Topic Archive

Myths about Mythology

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

496 myths currently featured for Mythology.

Myrrha Transformed into a Myrrh Tree

🏛️ Greek MythologyPaphos, CyprusMyrrha • Cinyras • Adonis

The tragic myth of Myrrha follows a princess of Cyprus cursed by Aphrodite with an unnatural passion for her own father, King Cinyras. After a desperate deception leads to her pregnancy, she flees his wrath and is transformed by the gods into a myrrh tree to escape death. From her wooden trunk, the beautiful youth Adonis is eventually born, while her eternal tears become the precious resin...

Iphis and Ianthe

🏛️ Greek MythologyPhaistos, Crete, GreeceIphis • Telethusa • Ligdus

In the ancient Cretan city of Phaistos, a woman named Telethusa hides her daughter's gender to save her from a husband who decreed only sons should live. The child, Iphis, is raised as a boy and eventually falls in love with a girl named Ianthe. Through the divine intervention of the goddess Isis, Iphis is miraculously transformed into a man to allow the couple to marry.

Philemon and Baucis Transformed into Intertwined Trees

🏛️ Greek MythologyTyana (Kemerhisar), Cappadocia, TurkeyPhilemon • Baucis • Zeus

In the ancient lands of Phrygia, an elderly couple named Philemon and Baucis offered hospitality to the gods Zeus and Hermes who were disguised as weary travelers. While their wealthy neighbors turned the strangers away, the humble couple shared their meager resources with joy. As a reward for their piety and kindness, the gods spared them from a great flood and eventually transformed them...

Polyidus Resurrecting Glaucus with the Magic Herb

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Knossos, Crete, GreecePolyidus • Glaucus • Minos

Glaucus, the young son of King Minos of Crete, tragically drowns in a storage jar filled with honey. The seer Polyidus is tasked by the king to find the boy and, eventually, to restore him to life. Through the observation of a snake using a miraculous herb to revive its mate, Polyidus discovers the secret to resurrection and successfully brings the prince back from the dead.

Clytie Transformed into a Sunflower Watching Helius

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Parnassus, GreeceClytie • Helius • Leucothoe

Clytie, an Oceanid water nymph, fell deeply in love with the sun god Helius but was eventually abandoned for the princess Leucothoe. Driven by jealousy, Clytie revealed the affair to the princess's father, leading to a tragic end for her rival and causing Helius to despise Clytie forever. Consumed by grief and regret, Clytie sat upon the earth for nine days without food or water, staring at...

Zetes and Calais Chasing Away the Harpies

🏛️ Greek MythologyStrophades Islands, Ionian Sea, GreeceZetes • Calais • Phineus

When the Argonauts arrived in Thrace, they found King Phineus tormented by the Harpies, monstrous bird-women who stole and defiled his food. Zetes and Calais, the winged sons of the North Wind, pursued the creatures across the seas to the Strophades Islands. There, the goddess Iris intervened, sparing the Harpies in exchange for a vow that they would never plague Phineus again.

Hylas Abducted by the Water Nymphs

🏛️ Greek MythologyCios (Gemlik), Bithynia, TurkeyHylas • Heracles • Theiodamas

Hylas, the handsome young companion of Heracles and a member of the Argonauts, was abducted by water nymphs during a stop at the city of Cius. While fetching water from the spring of Pegae, his beauty so charmed the local spirits that they pulled him into their pool to stay with them forever. This event led to a desperate search by Heracles and established a long-standing ritual of searching...

Cyrene Wrestling a Lion and Won by Apollo

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Pelion, Magnesia, GreeceCyrene • Apollo • Chiron

Cyrene, a fierce huntress and daughter of King Hypseus, protected her father's flocks by wrestling a wild lion to death with her bare hands on the slopes of Mount Pelion. The god Apollo, witnessing her extraordinary bravery and strength, fell in love with her and sought the counsel of the wise centaur Chiron. Apollo eventually took her in his golden chariot to Libya, where she became the...

The Tragedy of Coronis and the Birth of Asclepius

🏛️ Greek MythologyLake Boebeis (Lake Karla), Thessaly, GreeceCoronis • Apollo • Artemis

Coronis, a princess of the Lapiths and lover of Apollo, was slain by the goddess Artemis after a white raven revealed her infidelity with the mortal Ischys. Before her body was consumed by the funeral pyre, Apollo rescued their unborn son, Asclepius, who would become the god of medicine. This myth explains the origin of the black raven and the divine lineage of the healing arts.

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...