Topic Archive

Myths about Betrayal

Explore myths connected by the recurring theme of Betrayal across cultures, characters, and sacred places.

28 myths currently featured for Betrayal.

Loki Bound by the Aesir Beneath a Venomous Serpent

🪓 Norse MythologySurtshellir Lava Cave, IcelandLoki • Odin • Thor

Following the death of Baldur, the trickster god Loki is pursued by the Aesir and captured in the form of a salmon. As punishment for his many crimes, he is bound in a dark cavern with the entrails of his son, while a venomous serpent drips poison onto his face, causing earthquakes whenever his wife Sigyn must empty the bowl catching the venom.

Ixion's Seduction of the Cloud-Clone Nephele

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Pelion, Magnesia, GreeceIxion • Zeus • Hera

Ixion, the King of the Lapiths, committed the grave sin of kin-slaying and was unexpectedly offered redemption by Zeus on Mount Olympus. However, consumed by hubris, Ixion attempted to seduce Zeus's wife, Hera, leading the king of gods to create a cloud-double named Nephele to ensnare him. This act of deception resulted in the birth of the centaurs and the eternal punishment of Ixion on a...

Heracles Rescuing Hesione from the Sea Monster

🏛️ Greek MythologyCoast of Troy (Hisarlik), TurkeyHeracles • Hesione • Laomedon

The Trojan princess Hesione is chained to a rock as a sacrifice to a terrifying sea monster sent by Poseidon. When the hero Heracles arrives at Troy, he offers to slay the beast in exchange for a team of divine horses, leading to an epic battle that saves the princess but sets the stage for Troy's eventual downfall due to King Laomedon's greed.

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 Building of the Walls of Troy by Poseidon and Apollo

🏛️ Greek MythologyTroy (Hisarlik)Poseidon • Apollo • Laomedon

To punish their rebellion against his authority, Zeus commanded the gods Poseidon and Apollo to serve the Trojan King Laomedon as mortal laborers for a full year. During this time, they constructed the legendary, impenetrable walls of Troy, only to be cheated of their wages by the king's greed and arrogance. This divine betrayal cursed the city's future, leading to Poseidon’s eternal enmity...

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 Murder of Agamemnon

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Mycenae, Peloponnese, GreeceAgamemnon • Clytemnestra • Aegisthus

Upon his victorious return from the Trojan War, King Agamemnon is murdered by his wife Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus. The assassination is a carefully orchestrated act of revenge for Agamemnon's earlier sacrifice of their daughter, Iphigenia. This betrayal marks a dark climax in the curse of the House of Atreus, leading to further cycles of vengeance.

Philoctetes’ Abandonment on Lemnos and the Bow of Heracles

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Mosychlos, Lemnos, GreecePhiloctetes • Heracles • Odysseus

Philoctetes, a legendary archer and bearer of the Bow of Heracles, was abandoned on the desolate island of Lemnos by his fellow Greeks after suffering a debilitating and foul-smelling snake bite. For ten years, he survived in isolation until a prophecy revealed that Troy could only be defeated with his help. The story follows the moral conflict of the young Neoptolemus and the eventual...