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.

Ceyx and Alcyone’s Transformation into Halcyon Birds

🏛️ Greek MythologyTrachis, Malian Gulf, GreeceCeyx • Alcyone • Zeus

Ceyx and Alcyone were a devoted royal couple whose love was so profound they compared themselves to the gods Zeus and Hera. Their hubris led to a tragic shipwreck where Ceyx perished, but the gods ultimately took pity on their grief, transforming the pair into kingfishers and granting them the 'Halcyon Days' of calm weather for their nesting.

Tereus, Procne, and Philomela’s Tragic Cycle of Revenge

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Daulis, Phocis, GreeceTereus • Procne • Philomela

A haunting tale of betrayal and vengeance where the Thracian King Tereus violates his sister-in-law Philomela and silences her by cutting out her tongue. Philomela communicates the crime through weaving, leading her sister Procne to execute a gruesome revenge involving their son, Itys. The tragedy concludes with the divine transformation of the three protagonists into birds, forever echoing...

Endymion’s Eternal Sleep and the Obsessive Love of Selene

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Latmus, Caria, TurkeyEndymion • Selene • Zeus

This myth tells of the profound and haunting love between Selene, the Titan personification of the Moon, and a mortal shepherd named Endymion. To preserve his youth and beauty forever, Selene persuaded Zeus to place Endymion into an eternal, ageless slumber within a cave on Mount Latmus. There, she visits him every night, watching over his sleeping form as she traverses the night sky in her...

Echo’s Fading Voice and Narcissus’ Fatal Love for His Reflection

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Helicon, Boeotia, GreeceEcho • Narcissus • Hera

This tragic myth recounts the curse of the nymph Echo, who could only repeat the words of others, and her unrequited love for the beautiful but vain Narcissus. After rejecting Echo and many others, Narcissus is cursed to fall in love with his own reflection in a pool on Mount Helicon, eventually wasting away and transforming into the flower that bears his name. The story serves as a classic...

Pygmalion’s Creation of and Love for the Statue Galatea

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Amathus, CyprusPygmalion • Galatea • Venus

Pygmalion, a talented sculptor from Cyprus, becomes so disillusioned by the local women that he vows to live a solitary life of celibacy. He carves a perfect woman out of ivory, eventually falling in love with his own creation. After he prays to the goddess Aphrodite, the statue is miraculously brought to life, and the two are united in marriage.

The Fall of Phaethon

🏛️ Greek MythologyEridanos (Po River)Phaethon • Helios • Clymene

Phaethon, the mortal son of the sun god Helios, attempts to prove his divine lineage by driving his father's solar chariot across the sky. Lacking the strength to control the fiery horses, he veers off course, nearly incinerating the Earth before being struck down by Zeus’s thunderbolt into the river Eridanos.

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.

Tydeus’ Cannibalism at the Gates of Thebes

🏛️ Greek MythologyThebes, GreeceTydeus • Athena • Melanippus

During the siege of the Seven against Thebes, the hero Tydeus was mortally wounded by the defender Melanippus. Although the goddess Athena intended to grant Tydeus immortality, his savage act of consuming Melanippus's brain in a fit of rage horrified her. Consequently, Athena withdrew her divine gift, and Tydeus died as a mortal on the battlefield.

The Seven Against Thebes

🏛️ Greek MythologyThe Seven Gates of ThebesEteocles • Polynices • Adrastus

Following the exile of King Oedipus, his sons Eteocles and Polynices agreed to share the throne of Thebes by alternating power each year. However, Eteocles refused to step down after his term, prompting Polynices to raise an army of seven champions from Argos to reclaim his birthright. The resulting siege ended in a tragic duel at the seventh gate where the brothers killed one another,...

Oedipus’ Discovery of His Tragic Fate and Self-Blinding

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Thebes, GreeceOedipus • Jocasta • Creon

King Oedipus of Thebes discovers that he has unwittingly fulfilled a horrific prophecy by killing his father, Laius, and marrying his mother, Jocasta. Upon the devastating revelation of his true identity and the source of a plague ravaging his city, Oedipus blinds himself in a fit of grief and shame. The story concludes with his fall from power and his request to be exiled from the land he...