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Ancient Ruins

GREEK
MYTHOLOGY

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Retellings and analyses of myths.

Zeus's Conquests and Animal Forms

One of the most disturbing and controversial aspects of the god Zeus is his tendency to rape innocent women, often in the shape of animals. Zeus's reputation has tanked among mythology fans, mostly because he is popularly interpreted as an irredeemable rapist. Why does he do this? The short answer is that Zeus is a divine king, so he behaves in the way powerful men were expected to in Ancient Greece. It’s likely that his various lovers were local goddesses at one point, so his “conquests” represent his literal dominion over different parts of Greece, and handily gives local kings a way to claim descendancy from Zeus. But that doesn’t explain the turning-into-animals bit. The most cynical interpretation is that the god disguises himself as an innocuous animal so that he can get close to his victim without her feeling threatened until it’s too late, and some of the sources actually do frame Zeus’ animal shapes as a means of deception. I guess one could say that rape is an inherently bestial act, so a god must take the form of a beast to do it, but that’s a little overly simplistic and not consistent enough. In order to properly answer this question, I must ask you to suspend the notion of myths as consistent narratives about Zeus raping innocent mortal women or his own sisters and daughters. Instead, view myths as symbolic. It’s not usually a one-to-one metaphor or allegory, but rather a combination of signifiers that amount to some deeper mystery. I’m going to try to find out what the deeper mystery is. Because there are so many of these stories, I’m going to focus on three for simplicity’s sake. The Snake: Zeus and Persephone Despite being the least familiar of these three myths, I’m going to start with this one because I know the most about it and can interpret it the most easily. In this myth, Zeus approaches Persephone in a Cretan cave, in the form of a serpent, to conceive Zagreus. Snakes are very common in Greek mythology, and are associated with many different gods. More often than not, though, they are associated with the Earth and gods related to the Earth. Sons of Gaia, like Erichthonius and Typhon, have serpentine features. The dragon Python represents Gaia’s dominion over Delphi, until it’s slain by Apollo. Snakes are sacred animals of earth gods like Demeter and Dionysus. Their overall reputation in Greek mythology is ambivalent, neither good nor evil. They’re generally considered to be sources of divine wisdom, and they are also phallic, making them symbols of fertility and life-force (zoë). That means they are loaded with mystical significance. They represent primordial creative power, as well as darkness and destruction. Phanes, the primordial god of progenation, is an androgynous figure with a snake wrapped around his body. The ouroboros, the snake eating its own tail, generates and consumes itself. Zeus’ serpent form connects him directly to the Underworld, because a snake is a chthonic animal, and the chthonic location (a cave) further emphasizes this. Zeus in the form of a serpent is a chthonic Zeus, an Underworldly Zeus, which is somewhat unusual for a sky god. However, it would make sense for Hades, who is Persephone’s husband in conventional mythology, so it would also make sense for Hades to be having sex with his wife. Hades is euphemistically called Zeus Khthonios in some sources, and Hades and Zeus are conflated in Orphism (such as in the Orphic Hymn to Melinoe). One source outright names Zagreus as the son of Hades (a fragment from a lost play (Sisyphus by Aeschylus), which is out-of-context but enough to establish the connection between the chthonic Dionysus and Hades. Hades is Zeus of the Underworld — the divine sovereign, but down instead of up. Snake-Zeus and Hades may be the same entity, the chthonic aspect of the Lord of the Universe. Maybe this myth is just the Orphic version of the typical “Rape of Persephone” myth. If Zeus/Hades are the respective celestial and chthonic aspects of the same entity, this fits in nicely with the similar dual natures of Dionysus/Zagreus and Kore/Persephone. Dionysus himself is also the Lord of the Universe in Orphism — he was considered to be Zeus’ successor, the heir to the current Lord of the Universe, and he was also identified with Phanes, the first Lord of the Universe. If we interpret all of these gods as aspects of the same cosmic king, then that would mean that the Lord of the Universe is Persephone’s father, her husband, and her son. "Taking his mother or daughter to wife, the son or husband begets a mystic child who in turn will court only his mother. To such involvements, the snake figure is more appropriate than any other. It is the most naked form of zoë absolutely reduced to itself." —Karl Kerényi, Dionysos: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life If that sounds weird, that’s because mysticism is weird. But that’s also where its beauty is — like the ouroboros that eats its own tail, the Orphic Zeus conceives the next evolution of his own self. It’s possible that most or all cases of divine incest are examples of the same symbols looping back in on themselves. Zeus and Hera are siblings because Hera, as a sky goddess, is Zeus’ feminine counterpart. So, these two “like” beings rule the Universe together. Zeus and Demeter are siblings because Zeus (Dios) and Demeter (Deo) are the respective rulers of the sky and the earth; Demeter is another iteration of Zeus’ divine mother, Rhea, and Zeus himself is the successor of Kronos, the previous Lord. Kronos and Rhea were the children of Ouranos and Gaia, the literal sky and the earth. So Zeus and Demeter, the same sky/earth deities as their parents, conceive Persephone. Zeus and Persephone then conceive Zagreus-Dionysus, the next Lord of the Universe, who learns everything he needs to know from Rhea. And so it goes. The reason why this is expressed as incest is because the familial relationships between gods symbolize the continuity of the archetype shared by each divine identity. As the later iterations of the Sky and Earth, Zeus and Demeter have to both be the grandchildren of the original Sky and Earth. In order to conceive his heir, the next Lord of the Universe, Zeus has to conceive him with his own daughter, because she is the next Chthonic Goddess. She must be the daughter of the previous Chthonic Goddess, so Zeus had to have conceived her with his own sister. Without the incest, it wouldn’t be a cycle. The incest is a kind of nudge and wink to the mystic that these gods are connected symbolically. I am spitballing here. I don’t claim that this is how the myths were meant to be interpreted by ancient Orphics, because I would need harder evidence to prove that. And, after years of having to wade through Frazerian/Gravesian/witch-cult-hypothesis/etc neopagan bullshit, I’m painfully aware that just because a connection appears to make sense does not mean it is substantiated. Mythology is also too complex for this “sky father and earth mother” dynamic to apply universally; each god is an entire collection of numerous archetypes, at minimum. I don’t mean to suggest that Zeus, Kronos, Ouranos, Hades, Dionysus and Phanes are interchangeable, because they’re not. Nor are Gaia, Rhea, Demeter, Persephone, and Ariadne all interchangeable. The archetype is not the “true identity” of any of these gods; rather, it is a common thread that links all of these gods together in this specific context. However, speaking as a mystic rather than a scholar, I like this interpretation. (I remain a sucker for Jungian-style archetypes even after all this time.) It adds some layers of deeper meaning to the interactions between the gods in mythology, making it spiritually profound, instead of just “ew, Zeus is fucking his daughter!” Everything in mythology is symbolic, but weird sex is especially symbolic. The Bull: Zeus and Europa We remain on Crete for this next story. Zeus takes the form of a white bull to kidnap Europa, and walks through the sea with her on his back to get to Crete, where they establish the kingdom of Minos: "Once on the Sidonian beach Zeus as a high-horned bull imitated an amorous bellow with his changeling throat, and felt a charming thrill; little Eros heaved up a woman, with his two arms encircling her middle. And while he lifted her, at his side the sea-faring bull curved his neck downwards, spread under the girl to mount, sinking sideways on his knees, and stretching his back submissive, he raised up Europa; then the bull pressed on, and his floating hoof furrowed the water of the trodden brine noiselessly with forbearing footsteps. High above the sea, the girl throbbing with fear navigated on bullback, unmoving, unwetted. If you saw her you would think it was Thetis perhaps, or Galateia, or Earthshaker’s bedfellow [Amphitrite], or Aphrodite seated on Triton’s neck. Aye, Seabluehair [Poseidon] marvelled at the waddle-foot voyage; Triton heard the delusive lowing of Zeus, and bellowed an echoing note to Cronos’ son with his conch by way of wedding song; Nereus pointed out to Doris the woman carried along, mingling wonder with fear as he saw the strange voyager and his horns." —Nonnus, Dionysiaca Bulls appear all over Greek mythology and religion. A hecatomb is a particularly handsome sacrifice of a hundred oxen offered to the gods (usually used for public festivals, at which there would be enough people to eat that much meat). In the Dionysian cult, Dionysus is represented by a “worthy bull” that is then sacrificed to him, allegedly by dismemberment (the manner in which Zagreus was killed by the Titans). That means that the bull is Dionysus being sacrificed to himself. (There’s that looping effect again.) The significance of bulls also extends way beyond Greece — the “Bull of Heaven” in Mesoamerica, Apis in Egypt, and allegedly Moloch in Canaan. It usually has connotations of masculine power, kingship and virility. So of course Zeus would take a bull shape at least once, and of course that shape would have something to do with Crete. Bulls are especially significant to Crete, and we know this because of their prevalence in Minoan artwork. The significance of bulls in myths about Crete is probably some kind of ancestral memory or reference to the significance of bulls in Minoan religion and culture more generally, though we can only guess at what that could have been. Whatever the true meaning of Zeus’ bull-form is in this myth, it is likely based in the spiritual significance that bulls had in Minoan culture. Maybe the meaning will become clear if Linear A is ever deciphered. It’s therefore not that surprising that there are three “Cretan Bull” characters, all of whom could be represented by the constellation Taurus: The first is Zeus in the form he took to abduct Europa, the second is the bull that Poseidon sent to Crete and Minos refused to sacrifice (resulting in the conception of the Minotaur), and the third is Asterion, the Minotaur himself (whose name is a reference to the constellation). Once again, there’s a bull for each generation — Bull-Zeus and Europa, then Pasiphae and the white bull sent by Poseidon, and then the Minotaur (and Ariadne, who then marries Dionysus, the bull-horned god). Since all of them could potentially be Taurus, they’re all (again) the same celestial bull. Except now we have (true) bestiality instead of incest, yaaaay. The bull is usually associated with sacrifice, because that was the main role it played in religion. Minos refuses to sacrifice the beautiful white bull to Poseidon, so as punishment, his wife falls in love with it. Athenian teeangers are sacrificed to the Minotaur, and then the Minotaur himself is sacrificed when Theseus comes to kill him. Dionysus is sacrificed to himself in bull form. There isn’t any apparent sacrificial component of Zeus’ bull shape, though. My guess is that its importance as a sacrifice makes the bull an almost inherently divine animal, alongside its kingly associations. The Minotaur serves to represent the bull’s savage and destructive dark side. Dionysus, of course, embodies both. Whether Zeus is the noble bull or the savage bull in this myth is open to interpretation; I think it’s safe to assume that it’s intended to be the former, but has become the latter due to Values Dissonance. I leave you with Hera’s hilarious reaction to seeing her husband in the shape of a bull: "Phoibos [Apollo], go and stand by your father, or some plowman may catch Zeus and put him to some earth-shaking plowtree. I wish one would catch him and put him to the plow! Then I could shout to my lord – ‘Learn to bear two goads now, Cupid’s (Eros’s’) and the farmer’s! You must be verily Lord of Pastures, my fine Archer, and shepherd your parent, or cattle-driver Selene may put Cronides under the yoke, she may score Zeus’s back with her merciless lash when she is off to herdsman Endymion’s bed in a hurry! Zeus your Majesty! it is a pity Io did not see you coming like that to court her, when she was a heifer with horns on her forehead! she might have bred you a little bull as horny as his father! Look out for Hermes! The professional cattle-lifter may think he is catching a bull and steal his own father! He may give his harp once again to your son Phoibos, as price for the ravisher ravished. But what can I do? If only Argos were still alive, shining all over with sleepless eyes, that he might be Hera’s drover, and drag Zeus to some inaccessible pasture, and prod his flanks with a crook!’” —Nonnus, Dionysiaca The Swan: Zeus and Leda This one is trickier, because swans don’t have nearly the same presence in Greek mythology/religion as do bulls and snakes. Most of the other swans in Greek mythology have something to do with Apollo, since swans are sacred to him; they pull his chariot, and live in his sacred realm of Hyperborea. A king called Kyknos (literally “swan”) was changed into a swan while mourning the death of Phaethon, associating the swan with Helios, who was conflated with Apollo in Roman sources. But Zeus’ rape of Leda in the form of a swan has nothing to do with Apollo or Helios, and doesn’t seem to have any kind of solar connotations either. Leda was queen of Sparta, and after being impregnated by Zeus, she laid two eggs instead of giving birth normally. Out of one egg came Helen and Clytemnestra, and Castor and Polydeuces (Pollux) came out of the other. Helen and Polydeuces are demigods and the children of Zeus, while Castor and Clytemnestra are mortal and the children of Leda’s husband Tyndareus. Polydeuces ends up sharing half his divinity with Castor, and eventually both are apotheosized. Helen and Clytemnestra fare less well, to put it mildly. This distinction between the half-divine child and the fully-mortal child is an interesting one. There’s an idea that shows up occasionally in mythology of a child with three parents — two human parents, and then a divine parent, because the divine parent interceded with the conception somehow. The child is therefore a normal product of their two human parents, like anyone else, except for some supernatural quirk. It’s a handy way for kings to claim descendancy from gods. In Mesopotamian mythology, Gilgamesh is 2/3rds divine because his mother is a goddess, and his mortal father was possessed by his divine father while he was being conceived. Jesus seems to be in a similar situation, since he is descended from David through Joseph, despite his conception being allegedly immaculate. This isn’t exactly what’s going on in the myth of Leda, but it’s where my mind went. All four children are born inside eggs, making them all essentially products of the swan, so each egg has input from all three parents. But only two of the children are true demigods. (It’s actually possible for fraternal twins to have separate fathers, but this doesn’t happen very often among humans.) It’s possible that Leda’s name is a variant of Leto, the divine mother of Apollo and Artemis, who are also twins. I don’t know how true that is, but it might explain the swan form by giving it a very indirect tie to Apollo. I’m doubtful, though, because nothing else about Leda’s myth is similar to Leto’s. In other versions, the goddess Nemesis is actually the mother of Helen, conceiving her with Swan-Zeus in the form of a goose, and Leda raises her. It makes some sense that the goddess of retribution would spawn the face that launched a thousand ships. Why a swan? Honestly, I don’t know. I didn’t find much about the symbolism behind this myth, so I’ll speculate a bit. Swans are paradoxical animals. They’re known for their beauty and grace, making them symbols of nobility and refinement. The Ancient Greeks believed that they sang a beautiful song as they died, which would be the most beautiful birdsong on earth — this isn’t actually true, but it further associates the swan with beauty, in terms of appearance and movement and sound. This is probably why they’re associated with Apollo. But swans are also powerful and dangerous. They’re the world’s heaviest flying birds, they’re aggressive, and they’re capable of drowning people. Did you know that mute swans can hiss like cats? I’ve seen an angry swan before, and it’s pretty intimidating. So, I associate swans with some of the same qualities that the bull is associated with — it is both noble and savage, making it kingly. In a group of swans, the most powerful male carries his wings up on his back, so everyone knows who’s in charge, and he’ll snap and nip at the others swans when he doesn’t get what he wants. So, I’m not particularly surprised that a swan might be associated with masculine sexual power and aggression. Oddly, this myth is a popular subject of artwork, becuase it’s somehow more socially acceptable to portray sex between a woman and bird than a woman and a man. This gives artists a loophole that they can use to sexualize women without crossing too many lines. Therefore, many of the depictions make the encounter appear consensual. This invites the viewer to objectify Leda, but it makes me wonder… why can’t these myths be consensual? So, where to go from here? One other thing I want to mention is that stories of girls marrying talking animals or monsters are pretty common in folklore. Bruno Bettelheim discusses these stories in The Uses of Enchantment, calling them the “Animal-Groom Cycle.” Bettelheim argues that fairy tales help children to learn about and come to terms with sex in a way that’s appropriate, by using symbolic devices like the animal-groom. In animal-groom stories, the bestial lover represents the animalistic aspects of male sexuality, which the female protagonist has to contend with in order to reach maturity. (See this answer for more of my thoughts on that.) Bettelheim cites “Cupid and Psyche” as the oldest example, but that’s because he’s discussing fairy tales and not myths, and “Cupid and Psyche” has a more fairy-tale-like structure than any of these stories. These stories of Zeus in animal forms aren’t the same, but they’re very similar. He’s a supernatural being in the form of an animal, who comes to beautiful virgin girls and couples with them, producing supernatural children. When I was a child, it seemed natural to me that Zeus would take the form of animals to court various women, and I believed that his different forms somehow “personalized” the encounter for each of the women. It’s possible that these myths were my first exposure to sexuality in any form that was more complex than the standard happily-ever-after of Disney films. And back then, all of it made sense to me — gods taking animal forms, gods marrying their own siblings, gods having multiple partners. I questioned none of it. Of course, I didn’t know about rape as a child, and that bit of context should never be explicit in a children’s book. I thought that Zeus was really that seductive, and that the women loved him back, because who wouldn’t want to be loved by a god? My favorite Zeus-affair is one I didn’t analyze here, the myth of Danaë. This was because it’s part of the myth of Perseus, but also because I interpreted it as a Cinderella story. I perceived that Zeus had somehow saved Danaë from her imprisonment. Since she and all the others were called Zeus’s “wives,” I imagined that he brought her to Olympus and held an entire marriage ceremony for her before gently placing her back in her mortal prison, this time with divine favor on her side. Maybe he repeatedly visited her in the box to keep her company and make love, instead of adding to her trauma. Maybe Europa was happy to be given a kingdom, like her brother Cadmus, and a line of divine children. Maybe Semele was honored and thrilled to be secretly the bride of Zeus until Hera ruined it for her. Maybe Ganymede was a repressed bottom who was granted eternal life and beauty and a divine daddy who loves him in exchange for pouring nectar every once in a while. I mean, why not? That interpretation is not accurate, and I would never try to argue that it is. I’m not going to back up this interpretation or claim it as “the real story,” because the sources we have are usually clear about these encounters being non-consensual. Greek literature and art didn’t even distinguish between marriage and rape! But these sources were mostly written by men, and we mostly have no idea how women interpreted these myths. Speaking as a woman who believes in the Greek gods, I like my child-self’s interpretation better. I would rather interpret Zeus as a masterful (if unfaithful) womanizer over a rapist. Not merely because it makes him look better, but because (in my opinion) it’s more in keeping with his identity as the benevolent Lord of the Universe, and (as I’ve argued before) that’s what really matters about him. If I were going to do a “feminist rewrite” of these myths, I would not cast Zeus as an evil rapist. I would give the women, his lovers, the actual sexual agency that they are denied in the myths.

The Greek Underworld

The Ancient Greek Underworld is divided into three realms: The Fields of Asphodel Endless fields of asphodel flowers. This is where most people go after they die. They end up as something akin to shambling zombies, or ghosts fluttering like leaves in an endless wind. They drink from waters of Lethe, the river of forgetfulness, and have no memory of who they were in life. They just exist. To be clear, most people end up here, irrespective of whether they led moral or sinful lives. Elysium and the Isles of the Blessed A kind of heaven that is reserved for heroes or those of extreme virtue in life. Basically, it’s a peaceful and blissful realm in the Underworld, but its exact nature changes depending on the source. Sometimes the Elysian Fields are synonymous with the Isles of the Blessed, but sometimes they’re different: the latter is for legendary heroes, while the former is for ordinary people who were initiates of the Mysteries in life (i.e. the Eleusinian or Orphic Mysteries), having achieved a holy afterlife. Later classical literature incorporated the concept of reincarnation, which actually tiers these realms — if a person was virtuous enough to make it to Elysium after three subsequent lifetimes, they would go to the Isles of the Blessed after their fourth lifetime to live with the heroes for all eternity. (Both realms are still part of Hades, so even the most virtuous still go to Hades.) Tartarus Originally, in older Greek literature, Tartarus was a great abyss as far below Hades as the Earth is below the sky, meaning it’s explicitly not part of Hades. This is where the Titans are imprisoned. However, in about the 5th century BC, Tartarus evolved into a kind of dungeon where the most evil people were imprisoned and subject to ironic punishments. Some of them were redeemable and subject to a kind of purgatory, but others were basically in Hell. However, “damnation” as we know it still wasn’t really an idea. Very few people were evil enough to be imprisoned in Tartarus forever, so the average person wasn’t at risk of being imprisoned in Tartarus. You’d have to have directly and personally offended the gods in a particularly brutal way to end up here. The three judges of the dead — Minos, Aiakos, and Rhadamanthus — allocate the souls to each realm. The only true exception to this rule of “everyone goes to Hades” are those vanishingly few mortals who have achieved apotheosis, and live as gods upon Olympus. The Underworld contains five rivers: Styx (hatred), Acheron (woe), Lethe (oblivion), Cocytus (tears/lamentation), and Phlegethon (fire). The only trees that grow in the Underworld are cypress, poplars, and pomegranates. The Greek Underworld is ruled by the god Hades and the goddess Persephone. Hades is the divine overseer of the realm that bears his name, and Persephone more directly controls the movements of dead souls (authorizing them to speak to mortals or to be reincarnated). Though their marriage began with a non-consensual kidnapping (as was a typical representation of marriage itself at the time), they appear to have one of the most stable and mutually respectful marriages among the Greek pantheon. Other chthonic gods include Hecate, a Titaness and the goddess of witchcraft and ghosts; Nyx and Erebus, the primordial gods of night and darkness; Thanatos, the personification of death; Hypnos, the personification of dreams; the Oneiroi, the spirits of dreams; Lampades, underworld nymphs in Hecate’s retinue that carry torches; the Erinyes, three female spirits that punish mortals for transgressions; and Charon, who ferries souls across the river Styx (or Acheron) in exchange for coins. Hermes also pops in from time to time, because it’s his job to bring the souls to Hades after they die. Here are three tales of mortals who visited their realm: Sisyphus Sisyphus was a king of Corinth known for his cunning. The gods decide to personally kill him, either for grievously violating Xenia or for interfering in one of Zeus’ love affairs. When Thanatos, the personification of death, comes to claim his soul, Sisyphus captures and binds Thanatos. With Thanatos bound, no one can die. The ensuing chaos is so severe that Zeus commands Sisyphus to let Thanatos go. Sisyphus can’t evade Death this time, so he tells his wife not to bury him with proper funeral rites (which, as a king, he’s entitled to). He arrives at the banks of the River Styx with no coins to pay Charon to row him across the river. Persephone pities him, and lets him return to Earth to give his wife a talking-to. Sisyphus lives out the remainder of his life, and when he finally dies naturally, Hades throws him in Tartarus. His punishment is to roll a boulder up to the top of a giant hill, which will roll to the bottom again as soon as it reaches the top. It’s pretty obvious that this is meant to drill in the concept of inevitability. Suffice to say, no individual mortal managed to straight-up irritate the gods more than Sisyphus. Theseus and Pirithous This is one of Theseus’ less proud moments. He and his friend Pirithous got the bright idea that they should be entitled to marry goddesses, and Theseus accompanies Pirithous to Hades in order to kidnap Persephone. This goes about as well as you might expect. Hades offers them a seat, ever the god of hospitality, and Theseus and Pirithous are held fast to their bench. Hades then leaves them at the mercy of the Erinyes, who famously don’t have much in the way of mercy. Theseus is eventually rescued by Heracles, who frees him when he makes his own journey to the Underworld. Heracles goes to free Pirithous, but the resulting earthquake informs him that Pirithous deserves his eternal punishment. Honestly, they probably got off easy in the end — Persephone herself would probably have given them a worse punishment than eternal torture. Orpheus and Eurydice Probably the saddest myth in the entirety of Greek mythological canon, at least in my opinion. Orpheus was a Thracian bard, the son of the Muse Calliope, and famed throughout Greece for his remarkable singing voice. He fell in love with a woman called Eurydice, but on the day of her wedding, she was bitten by a venomous snake and died. Orpheus was so devastated that, like Dionysus before him, he traveled into Hades to get his love back. He put Cerberus to sleep by playing his lyre, and Hades and Persephone were moved to tears by his singing. They let Eurydice go, on one condition — Orpheus must make it all the way back to the surface without looking back to check that Eurydice is still behind him. Now, whenever a character in folklore is given an explicit instruction by a supernatural being, they always end up failing to follow it. At the last second, the moment before Orpheus reaches the surface, he looks back. And that’s it. Eurydice is pulled back down into Hades. Orpheus was crushed with grief and regret, but although his story has a sad ending, it also has an interesting twist — he founded a mystery religion called Orphism, and it would amend his mistake by allowing mortals to experience resurrection, by the grace of Dionysus and Persephone.

The Oldest Version of the

Persephone Myth

You may have heard that Persephone goes to the Underworld willingly in the "oldest" version of her myth. Unfortunately, this is not true. As far as we know, this is the oldest version of the Persephone myth that has survived: He [Zeus] came to the bed of all-nourishing Demeter, and she bare white-armed Persephone whom Aidoneus [Haides] carried off from her mother; but wise Zeus gave her to him. —Hesiod, Theogony (Translation from Theoi.com) A more complete version comes from the Homeric Hymn to Demeter (translation from Theoi.com): "I begin to sing of rich-haired Demeter, awful goddess -- of her and her trim-ankled daughter whom Aidoneus rapt away, given to him by all-seeing Zeus the loud-thunderer. Apart from Demeter, lady of the golden sword and glorious fruits, she [Persephone] was playing with the deep-bosomed daughters of Oceanus and gathering flowers over a soft meadow, roses and crocuses and beautiful violets, irises also and hyacinths and the narcissus, which Earth made to grow at the will of Zeus and to please the Host of Many [Hades], to be a snare for the bloom-like girl — a marvellous, radiant flower. It was a thing of awe whether for deathless gods or mortal men to see: from its root grew a hundred blooms and is smelled most sweetly, so that all wide heaven above and the whole earth and the sea's salt swell laughed for joy. And the girl was amazed and reached out with both hands to take the lovely toy; but the wide-pathed earth yawned there in the plain of Nysa, and the lord, Host of Many [Hades], with his immortal horses sprang out upon her — the Son of Cronos, He who has many names. He caught her up reluctant on his golden car and bare her away lamenting." So… yeah. This supposed “older version” of the story does not exist. Perhaps an older version of Persephone did go to the Underworld willingly, but we don’t know that. What we do know, or can at least speculate, is that Hades was not the central focus of pre-Ancient-Greek versions of the myth. We know this because Hades isn’t mentioned in Linear B, and because the Eleusinian Mysteries (which center around the seasonal cycle of Persephone’s descent to the underworld and ascent out of it) place very little emphasis on him. He’s relegated to a plot catalyst, not unlike the prince in Cinderella (who doesn’t actually do anything but provide an occasion for Cinderella’s character growth). The Eleusinian Mysteries are fundamentally a goddess cult, so it is likely that a pre-Ancient-Greek “goddess-centered” version of the Persephone myth exists. Unfortunately, we have no idea what that is, but it still indicates that Persephone is vastly more important than Hades is, both in mythology and in Ancient Greek religion. She is the Queen of the Underworld. The reason why she features so predominantly as the Queen of the Underworld in myth is because her Kore characterization simply doesn’t matter as much, and likely isn’t as old, even though it “should” be predominant just based on how much time Persephone spends aboveground. So, regardless of whether Persephone went to the Underworld willingly or not, the results are ultimately the same — she becomes the Dread Queen of Those Below, and mortals fear to speak her name. Just goes to show that mythology is definitely not consistent. Despite that big question mark over Persephone’s earliest characterization, the version of the story in which Persephone goes willingly and fell in love with Hades is definitely modern. But, as long as we acknowledge that, I don’t think that makes it invalid. I like the newer story a lot better, both because of the symbolism of a girl confronting and loving the darkness, but also because Persephone and Hades otherwise have one of the best relationships in Greek mythology. The concept of the dark and powerful Lord and Lady of the Underworld is a beautiful and empowering one.

"Cupid and Psyche" as a Fairy Tale

“Cupid and Psyche” is more similar to a fairy tale than a myth, in both its structure and in the tropes that it uses. "The Western tradition of the animal-groom stories begins with Apuleius’ story of Cupid and Psyche of the second century A.D., and he draws on even older sources. This story is part of a larger work, Metamorphoses [The Golden Ass], which, as the title suggests, is concerned with initiations that cause such transformations. Although in “Cupid and Psyche” Cupid is a god, the story has important features in common with the tales of the animal groom. Cupid remains invisible to Psyche. Led astray by her two evil older sisters, Psyche believes her lover — and with it sex — to be disgusting, “a huge serpent with a thousand coils.” Cupid is a deity, and Psyche becomes one; a goddess, Aphrodite, out of her jealousy of Psyche, causes all the events. […] …this myth has influenced all later stories of the animal-groom type in the Western world. We encounter here for the first time the motif of two older sisters who are evil due to their jealousy of their youngest sister, who is more beautiful and virtuous than they. The sisters try to destroy Psyche, who nevertheless is victorious in the end, but only after she has undergone great hardships. Further, the tragic developments are the consequence of a bride who, ignoring her husband’s warning not to try to gain knowledge of him (not to look at him, not to permit light to fall on him), acts contrary to his orders and then must wander all over the world to regain him. More important than these motifs is one very significant feature of the animal-groom cycle which appears here for the first time: the groom is absent during the day and present only in the darkness of night; he is believed to be an animal during the day and to become human only in bed; in short, he keeps his day and night existences separate from each other. From what happens in the story it is not difficult to conclude that he wishes to keep his sex life separated from all else he is doing. The female, despite the ease and pleasure she enjoys, finds her life empty; she is unwilling to accept the separation and isolation of purely sexual aspects of life from the rest of it. She tries to force their unification. Little does she know that this can be achieved only through the hardest, most sustained moral and physical efforts. But once Psyche embarks on trying to wed the aspects of sex, love, and life into a unity, she does not falter, and in the end she wins." —Bruno Bettelheim, The Uses of Enchantment Cupid and Psyche uses a lot of tropes that are rare in myth, but very common in fairy tales: 1. Psyche is the youngest of three siblings of the same sex, and she wins in the end. 2. Her two older sisters are evil. They try to steal Psyche’s prize for themselves out of jealousy, but die in the process. 3. Psyche’s beauty indicates that she is an inherently good person, and this is why she wins. 4. Psyche’s husband is (apparently) a monster, but she loves him anyway. 5. Psyche loses her husband through committing some sort of transgression against him, and has to earn him back. (This plot point of the girl looking upon her monstrous husband as he sleeps, seeing that he’s actually a handsome man, and then immediately losing him is also in the Norwegian tale “East of the Sun and West of the Moon.”) 6. Aphrodite plays the Wicked Stepmother role. She envies Psyche’s beauty and innocence. 7. She gives Psyche various impossible tasks, which Psyche completes through supernatural aid. These tasks, except for the last one, are distinctly fairy-tale like. The first is picking lentils and grain out of ashes, which is also the first task the wicked stepmother assigns in “Cinderella.” The other two consist of bring back magic wool and magic water. Only the last one, katabasis, is distinctly mythic. 8. Psyche is finally reunited with her husband, and has a Happily Ever After. Why is this so much more a fairy tale than a myth, and why did it influence fairy tales as far away as Norway? Honestly, I have no idea. It’s definitely a weird story in the context of myth, but it also isn’t quite an example of the Animal Groom Cycle, because Eros isn’t and was never a monster. That plot point isn’t actually resolved, either — the oracle says that Psyche will marry a great dragon that men and gods fear, but she marries Eros. I reconciled this in my own telling by having the “dragon” be the primordial Eros, the spirit of progenation itself, of which Aphrodite’s son is but one incarnation. But that’s just my interpretation.

Appearances

Medusa Was Not Always Sympathetic

Many people are familair with Ovid's sympathetic version of Medusa's story, in which she was a beautiful woman, turned into a monster as punishment for having been raped by Poseidon. I'm not a fan of Ovid's version. I get why it’s popular. It seems almost tailor-made for feminist interpretations of mythology, without having to change too much. But it’s taken out of the wider context around this myth. I’ve heard some people use this story as justification for hating Athena, but Ovid goes out of his way to portray the gods more unsympathetically than in other sources. (This is mostly because of Roman politics and Ovid’s personal beef with the emperor, long story short.) I’m not saying that Ovid’s story “doesn’t count” because of its lateness or its bias or any other reason. There are other Greek myths for which Ovid is our main or only source, such as the myth of the Golden Touch. But in the case of Medusa, Ovid is not the only source we have. This story about her being a human rape victim doesn’t appear in earlier versions of her tale. In earlier, Greek sources, Medusa was a monster to begin with. She’s the daughter of Phorkys and Keto, two sea monsters, and she has two equally-monstrous sisters, Stheno and Euryale. The oldest written version of the story is Hesiod’s: "[The Gorgons] are Sthenno, Euryale, and Medousa, whose fate is a sad one, for she was mortal, but the other two immortal and ageless both alike. Poseidon, he of the dark hair, lay with one of these, in a soft meadow and among spring flowers. But when Perseus had cut off the head of Medousa there sprang from her blood great Khrysaor and the horse Pegasos so named from the springs (pegai) of Okeanos, where she was born." —Hesiod, Theogony. (Translation from Theoi.) So Poseidon is mentioned in the earliest version of the story, as are his and Medusa’s sons, Pegasus and Khrysaor. Poseidon and Medusa had sex in a meadow, not in Athena’s temple, and nothing here indicates that it was non-consensual. Medusa was also a monster to begin with, the sister of fellow Gorgons Stheno and Euryale, and the daughter of Phorkys and Keto. Hesiod laments Medusa’s fate because she is mortal and will die, not because of any injustice committed against her. Based on this alone, we have no reason to conclude that Medusa was raped in this oldest version. For some reason, none of the other sources mention this little episode with Poseidon until centuries later when Ovid took up the story and embellished it a little. Medusa also was not a beautiful woman in these older versions. She and her sisters were all ugly monsters. That was the point — Medusa’s head was a apotropaic symbol. Its hideousness was thought to scare away evil spirits, kind of like grotesques on churches. Most older depictions of Medusa show her as bug-eyed and bearded with a lolling tongue, a unibrow, and tusks like an orc. Apart from Ovid, the only other source that describes Medusa as having once been a beautiful woman is the Bibliotheca of Pseudo-Apollodorus, an anthology of myths from the first or second century CE: "It is affirmed by some that Medousa (Medusa) was beheaded because of Athene (Athena), for they say the Gorgon had been willing to be compared with Athene in beauty." —Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca. Translation from Theoi In this version, the reason why Athena turned Medusa into a monster is because Medusa claimed to be more beautiful than Athena, not because Poseidon raped her. That makes it a typical hubris punishment and not a grievous injustice. I acknowledge my own bias here. I remember being seven years old and pretending to cut off Medusa’s head with a sword (actually a repurposed princess wand). Medusa had to die for Pegasus to be born, and I loved Pegasus. This myth has too much personal significance to me for me to accept the reinterpretation. But there are also many other women in Greek mythology who deserve more sympathy from a modern audience than Medusa: Helen, Ariadne, Atalanta, Daphne, Iphigenia, Antigone, even Medea. Medusa is not supposed to be a woman, she is supposed to be a monster. The story of Perseus and Medusa explains how the Gorgon’s face came to have apotropaic power — Perseus gave the Gorgon’s head to Athena, who converted its destructive power into protective power. It bothers me that Ovid’s version is the most well-known, because the significance of the actual myth loses out to the reinterpretation, and Athena is unfairly villainized for this one portrayal (and there are many more surviving myths concerning Athena). Perseus is even more unfairly villainized. Of all the Ancient Greek heroes, he’s the most heroic in the modern sense. His motivation was actually to protect a woman, his mother, from rape! He is not a representation of big bad patriarchal men coming to kill the Goddess.

Someone Please Help Odysseus

So, it turns out that when most people think of "The Odyssey," they think of only four books of it. Four. Books. Out of twenty-four! These four books are collectively called the Apologoi. Here are the events of the Apologoi, in chronological order: The Kikonians: Fresh from war, Odysseus and his men think it would be a great idea to sack the cities of these random people, murder all the men, enslave all the women, etc. and are shocked — shocked, I tell you! — that the Kikonians retaliate. The Lotus-Eaters: A short but intriguing episode, in which Odysseus and his men arrive at an island where people eat a magical lotus fruit that makes the men forget about home and want to stay there forever. Trope Namer for the Lotus-Eater Machine. Land of the Cyclops: The beautiful but primitive land of single-eyed giants. Odysseus and his men hide in the cave of Polyphemus, who shows terrible hospitality by eating two of the men every day. Odysseus finally uses his guile to blind the giant, but then fucks it up as they escape by telling Polyphemus his real name, because he just had to gloat. Polyphemus calls his father Poseidon to curse Odysseus. Now with the sea itself working against him, from here it gets a whole lot worse. Aeolus: Odysseus and co. arrive at the land of Aeolus, whom the gods have entrusted with control of the Four Winds. Aeolus binds up three of the winds in a bag, and leaves Zephyr, the gentle West Wind, to blow Odysseus and his fleet home. And they almost make it! Unfortunately, the men are idiots. They believe that the bag is filled with gold that Odysseus is keeping for himself, so they let the winds out while he sleeps, and the resulting storm blows them all the way back to Aeolus. Aeolus is horrified, realizes the gods must really hate Odysseus if that happened, and refuses to help him any more. The Laistrygonians: More man-eating giants, who kill most of the men and destroy all the ships in Odysseus’ fleet except one. Circe: A sorceress-goddess who turns some of Odysseus’ men into pigs, but Odysseus manages to save them with some help from Hermes. He becomes Circe’s lover, and he and his men rest and her island for a full year. One poor bastard dies from falling off her roof, which is an embarrassing way to go after having survived the Trojan War. Circe tells Odysseus that he has to conjure the shade of the seer Tiresias to learn what will happen to him next. Hades: Odysseus announces to his men that they’re leaving Circe’s island but no, they’re not going home, they’re going to hell! Literally! So they go all the way to Hades, and here we have what might be the most famous example of necromancy in anything ever. Odysseus sacrifices a ram and allows the shades of the dead to drink its blood to temporarily regain their conscience and memories. In addition to Tiresias, he catches up with his mother, Achilles, Agamemnon, and long-dead famous mythological figures. Interestingly, this early version of the Greek underworld does not have Tartarus or Elysium (Tartarus is a pit as far below Hades as the earth is below the sky). Everyone is an empty shade fluttering in the gloom, regardless of who they were in life. Odysseus does see Tantalus and Sisyphus with their famous punishments, but they’re grouped in with everyone else. The Sirens: Back at Circe’s place, she gives them provisions and tells Odysseus what’s coming. The Sirens were a much shorter episode than I was expecting. Odysseus stops his sailors’ ears with wax, they tie him to the mast, he nods at them to untie him when he hears the Sirens sing, and instead they tie him tighter. And that’s it. Scylla and Charybdis: Odysseus and his men must pass two of the sea’s most deadly monsters — Scylla, who has six dogs for legs whose mouths are full of razor-sharp teeth, or Charybdis, a monster that sucks water down into the sea and vomits it back up again, creating a maelstrom. They decide that they have a better chance of surviving Scylla, so they choose her path, but lose six men to her jaws. Helios’ cattle: Odysseus wants to pass by Helios’ island because he’s been warned not to stop there by Circe and Tiresias. His men are tired and hungry and demand that Odysseus stop, so he makes them swear that they won’t touch any of Helios’ cattle. They manage not to do that until their provisions run low, and then while Odysseus sleeps, they sacrifice some of Helios’ best cattle to the gods and eat them. Helios is obviously pissed off and complains to Zeus, vowing that if Zeus doesn’t punish them, he will go to Hades and deprive earth and heaven of sunlight. That’s obviously a pretty terrible threat, so as soon as the ship leaves the island, Zeus straight-up smites it with a thunderbolt. Only Odysseus survives. Scylla and Charybdis II Electric Boogaloo: Odysseus floats by Charybdis and doesn’t have much of a choice but to pass her, since he can’t crew a ship by himself. He survives Charybdis by hanging on for dear life to the fig tree that hangs above her, then waiting for her to spit part of the ship back up so he can float on it. Kalypso: Odysseus washes up on Kalypso’s island, and she keeps him as her personal sex toy for seven whole years before Hermes finally comes to convince her to let him go. Reluctantly (and after complaining about the double standard that gods can keep human lovers, but goddesses can’t), she gives him a raft and sets him off. He promptly gets caught up in a Poseidon-induced storm and barely survives. The Phaiakians: Odysseus washes up battered and naked in the land of the Phaiakians, who, for once, are normal human beings. After all he’s been through, it’s not that surprising that he initially assumes the king’s daughter must be a goddess. The Phaiakians take him in and treat him as an honored guest, and now he’s telling this whole story to them around the dinner table. Maybe he’ll finally be able to head home to Ithaca now.

The Golden Touch

Hello, dear mortals. I am Dionysus. Let me tell you a story. Once, a very long time ago, there was a king who treated one of my satyrs with kindness. You may have heard of him; his name was Midas, and he was king of Phrygia. To Midas’ credit, most people were not kind to satyrs. Satyrs are just so degenerate and lustful, with very visible erect phalloi and they smell like goats. Kings, in particular, are not fond of them. They are a constant reminder of the savage wilderness and how close it really is, encroaching upon civilization, wrapping it tenderly like a lover… that’s an uncomfortable feeling, for kings. I would say that, in general, kings don’t like me, but that is not true — kings LOVE, LOVE, LOVE me. They’re just scared to admit it? Where was I? Oh, yes. Midas. He found a satyr passed out drunk in his garden. This particular satyr was Silenus, who raised me when I was a young god living upon the earth. Midas treated him as his honoured guest. And that, oh, I was just tickled by that. So. When I returned from my exploits, I offered Midas a gift to reward him for his hospitality. And… of all things, he wished that everything he touched would turn to gold. Idiot. I know that this must seem desirable to you, mortal, but believe me, this is a foolish gift. To quote a wise old sorcerer whom I met once, “humans have a knack for choosing precisely those things that are worst for them.” This is an example of that. But I had promised to give him whatever he wished for. In hindsight, I really should have known better; my mother met her end in a similar way. She begged a god for exactly the wrong sort of “gift.” But, I figured, this would be a learning experience for Midas, and I do not break my promises. I made it so — everything he touched turn to gold. And then, I waited. Sometimes, it takes getting what you want to learn what you really want from life. Poor Midas. His enjoyment of his gift did not last very long. You see, gold is… well, it is useless. It does not do anything. There are better metals for almost any purpose, even coins, and the only thing gold really has going for it is that it is pretty and does not corrode. And that’s nice, I like pretty things. But surely, you realize how impractical this is? Everything he touched turned to gold. The trees in his orchard became hard, shiny metal. His bed, shiny metal. The floorboards under his feet, shiny metal. And eventually, yes, his food and drink — shiny metal. If everything you touch turns to gold, then you are surrounded by nothing. but. shiny. metal. You can’t eat metal. You cannot DRINK metal! No food, no wine, soon enough Midas found himself surrounded by riches but likely to starve to death. Worst of all, if a person — like, say, his daughter — touched him, well, they would turn into a golden statue. He came to me, begging me to remove the gift he’d asked for, and I did. No one deserves to be punished for doing a good deed, and he had already been punished enough for his foolishness. I told him where to wash it off, and changed everything back. But to answer your question, mortal, why wouldn’t you want magic hands that turn everything to gold? That’s why. Because if you got what you’d asked for, everything would be gold. Your food and drink would be gold. Your loved ones would become gold statues. Your phone would turn to a lump of solid metal in your hands. Your books, thin papery sheets of gold foil. Your pets, gold. Your pillows, gold. The water that you bathe in, liquid gold. You yourself might turn to gold, eventually, or… ahh… you might go m a d at the sight of BRIGHT. SHINY. METAL. HAHAHAHAHAHA—ah. mmmh. where was I? Right. You, mortal, learn this lesson about your own greed, and, if you have any interest in learning how to turn things to gold properly, talk to Hermes. That’s his wheelhouse. And try the wine! It will make your thoughts gold. Try the mead, the honey, the golden divine fluid. The golden touch is mortals’ folly, it is no true gift of mine. The virtues of MY gifts are not to be taken for granted.

Zeus Overpowered

Despite being one of the most powerful gods, Zeus is not literally invincible. There’s a few times in which he’s been disempowered. There was one instance in which the other Olympians attempted to overthrow Zeus, mentioned in the Iliad: "…you [Thetis] said you only among the immortals beat aside shameful destruction from Kronos' son [Zeus] the dark-misted, that time when all the other Olympian gods sought to bind him, Hera and Poseidon and Pallas Athene. Then you, goddess, went and set him free from his shackles, summoning in speed the creature of the hundred hands to tall Olympos, that creature the gods name Briareos, but all men Aigaios' son, but he is far greater in strength than his father. He rejoicing in the glory of it sat down by Kronion, and the rest of the blessed gods were frightened and gave up binding him" —The Iliad, Book 1, 397 This is, as far as I know, the only instance in which the Olympians genuinely attempt a coup against Zeus. There’s plenty of superficial reasons that modern readers can come up with about why the gods might want to overthrow Zeus, but the truth is that we are not told. The only thing we know is that Hera is the ringleader, and it’s fairly obvious why she would want him replaced. For the rest of the gods, their reasoning is less obvious. (Life is actually pretty good under Zeus for most of the other gods, since he grants all of them sovereignty and mostly doesn’t control their behavior.) Regardless, the plot fails. Thetis unbinds Zeus and gets one of the Hekatonkheires as backup, scaring the gods into submission. Athena gets off scot-free because Zeus favors her, but he sentences Poseidon (and sometimes Apollo) to hard labor (building the walls of Troy as a mortal), and Hera’s punishment is the most brutal. Zeus suspends her from the sky, with anvils tied to her feet, directly above the primordial void of Khaos. So, in the future, Hera resorts to less direct means of incapacitating Zeus. She appeals to Hypnos to put Zeus to sleep for her. Hypnos is reluctant to do this, on account of what happened the last time: "That time I laid to sleep the brain in Zeus of the aegis and drifted upon him still and soft, but your mind was devising evil, and you raised along the sea the blasts of the racking winds, and on these swept him away to Kos, the strong-founded, with all his freinds lost, but Zeus awakened in anger and beat the gods up and down his house, looking beyond all others for me…" —The Iliad, Book 14 252–58 Hera convinces Hypnos to put Zeus to sleep again by promising one of the Kharities to him in marraige. The idea of sex with a pretty goddess overrides Hypnos’ better judgement (though he wouldn’t be the first) and he puts Zeus to sleep again. When Zeus wakes up, he is once again pissed and reminds Hera of that time he hung her above the chasm of Khaos, although she calms him down, and this time he does not go after Hypnos. From these examples in the Iliad, we know that it is possible to bind Zeus and that it is also possible to put Zeus to sleep so he can be temporarily out of the picture. But in these cases, Zeus isn’t really disempowered so much as breifly incapacitated. A true example of Zeus having lost some of his own power is in his battle with Typhon. Typhon is basically the Ancient Greek version of Godzilla. He is enormous, he has a hundred snake heads growing from his shoulders, in addition to lion heads and bull heads and human heads, and he breathes poison from all of his heads. He has just as many arms, with which he can rend the stars. He’s the father of most of Greek Mythology’s nastiest monsters, including the Chimera, the Sphinx, and the Nemean Lion. The Olympians are able to easily crush the Gigantes, but Typhon is so terrifying that most of the Olympians take one look at him, go “Nope!” and flee to Egypt in the forms of animals (which explains why Egyptian gods have animal heads). Only Zeus (and sometimes Athena) stays to fight, but in some tellings, Typhon incapacitates him. In Nonnus’ Dionysiaca, Zeus hid his thunderbolts in a cave while engaged in one of his many love affairs, and Typhon stole them: "This was the reason. Zeus Kronides had hurried to Plouto's [mother of Tantalus, not Hades] bed, to beget Tantalos, that mad robber of the heavenly cups; and he laid his celestial weapons well hidden with his lightning in a deep cavern. From underground the thunderbolts belched out smoke, the white cliff was blackened; hidden sparks from a fire-barbed arrow heated the water-springs; torrents boiling with foam and steam poured down the Mygdonian gorge, until it boomed again. Then at a nod from his mother, the Earth [Gaia], Kilikian (Cilician) Typhoeus stretched out his hands, and stole the snowy tools of Zeus, the tools of fire; then spreading his row of rumble-rattling throats [i.e. Typhoeus had a hundred animal heads], he yelled as his warcry the cries of all wild beasts together: the snakes that grew from him waved over his leopard's heads, licked the grim lions' manes, girdled with their curly tails spiral-wise round the bulls' horns, mingled the shooting poison of their long thin tongues with the foam-spittle of the boars." —Nonnus, Dionysiaca Nonnus portrays Typhon as being almost childish in his attempts to wield Zeus’ thunderbolts, which are heavy in his (many, gigantic) hands, while Zeus can lift them without a problem. The lightning is compared to a horse that senses its rider’s inexperience and takes advantage of it to buck him off. The lightning in the hands of Typhon is also described as being like a symbolic castration: “The thunderbolts felt the hands of a novice, and all their manly blaze was unmanned.” Typhon is clearly not worthy to wield them, but it almost doesn’t make a difference. Without his thunderbolts, there’s not a lot that Zeus can do to Typhon. So, Zeus’s solution is to use his wits to get the lightning back. He goes to Cadmus and asks him to dress up like a shepherd and play music to distract the monster. Incredibly, this works — Typhon is so enraptured by Cadmus’ playing that he’s compared to a young man struck with love for a young woman. The story abruptly switches from talking about the theft of Zeus’ lightning to the theft of his tendons, which Cadmus asks for, pretending he wants them for harp strings. Typhon gives them to Cadmus, who returns them to Zeus. Armed with his thunderbolts and his tendons, Zeus is now a force to be reckoned with. After an apocalyptic battle, Typhon is defeated, and Gaia gives up messing with Zeus. The version of the story in which Zeus’s tendons are stolen is much older. Here’s Pseudo-Apollodorus’ version: "But Typhon entwined the god and held him fast in his coils, and grabbing the sickle he cut out the sinews from Zeus' hands and feet. Then, placing Zeus up on his shoulders, he carried him across the sea to Kilikia (Cilicia), where he deposited him in the Korykion (Corycian) cave. He also hid away the sinews there in the skin of a bear, and posted as guard over them the Drakaina (Dracaena) Delphyne, a girl who was half animal. But Hermes and Aigipan (Aegipan) stole back the sinews and succeeded in replanting them in Zeus without being seen. So Zeus, again possessed of his strength, suddenly appeared from the sky in a chariot drawn by winged horses, and with thunderbolts chased Typhon to the mountain called Nysa." —Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca. Translation from Theoi. Similarly, Zeus is disempowered and incapacitated by having his tendons stolen, which are again hidden in a cave. In this version, its Hermes and Pan who steal them back. Again, I think it makes sense to interpret this as a symbolic castration. The cave that the tendons are hidden in is at Delphi, which suggests a connection between the myth of Apollo and Python. In that myth, another serpentine child of Gaia fights with a celestial god for supremacy, and is defeated. In Dionysos: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life, Karl Kerenyi draws a parallel between the tendons of Zeus that are hidden in the cave, and the dismembered body of Zagreus that is allegedly buried at the site. In Aeschylus’ Eumenides, the Pythia mentions that the Korykion cave is sacred to Dionysus. So, basically what that means is that Zeus in this myth is in more-or-less the same situation as Zagreus. He’s had part of his own body forcibly removed, and has (in Nonnus’ version) also been separated from his thunderbolts, which represent masculine power and divine authority. Kerenyi writes, “Originally, the two actions [Apollo’s victory and Zagreus’ defeat] were part of one and the same fight with the dragon. What happened in the [Korykion cave] proved that a god had only temporarily lost his powers and was therefore unconquerable.” Zeus and Zagreus do not stay disempowered. Zeus gets his tendons/lightning back and goes to defeat Typhon once and for all, and Zagreus is resurrected as Dionysus. In both cases, the god’s comeback is proof that he can’t be permanently destroyed or defeated. It is important to remember that myths are not literal, and they should not be taken at face-value. Taken metaphorically, this myth represents Zeus’s ability to maintain order in the face of ultimate chaos. To the Ancient Greeks, Zeus represented cosmic order and power structures. Zeus is who you pray to when your life is crashing down around you and you feel helpless. Zeus’s defeat of Typhon demonstrates that even when things are at their worst, even when the chaos of life has defeated you, the gods will always set it right. Zeus, as the god of order, will always restore it, even when that seems impossible. Ouranos’ emasculation is permanent — Kronos cuts his balls off, and that’s it, he’s no longer Lord of the Universe. Zeus’s is temporary. Zeus cannot be taken down that easily. Every time he’s incapacitated, he inevitably reclaims his throne. "Then he will see how far I am strongest of all the immortals. Come, you gods, make this endeavor, that you all may learn this. Let down out of the sky a cord of gold; lay hold of it all you who are gods and all who are goddesses, yet not even so can you drag down Zeus from the sky to the ground, not Zeus the high lord of counsel, though you may try until you grow weary. Yet whenever I might strongly be minded to pull you, I could drag you up, earth and all and sea and all with you, then fetch the golden rope about the horn of Olympos and make it fast, so that all once more should dangle in mid air. So much stronger am I than the gods, and stronger than mortals." —The Iliad 8, 10–27 Zeus is not to be trifled with.

The Bacchae

Dionysus does not anger easily, but denying his divinity is one of the most surefire ways to piss him off. There’s multiple stories of Dionysus proving his divinity to humans, like the pirate story, but the most famous is definitely The Bacchae by Euripides. On its surface, it’s quite a disturbing myth: Dionysus returns home to his mother’s city of Thebes, which is now ruled by his cousin, Pentheus. Pentheus feels threatened by the presence of Dionysus’ cult (not helped by the fact that his mother and aunts have all gone crazy and gone to join the wild women in the mountains), so he persecutes Dionysus relentlessly. After teasing Pentheus and trying to get him to come round, Dionysus decides that he’s a lost cause and that he must be punished for his hubris. Dionysus entices Pentheus to come to see the women in the mountains, has him dress in drag himself, parades the king through the streets of his own city, and then has him violently dismembered by the Maenads — including his own mother. And then, if that wasn’t already enough, curses the rest of Thebes’ royal family. On the surface, it’s another example of a god being cruel and arbitrary, which begs the question, why do I worship a god who dismembers people? There’s a lot going on here. Part of the reason I think and write about this myth so often is that there are many layers of interpretation within it, and there’s a lot it can tell us about Dionysus. Myths need not be literal, and it’s possible to simply write off myths that don’t mesh with your personal interpretation of a deity (like, for example, I give little mind to the myth of Dionysus’ rape of Aura — apart from being from only one source, it also may be a reinterpreted Anatolian myth). The Bacchae, however, is far too crucial to Dionysus’ mythos to be written off like that. It sits right at the heart of who Dionysus is, both as a character and as a deity. So, I spend a lot of time thinking through The Bacchae and the ways it’s relevant to my life and to my understanding of Dionysus. I’ve written elsewhere that Dionysus is a god of duality. All of the aspects of his dual nature are relevant to this play, but I think there are three in particular that it focuses on: otherness, gender, and rulership. Otherness Although Dionysus is returning home to his mother’s city, he is presented as a foreigner. He and all of his Bacchantes come from Asia Minor, making them apparently “not-Greek” to the people of Thebes, which is why they can get away with so much social transgression. They run wild through the mountains, drunk and half-crazy. If the “Apollonian” sentiment represents everything that Greece is supposed to be — logical, artistic, productive, a shining civilization of bright marble — then the Dionysian sentiment is the precise opposite: It is dark, wild, irrational, hedonistic, and downright savage. Apollo is the god of reason and truth, while Dionysus is a god of frenzy and delusion. His rituals are ecstatic and sometimes violent. On the surface, Dionysus appears to represent everything Greece wants to distance itself from. He subverts its values, and brings its Shadow into full focus. So of course Pentheus is threatened by him. Dionysus’ presence in Thebes threatens to undermine the social order that, as king, Pentheus is set to maintain. Pentheus associates Dionysus with moral degradation and depravity (something Dionysus’ cult would literally be associated with when it was persecuted in Rome — Livy’s comments on it read like the Ancient Roman of Satanic Panic conspiracy fearmongering). Pentheus claims that the Bacchantes are using this new god “Dionysus” as an excuse to have wanton sex in the woods: "They’ve set up their mixing bowls brimming with wine amidst their cult gatherings and each lady slinks off in a different direction to some secluded wilderness to service the lusts of men. They pretend to be maenads performing sacrifices but in reality they rank Aphrodite’s pleasures before Bacchus!" —Euripides, The Bacchae 221–25 (translation by Stephen Esposito) Pentheus is very insistent that the women in the mountains are having crazy sex. Remember that, because it’ll be important later. Pentheus later goes on to complain about the leader of these crazy women, a pretty young man who charms women easily and makes extraordinary claims about Pentheus’ aunt: "They say, too, that some stranger has come here a quack dealer in spells from the land of Lydia his long locks and golden curls all sweet-smelling his cheeks dark as wine, his eyes full of Aphrodite’s charms Day and night he surrounds himself with young girls alluring them with his mysteries of joy. But if I capture him within this land I’ll put a stop to his beating the thyrsus and tossing his hair In fact I’ll cut his head right off his body! This is the guy who claims that Dionysus is a god. Indeed he claims that Dionysus was once sewn into Zeus’s thigh. The truth is that Dionysus was incinerated by fiery lightning along with his mother Semele because she had lied about her union with Zeus. Aren’t these terrible slanders worthy of hanging? What outrageous acts of hybris this stranger commits, whoever he is!" —233–46 As you might have guessed, “the Stranger” is in fact Dionysus, disguised as a priest of himself. The audience already knows this, so it’s a striking bit of dramatic irony when Pentheus accuses Dionysus of hubris. Pentheus describes this young priest in otherizing terms, emphasizing how he is effeminate, how he is a sorcerer (designating something “magic” rather than religion is often a form of othering, see this answer), and how he has offended the gods of Greece. Pentheus calls the mysterious priest “the Stranger,” indicating that he’s from elsewhere. But not only is Dionysus from Greece, Dionysus is from Thebes. His mother is Pentheus’ aunt. They’re first cousins. There’s not actually anything foreign about Dionysus, just as there’s not actually anything un-Greek about everything he represents. All of this weirdness and wanton behavior is from right here, in Thebes. He is everything about Pentheus’ own culture (and that of the Athenians watching this) that he refuses to accept. And when something is almost familiar but slightly “off,” it falls squarely into the uncanny valley. Dionysus doesn’t just threaten Pentheus on a societal level, he also unsettles Pentheus on a personal level. Dionysus undermines Pentheus’ power with his very existence. It’s socially expected that Pentheus would give homage to a new god that comes through. But everything about this god makes Pentheus viscerally uncomfortable. The easiest way for Pentheus to get around having to worship him, then, is to claim that Dionysus isn’t really a god. That’s not real religion, that’s magic, or just an excuse to have sex and break rules. No, you’re committing hybris! Gender One of the things that makes Dionysus so unsettling to Pentheus is his attitude towards gender. Dionysus plays around with gender identity and presentation all the time. There’s various myths about this, but in The Bacchae, gender subversion plays a very distinctive role. Early on, Dionysus incites the women of Thebes to distinctly unladylike behavior. The Maenads are dangerous; they can pillage cities and dismember cattle by themselves, armed with nothing but their fennel wands. While Pentheus is raving against the Bacchae, his father Cadmus and the respected seer Tiresias (who has experience with genderbending) dress up like Bacchantes to worship Dionysus. "If hoary old age weren’t protecting you [Tiresias], you’d be sitting in chains with the rest of the Bacchae for importing these sinister rituals. For whenever the liquid joy of the grape comes into women’s festivals, then, I assure you, there is nothing wholesome in their rites." —258–62 Ancient Greece, if you’ll remember, was absurdly patriarchal. To an Ancient Greek king, women running wild in the mountains (and, *gasp,* having sex!), and men who dress like women, are the scariest things in the world. There is nothing much scarier or more transgressive to the patriarchy than “men in dresses,” men who behave or present in gender-nonconforming ways. This is because patriarchy is based on the assumption that there is a specific way in which both men and women are naturally inclined to behave, and anything that suggests that gender roles are not “natural” — that they are, in fact, arbitrary — is threatening. In a world where men are “inherently” superior to women (physically, mentally, spiritually, and morally), any man who willingly acts like a woman in any way must be “sick.” Because why else would you want to be like women? Homophobia is actually misdirected misogyny — the only reason a man would willingly endure the abject humiliation and emasculation of being sexually passive, i.e. act like a woman (because it’s not “gay” if you’re on top), is if something was wrong with him. (Side note: there’s another myth in which Dionysus invents a dildo and uses it to keep his promise to have sex with a man who died before he could fulfill it. Dionysus has no problem being sexually passive, either.) Hence, the belief that gay men and “men in dresses” are somehow unnatural, sick, or damaged. And if they’re sick, the logic goes, then that also makes them dangerous or violent. I’m going to get political for a moment: “Men in dresses” encompasses three completely separate classes of people. One is drag queens or crossdressers, men who dress up like women because it’s fun. Two is “femboys,” men who adopt a feminine or androgynous gender presentation without intending to pass as women (i.e. they’re not dressed up, they’re just wearing clothes they like). The third is trans-women, who aren’t men at all. All of these different groups are lumped together and assumed to be dangerous because they reject the role that the patriarchy has prescribed for men, in various ways and for various reasons. That’s why there’s backlash against “drag queen story time,” and why that backlash is usually driven by transphobia, even though drag queens are not trans women. Drag queens and trans women are believed to be dangerous to children, not because they are, but because they’re “men in dresses” and “men in dresses” are “inherently” dangerous or perverse. Male femininity induces so much cognitive dissonance in the patriarchy’s collective minds that it is an affront to the social order just by its very existence. Add to that the dangerous “trap” narrative — part of what makes “men in dresses” so scary is that a straight man might be attracted to the feminine man/trans woman, believing him/her to be a cis-woman. When he discovers that he’s/she’s not, that forces him to question his own sexual orientation, which threatens his masculinity, which may as well be his gender identity. It threatens to throw him out of the social order that he’s worked so hard to secure himself in. In the worst cases, which is unfortunately a lot of them, the man will blame the feminine man or trans woman for inducing this cognitive dissonance by accusing him/her of deliberate deception with the express purpose of making him uncomfortable (as opposed to just existing), and react violently. I think that similar cognitive dissonance is going on in Pentheus’ mind when he sees Dionysus. Pentheus’ first impression of Dionysus is that he looks effeminate: "Well, stranger, your body is indeed quite shapely, at least for enticing the women. And that’s why you’ve come to Thebes, isn’t it? Those long side-curls of yours show for sure you’re no wrestler, rippling down your cheeks, infected with desire. And you keep your skin white by deliberate contrivance, not exposed to the sun’s rays but protected by the shade, hunting Aphrodite’s pleasures with your beauty." —453–59 Pentheus calls attention to Dionysus’ beautiful golden curls that flow down his cheeks and onto his shoulders, to his “shapely” body, and to his pale skin (which was associated with femininity in ancient cultures). By Ancient Greece’s standards, Dionysus looks very androgynous. Pentheus tries to insult him by saying that he’s there to seduce women, but there’s more than a little homoeroticism in there. So, what do you think Dionysus has Pentheus do? Dionysus suggests a voyeuristic venture to see the women in the mountains. And Pentheus, who up until this point has only condemned the women as depraved, is suddenly very interested in seeing what exactly it is they do up there. Why? Well, I’m guessing it’s for the same reason that different countries’ porn tastes tend to align with whatever that culture’s taboos are. Remember, Pentheus has been utterly fixated on his idea that the women are using Dionysus’ cult as an excuse to have sex. Dionysus tells Pentheus that to go see the women, he has to disguise himself as one of them, or else they’ll attack him. That’s like Claude Frollo dressing up like a gypsy to access the Court of Miracles. As Pentheus is getting dressed up, he perceives that Dionysus has a bull’s horns, meaning that he’s beginning to perceive Dionysus as he actually is: PENTHEUS: […} And you seem to be a bull leading us in front and horns seem to have sprouted on your head. But were you a beast before? Because certainly you are a bull now." DIONYSUS: "The god accompanies me. Though initially ill-disposed he is in alliance with us. So now, at last, you see what you ought to see." —920–22 Then Pentheus, the King of Thebes, processes through his own streets dressed as a girl. We laugh at him, the same way we laugh at men who pass homophobic legislation and then turn out to like submitting themselves to male sex workers in their spare time — not because being gay is wrong, or because being submissive is wrong, or because hiring sex workers is wrong, but because they’re hypocrites. So much for maintaining his masculine power in the face of Dionysian subversion. Rulership So, you may have noticed that Dionysus is a bit a revolutionary. In fact, he actually has an epithet related to his capacity as a revolutionary: Eleutherios, “the liberator” or “the free.” Many different contexts, both in myth and in real life, establish Dionysus as a god of the socially oppressed and marginalized. He is a guardian of women, and his cult provides a place for women to be free and independent. He’s obviously an ally to LGBTQ+ people, or the nearest Ancient Greek equivalent. Wine is his great equalizer, breaking the chains that bind humans to propriety, bringing out the crazy and bestial sides in all people. His very existence is a massive “screw you” to Pentheus, upsetting the patriarchal power structure that Pentheus represents. Pentheus resists Dionysus’ tide of social change until he is literally rent by it, representing the destruction of that power structure. But Dionysus is a god. Not only does he have a right to be there, he has the right to be there. As son and heir of Zeus, Dionysus is the social order. Thebes is his own mother’s city, and he’s come with his army of Bacchantes to conquer it. Pentheus is inherently wrong for daring to go against a god, and the god thoroughly punishes him for his hubris. What chance did he stand, against Dionysus’ divine sovereignty? "I say these things as Dionysus, born not from a mortal father but from Zeus. If you had known how to behave wisely when you chose otherwise, you would now be happy and have the son of Zeus as an ally." —1340–43 As much as I’d love to interpret Dionysus as a “make love, not war” sort of god, this isn’t the case. Areios, “warlike,” is one of his epithets. Dionysus is a straight-up conqueror-king who canonically brought India to its knees. So, just as Dionysus is many other contradictory things at once, he is also the revolutionary and the conqueror-king, both anti-establishment and the enforcer of the cosmic order that Pentheus transgresses. That’s why Alexander the Great himself and the Ptolemies identified themselves with him! One of the reasons I worship Dionysus is because all of the dualities that he embodies are somehow relevant to my life and my identity. This one is no exception. I’ve always prided myself on having something of a revolutionary impulse. I’m not virulently anti-establishment on a political level, but during my teen years, I did take personal offense at anyone or anything trying to curtail my freedom. A lot of teens are like that, but I was already like that, so I embraced this revolutionary tendency as an inherent aspect of my identity. I remember a feeling of invincibility, like I could put up with literally anything for the sake of making a point (preferable, in many ways, to the adult anxiety that I experience now). I projected an imaginary tyrant onto basically every authority figure in my life. And then a little later, I discovered that the imaginary tyrant was, in fact, myself. Whenever I got offended by someone trying to control me, I would become indignant and sink into a childish evil overlord fantasy, in which I control everything and everyone worships me. This tyrannical part of me was directly at odds with my values, which was that everyone else deserves the same freedom that I want for myself. Turns out, that doesn’t work. Tyrants are the only people with true, absolute freedom to work their will, and living peacefully with others requires surrendering some amount of personal freedom. You can’t live in a society and be completely independent or individualistic all the time. My anti-authoritarian teenage mind made it impossible for me to truly “worship” the gods. I associated worship with submission, and I refused to submit to anyone. That might have been hubris in Ancient Greece, but the gods didn’t hold it against me. Dionysus taught me what worship is actually supposed to look like, which changed my perspective on it. I’m slowly working through all of my hangups around power, especially as it relates to things like sexuality and gender identity. I need to get my sense of power back, and part of that means leaning into or at least examining Dionysus’ “conqueror-king” persona. What does it mean to deserve power? And how do I come to believe that I deserve it? That’s why I’ve been thinking about this myth a lot lately. I’m still trying to figure out that piece. I think my current interpretation is that being weird (see above) does not preclude having power. Dionysus waltzes into Thebes knowing full well that he is the most powerful person around. That’s not something he has to earn, or gain, or even prove — it just is. No amount of complaint or persecution from Pentheus will ever change this. Dionysus wears a dress because he wants to, because he can, and that does absolutely nothing to undermine or cancel out his phenomenal cosmic power. Wearing a dress does not make him weaker, or inferior, or sick, or any of the other things that “men in dresses” are supposed to be. Dionysus is in power, so he can decide what the rules are and make everyone else follow them — all of the powerful men (Cadmus, Tiresias, and eventually Pentheus himself) have to wear dresses, too! That goes for everything else that’s transgressive about Dionysus, not just the crossdressing. Power does not have to look conventional, no matter how often the Pentheuses of the world insist that it does. True power does not have to be justified, either. The Mystery There’s one more aspect to this myth that I haven’t addressed yet, and that’s how it relates to the Dionysian Mystery tradition as a whole. There is no question that Pentheus’ death is brutal. Dionysus has him literally torn apart by a group of Maenads, including his own mother, who carries his head back to Thebes and presents it as a trophy, hallucinating that it’s the head of a mountain lion. And Pentheus is depicted as entirely deserving of this fate. Dionysus is enacting justice by inflicting this horror upon Thebes. After an entire play’s worth of him being amicable and a bit smart-mouthed, intent upon bringing joy to mortals, we suddenly see Dionysus at his most savage: "Appear as a bull or a many-headed snake or a fire-blazing lion to behold. Go, Bakkhos, and with a laughing face cast the noose of death on the hunter of the Bacchae as he falls under the herd of Maenads." —1017–23 The obvious lesson is “don’t underestimate Dionysus just becuase he seems goofy,” a subset of the more general rule, “don’t piss off the gods.” Although that interpretation isn’t wrong, it is a little bit shallow. Pentheus’ death represents far more than a straightforward punishment for hybris. The particular manner in which he dies is significant within the wider Dionysian mythos —sparagmos, dismemberment, is the manner in which Dionysus himself died. Long story short: Dionysus was once a god called Zagreus, the son of Persephone and heir of Zeus, who was dismembered by Titans at Hera’s behest. He is eventually reincarnated in his current form as the son of Zeus and Semele. Therefore, Dionysus is a god of death and rebirth. Sacrifices to the god were interpreted as stand-ins for him and (allegedly) dismembered in the same manner. The fact that Pentheus is also dismembered makes him essentially a stand-in for Dionysus, and implies an eventual rebirth. "The inherent dialectic of the cult, whose sacrificial offering the god himself voluntarily became, made ‘Pentheus’ into the name of a punished enemy of the god, who nevertheless in his suffering comes close enough to represent him. The contradictory nature of the god who suffers and lets himself be killed — a god whose servant, indeed he himself, was the sacrificial ax — was embodied in a man who destroyed himself, a frequent figure in later Attic tragedy." —Karl Kerenyi, Dionysos: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life Pentheus death is therefore a twisted sort of initiation: In addition to representing the deconstruction of the old, traditionalist ways of thinking that he embodies throughout the play, it also represents the tearing-apart of the old self or the dissolution of the ego. Spiritual death is a necessary step of the initiation process, and often one of the first steps. I relate the sparagmos to alchemical dissolution, which is also inherent in the literal process of winemaking: Grapes are crushed into must that then ferments into wine, enzymes break down sugars to produce alcohol. Dionysus’ cult carries with it the promise of resurrection and eventual transcendence. "Now you have died and now you have been born, thrice blessed one, on this very day. Say to Persephone that Bakkhios himself freed you. A bull you rushed to milk. Quickly, you rushed to milk. A ram you fell into milk. You have wine as your fortunate honor. And rites await you beneath the earth, just as the other blessed ones." —Gold tablet from Thessaly Being an Initiate would allow the spirit of a dead person to appeal to the gods of the Underworld, proclaim their own divinity, and receive a happier afterlife — or even full apotheosis. In order to achieve that resurrection, you have to be willing to die. You have to be willing to let older ways of thinking be destroyed. You have to put yourself in uncomfortable situations, and confront parts of yourself that you would rather ignore. You also have to be able to recognize when God is staring you in the face, and honor it when it does. The real moral of the story, I would argue, is to embrace the things that Dionysus represents — liberation from one’s inhibitions, recognition of the inherent savagery hiding within civilized humanity, revelation through ecstasy, deconstruction of gender norms, pleasure as a spiritual avenue. You’re going to submit to the frenzy either way — if you can embrace the madness, it will be a fun and transcendent experience, but if you can’t, you will be rent by it as a natural consequence. Whether Euripides intended for some cult secret to be displayed on stage in the performance of this play, I have no idea, but his contradictory portrayal of Dionysus is very much in keeping with his duality. Dionysus is both kind and cruel, a divine force of nature and a humanlike friend to his worshippers. Therefore, I don’t interpret this play as intended to scare people into worshipping Dionysus; it is a display of Dionysian worship in all its beauty and terror.

Sarah McLean in library.jpg

About Sarah McLean

Hi, I'm Sarah McLean. I'm a writer with interests in mythology, religion, literature, and occultism. I spend a lot of my free time writing online articles about these topics, and I also write fantasy novels.

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