Topic Archive

Myths about Resurrection

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

25 myths currently featured for Resurrection.

Odin Whispering the Unknown Secret into the Ear of the Dead Baldr

🪓 Norse MythologyBorre Mound Cemetery, NorwayOdin • Baldr • Frigg

Following the tragic death of the god Baldr by a mistletoe dart, his funeral was held on the grandest ship in the cosmos. Before the pyre was lit, Odin, the Allfather, leaned down and whispered a final, unknown word into his dead son's ear. This secret became the ultimate riddle of Norse mythology, symbolizing the hidden hope of rebirth after Ragnarök.

Thor Resurrecting His Goats After a Meal with Thialfi

🪓 Norse MythologyRoskilde, DenmarkThor • Loki • Thialfi

While traveling to the land of the giants, Thor stays with a peasant family and shares his magical goats, Tanngrisnir and Tanngnjóstr, as a meal. After Thialfi breaks a bone to eat the marrow against Thor's warning, the god resurrects the goats only to find one is lame. To pay for the damage, Thialfi and his sister Roskva are taken into Thor's service as his lifelong bondservants.

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.

The Resurrection of Glaucus in the Palace of Knossos

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Knossos, Crete, GreeceGlaucus • Minos • Polyidus

Glaucus, the young son of King Minos, accidentally drowns in a large pithos of honey while playing in the palace storerooms. Through the wisdom of the seer Polyidus and the observation of a magical herb used by a serpent, the boy is miraculously restored to life. The myth explores themes of resurrection, the weight of prophecy, and the fleeting nature of divine knowledge.

Asclepius’ Resurrection of the Dead and Zeus’ Thunderbolt

🏛️ Greek MythologySanctuary of Asclepius, EpidaurusAsclepius • Apollo • Zeus

Asclepius, the son of Apollo and a master of medicine, developed skills so advanced that he could bring the dead back to life. This disruption of the natural order of the universe angered Hades and worried Zeus, leading the King of the Gods to strike Asclepius down with a thunderbolt to maintain the boundary between mortality and divinity.