- 1Medusa was once a beautiful priestess of Athena — sworn to be a virgin guardian of her sacred temple.
- 2Poseidon, obsessed with her beauty, attacked her inside Athena's own temple — a profound desecration of sacred space.
- 3Athena, furious but powerless to punish her own uncle Poseidon, transformed Medusa into a monster — snakes for hair, a gaze that turns people to stone.
- 4Hero Perseus is tasked with retrieving Medusa's head. He uses a polished shield as a mirror to avoid her gaze, then slices off her head.
- 5From Medusa's severed neck spring Pegasus (the winged horse) and Chrysaor. Perseus uses her head as a weapon, then gifts it to Athena for her shield.
The 12 Olympians
Major Gods — Click a card to read the full story
The Titans — Before the Olympians
| Titan | Domain | Key Fact | Fate |
|---|---|---|---|
| CronusSaturn | TimeHarvest | Swallowed his children to prevent being overthrown — but Zeus escaped! | Imprisoned in Tartarus |
| Rhea | MotherhoodEarth | Saved Zeus by hiding him in Crete, giving Cronus a stone wrapped in cloth instead. | Honored, allied with Zeus |
| Prometheus | FireForethought | Stole fire from Olympus and gave it to humans. Punished with eternal torment on a cliff. | Eventually freed by Heracles |
| Atlas | StrengthAstronomy | Condemned to carry the heavens on his shoulders forever after losing the Titanomachy. | Eternal punishment |
| Helios | Sun | Drove the sun chariot across the sky each day. His son Phaethon crashed it, nearly burning the Earth. | Continued divine duty |
| Oceanus | Ocean | The great river encircling the entire world. Did NOT fight Zeus in the Titanomachy — stayed neutral. | Neutral, survived |
Greek vs Roman Names — Quick Reference
| Greek | Roman | Domain | Memory Hook |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zeus | Jupiter | Sky & Thunder | ⚡ "Zeus ZAPS with lightning" |
| Hera | Juno | Marriage | 💒 "Hera's fury at Zeus's affairs" |
| Poseidon | Neptune | Sea | 🌊 "Neptune = the ocean planet" |
| Demeter | Ceres | Harvest | 🌾 "Ceres → Cereal!" |
| Athena | Minerva | Wisdom | 🦉 "Athens is named after Athena" |
| Apollo | Apollo | Sun & Arts | ☀️ "So perfect he needs no alias!" |
| Ares | Mars | War | ⚔️ "March/Mars = month of war" |
| Aphrodite | Venus | Love | 💖 "Venus = most beautiful planet" |
| Hephaestus | Vulcan | Fire & Forge | 🔥 "Vulcan → Volcano!" |
| Hermes | Mercury | Speed & Messages | 🪄 "Mercury = fastest planet" |
| Artemis | Diana | Hunt & Moon | 🌙 "Diana hunts by moonlight" |
| Hades | Pluto | Underworld | 💀 "Pluto = darkest, furthest" |
Anime Portraits
Each Olympian reimagined in anime style — colors, expressions, and symbols capture their divine essence. Click any portrait to read their full story.
Chronological Timeline
Key Events — From Chaos to Odysseus
Hesiod's Five Ages of Man
| Age | Metal | Characteristics | Fate |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Age | 🥇 Gold | Perfect — no labor, no sorrow, eternal spring, companions of the gods | Became guardian spirits of Earth |
| Second Age | 🥈 Silver | Childish for 100 years, impious, refused to honor the gods | Destroyed by Zeus, became underworld spirits |
| Third Age | 🥉 Bronze | Mighty warriors but violent — destroyed each other through endless war | Went to Hades, nameless and forgotten |
| Fourth Age | ⭐ Heroes | Nobler demigods — fought at Thebes and Troy, performed great deeds | Islands of the Blessed (paradise) |
| Fifth Age | 🔩 Iron | Our present age — toil and sorrow coexist with justice and goodness | Ongoing — you are here |
Simplified Stories
Six legendary myths each told in five steps. Click any story to expand.
- 1Persephone, daughter of Demeter, is picking flowers in a sunlit meadow when the earth cracks open beneath her feet.
- 2Hades emerges and abducts her to the Underworld to be his queen. Zeus had secretly permitted it — enraging the harvest goddess Demeter.
- 3Demeter abandons her divine duties. All crops wither. Animals stop reproducing. Humanity begins to starve and freeze. Zeus must intervene.
- 4Zeus orders Hades to release Persephone — but she has eaten 6 pomegranate seeds in the Underworld. Ancient law: anyone who eats in the realm of the dead must remain there partially.
- 5Compromise: 6 months above ground (spring and summer — Demeter rejoices, Earth blooms), 6 months below (autumn and winter — Demeter mourns, Earth sleeps).
- 1Narcissus was extraordinarily handsome — and knew it. He coldly rejected everyone who fell in love with him, considering none worthy of his beauty.
- 2Echo, a nymph cursed to only repeat others' last words, fell hopelessly in love. He mocked and rejected her. She faded until only her voice remained — echoing through caves forever.
- 3Nemesis, goddess of retribution, witnessed Narcissus's cruelty and decided on a perfectly ironic punishment for his pride.
- 4Narcissus knelt to drink from a still mountain pool and saw his own reflection. He fell instantly and completely in love — not realizing he was looking at himself.
- 5He could not leave or look away. He wasted away by the pool, dying while staring at his own image. Where he lay, the narcissus flower bloomed.
- 1Master craftsman Daedalus and his son Icarus are imprisoned by King Minos on Crete after Daedalus helped Theseus escape the Labyrinth.
- 2Daedalus crafts two sets of wings from feathers and wax, planning their escape by flying across the Aegean Sea.
- 3Daedalus's warning is precise: "Don't fly too low — sea spray wets the feathers. Don't fly too high — the sun's heat melts the wax. Stay the middle path."
- 4Icarus, drunk on the freedom and exhilaration of flight, spirals higher and higher, ignoring his father's desperate cries from below.
- 5The wax softens, then melts. The feathers scatter. Icarus plunges into the sea. Daedalus, weeping and calling his son's name, continues alone to safety in Sicily.
- 1Orpheus is history's greatest musician — his lyre playing could charm rivers into stillness, make stones weep, and calm wild beasts mid-hunt.
- 2His beloved wife Eurydice dies from a snakebite on their wedding day. Shattered, Orpheus does the impossible — he descends into the Underworld alive to reclaim her.
- 3He plays his lyre for Cerberus, the Furies, and finally Hades and Persephone themselves. Even the stoic king of the dead weeps. Hades grants Eurydice's return with one condition.
- 4The condition: Orpheus must lead Eurydice out without once looking back. Not until both have fully emerged into daylight. He must trust she is following behind him.
- 5Steps from the exit, doubt overcomes him. He turns. Eurydice whispers "farewell" and dissolves back into shadow forever. Some say he heard a stumble. Some say he simply could not bear not knowing.
- 1Heracles, son of Zeus and mortal Alcmene, is hated by Hera, Zeus's jealous wife. She drives him temporarily mad with divine fury sent from Olympus.
- 2In his madness, Heracles kills his own wife Megara and their children. When his sanity returns he is devastated. He must seek divine atonement for what Hera made him do.
- 3The Oracle of Delphi decrees: serve King Eurystheus for 12 years and complete 12 impossible tasks. Only then will he be purified of the blood guilt.
- 4The labors include: the Nemean Lion, the Lernaean Hydra (regrows heads when cut), the Ceryneian Hind, cleaning the Augean Stables in one day, the Stymphalian Birds, the Cretan Bull, Mares of Diomedes, Belt of Hippolyta, Cattle of Geryon, Golden Apples of the Hesperides, and finally capturing Cerberus himself from the Underworld.
- 5Heracles completes all 12, earning divine purification and eventually immortality — taken to Olympus itself after death, even reconciling with Hera. The ultimate ancient redemption arc.
Sacred Map of Greece
Tap any marker to reveal its mythological significance. Use the basemap switcher (top-right) to toggle between Topo, Satellite, and OSM views. Filter by realm below.
The Three Cosmic Realms
Memory Tricks
Mnemonics, patterns, and mental hooks engineered to make mythology permanently memorable.
The 12 Olympians — Master Mnemonic
Say it fast: "ZAPH-HA · HPHAD" — once you have the rhythm, the 12 names come automatically. Or remember: Zeus had 3 siblings on Olympus (Hera, Poseidon, Demeter) and 7 children who joined (Athena, Apollo, Artemis, Hermes, Hephaestus, Ares, Dionysus).
God Symbol Quick-Links — Visual Memory
The Hubris Formula — Greek Mythology's Core Theme
Nemesis = Divine retribution / punishment sent as consequence
Ate = Blindness and recklessness caused by divine punishment
Doom = The inevitable, unavoidable fall
Examples throughout mythology: Icarus flew too high · Narcissus loved only himself · Arachne challenged Athena to a weaving contest · Niobe boasted her children surpassed Apollo and Artemis · Sisyphus tricked Death itself · Agamemnon returned from Troy boasting he surpassed the gods themselves
Simplified Family Tree