Topic Archive

Myths about Greek Mythology

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

135 myths currently featured for Greek Mythology.

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.

Bellerophon Thrown from Pegasus Trying to Reach Olympus

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Olympus, GreeceBellerophon • Pegasus • Zeus

The Greek hero Bellerophon, riding the winged horse Pegasus, attempted to fly to the summit of Mount Olympus to join the gods. Infuriated by his hubris, Zeus sent a gadfly to sting Pegasus, causing the hero to fall back to earth while the horse continued to the divine stables. Bellerophon survived the fall but spent the rest of his life wandering in misery, a broken man who had dared too much.

Arethusa Bathing and Fleeing the River God Alpheus

🏛️ Greek MythologyRiver Alfeios, Arcadia, GreeceArethusa • Alpheus • Artemis

Arethusa, a chaste nymph of Artemis, is pursued by the river god Alpheus after she unknowingly bathes in his waters. To escape his advances, she is transformed into a subterranean stream that flows from Greece to Sicily, where she emerges as a sacred fountain. However, Alpheus follows her through the depths of the sea to forever unite their waters.

Pegasus Striking the Fountain of Hippocrene

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Helicon, Boeotia, GreecePegasus • The Muses • Calliope

On the slopes of Mount Helicon, the winged horse Pegasus struck the earth with his hoof, creating the magical fountain of Hippocrene. This event occurred during a singing competition between the Muses and the daughters of Pierus, where the mountain itself began to swell toward the heavens in response to the divine music. The resulting spring became a sacred source of poetic inspiration, later...

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...

King Codrus Sacrificing Himself to Save Athens

🏛️ Greek MythologyBanks of River Ilissos, Athens, GreeceCodrus • Melanthus • Medon

King Codrus of Athens, upon learning from the Delphic Oracle that his city would only survive if he perished at the hands of the enemy, sacrificed himself during the Dorian invasion. Disguising himself as a common woodcutter to bypass the enemy's orders to spare his life, he provoked a fatal skirmish with Dorian soldiers. His selfless act ensured the safety of Athens and led to the transition...

Erichthonius Born from the Earth of Attica

🏛️ Greek MythologyErechtheion, Acropolis of Athens, GreeceErichthonius • Athena • Hephaestus

Erichthonius was the legendary king of Athens who was born directly from the earth of Attica following a complex encounter between the gods Hephaestus and Athena. Entrusted to the daughters of King Cecrops in a sealed chest, his discovery led to tragedy when the sisters disobeyed Athena’s warnings and peered inside. He grew to become a great reformer and culture hero, credited with...

Hephaestus Forging Weapons in His Volcano

🏛️ Greek MythologyVulcano Island, Aeolian Islands, ItalyHephaestus • Zeus • Hera

Beneath the smoking crater of Vulcano, the god Hephaestus operates a divine forge where the heat of the earth is harnessed to craft the weapons of the gods. This myth connects the geological activity of the Aeolian Islands to the industry of the divine blacksmith, explaining the island's smoke and tremors as the sounds of his tireless hammer. From the shield of Achilles to the lightning bolts...

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.

The Treachery of Laomedon

🏛️ Greek MythologyTroy (Hisarlik)Laomedon • Apollo • Poseidon

King Laomedon of Troy commissioned the gods Apollo and Poseidon to build the city's legendary walls, but he committed a grave act of hubris by refusing to pay them. His deceit led to divine punishments, including a plague and a sea monster, and eventually triggered the first sack of Troy by Heracles after the king cheated the hero as well.