Topic Archive

Myths about Ra

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

413 myths currently featured for Ra.

Heracles’ Capture of the Ceryneian Hind

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Ceryneia, Achaea, GreeceHeracles • Eurystheus • Artemis

Tasked by King Eurystheus as his third labor, Heracles was commanded to capture the elusive Ceryneian Hind without harming it. The sacred creature, possessing golden antlers and bronze hooves, was faster than any arrow and dedicated to the goddess Artemis. After a year-long pursuit that took him to the edge of the world and back, Heracles finally captured the animal and successfully...

Heracles’ Slaying of the Nemean Lion

🏛️ Greek MythologyCave of the Nemean Lion, Nemea, GreeceHeracles • Nemean Lion • King Eurystheus

As the first of his twelve labors, the hero Heracles was tasked by King Eurystheus to slay a monstrous lion terrorizing the region of Nemea. The beast possessed a golden hide that was impervious to all weapons, forcing Heracles to rely on his immense physical strength to defeat it. By strangling the lion and using its own claws to skin it, Heracles secured both his victory and his iconic...

Atalanta’s Footrace and the Golden Apples of Hippomenes

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Tegea, Arcadia, GreeceAtalanta • Hippomenes • Aphrodite

To avoid a prophesied marriage, the swift huntress Atalanta challenged her suitors to a deadly footrace, only to be outwitted by Hippomenes and three divine golden apples.

The Hunt for the Calydonian Boar and the Tragedy of Meleager

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Calydon, Aetolia, GreeceMeleager • Atalanta • Oeneus

When King Oeneus of Calydon neglects to honor the goddess Artemis during a harvest festival, she sends a monstrous boar to ravage his kingdom. A legendary hunt ensues, led by the prince Meleager and the huntress Atalanta, but the victory is short-lived as family betrayal and an ancient prophecy lead to Meleager's tragic death.

Medea’s Vengeance on King Creon and Glauce

🏛️ Greek MythologyTemple of Apollo, Ancient Corinth, GreeceMedea • Jason • Creon

Betrayed by her husband Jason for the hand of the Corinthian princess Glauce, the sorceress Medea exacts a horrific revenge. Through the use of enchanted gifts—a poisoned robe and a golden crown—she destroys both the princess and her father, King Creon, before fleeing the city in a divine chariot. This tragedy remains one of the most potent tales of betrayal and supernatural wrath in the...

Daedalus and Icarus’ Flight from Crete

🏛️ Greek MythologyIcarian Sea, Icaria, GreeceDaedalus • Icarus • King Minos

Daedalus, a master craftsman, and his son Icarus were imprisoned in the Labyrinth of Crete by King Minos. To escape the island, Daedalus fashioned wings from feathers and wax, but despite his warnings to fly a middle course, Icarus’ curiosity and pride led him too close to the sun. The wax melted, and the boy fell into the sea that now bears his name, serving as a timeless cautionary tale...

Lycaon’s Transformation into a Wolf by the Wrath of Zeus

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Lykaion, Arcadia, GreeceLycaon • Zeus • Nyctimus

King Lycaon of Arcadia, seeking to test the divinity and omniscience of Zeus, served the god a banquet containing the cooked flesh of a human sacrifice. Enraged by this ultimate violation of hospitality and natural law, Zeus transformed the king into a wolf and struck down his impious sons. This myth serves as a foundational story for the origins of lycanthropy and the justification for the...

Orpheus and Eurydice

🏛️ Greek MythologyNecromanteion of Acheron, Epirus, GreeceOrpheus • Eurydice • Hades

The master musician Orpheus descends into the depths of the Underworld to rescue his beloved wife Eurydice after her tragic death. Through the power of his lyre, he convinces Hades to let her go, but his own doubt leads to a second, final tragedy on the threshold of the living world.

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...

The Tragedy of Niobe

🏛️ Greek MythologyWeeping Rock, Mount Sipylus, TurkeyNiobe • Amphion • Leto

Niobe, the Queen of Thebes, boasted that her fourteen children made her superior to the goddess Leto, who had only two. In retribution, Leto’s children, Apollo and Artemis, used their bows to kill all of Niobe's sons and daughters. This devastating loss drove Niobe to a state of eternal grief, eventually turning her into a stone figure on Mount Sipylus that continues to weep to this day.