There were 12 great gods of the Greeks, known as the Olympians, but Zeus was “the King of the Gods and the god of the sky, weather, law and order, destiny and fate, and kingship.”
In the program guide for the annual St. Sophia Greek Festival in May 2017, there was an article entitled “Greek gods in mythology, part IV,” featuring Zeus. The first three parts were in the previous years’ programs.
“Remember Cronus, the kid who attacked his dad, Uranus and banished him from the Earth because he was an abusive go?… Cronus was even worse… he swallowed each of his own kids… However, one child named Zeus escaped this horrible doom and was hidden by his mother.
“After mom, gave Cronus a potent drink which made him upchuck, the kids that he swallowed were set free… [Zeus, his sibs and uncles] prepared to fight the evil Titans.
“The Cyclopes… made the weapons… They armed Zeus wit a thunderbolt that shook the universe…
“It was a fierce and long 10-year war between the old gods and the new gods, but at last Cronus and the Titans were defeated…”
Zeus‘ “name is cognate with the first element of his Roman equivalent Jupiter. His mythologies and powers are similar, though not identical, to those of the Indo-European deities such as Indra, Jupiter, Perun, Thor, and Odin.”
Cronus was not the only person eater in this story line. “Zeus devoured the pregnant goddess Metis when an oracle revealed that her son was destined to replace him as King of the Gods. Their child, Athena, was subsequently born in his belly and birthed directly from his head.”
“Zeus’ most distinctive attribute was his stylized lightning bolt which he wielded in his hand like a javelin. His other attributes included a royal sceptre, a throne, an eagle, a miniature Nike (winged goddess of victory), and the aigis (a goat-skin arm-guard). The god was usually clothed in a long robe (chiton) and cloak (himation) but was sometimes depicted nude. He was often crowned with a wreath of olive leaves.”
Although I still not have found the time for it… It has Always fascinated me and I want to know more about that piece of historie..
Boy does this bring me back to high school mythology…I kind of liked it.
Like your powerful statuary photo.
i guess it’s fortuitous that zeus escaped
Much as I love the tales of Greek mythology, they had a poor grasp of anatomy! Either that or too much absinthe.
Good to know these details of which I had no idea.
Mythology is so wild sometimes ~ Great post and photo for Zeus ~ Z ~
Thanks for visiting my blog and commenting ~ ^_^
By deuce it’s Zeus,
Not a very nice man but then,
Them thar greeks had fertile imaginations !
Di.
ABCW team.
The Metis myth is one that passed me by although am rather fond of Athena and her owl.
I got a shot of a crumbled Zeus in Agrigento, Sicily, way back in 2006 when I visited the Valley of the Temples. Now That was one memorable trip.
Leslie
abcw team
I enjoyed reading Greek mythology when I was a kid. How did I miss that history about Cronus? Very interesting that Athena would’ve been the next god of gods. I wonder what her reign would’ve been like.