw to Poseidon if he survived. To his horror, the first person to greet him on the shores of Crete was his own son, whom he was then forced to sacrifice. This act led to a devastating plague and the king's eventual exile to Italy, serving as a grim...

Nisus’ Purple Hair of Invincibility Stolen by His Daughter Scylla

🏛️ Greek MythologyMegara, West Attica, GreeceNisus • Scylla • Minos

King Nisus of Megara possessed a magical lock of purple hair that guaranteed the safety of his life and his kingdom. During a siege by King Minos of Crete, Nisus' daughter Scylla fell in love with the enemy king and cut the lock from her father's head as a gift for Minos. Repulsed by her betrayal, Minos rejected her, and both father and daughter were eventually transformed into birds.

The Dismemberment of Pentheus

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Cithaeron, Boeotia, GreecePentheus • Dionysus • Agave

King Pentheus of Thebes attempts to suppress the newly arrived cult of Dionysus, only to be lured onto Mount Cithaeron in disguise. There, under the influence of divine madness, the Maenads—led by his own mother Agave—mistake him for a wild beast and tear him apart. The tragedy serves as a grim warning against the rejection of the divine and the dangers of extreme hubris.