Classical Mythology
Terms:
1) Achilles: He was the best fighter and essential in the
Greek war effort against Troy
in the Trojan War. In an attempt to make
him immortal, Achilles’ mother dipped the infant Achilles in the magical water
of the Styx river, but held him by his heel when submerging him in the stream,
leaving a weak, spot susceptible to injury on Achilles’ body. Paris
took advantage of Achilles’ weak spot, and with the help of the god Apollo,
killed Achilles by shooting an arrow at his heel.
2) Adonis: Adonis was such a handsome young man that
Aphrodite found him irresistible.
However, he was killed by a boar after ignoring Aphrodite’s warning. To memorialize his death, Aphrodite sprinkled
nectar on the ground which caused an anemone to grow.
3) Aeneas: A noble fighter for Troy during the Trojan War. He managed to escape from the invading Greeks
and established a new Troy
in Italy,
founding the city of Rome.
4) Ares/Mars: The god of war, but also the product of one
of Zeus’ affairs. Ares’ actual mother
was turned into a cow by Zeus to protect his secret unfaithfulness, but Hera
took the cow and had a one hundred eyed giant watch over it. Ares had a long-term affair with Aphrodite,
having Eros, Deimos (Panic), Phobus (Fear), and Harmonia, but was also trapped
in bed with Aphrodite by her husband, Hephaestus.
5) Argus: The shipwright who built the Argo for Jason,
but also a mythological creature with more than the typical number of
eyes. The Argo for Jason was a ship that
Jason rode in his quest of the Golden Fleece.
6) Athena/Minerva: The Olympian, virginal goddess of arts and
crafts, wisdom, and war. She is also
known as the protector and benefactor of heroes, beating Poseidon in a contest
for the honor of having the city of Athens
names after her.
7) Atlas: A Titan who fought on the side of Cronus
against Zeus in the Titanomachy. Unlike
the other Titans who were condemned to Tartarus, Atlas was condemned to hold
the sky on his shoulders, separating the sky from the earth.
8) Augean
stables: One of Heracles’ Labors was
to clean the filthy, unbearable stables of King Augeas, who hadn’t cleaned the
stables in years. Heracles agreed,
cleaned the stalls, and was able to divert the course of two rivers.
9) Bacchus/Dionysus: The Olympian god of wine, frenzied music and
dance, and the irrational. He watched
over ecstatic, sometimes sexual rites which involved initiation and often left
the participants to become possessed by the deity. He is often worshipped by females and male
satyrs.
10) Hiawatha: A central figure of The Song of Hiawatha (1855), a poem written by Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow. He was a pre-historical
Native American chief.
11) Judgment
of Paris: Paris’
decision to award Aphrodite the golden apple because of her offer of Helen in
the competition between Aphrodite, Athena, and Hera. Paris’
decision is believed to have set off the Trojan War.
12) Jupiter/Zeus: The king or supreme god of the Olympians and
the father of Perseus and Hercules. He
was also the god of the sky.
13) Laocoon: A Trojan who realized that Sinon was lying
when he said that the huge wooden horse the Greeks had left them outside the
walls of Troy
was an offering to Athena to make the city invincible if brought into the
city. However, he and his two sons were
killed by snakes, causing Trojans to believe he was killed as punishment for
being ungrateful for the holy gift to Athena.
14) Leda: The wife of Tyndareus, the king of Sparta, who gave birth to
two sets of twins. One set of twins
belonged to Zeus, who made love to Leda in the form of a swan, and the other of
Tyndareus, who had sex with Leda in the same night that Zeus impregnated her.
15) Midas: His ears were turned into those of an ass by
Apollo for his lack of perception when he chose Pan as the victor against
Apollo in a musical contest. Midas hid
his ears under a hat, but his barber saw, and, unable to keep the secret, the
barber dug a hole and told his secret.
The wind blew the secret so that everyone could hear the secret that was
supposed to remain buried. For doing a
favor for Dionysus, he was granted with the ability to turn everything he
touched into gold. However, Midas found
that even food and drink would turn into gold, so Dionysus told him to bathe in
the river Pactolus, whose bed became golden.
16) Nemesis: The goddess of vengeance who brings
retribution to sinners, especially if they sinned through hubris, or extreme
pride.
17) Odin: The great magician among the gods and was
associated with runic writing. He had an
eight-legged horse named Sleipnir, who could gallop through air and over the
sea.
18) Cassandra: A Trojan who was pursued by the god
Apollo. When she agreed to sleep with
him, he gave her the gift of prophecy, but when she broke her promise, he
changed her ability so that she would never be believed. Cassandra’s predictions were typically about
some future disaster, but she was never believed.
19) Cerberus: The hound of the underworld and Hades’ guard
dog that stood guard to the gates of Hades to prevent those from entering if
they weren’t supposed to. Related to the
Chimaera and the Hydra, he’s usually described as having three heads and a
dragon’s tail.
20) Ceres/Demeter: The Olympian goddess of agriculture, the
sister of Zeus, and the mother of Persephone.
21) Chimera: A fire-breathing monster that had the head of
a lion, the body of a goat, and the tail of serpent, which was killed by the
Corinthian hero Bellerophon on one of his journeys.
22) Circe: An enchantress of divine lineage, a
sorceress, and advisor to Odysseus.
Odysseus spent an entire year with her on the island of Aeaea
when going home after the Trojan War.
She directed him to go to the Underworld to talk to Tiresias. Their son, Telegonus, would later on
accidentally kill his father.
23) Daedalus: A master craftsman who worked for King Minos
of Crete after being banished for killing his
nephew. He built the Labyrinth that
housed the Minotaur, but was imprisoned by Minos for telling Theseus the secret
of the Labyrinth. In his attempt to
escape, he built himself wings, but got too close to the sun, causing the wax
of the wings to melt and the feathers to fall from his arms, plunging him into
the sea. Minos searched for Daedalus but
was killed by the daughters of Cocalus, the king of Camicus, who was harboring
Daedalus.
24) Damocles: A member of the court of Dionysus the Elder,
the king of Syracuse. Damocles showed envy of the king’s position,
so Dionysus offered to switch roles with him for a day, but to teach Damocles
that being a king wasn’t the great, happy role that Damocles originally
believed, Dionysus suspended a sword over the throne.
25) Delphic
Oracle: The shrine of the god Apollo
and the site of the famous Oracle, whose often inscrutable advice was sought
down into historical times.
26) Electra: “Amber,” the daughter of Agamemnon and
Clytemnestra, who helped Orestes avenge their father by killing Clytemnestra
and who married Pylades. She is the
mother of Medon and Strophius.
27) Pan: The son of Hermes and the god of nature and
shepherds who is part goat and part man and is often associated with
Dionysus. He gave rise to the word panic because of his ability to inspire
terror with a shout or sudden noise. He
fell in love with Syrinx, a nymph, who ran from him and was turned into a bed
of reeds. Pan took two reeds and put
them together with wax after hearing wind blow through them and made it into a
panpipe.
28) Pandora’s
Box: A beautiful woman, possibly the
first woman, given to men by the gods to punish mankind. The gods sent with her a jar that, when
opened, released the ills that plague humankind.
29) Paris:
The Trojan prince who caused the Trojan War by carrying off Helen, wife
of the Greek Menelaus. He grew up to be
the handsomest man alive, causing Athena, Hera, and Aphrodite to argue who was
the most beautiful. To solve the
conflict, Zeus had Hermes bring the three goddesses to Paris: Hera promised him political power if
chosen, Athena promised success in battle, and Aphrodite promised Helen. Paris
chose Helen and after being reunited with his parents, he went to Sparta to go get Helen.
30) Parnassus: A mountain in Greece which was sacred to Apollo
and the Muses and was where the Muses supposedly lived.
31) Prometheus: A Titan at birth who joined the Zeus’ side in
the Titanomachy, but then challenged Zeus by championing the cause of man. He prepared two sacrifices for Zeus to
choose, one being fine meat and organs of an ox and the other bones covered in
fat. Zeus chose the less desirable one,
setting the precedent for the kind of sacrifices mankind would have to
make. When Zeus refused to give men the
gift of fire, Prometheus smuggled it out of heaven and brought it to earth. (Prometheus bestowed many gifts to the
mortals to bring them from savagery to civilization). As punishment for his disobedience, Zeus
punished mankind by creating women and chained Prometheus to a cliff where each
day an eagle would pick at his liver and each night the wounds would heal and
the liver would grow back. Heracles
killed the eagle with an arrow, freeing Prometheus, who then traded his
mortality for Chiron’s immortality.
32) Proteus: A sea-god who could change shape and
possessed knowledge of the future, but in order to obtain information, one had
to struggle with the god until his metamorphoses ended.
33) Pygmalion: “Cubit,” he was a craftsman who lived on an
island whose women were all prostitutes, so he decided to carve a statue wife
out of ivory, which Aphrodite had come alive.
He named his wife Galatea and their son Paphos.
34) Romulus and Remus: They established the city of Rome.
Their grandfather Numitor was sent into exile by his brother, Amulius,
who usurped the throne of Alba Longa. Their mother had an affair that produced the
twins, causing Amulius to send the twins adrift on the Tiber
in an ark. When they came ashore, a
she-wolf discovered them and took care of them until a man named Faustulus
found them and raised them. When they
were young, Remus was captured by one of Numitor’s shepherds and brought to
Numitor, so Romulus
came to explain their life story.
Numitor recognized the two as his grandchildren and conspired with them
to overthrow Amulius and return Numitor to the throne. After, Romulus
and Remus established the city of Rome,
but when they argued over who should rule the city, Romulus killed Remus and named the city after
himself.
35) Elysian
Fields: The paradise of heroes
either in the Underworld or in the far West; it is granted to those mortals who
have won a blessed afterlife for having a virtuous life.
36) Fauns: Faunus, which means one who shows favor, was
a Roman woodland deity who was thought to bring prosperity to farmers and
shepherds and depicted with horns, tail, ears, and legs of a goat, creating an
association with Pan and Dionysiac satyrs.
His lover was Fauna, a female agricultural deity and a goddess of
flowers, grains, and the grapevine.
37) Golden
Fleece: The woolly coat of a magical
flying ram, and sought by Jason and the Argonauts on a quest.
38) Hades: The son of Cronus and Rhea, yet not an
Olympian god since he doesn’t live in Olympus,
Hades is the god of the dead and ruler of the Underworld. He is married to Persephone, who he abducted
and made his queen. Hades is also the
realm of the dead, named after the god.
39) Holy
Grail: The cup or platter used by
Jesus at the Last Supper and by Joseph of Arimathea when receiving Christ’s
blood at the Christ. The Holy Grail
became earnestly sought after by many.
40) Hector: A Trojan prince who was the Trojans’ greatest
warrior, but was more noble than Achilles.
After he killed Patroclus, Achilles killed Hector and dragged his body
around the city for twelve days, with Apollo restoring the corpse each
night. Priam, Hector’s father, ransomed
his son’s body from Achilles.
41) Henry,
John: A hero of American folktales
who was portrayed as an enormously strong black man who worked on the railroads
and died of exhaustion in a battle against a machine.
42) Hera/Juno: The Olympian goddess of marriage and
fertility, the wife of Zeus, and the daughter of Cronus and Rhea. She sent snakes at and stirred the Amazons
against Hercules, but aided and protected Jason in his quest for the Golden
Fleece.
43) Hermes: The Olympian messenger god and guide of dead
souls to the Underworld. He delivers
messages for the gods, travelers, roads, orators, commerce, and thieves. On the first day of his life, he escaped from
his crib, created the first lyre, and stole some cattle from his half-brother,
Apollo. The two reconciled, with Hermes
giving Apollo his lyre.
44) Scylla
and Charybdis: Scylla was once a
beautiful sea nymph that either the minor sea god Glaucus fell in love with and
was determined to have her with the help of Circe, who then turned Scylla into
a horrible monster so Glaucus would have to follow Circe’s plans for him, or
had attracted Poseidon, who made advances towards her, causing Amphitrite to
throw magic herbs in the water that Scylla swam in to change her into a
terrible monster. Charybdis is a
mythological whirlpool off the coast of Sicily.
Together, they form a danger towards sailors, such as Jason and the
Argonauts and Odysseus, who wanted to go through the Strait of Messina,
between southern Italy
and Sicily.
45) Sisyphus: He revealed the secret of one of Zeus’ love
affairs and when he died, he cheated Death by begging for permission to go back
to earth long enough to arrange a proper burial for his corpse, but ended up
staying there and not returning to the Underworld until he died a second
time. As punishment, he was condemned to
have to push a large boulder up a hill and then watch it roll back down to the
bottom for all eternity.
46) Tiresias: The blind seer from Thebes.
47) Titan(s): The twelve sons of Earth and the second
generation of gods, born of Ge and Uranus, they were older than the Gods of
Olympus. They were thought to be the
natural forces, and were invincible even though they were defeated and punished
by Zeus.
48) Vesta/Hestia: “Hearth,” the goddess of the hearth, whose
temple in the Roman Forum housed an altar with a fire that symbolized the
center of life of the Roman
Republic and wasn’t
allowed to go out. Her priestesses, or
Vestal Virgins, were chosen at a young age, took a vow of chastity, and had the
power to pardon criminals sentences to die nor did they have to take an oath of
honesty. A Vestal Virgin who died while
in office was given the honor of being buried in the city of Rome.
49) Venus/Aphrodite: The Olympian goddess of love and beauty in
Greek mythology even though she was originally seen as the protector of gardens
who brought luck and favor.
50) Zephyr: Zephyrus is the west wind, which signals the
return of spring.
Biblical Terms:
1) Abraham
and Isaac: Abraham’s wife, Sarai,
later changed to Sarah, cannot become pregnant, but she really wants to giver
Abraham an heir, so God promises a son, who he says shall be names Isaac. God asks Abraham to kill his son, Isaac, as a
sacrifice to test his loyalty. Abraham
obeys and brings Isaac to the top of the mountain to be sacrificed, but right
before Abraham strikes, one of God’s angels stops him and tells Abraham that
God is impressed with his devotion and supports his covenant.
2) Annunciation: The celebration of the angel Gabriel’s
announcement of the virgin Mary’s pregnancy with Jesus.
3) Ararat: The mountain peak of Ararat
where Noah’s ark landed and rested during the flood and while it receded.
4) Armageddon: The destination of the final conflict between
Christ and Antichrist; the last battle between good and evil before the Day of
Judgment.
5) Babel:
All of mankind spoke one language and decided to build the Tower of Babel in order to reach heaven. However, God understood their true intention
of promoting themselves instead of God, so he scattered the people and created
different languages to create a language barrier in order to prevent them from
rising above him.
6) Babylon:
One of the first cities in the world, Babylon was a city of rebellion against God,
where mankind built the Tower
of Babel. The city was seen as a symbol for evil and
was destroyed by God.
7) Burning
Bush: A manifestation of God himself
when he speaks to Moses because Moses was too frightened to look at God
himself. God tells Moses to go back to Egypt and
demand for the Israelites to be released from slavery.
8) Damascus:
The most ancient of the Oriental cities and the capital of Syria; the city
was later taken and destroyed by the Assyrians, with the Syrian inhabitants
being captured and carried to Assyria. The city s most memorable for Saul’s
conversion and became the center of Christianity.
9) Esther: The Jewish Queen of Ahasuerus whose original
name was Hadas’sah. One of the princes
of the kingdom, Haman, wanted to rid of his rival, Esther’s uncle Mordecai, so
he told the king that there was a group of people (Jewish) that wanted to
overthrow him and his power, convincing the king to pass a law that allowed for
Jews to be murdered. Although
conflicted, Esther told the king of her ethnic origin and told him that she was
required to be killed. She became the
Jewish peoples’ protector and savior through her intervention and Haman was
hanged.
10) Golden
Calf: When Moses left to receive the
Ten Commandments, the people became impatient waiting for his return and
decided to create a molten image of a calf to worship. However, Moses commanded them to destroy the
calf upon his return.
11) Jacob’s
Ladder: Jacob dreamed of a ladder on
earth that could reach heaven at the top.
Jacob saw in his dream angels ascending and descending the ladder and
dreamt that God promised that his descendants would return to the land,
multiply in population, bless all people on the earth, and to be with Jacob for
the rest of his life. Jacob then built a
pillar and devoted his life to following after God.
12) Jeremiah: A Hebrew prophet of God who was sent to
preach about indictment and judgment in the hope of turning people from their
wicked ways, but faced harsh opposition by many.
13) Job: A wealthy, devoted Arabian patriarch who
suffered through a series of trials created by Satan in an attempt by Satan to
argue of Job’s goodness to God that fell on him. However, he maintained his integrity and
faithfulness, so God visited him with goodness and greater prosperity.
14) Leviathan: A crocodile, sometimes seen as a sea monster
or serpent, which is used by God through the use of rhetorical questions to
prove to Job that man is not all-powerful.
15) Lot’s Wife: Two angels visited Lot,
who told them to come into his home in order to protect them from the
neighbors, after Abraham convinced God not to destroy the good people with the
wicked. The angels told Lot and his family to flee the city and go to the
mountains because God was going to destroy the city, but warned them not to
turn around. However, when they escaped
the city, Lot’s wife turned around and turned
into stone.
16) Methuselah: He was the son of Enoch and the grandfather
of Noah. He was the oldest man to live
in the record, living nine hundred and sixty-nine years.
17) Olive
Branch: During the flood, Noah
wanted to find out whether the flood was over or not. He send both a raven and a dove out of the
ark to see if the flood was over and the second time that he sent the dove, it
came back with an olive branch in its mouth, signifying the end of the flood. The olive branch became a symbol of peace and
is associated with the Holy Spirit.
18) Pearls
Before Swine: Jesus told his
followers to never throw pearls before swine to explain to his followers not to
waste something they find sacred and valuable to those who won’t appreciate
them in order to prevent the gift from being wasted.
19) Promised
Land: God, in the form of a burning
bush, told Moses to free the enslaved Jews in Egypt. Under God’s guidance, Moses was able to lead
the Jewish to the promised land of Israel even though he wasn’t able
to enter the promised land himself.
20) Prodigal
Son: Jesus tells the story of a man
who has two sons. The younger son asks
his father for some of the family’s land as an early inheritance, and when he
receives the land, the son goes on a journey where he wastes his fortune. When he runs out of money and a famine hits,
he becomes destitute and, recognizing his foolishness, comes back to his father
to beg for forgiveness. The father
welcomes his prodigal son back warmly, enraging the older brother. However, the father tells him that everything
he owns is the older son’s and that he just wants to celebrate the return of
his lost son.
21) Queen
of Sheba: She had heard stories of Solomon and wanted
to find out if the stories were true or not, so she decided to visit him,
bringing lavish gifts. When she got
there, she tested him with hard questions.
At the end, she was satisfied that the stories were true and left the
Solomon with the gifts, to which he reciprocated.
22) Ruth: She married her rich relative, Boaz and
became the mother of Obed, who becomes the grandfather of David, the slayer of
Goliath who later becomes king.