Theogony (Greek: Θεογονία, theogonia = the birth of God(s)) is a
poem by Hesiod describing the origins and genealogies of the gods of the ancient Greeks, composed circa 700 BC. The
title of the work comes from the Greek words for "god" and "seed".
Descriptions
Hesiod's Theogony is a large-scale synthesis of a vast variety of local Greek
traditions concerning the gods, organized as a narrative that tells how they came to be and
how they established permanent control over the cosmos. In many cultures, narratives about the origin of the cosmos and about the gods that shaped it are a way for society to reaffirm its native cultural traditions.
Specifically, theogonies tend to affirm kingship as the natural embodiment of society. What makes the Theogony of Hesiod
unique is that it affirms no historical royal line. Such a gesture would have sited the Theogony in one time and one
place. Rather, the Theogony affirms the kingship of the god Zeus himself over all the other
gods and over the whole cosmos.
Further, in the "Kings and Singers" passage (80-103[1]
Hesiod appropriates to himself the authority usually reserved to sacred kingship. The poet declares that it is he, where we might
have expected some king instead, upon whom the Muses have bestowed the two gifts of a
scepter and an authoritative voice (Hesiod, Theogony 30-3), which are the visible signs
of kingship. It is not that this gesture is meant to make Hesiod a king. Rather, the point is that the authority of kingship now
belongs to the poetic voice, the voice that is declaiming the Theogony.
Although it is often used as a sourcebook for Greek mythology,[2] the Theogony is both more and less than that. In formal terms it is
a hymn invoking Zeus and the Muses: parallel passages between it and the much shorter Homeric
Hymn to the Muses make it clear that the Theogony developed out of a tradition of hymnic preludes with which
an ancient Greek rhapsode would begin his performance at poetic competitions. It is necessary
to see the Theogony not as the definitive source of Greek mythology, but rather as a snapshot of a dynamic tradition that
happened to crystallize when Hesiod formulated the myths he knew — and to remember that the traditions have continued evolving
since that time.
The written form of the Theogony was established in the sixth century. Even some conservative editors have concluded that
the Typheous episode (820-80) is an interpolation.
The decipherment of Hittite mythical texts, notably the Kingship in Heaven
text first presented in 1946, with its castration mytheme, offers in the figure of Kumarbi a
Levantine parallel to Hesiod's Uranus-Cronos conflict.[3]
After the speaker declares that he has received the blessings of the Muses, and thanks them for giving him inspiration, he
explains that spontaneously Chaos was. Chaos gives birth to Eros[4] and Gaia (Earth), the more orderly and safe foundation that would serve as a home for the gods and mortals,
came afterwards. Tartarus (both a place below the earth as well as a deity) and (Desire) also
came into existence from nothing. Eros serves an important role in sexual reproduction, before which children had to be produced
by means of parthenogenesis. From Chaos came Erebos
(Darkness) and Nyx (Night). However, Erebos and Nyx reproduced to make Aither (Brightness) and Hemera (Day). From Gaia came Ouranos (Sky), the Ourea (Mountains), and Pontus (Sea).
Ouranos mated with Gaia to create twelve Titans: Okeanos, Coeus, Crius, Hyperion, Iapetos, Theia, Rhea, Themis, Mnemosyne, Phoebe, Tethys, and Kronos; three Kyklopes
(Cyclops): Brontes, Steropes, and Arges; and three Hecatonchires: Kottos, Briareos, and
Gyges.
Second generation
Because Ouranos foresaw that one of his children would overthrow him, he tried to imprison each of the children in Gaia, which
greatly discomforted her. She asked her children to punish their father. Only Kronos was willing to do so. During Ouranos'
attempt to mate with Gaia as he does every night, Kronos castrated his father with a sickle from Gaia. The blood from Ouranos
splattered onto the earth producing Erinyes (the Furies), Giants, and Meliai. Kronos takes the severed testicles and throws them
into the Sea (Thalassa), around which foams developed and they transformed into the
goddess of Love, Aphrodite
(which is why in some myths, Aphrodite was daughter of Ouranos and the goddess Thalassa).
Meanwhile, Nyx, though she mated with Erebos, produced children parthenogenically: Moros
(Doom), Oneiroi (Dreams), Ker and the Keres
(Destinies), Eris (Discord), Momos (Blame),
Philotes (Love), Geras (Old Age), Thanatos (Death), Moirai (Fates), Nemesis (Retribution), Hesperides (Daughters of Night),
Hypnos (Sleep), Oizys (Hardship), and Apate (Deceit).
From Eris, following her mother's footstep, came Ponos (Pain), Hysmine (Battles), the Neikea (Quarrels), the Phonoi (Murders), Lethe
(Oblivion), Makhai (Fight), Pseudologos (Lies), Amphilogia (Disputes), Limos (Famine),
Androktasia (Manslaughters), Ate (Ruin), Dysnomia
(Anarchy and Disobedience), the Algea (Illness), Horkos (Oaths), and Logoi (Stories).
After Ouranos had been castrated, Gaia mated with Pontos to create a descendent line consisting of sea deities, sea nymphs,
and hybrid monsters. One child of Gaia and Pontos is Nereus (Old Man of the Sea), who marries
Doris, a daughter of Okeanos and Tethys, to produce the Nereids, the fifty nymphs of the sea.
Another child of Gaia and Pontos is Thaumas, who marries Electra, a sister of Doris, to produce Iris (Rainbow) and three
Harpies.
Phorkys and Keto, two siblings, marry each other and produce
the Graiae, the Gorgons, Echidna, and Ophion. Medusa, one of the Gorgons, produced two
children with Poseidon, the winged-horse Pegasus and giant Chrysaor, at the instant of her decapitation by Perseus. Chrysaor marries
Callirhoe, another daughter of Okeanos, to make three-headed Geryon.
Gaia also mates with Tartaros to produce Typhoeus, whom Echidna marries to produce
Orthos, Kerberos, Hydra, and Chimera. From Orthos and either Chimera or
Echidna were born the Sphinx and the Nemean Lion.
In the family of the Titans, Okeanos and Tethys marry to make three thousand rivers and three thousand Okeanid Nymphs. Theia
and Hyperion marry to bear Helios (Sun), Selene (Moon), and
Eos (Dawn). Kreios and Eurybia marry to bear Astraios,
Pallas, and Perses. Eos and Astraios would
later marry to produce Zephyros, Boreas, Notos, Eosphoros, Hesperos, Phosphoros and the Stars (foremost of which Phaenon, Phaethon, Pyroeis, Stilbon,
those of the Zodiac and those three acknowledged before). From Pallas and Styx (another Okeanid) came Zelos (Zeal), Nike (Victory), Cratos
(Strength), and Bia (Force). Koios and Phoibe marry to make Leto, Asteria (who later marries Perses to produce Hekate). Iapetos marries Klymene (an Okeanid Nymph) to sire Atlas, Menoetius, Prometheus, and Epimetheus.
Third and final generation
Kronos, having taken control of the Cosmos, wanted to ensure that he maintained power. He
asked the advice of the Delphi Oracle, who told him a son would overthrow him. When he married Rhea, he made sure to swallow each
of the children she birthed: Hestia, Demeter, Hera, Hades, Poseidon, Zeus (in that order). However, Rhea asked Gaia and Ouranos for help in saving Zeus by sending Rhea to Crete to
nurture Zeus and giving Kronos a huge stone to swallow thinking that it was another of Rhea's children. Rhea then sets Zeus on a
tree that sat on a ledge (between sky, earth and sea, making him invisible) with the Curetes constantly clanging their swords on
their shield to keep Kronos from hearing the infant Zeus's crying.
After Zeus had grown up, he consults Metis, who concocts a potion which forces Kronos to disgorge his siblings and thereafter
waged a great war on the Titans for control of the Cosmos. The war lasted ten years, with the
Olympian gods, Cyclopes, Prometheus and Epimetheus, the children of Pallas on one side, and the Titans and the Giants on the
other (with only Oceanos as a neutral force). Eventually Zeus releases the Hundred-Handed ones to shake the earth, allowing him
to gain the upper hand, cast the fury of his thunderbolts and throw the Titans into Tartaros. Zeus later must battle
Typhoeus, a son of Gaia and Tartaros created because Gaia was angry that the Titans were
defeated, and is victorious again.
Because Prometheus helped Zeus, he was not sent to Tartaros like the other Titans. However, he later stole fire from the
Olympian gods to give to mortals, along with other knowledge, which angered Zeus. Zeus punishes Prometheus by chaining him to a
column and invokes a long-winged eagle that would feed on his ever-regenerating liver. Prometheus would not be freed until
Heracles, a son of Zeus, comes to free him and encourage him to tell Zeus the prophecy of who
would overthrow Zeus. (A digression: It would later turn out that Thetis, a nymph that Zeus was chasing, would have a son that
would be greater than his father. Zeus promptly married her off to Peleus, who ended up fathering Achilleus. At the wedding, Eris, who resented not being invited, rolled a golden apple inscribed "For the
Fairest". The apple rolled between the three loveliest goddesses (Hera, Aphrodite, and Athene). The three goddesses asked Zeus to
decide who was loveliest, but he was afraid of what either of them might do if they were not chosen. So he gave the
responsibility to the Trojan Prince Paris. He chose Aphrodite over Athena and Hera to get the most beautiful woman in the world,
Helen, and start the Trojan War. Another trickery Prometheus made was to divide an animal
sacrifice, giving meat to humans and bone and skin to the gods. It forms the origin of sacrificing animals to a deity.
Zeus, because of the loss of fire, would later punish the men on earth by making a woman with Hephaistos and Athena, Pandora,
who, through her good charms and beauty, would bring about all the miseries of diseases and deaths into the world by opening a
box from Zeus, but she closed the box before Elpis (Hope) was released. It would not be until Prometheus came and opened the box
to free Elpis (Hope).
Zeus marries seven wives. The first is the Oceanid Metis, whom he swallowed to
avoid getting a son that, as what happened with Kronos and Ouranos, would overthrow him, as well as to absorb her wisdom so that
she can advise him in the future. He would later "give birth" to Athena from his head, which
would anger Hera enough for her to produce her own son parthenogenetically, Typhaon, the part snake,part dragon sea monster. The
second wife is Themis, who bears the three Horae (Hours) – Eunomia (Order), Dike (Justice),
Eirene (Peace) and the three Moirae (Fates) –
Klotho (Spinner), Lachesis (Alotter),
Atropos (Unturned), as well as Tyche. Zeus then married his third
wife Eurynome, who bears the three Charites (Graces). The fourth wife is his sister Demeter, who
bears Persephone. Persephone would later marry Hades, and bear Melinoe, Goddess of Ghosts, and
Zagreus, God of the Orphic Mysteries, and Macaria, Goddess of the Blessed Afterlife. The fifth wife of Zeus is another
aunt, Mnemosyne, from whom came the nine Muses – Kleio,
Euterpe, Thaleia, Melpomene,
Terpsikhore, Erato, Polymnia, Urania, and Kalliope. The sixth
wife is Leto, who gives birth to Apollo and Artemis. The seventh
and final wife is Hera, who gives birth to Hebe, Ares,
Enyo, Hephastios,and Eileithyia. Of course, though Zeus no
longer marries, he still has affairs with many other women, such as Semele, who would give birth
to Dionysus, and Alkmene, the mother of Heracles, who marries Hebe.
Poseidon marries Amphitrite and produces Triton. Ares and Aphrodite would marry to make Phobos
(Fear), Deimos (Cowardice), and Harmonia (Harmony), who would later marry Kadmos to sire
Ino (who with her son, Melicertes would become
a sea deity) Semele (Mother of Dionysos), Agaue (Mother of
Actaeon), Polydorus, and Autonoe (who would
later be driven in to perpetual Bacchic Frenzy by her nephew, Dionysos). Helios and Perseis
birth Kirke (Circe), who with Poseidon would mother Phaunos, God of the Forest, and with Dionysos
mother Comos, God of Revelry and Festivity . And with Odysseus, she would later give birth to
Agrius. Atlas' daughter Kalypso would give birth to
Odysseus' children Telegonos, Teledamus, Latinus,
Nausithoos, and Nausinous.
Greek
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
See also
Notes
- ^ Kathryn B. Stoddard, "The Programmatic Message of the "Kings and Singers"
Passage: Hesiod, 'Theogony' 80-103"Transactions of the American Philological Association 133.1 (Spring 2003), pp.
1-16.
- ^ Herodotus (II.53) cited it simply as an
authoritative list of divine names, attributes and functions.
- ^ Walter Burkert, The Orientalizing Revolution: Near Eastern Inmfluence on
Greek Culture in the Early Archaic Age (Harvard University Press) 192, offers discussion and bibliography of related
questions.
- ^ Bulfinch's Age of Fable or Beauties of Mythology by Thomas Bulfinch
Publisher: S W Tilton (1894). ASIN: B000JWAT00 pg 19.
External links
References
- Brown, Norman O. Introduction to Hesiod: Theogony (New York: Liberal Arts Press) 1953.
- Bulfinch's Age of Fable or Beauties of Mythology by Thomas Bulfinch Publisher: S W Tilton (1894)ASIN: B000JWAT00
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