Topic Archive

Myths about Giants

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

28 myths currently featured for Giants.

Odin Stealing the Mead of Poetry

🪓 Norse MythologyHornelen, Bremanger, NorwayOdin • Kvasir • Suttungr

Seeking the gift of divine inspiration, Odin disguises himself as the worker Bolverk to infiltrate the mountain stronghold of the giant Suttungr. After tricking the giant's brother and seducing the guardian Gunnlöð, Odin consumes the Mead of Poetry and escapes to Asgard in the form of a great eagle. This myth explains how the gods and humanity gained the capacity for wisdom, scholarship, and...

Freyr Giving Up His Magic Sword to Woo the Giantess Gerd

🪓 Norse MythologyHardangervidda, NorwayFreyr • Gerðr • Skírnir

The fertility god Freyr falls into a deep melancholy after catching a glimpse of the beautiful giantess Gerðr. To win her hand, he sends his messenger Skírnir to Jotunheim, but is forced to pay a heavy price: his magical sword that fights on its own. While the mission is successful, the loss of his weapon leaves Freyr vulnerable, ultimately leading to his downfall at the hands of the fire...

Thor Fishing for the Midgard Serpent (Jörmungandr)

🪓 Norse MythologyLofoten Islands, Norwegian Sea, NorwayThor • Jörmungandr • Hymir

Thor, disguised as a young man, accompanies the giant Hymir on a fishing expedition into the deep ocean. Using the head of a massive ox as bait, Thor hooks his archenemy, the world-encircling serpent Jörmungandr, leading to a cosmic struggle that nearly causes the end of the world. The encounter ends abruptly when the terrified giant cuts Thor's line, allowing the serpent to sink back into...

Thor’s Epic Duel with the Giant Hrungnir

🪓 Norse MythologyJotunheimen National Park, NorwayThor • Hrungnir • Odin

After a drunken giant named Hrungnir threatens to destroy Asgard and steal its goddesses, Thor challenges him to a formal duel. The battle involves a massive clay giant, a shattered whetstone, and the unexpected strength of Thor's young son, Magni.

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...

Athena Trapping the Giant Enceladus

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Etna, Sicily, ItalyAthena • Enceladus • Zeus

During the cataclysmic Gigantomachy, the war between the Olympian gods and the rebellious Giants, the goddess Athena faced the formidable Enceladus. As the Giant attempted to flee the battlefield, Athena hurled the entire island of Sicily, or specifically the mass of Mount Etna, upon him. Forever imprisoned beneath the volcanic earth, Enceladus's restless movements are said to cause...

The Aloadae Attempting to Storm Mount Olympus

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Pelion, Magnesia, GreeceOtus • Ephialtes • Iphimedia

The Aloadae, twin giants named Otus and Ephialtes, attempted to overthrow the Olympian gods by stacking Mount Ossa and Mount Pelion on top of Mount Olympus to reach the heavens. After imprisoning the war god Ares in a bronze jar, their hubris was ultimately met with divine retribution when Artemis tricked them into killing one another. The myth remains a primary example of the Greek concept...

Hera’s Vengeance on Io and the Hundred-Eyed Argus

🏛️ Greek MythologyHeraion of Argos, GreeceHera • Zeus • Io

When Zeus transforms his lover Io into a heifer to hide her from his wife, Hera claims the animal and appoints the hundred-eyed giant Argus Panoptes to guard her. The myth follows the tragic isolation of Io and the eventual intervention of Hermes, who slays the giant to free her. This legend serves as the foundation for the peacock's distinctive plumage and the sacred status of the Heraion of...