Katabasis
A journey to the underworld; "going down"
Apotheosis
The elevation to divine status; "deification"
Apollodorus
Wrote "The Library," a summary of myths from Creation to the Trojan War.
Perseus
the son of Zeus who slew Medusa (with the help of Athena and Hermes) and rescued Andromeda from a sea monster.
Acrisius
King of Argos and father of Danae, the mother of Perseus. Acrisius locks away Danae to try to deflect a prophecy that he would be killed by his grandson, but Zeus came in the form of a shower of gold and impregnated Danae. He would eventually be unwittingly killed by Perseus.
Danae
King Acrisius' daughter, who gets pregnant by Zeus in the form of a shower of gold while in a prison-type underground room where she was put by her father because of a prophecy that said her son would kill her father. She gave birth to Perseus, and they were both put into a chest and sailed out to sea.
Polydectes
Arrogant king who desires the head of Medusa; evil king who wants to marry Danae; The ruler of the island where Danae and Perseus land. Cruel and ruthless, he wanted to marry Danae but wanted Perseus dead, so he blackmailed Perseus into a mission to bring back the head of Medusa as a wedding present.
Kibisis
A "bag" or "wallet" used by Perseus to hold Medusa's severed head.
3 Graiai
Means "gray women"; the 3 sisters who shared one eye and one tooth. In order to get information about Medusa's whereabouts, Perseus took their eye and tooth and wouldn't give them back until they told him what he needed to know.
3 Gorgons
Stheno, Euryale, Medusa. They lived in a cave to the west (possibly an entrance to the Underworld because of the west's association with the setting sun -- katabasis).
Medusa
The mortal gorgon. Her hair was made of snakes, and looking directly at her would turn a person to stone.
Pegasus
Sprang from the blood of Medusa when Perseus killed her. Offspring of Medusa and Poseidon.
Andromeda
Daughter of Cepheus and Cassiepeia, King and Queen of Libya. Cassiepeia committed hubris by saying she was prettier than the sea nymphs and Poseidon got mad and send a flood and sea monster to their town. Consulted the oracle of Zeus Ammon and it said to chain Andromeda to a rock and sacrifice her to the monster to end turmoil. Perseus saved Andromeda and killed the monster.
Cassiopeia
The mother of Andromeda who angered the gods by saying she was more beautiful than the sea nymphs.
Phineus
Engaged to Andromeda before she married Perseus. Led a mob into Andromeda and Perseus' wedding. Perseus lithified him with Medusa's head.
Cepheus
King of Ethiopia, husband to Cassiopeia, father of Andromeda.
Cetus
The sea monster meant to kill Andromeda
Atlas
Forced to hold the sky on his shoulders as punishment for leading the Titans in the war against the Olympians. In northwest Africa near the Strait of Gibraltar and the Garden of the Hesperides, an orchard with golden apples.
Atlantis
A wealthy and powerful island in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean ruled by Atlas. The people of Atlantis eventually became tyrannical, and the city of Athens rebelled and won a victory. The gods punished Atlantis with a huge earthquake and flood that caused the island to sink below the ocean.
Atlas Mountains
Formed when Medusa's severed head lithified the Titan Atlas.
Hesperides
3 daughters of Atlas; the Gorgons' cave was near the Garden of the Hesperides
Bellerophon and Chimaera
As punishment for a false accusation, Bellerophon was sent to fight the Chimaera. He rode Pegasus to slay the Chimaera. Out of hubris, he tried to ride Pegasus up to Mount Olympus, but Pegasus refused and threw off Bellerophon.
Hercules (=Alcides)
Hera
The Milky Way
Alcmena
The mother of Hercules. Seduced by Zeus, who took the form of Amphitryon while he was away.
Amphitryon
Husband of Alcmena and step-father of Hercules; Zeus slows down the night and disguises himself as this man in order to mate with Alcmena.
Iphicles
Hercules' half maternal twin brother.
Eileithyia (Ilithyia)
Linus
Heracles' music teacher, who he killed.
Megara & 3 sons
Killed by Hercules when Hera sent him into a fit of rage. He had to complete 12 tasks as penance.
Eurystheus
The king of Mycenae for whom Heracles' served for 12 years and completed the 12 (originally 10) labors for in order to repent for the killing of Megara and his kids.
Iolaus
Hercules' nephew who helped him kill the Hydra
Hercules' tasks
Lion of Nemea
Hydra of Lerna (disqualified because he had help from his nephew Iolaus)
Cerynean Hind
Erymanthian Boar
Stable of Augeas (disqualified because Eurystheus said the rivers did the work for him)
Stymphalian Birds
Cretan Bull Mares of Diomedes
Girdle of Hippolyta
Cattle of Geryon
Hesperides' apples
Cerberus
Parerga
"side works"; Hercules' minor works he completed in addition to the 12 labors: -Fighting for Alcestis -Rescuing Hesione at Troy -Defeating Cacus, monster son of Vulcan -Wrestling Nereus -Killing Antaeus, giant son of Gaia -Killing Busiris, king of Egypt who sacrificed foreigners -Killing the eagle plaguing Prometheus
Iphitus
A guest whom Hercules killed, violating xenia
Tripod of Apollo
Hercules went to Delphi to be purified after killing Iphitus, but he was scorned by the Pythia, so he stole her sacred tripod and fought with Apollo. Zeus separated them with a thunderbolt, and Hercules had to go into slavery again for a year to atone.
Omphale
The Queen of Lydia who bought Hercules from the slave market after he stole the tripod of Apollo. She forced him to wear women's clothing and do women's work.
Cercopes
Mischievous dwarf twins who practiced scams and thefts; called Hercules "ole black bottom." Captured by Hercules and turned into monkeys by Jupiter.
"Ole Black Bottom"
The Cercopes' nickname for Hercules.
Deianira
Heracles' second wife, originally engaged to the river god Achelous. Hercules fought Achelous, who could change shape because he was a river god. Achelous took the form of a bull, and Hercules broke off one of his horns, which became the cornucopia.
Achelous
The river god engaged to Deianira until Hercules married her. He fought with Hercules, changing shape. He shifted into a bull, and Hercules broke off one of his horns, which became the cornucopia.
Cornucopia
"Horn of plenty"; a horn broken off from Achelous as a bull. Apollonius says this was the horn of Amalthea, which Achelous gave to Hercules in exchange for his own horn back.
Tropics
"turn"
Solstice
"sun stops"
Equinox
"equal night"
Nessus
A centaur and ferryman who carried Deianira across the river and tried to kidnap her until Hercules rescued her and shot him with an arrow dipped in the Hydra's venom. The centaur's shirt was covered with his blood, tainted with the Hydra's venom. He told Deianira that it would be an aphrodisiac, when it was actually poisonous.
Love potion (on shirt)
Nessus told Deianira that his bloodstained shirt would be an aphrodisiac. Years later, Hercules took Iole as his concubine. When Deianira found out, she sent him the shirt of Nessus, thinking it would make him love her again. He put it on, and it started burning him. He threw himself on a funeral pyre and his mortal half burnt away, but his divine half was escorted to Olympus by Athena (apotheosis).
Iole
Hercules' concubine, who indirectly resulted in his death.
Hebe
Hercules' third wife; daughter of Zeus and Hera and goddess of youth. Their marriage marked Hercules' reconciliation with Hera.
Chthonic
"underground"
Hades
Pluto (Dis)
"Wealthy"
Persephone (Kore)
Virgo
The constellation of Persephone
Erebus
"darkness"
Tartarus
Elysium
Inferno
"below"
Oaths on River Styx
Acheron
boundary
Cocytus
Phlegethon
fire
Lethe
"oblivion"
Minos
Rhadamanthus
Aeacus
Cerberus
Charon
Furies (Erinyes)
Alecto, Megaera, Tisiphone
Thanatos
Greek god of death. Roman counterpart is Orcus.
Orcus
Roman god of death. Greek counterpart is Thanatos.
Hypnos (Somnus)
God of sleep
Morpheus
God of dreams
Tityos
Crime: tried to rape Leto, the mother of Apollo and Artemis. Killed by Apollo. Punishment: vulture eats his liver (assumed to be the seat of lust)
Tantalus
Crimes: stole nectar and ambrosia while dining with the gods, revealed secrets of Zeus that he overheard while dining with him, killed and cooked his son Pelops and offered the human flesh to the gods to eat. Punishment: stand in a pool of water beneath a fruit tree with low branches, but whenever he reached for the fruit, it was just out of his grasp.
Sisyphus
Crimes: violated xenia, quarreled with brother, revealed one of the secret seductions of Zeus. Punishment: forced to roll a stone over and over again up a steep hill.
Ixion
Crime: lusted after Hera. Punishment: spins on a fiery wheel.
Belidae/Danaids
Crime: murdered their new husbands. Punishment: carry water in leaky vessels
Orpheus
The son of Calliope and the Thracian King known for his musical talents. Bought Eurydice's life back from the Underworld with music, but he looked back and lost her.
Eurydice
Hymen (or Hymeneus)
Son of Aphrodite and Dionysus and god of the wedding feast, which involved wedding torches and saffron-colored clothing.
Orphism
A mystery cult focused on Orpheus, who had seen the Underworld and returned to tell about it (recorded in poems by Orpheus, now lost). Emphasized the cycle of life, death, purification in the Underworld, and rebirth (reincarnation).
Hecatomb
"100 slaughtered"; a great sacrifice to the gods
Haruspicy
"gut-gazing"; divination on the basis of observation of entrails (esp. liver) of sacrificial animals
Myth of Er
Story by Plato that ends his Republic. A soldier named Er sees the afterlife and reincarnates. Introduced the idea that moral people are rewarded and immoral people punished after death.
Metempsychosis
"change" + "soul" (reincarnation)
Music of the Spheres
Dream of Scipio
Written by Cicero and based directly on Plato. A fictional story of a man who dreams about the cosmos,, which are set in 9 concentric crystalline spheres that each produce a musical pitch as they rotate.
3 Fates (Moirai/Parcae)
Determine the length of each person's life by spinning a thread of a certain length. In The Dream of Scipio by Cicero, they set the crystal spheres of the cosmos spinning to produce a celestial harmony (Music of the Spheres).
Aeneas
A mythical Greek warrior who was a leader on the Trojan side of the Trojan War. Virgil wrote an epic poem about his life called the Aeneid.
Cumae
Oldest Greek colony in Italy, the site of an entrance to the Underworld and home to the Sibyl.
The Sibyl
The priestess of Apollo at Cumae, her sacred space is in a cave. Aeneas had been instructed to consult her and follow her into the Underworld to speak to his dead father Anchises (heroic katabasis). Told Aeneas he would first have to find the golden bough and find and bury the corpse of his comrade Misenus.
Golden bough
A branch sacred to Persephone. Aeneas had to find this before the Sibyl would escort him into the Underworld.
Anchises
Aeneas's father, and a symbol of Aeneas's Trojan heritage. Aeneas carried him from the burning Troy.
Twin Gates of Sleep
There are two gates of sleep through which to exit: one made of horn, and the other of ivory. Horn: "an easy exit for true shades" Ivory: "exit for false dreams" Aeneas and the Sibyl choose the ivory gate for their return to earth.
Alcestis (by Euripides)
Apollo killed the Cyclopes and was forced to serve as a slave to Admetus as punishment. Admetus and Alcestis were to be married, but he forgot to include a matrimonial sacrifice to Artemis. He was to die as punishment, but Apollo convinced the Fates to allow someone else to die in his place. Alcestis volunteered, and Thanatos came to claim Alcestis. Apollo prophesied that Hercules would rescue Alcestis from death. As a parergon during his 8th task, the Mare of Diomedes, he wrestled Thanatos and brought back Alcestis from the Underworld.
Admetus, son of Pheres
The husband of Alcestis. Forgot to include a matrimonial sacrifice to Artemis, so he was supposed to die as punishment, but Alcestis took his place.
Apollo
God of music, poetry, prophecy, and medicine. Served as a servant to Admetus as punishment for killing the Cyclopes and convinced the Fates to allow someone else to die in Admetus' place.
Asclepius