Character Archive

Myths featuring Ino

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

20 myths currently featured for Ino.

Aeneas’ Flight from the Burning City of Troy

🏛️ Greek MythologyTroy (Hisarlik), TurkeyAeneas • Anchises • Ascanius (Iulus)

After the Greeks infiltrate Troy using a giant wooden horse, the city is set ablaze and its people are slaughtered. Aeneas, a Trojan prince, is warned by the ghost of Hector to flee and preserve the future of his people. Carrying his elderly father on his back and leading his young son by the hand, Aeneas escapes the inferno, though he tragically loses his wife Creusa in the chaos, setting...

The Sneak Attack of the Wooden Trojan Horse

🏛️ Greek MythologyTroy (Hisarlik), TurkeyOdysseus • Sinon • Priam

After ten long years of siege, the Greek army appeared to abandon their war against Troy, leaving behind a massive wooden horse as a parting gift to the gods. Despite the warnings of a few clairvoyant citizens, the Trojans pulled the monument into their city walls to celebrate their victory. That night, elite Greek warriors hidden inside the hollow structure emerged, opened the gates for...

Heracles’ Stealing of the Flesh-Eating Mares of Diomedes

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Abdera, Thrace, GreeceHeracles • Diomedes of Thrace • Abderus

As his eighth labor, Heracles was sent to Thrace to capture the four man-eating mares of King Diomedes. After a fierce battle with the King's army and the tragic loss of his companion Abderus, Heracles tamed the beasts by feeding them their own cruel master. The hero then founded the city of Abdera in honor of his fallen friend before delivering the horses to King Eurystheus.

Heracles’ Capture of the Cretan Bull

🏛️ Greek MythologyHeraklion region, Crete, GreeceHeracles • King Minos • Eurystheus

For his seventh labor, the hero Heracles was dispatched to the island of Crete to capture a divine bull that had been driven to madness by Poseidon. After wrestling the powerful beast to submission in the rugged landscape near Heraklion, Heracles transported it back to the court of King Eurystheus. The myth serves as a bridge between the legends of the Peloponnese and the Minoan traditions of...

Heracles’ Defeat of the Lernean Hydra

🏛️ Greek MythologyLake Lerna, PeloponneseHeracles • Iolaus • Lernaean Hydra

As his second labor for King Eurystheus, the hero Heracles traveled to the swamps of Lerna to destroy a terrifying multi-headed serpent known as the Hydra. With the assistance of his nephew Iolaus, Heracles managed to cauterize the monster's necks to prevent its heads from regenerating. Although successful, the labor was later disqualified by the king because Heracles had received help during...

Phrixus and Helle’s Flight on the Golden Ram

🏛️ Greek MythologyThe Hellespont (Dardanelles), TurkeyPhrixus • Helle • Athamas

To escape the murderous plot of their stepmother Ino, the royal children Phrixus and Helle were rescued by a divine Golden Ram sent by their mother Nephele. During their flight across the sea, Helle fell into the waters and drowned, giving the Hellespont its name, while Phrixus reached Colchis to secure the Golden Fleece.

Theseus and the Minotaur

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Knossos, Crete, GreeceTheseus • Minotaur • Ariadne

The Athenian hero Theseus travels to Crete to end a gruesome tribute where seven young men and seven young women are sacrificed to the Minotaur, a half-man, half-bull monster living in a complex Labyrinth. With the help of the Cretan princess Ariadne and a ball of golden thread, Theseus navigates the maze, slays the beast, and leads his people to freedom, though the journey ends in tragedy...

Daedalus and Icarus’ Flight from Crete

🏛️ Greek MythologyIcarian Sea, Icaria, GreeceDaedalus • Icarus • King Minos

Daedalus, a master craftsman, and his son Icarus were imprisoned in the Labyrinth of Crete by King Minos. To escape the island, Daedalus fashioned wings from feathers and wax, but despite his warnings to fly a middle course, Icarus’ curiosity and pride led him too close to the sun. The wax melted, and the boy fell into the sea that now bears his name, serving as a timeless cautionary tale...

Dionysus’ Rescue of Abandoned Ariadne on Naxos

🏛️ Greek MythologyTemple of Apollo (Portara), Naxos, GreeceAriadne • Dionysus • Theseus

After aiding Theseus in his quest to defeat the Minotaur, the Cretan princess Ariadne was left behind on the shores of Naxos. Despairing and alone, she was discovered by Dionysus, the god of wine and festivities, who fell in love with her. He rescued her from her isolation, making her his immortal bride and placing her jeweled crown among the stars as the constellation Corona Borealis.

Odysseus' Return to Ithaca

🏛️ Greek MythologyIthaca, GreeceOdysseus • Penelope • Telemachus

After a grueling twenty-year absence fighting in the Trojan War and enduring a perilous sea journey, the legendary Greek hero Odysseus finally returns to his island kingdom of Ithaca. Disguised as an impoverished old beggar by the goddess Athena, he infiltrates his own palace to test the loyalty of his household and observe the arrogance of the suitors vying for his wife, Penelope. With the...