Topic Archive

Myths about Wind

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

3 myths currently featured for Wind.

The Giant Hræsvelgr Creating the Wind in Eagle Form

🪓 Norse MythologyNorth Cape (Nordkapp), NorwayHræsvelgr • Odin • Vafthrúdnir

In the furthest northern reaches of the world sits the giant Hræsvelgr, who takes the form of a colossal eagle. By flapping his massive wings at the edge of the heavens, he generates the winds that sweep across all nine realms of the Norse cosmos. His role as the 'Corpse-Swallower' highlights the dual nature of the wind as both a life-giving force for sailors and a harbinger of destruction...

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.

Boreas’ Abduction of Orithyia

🏛️ Greek MythologyRiver Ilissos, Athens, GreeceBoreas • Orithyia • Erechtheus

The powerful god of the North Wind, Boreas, becomes enamored with the Athenian princess Orithyia but is repeatedly rebuffed by her father. Frustrated by the constraints of mortal diplomacy, Boreas embraces his wild nature and snatches the princess from the banks of the Ilissos River, carrying her away to his home in Thrace. There, she becomes his queen and the mother of the winged heroes...