Zeus The man the Myth the Legend

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His first choice would be the Titaness Mitis who had helped Zeus assume his position. Mitis, just like Zeus, was a shape shifter. She was not ready to give herself to Zeus but he did eventually get his way. Before he had a chance to enjoy his victory Gaia warned him that Mitis would birth a son that would be powerful enough to overthrow him. Panicked, Zeus swallowed Mitis, not knowing she was already pregnant (Stone 55). Zeus himself was not only now pregnant but he gained the wisdom that Mitis had. After Mitis, Zeus would have many wives which produced many offspring. His next wife would be the Titaness Themis who would birth two sets of triplets. The first set was the Orai, or Seasons, and the second set were the Moirai, or the Three Fates. The Three Fates were named Klotho, Lakhesis, and Atropos. Together, the Three Fates would spin the thread of life, decide on its end and cut it. Zeus, in all his glory, was virtually powerless to their influence. His third wife, Evrynomi, was the sister of Mitis. She would give birth to the three Graces, beauty, gentleness, and friendship. Mnemosyne, goddess of memory, would give birth to the nine Muse (Stone 56). Finally, there was Hera. Hera would be the primary wife of Zeus throughout his reign as king of the gods. However, this did not suppress his unquenchable thirst for lust.

Hera was the sister of Zeus and one the siblings he saved from Kronos. He would seduce Hera in the form of a cuckoo bird. Once he seduced her he then created a silver rain that fell from a cloudless sky causing Hera to protect the fragile bird by putting him under her skirt. She knew by doing this she would be giving herself to the bird and almost instantly Zeus transformed

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back into himself (Ston...

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...is workshop where it was disassembled brought to the temple and then reassembled. The statue was 40 feet tall made from ivory and gold, looked big even inside the massive temple. The statue included Zeus holding a scepter in his left hand with an eagle sitting on top of it. In the palm of his right hand was the goddess Nike, goddess of victory, which was often found near Zeus. There were two lions on either side of his feet along with a long reflecting pool on the floor in front of him (Stone 206). This statue would become one of the seven wonders of the ancient world as well as Phidias’s greatest achievement. Zeus was at a high point as the king of gods and men but the fate of the god was set in motion and he was helpless to stop it.

Works Cited

Stone, Tom. Zeus: A Journey through Greece in the Footsteps of a God. New York: Bloomsbury, 2008. Print.

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