Topic Archive

Myths about Nature

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

14 myths currently featured for Nature.

Adonis Gored by a Wild Boar

🏛️ Greek MythologyAphaca (Afqa), Mount LebanonAdonis • Aphrodite • Ares

The beautiful youth Adonis, loved by the goddess Aphrodite, meets a tragic end during a hunt near the sacred grotto of Afqa. Despite warnings to avoid dangerous beasts, Adonis is mortally gored by a giant wild boar. From his blood, the first anemone flowers grow, and the river flowing from the cave turns red every spring in his memory.

Pan’s Pursuit of the Nymph Syrinx

🏛️ Greek MythologyRiver Ladon, Arcadia, GreecePan • Syrinx • Ladon

The wild god Pan fell in love with the chaste nymph Syrinx and pursued her through the rugged landscape of Arcadia. To escape him, she fled to the banks of the River Ladon and begged for transformation, turning into hollow water reeds. Pan, mourning his lost love, used the reeds to create the first musical pipe, which he named the syrinx in her honor.

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...

Apollo’s Pursuit of Daphne

🏛️ Greek MythologyVale of Tempe, River Peneus, GreeceApollo • Daphne • Eros

After Apollo mocks the god of love, Eros retaliates by striking Apollo with a golden arrow of desire and the nymph Daphne with a leaden arrow of revulsion. This leads to a relentless pursuit through the Vale of Tempe, ending only when Daphne's father transforms her into a laurel tree to save her. Heartbroken, Apollo declares the laurel his sacred plant, symbolizing victory and poetic inspiration.