A COMPLETE LIST OF TITANS & TITANESSES
A COMPLETE LIST OF TITANS & TITANESSES
Pindar, Pythian Ode 4. 290 ff (trans. Conway) (Greek lyric C5th B.C.)
:
"Does not even now great Atlas struggle to bear up the weight of
heaven, far from his fathers’ land and his possessions? But almighty Zeus set
free the Titanes for as time passes and the breeze abates, the sails are set
anew."
The Titans were an elder generation of gods who ruled the cosmos before the
Olympians gods came to power. They were responsible for the original ordering of
time and the establishment of fixed heavenly cycles.
The eldest of the Titans--Cronos and his four brothers, Crius, Coeus,
Hyperion and Iapetus--were imprisoned in the stormy pit of Tartarus by Zeus
after he was victorious in the War. Many of the younger Titan gods, however,
allied themselves with Zeus and retained their divine rights under the new
regime. Some of these allies later proved to be rebellious and were sentenced to
harsh punishments, such as Atlas who was condemned to bear the heavens, and
Prometheus, who was chained to a rock and an eagle set to feed on his liver.
The female Titans or Titanides remained neutral
in the War, and retained their positions as prophetic goddesses. Several of
these goddesses became consorts of Zeus and received a place on Mount Olympos as
mothers of the gods.
ADANUS (Adanos) An alternate name for one of the elder Titan sons of Uranus.
ANDES An alternate name for one of the elder Titan sons of Uranus. He was
perhaps the same as Hyperion.
ANCHIALE
(Ankhiale) A younger Titan goddess who perhaps represented the warmth of fire.
She was the wife of Hecaterus and hte mother of the metal-working Dactyli.
ANYTUS
(Anytos) One of the younger Titans or Curetes. Anytus was an attendant of the
goddess Demeter who fostered her Arcadian daughter Despoine.
ASTERIA A
younger Titan goddess whose name and genealogy suggest presided over the night,
stars and nocturnal prophecy. She was the mother of the goddess Hecate. After
the fall of the Titans Asteria was pursued by Zeus and but leapt into the sea to
escape him where she was transformed into the island of Delos.
ASTRAEUS
(Astraios) The younger Titan god of the stars, the winds, and the art of
astrology. He was the father of the four directional winds and the five
wandering stars (the Planeta) by his wife Eos, the goddess of the dawn
ATLAS The younger
Titan god of astronomy and the revolution of the heavnely constellations. He was
arrested by Zeus and condemned to bear the heavens upon his shoulders. Homer
suggests he was later released from this torment and appointed guardian of the
pillars of heaven.
AURA The younger
Titanis-goddess of the breezes. She was a virgin huntress raped by the god
Dionysos.
CLYMENE
(Klymene) The younger Titanis-goddess of fame and renown. She was the wife of
Iapetos and mother of Prometheus.
COEUS (Koios) The
Titan god of the intellect as his name would suggest. He was also known as Polus
(the pole) and probably presided over the axis of heaven in the north around
which the constellations revolve. Coeus was one of the four Titan-brothers who
conspired with Cronus in the ambush and castration of Uranus. At the end of the
Titan-War, he was confined by Zeus in the Tartarean pit. Coeus was sometimes
described as leader of the Gigantes, who rebelled against Zeus.
CRIUS (Kreios) The
Titan god of the heavenly constellations and the measure of the year. He was
probably associated with the constellation Aries, the heavenly ram (which the
Greeks called Crius). Its spring rising marked the start of the new year, andthe
other constellations were said to follow in its wake. Crius was one of the four
Titan brothers who conspired with Cronus in the castration of Uranus. He was
later cast into the Tartarean pit by Zeus. Crius was sometimes named as a leader
of the Gigantes who rebelled against the rule of Zeus.
CRONUS (Kronos) The
King of the Titanes, and the god of destructive time--time which devours all. He
led his brothers in the ambush and castration of their father Uranus, but was
himself deposed and cast into the pit of Tartaros by his own son Zeus. Some say
the old Titan was later released by Zeus and appointed King of Islands of the
Blessed, home of the favoured dead.
CURETES (Kouretes)
A group of shield clashing Daemones or Titan gods who came to the aid of Rhea to
act as guardians of her son Zeus. They were sometimes called Gigantes, and were
probably the same as those which Hesiod described as being born from the
castration of Uranus. Their sisters, the Meliae, were Zeus' nurses.
DIONE A prophetic
Titan-goddess who presided over the Oracle at Dodona alongside Zeus. According
to some she was the mother of the goddess Aphrodite.
EOS The younger
Titan-goddess of the dawn. She was the mother of the wandering stars (that is,
the planets) and the four directional winds by the Titan Astraeus.
EPIMETHEUS The
Titan god of afterthought. He was appointed with the task of creating the beasts
of the earth, while his brother Prometheus was busy with the crafting of man.
Epimetheus was tricked by Zeus into receiving Pandora, the first woman, and her
jar of evils into the house of man.
EURYBIA A Titan
goddess of the power of the sea. She was the wife of the Uranid Crius.
EURYNOME (1)
The younger Titan-goddess of earth's flowery meadows. She was the mother of the
three lovely Graces by Zeus.
EURYNOME (2)
The younger Titan-goddess of the earth's meadows. She was the wife of the first
Titan-King Ophion. The couple were cast from heaven by Cronus and Rhea who
wrestled them for the throne. This Eurynome may have been the same as Tethys.
GIGANTES The War of
the Giants and its combatants the Gigantes were frequently confounded by the
ancients with the Titans and the Titan War. Sometimes the Gigantes were
represented as soldiers in the army of the Titan-gods, or as rebellious
supporters of the deposed Titan Cronus.
HECATE (Hekate) The
younger Titan-goddess of the ghosts, witchcraft and necromancy. She supported
Zeus in the Titan war and so retained all of her privileges.
HELIUS (Helios) The
Titan god of the sun who rode across the sky in a chariot drawn by four fiery,
winged steeds. He was an ally of Zeus in the Titan-War.
HOPLODAMUS
(Hoplodamos) A Titan, Giant or Curete who with his brothers came to the aid of
the Titaness Rhea after Cronus learnt of her deceptions surrounding the birth of
Zeus.
HYPERION The
Titan god of light, and of the cycles of time measured by the lights of heaven
-- the sun, the moon and the dawn. Hyperion was one of the four brother Titans
who held Uranus fast while Cronus castrated him with the sickle. At the end of
the Titan War he was cast into the pit of Tartarus by Zeus.
IAPETUS (Iapetos)
The Titan god of mortality and the allotment of the mortal life-span. His sons
Prometheus and Epimetheus were the creators of animals and men. Iapetus was one
of the four brother-Titans who held Uranus fast while Cronus castrated him with
the sickle. As punishment he was cast into the Tartarean pit by Zeus at the end
of the Titan War.
LELANTOS The
Titan god of the breezes of the air. His name means "the unnoticed" or "unseen
one".
LETO The younger
Titan-goddess of motherhood, light, and womanly demure. She was the mother of
the twin gods Apollo and Artemis by Zeus.
MEGAMEDES Another
name for the Titan Crios, meaning "the great lord."
MELISSEUS
The Titan or Curete god of honey. He was one of the protectors of the infant
Zeus. His daughters were the god's nurses.
MENOETIUS
(Menoitios) The Titan god of violent anger and rash action as his name would
suggest. Zeus blasted him into Erebus with a thunderbolt, where he became a
bondsman of King Hades.
METIS The younger
Titan-goddess of good counsel. She was an ally of Zeus in the Titan War who fed
Cronus an elixir which forced him to disgorge his five devoured children. Later
she was swallowed whole by Zeus who had learned that a son born of their union
was destined to depose him. Their only child was instead a daughter, Athena, who
sprang fully grown from her father's head.
MNEMOSYNE The
elder Titanis-goddess of memory, words and language. She was the mother of the
nine Muses by Zeus. Mnemosyne was also a prophetic goddess associated with the
oracle of Trophonius in Lebadeia.
MUSES ELDER (Mousai)
Three Titan goddesses of music and song. One of them, Mneme (Memory), was the
mother of the nine younger Muses by Zeus.
MYLINUS
(Mylinos) A Titan or Giant of the island of Crete who was destroyed by Zeus. His
name means "he of the grinding millstone," and he was perhaps the same as Cronus
"time."
OCEANUS (Okeanos)
The Titan god of the earth-encircling, fresh-water river Oceanus. As a Titan god
he presided over the rising and setting of the heavenly bodies : the sun, the
moon, the stars, and the dawn. His ever-flowing waters, encircling the edges of
the cosmos were associated with the neverending flow of time. Oceanus was the
only one of the brother Uranides not to participate in the castration of their
father Uranus. In the Titan-War he remained neutral, giving his tacit support to
Zeus.
OLYMBRUS (Olymbros) An alternate name for one of the elder Titan. He may be
the same as Olympus the Cretan mentor of Zeus.
OLYMPUS
(Olympus) A Cretan Titan or Giant who mentored Zeusin his youth. He later roused
his kin in an uprisal against the god but was destroyed. Olympos (whose name may
derive from a word meaning eternal time) was perhaps the same as Cronus or
Olymbrus.
OPHION The eldest
of the Titan gods whose brother Cronus wrestled him for the throne of heaven and
cast him down into the Ocean-stream. He was probably the same as Oceanus, or
perhaps Uranus.
OSTASUS An alternative name for one of the Titan sons of Uranus.
PALLAS The Titan
god of warcraft and the military campaign season. Some say Athena defeated him
in battle and crafted her aegis-cape from his goatish skin.
PERSES The Titan
god of destruction, and perhaps of summer droughts whose name means "the
destroyer." Like his daughter Hecate, he was probably associated with the
dog-sta r: the source of scorching heat of mid-summer.
PHOEBE (Phoibe)
The elder Titan-goddess of intellect and prophetic goddess of the great Oracle
of Delphi. She was the grandmother of the god Apollo.
PHORCYS (Phorkys) The
old man of the sea was sometimes named as one of the six Titan sons of Uranus.
POLUS (Polos) The
Titan god of the axis of heaven ("polos"). He was usually called Coeus.
PROMETHEUS The
Titan god of forethought and the creator and benefactor of man. He defied Zeus
on several occasions, including tricking the gods out of the best share of the
sacrificial meat, and stealing fire from heaven for the benefit of mankind. Zeus
was furious, and had Prometheus chained to Mount Caucasus, where an eagle was
set to devour his ever-regenerating liver. The Titan was eventually released
from his tortures by Heracles.
RHEA (Rheia) The
Queen of the Titans and goddess of female fertility and the mountain wilds. She
saved her son Zeus from the maw of Cronus by substituting the child for a stone
wrapped in swaddling cloth. The Titan had devoured her other five children, but
these were later freed from his beely by Zeus.
SELENE The younger
Titan-goddess of the moon.
STYX The
younger Titan-goddess of oaths of allegiance and of the deadly, netherworld
River Styx. She brought her children Victory, Rivalry, Force and Power to the
side of Zeus at the start of the Titan-War.
SYCEUS (Sykeus)
A Titan or giant who fled from Zeus in the course of their war against the gods.
He was hidden by his mother in the earth in the guise of a fig tree or its
sprouting seed.
TETHYS The elder
Titan-goddess of the sources of fresh-water. She was known as the great nurse
("tethis") of life, and was sometimes equated with Thesis, the goddess
"creation." Tethys spawned the Rivers, Clouds and Springs.
THEIA The elder
Titanis goddess of sight and the shining light of heaven ("aither"). She was the
mother of Sun, Moon and Dawn. Her name is also connected with words meaning
"foresight" and "prophecy".
THEMIS The elder
Titan-goddess of the natural order, divine law and tradition. She was also a
goddess of the oracles of Dodona and Delphi. By Zeus she was the mother of the
goddess Fates and of the Seasons, and had a seat by his side on Olympus as
advisor.
TITAN A Titan god
who instructed mankind in the observation of the stars and establishment of the
natural or farming calendar. He was perhaps the same as Atlas.
GREEK
&
ROMAN NAMES
GREEK
ROMAN *
Asteria
Asteria
Astraeus
Astraeus
Atlas
Atlas
Clymene
Clymene
Coeus
Coeus
Crius
Crius
Cronus
Saturn
Curetes
Curetes
Dione
Dione
Eos
Aurora
Epimetheus
Epimetheus
Eurybia
Eurybia
Eurynome
Eurynome
Hecate
Hecate
Helius
Sol
Hyperion
Hyperion
Iapetus
Iapetus
Leto
Latona
Mnemosyne
Moneta
Oceanus
Oceanus
Pallas
Pallas
Perses
Perses
Phoebe
Phoebe
Prometheus
Prometheus
Rhea
Ops
Selene
Luna
Styx
Styx
Tethys
Tethys
Theia
Thea
Themis
Themis
* The Romans simply used the Greek names for most of the Titans. Only a
handful were identified with pre-existing Roman gods.
The Theoi Project: Guide to Greek Mythology was created and is edited by
Aaron J. Atsma.
Website copyright © 2000–2007 Aaron Atsma, New Zealand.
Comments
Post a Comment