The documents provide background on concepts and creatures from Greek mythology. One discusses nymphs as nature spirits and dryads as tree nymphs. Another explains ambrosia and nectar as
This is a basic introduction to Greek Mythology and the concepts that are essential to understanding mythology. There is also a connection to mythology in current advertising.
This is a basic introduction to Greek Mythology and the concepts that are essential to understanding mythology. There is also a connection to mythology in current advertising.
this powerpoint presentation is a brief intoduction to greek mythology. i hope that everyone who sees this slideshow will get benefit. (constructive criticism is welcome)
Contains legends, creatures, pictures and more of Greek Mythology!!! Very interesting and important to know. This is basic culture and knowledge of general mythology. Made by Carolina Giraldo, Isabella Centanaro and Maria Paulina Restrepo, with some help from Miss Sonia Alzate.
This is an introductory powerpoint addressing the definition and fundamentals of Greek/Roman mythology. It addresses the where, why and who of the creation and study of the Greek gods and goddesses.
this powerpoint presentation is a brief intoduction to greek mythology. i hope that everyone who sees this slideshow will get benefit. (constructive criticism is welcome)
Contains legends, creatures, pictures and more of Greek Mythology!!! Very interesting and important to know. This is basic culture and knowledge of general mythology. Made by Carolina Giraldo, Isabella Centanaro and Maria Paulina Restrepo, with some help from Miss Sonia Alzate.
This is an introductory powerpoint addressing the definition and fundamentals of Greek/Roman mythology. It addresses the where, why and who of the creation and study of the Greek gods and goddesses.
Prehistoric goddesses have either been romanticized as sirens , mermaids or angels or demonized as witches and monsters. Either way they are Mad. Let’s get real they say.
2. The Greek gods originated in Ancient Greece. There were minor
gods, and major gods. The minor gods were gods, for example, Pan, and
Hestia. Pan, the God of the Wild, Hestia being the Goddess of the
Hearth . But, the major gods were the most powerful. They made up, a
council of sorts. The council itself held 12 seats in total.
At the head was Zeus, God of the Skies, and King of the Gods. At
his left sat his brother, Poseidon, King of the Oceans. His right was
occupied by his wife, Hera, Queen of the Gods, and Goddess of marriage
and family. Then Demeter, Goddess of fertility and agriculture.
Dionysus, God of wine, was next. Apollo, God of Light. Artemis, Goddess
of the Hunt, and the moon. Artemis and Apollo were twins. Then,
Hermes, the Messenger of the Gods, God of thieves and travelers.
Athena, Goddess of wisdom, defense, and strategic warfare. Next to
her sat Ares, God of war. Then Aphrodite, Goddess of love and beauty.
Lastly, was Hephaestus, God of fire and forge, and he was the
blacksmith of the gods.
3. Artemis, Goddess of the Moon and the Hunt.
Athena, Goddess of Wisdom and strategic warfare.
Hestia, Goddess of the Heart and Home.
These three goddesses were apart of many goddesses that swore to never be with a man. They were called, the
Virgin Goddesses.
They had made a pact to never be with a man. Artemis, herself, was an unattainable woman, legend says, so
she was never bound to a man. Being able to care for herself and the likes, she was named the Goddesses of
Fertility and Childbirth. Athena, Daughter of Zeus, is said to have never taken a lover. She, it says, to
dress like a man, fight like a man, and even act like one. Hestia, Goddesses of the Heart, stubbornly
demanded her father, Zeus, to make her a virgin forever. He did, and even made it so Aphrodite, goddess of love,
could not use her powers on Hestia and make her fall in love.
4. Cerberus, the Furies, Chimera, Medusa, Harpies, Hydra. Only a few of the
countless monsters that the ancient Greeks are said to know of. The question is, are
they really a myth or are they the monsters you thought were under your bed?
Despite the multitude of monsters that loved nothing more than to eat people alive, there
were some good monsters as well. Argus, the creature of many eyes, was created by
Hera, and played a prominent role in many of her myths. Pegasus, the immortal
winged horse, who was the steed of Hercules. Even Satyrs, who were the
companions of Dionysus, and protectors of the wild..
Most of the monsters of Greek mythology were know to be killed by heroes, such as
Hercules. Some, however, were killed by the gods, like Apollo for example, who
killed the Python, an enormous serpent.
5. Ambrosia was a term for the “Nectar of the Gods”, as legend says. It was
brought to the gods in Olympus by doves ,so it may have been thought of
in the Homeric tradition as a kind of divine exhalation of the Earth.
Ambrosia is very closely related to the gods' other form of sustenance,
nectar The two terms may not have originally been distinguished;
though in Homer's poems nectar is usually the drink and ambrosia the
food of the gods; it was with ambrosia Hera "cleansed all defilement from
her lovely flesh", and with ambrosia Athena prepared Penelope, another
myth, in her sleep, so that when she appeared for the final time before her
suitors, the effects of years had been stripped away and they were
inflamed with passion at the sight of her.
6. Nymphs were said to be beautiful women who
were spirits of nature. Worshipped by the
Ancient Greeks and said to come from the
earth, they were seen to be care givers of the
land and life in general. Although not
immortal, they lived extremely long lives,
connected to the life of the object they lived,
such as trees. Unlike many other mythical
creatures such as pixies and fairies, nymphs
are rarely mentioned in contemporary popular
culture.
Nymphs are most generally pictured as young,
vital, beautiful young women embodying the
age of fertility and were strongly attractive
to young males. They represented the ideal
woman, beautiful, the source of new life and
able to nurture it. Yet, their relationships with
men were generally troubled. While some men
7. In Greek Mythology, a dryad, or wood nymph, is usually a
female spirit typically associated with a particular location
or land form. Other nymphs, always in the shape of young
maidens, were part of the retinue of a god, such as
Dionysus, or Hermes or Pan, or a goddess, generally
Artemis.
Nymphs, were the frequent target satyrs. At times, even
gods as well targeted them. They live in groves, in trees
and in valleys and cool grottoes. Each one is born with a
certain tree over which she watches. A dryad either lives
in a tree, in which case she is called a Hamadryad or close
to it. The lives of the dryad are connected with that of a
tree, the longer the tree lives, the longer would be the life
the dryad and if the tree dies, so does she. If this is
caused by a mortal the gods will punish him/her. The dryad
them self punish any foolish mortal who tried to hurt their
tree.
8. http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/nymph - Info on Nymphs
http://camphalfblood.wikia.com/wiki/Dryad - Info on Dryads.
http://www.webgreece.gr/greekmythology/olympiangods/ - Knowledge on the
Olympian gods and their myths
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelve_Olympians - Information on the twelve
Olympian gods.
http://wserver.scc.losrios.edu/~waxmanr/87online/student_sites/morco_luisa/
mythical_creatures/index.html -Small notes on the different types of monsters
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambrosia - Knowledge of ambrosia and it’s uses
for the gods.
Http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Greek_mythological_creatures - Lists of
the different mythical creatures the Greeks wrote about.