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  2. Typhoeus - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/typhoeus

    Typhoeus (or Typhon) was an enormous monster, often imagined with multiple fire-breathing dragon heads. According to most traditions, Gaia bore him to be a challenger to Zeus, but the king of the Olympians ultimately defeated Typhoeus and imprisoned him beneath the earth.

  3. Mythopedia. We’re building the world’s most authoritative, online mythology resource, with engaging, accessible content that is both educational and compelling to read. After all, mythology is storytelling at its finest. Learn more about our mission. Subscribe to our newsletter.

  4. Python – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/python

    Ogden, Daniel. “Delphyne and Python, Slain by Apollo.” In Drakon: Dragon Myth and Serpent Cult in the Greek and Roman Worlds, 40–48. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013. Smith, William. “Typhon.” In A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. London: Spottiswoode and Company, 1873. Perseus Digital Library.

  5. Hydra - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/hydra

    Overview. The Hydra, also called the Lernean Hydra (because it lived near Lerna in Greece), was part of a brood of ancient mythical monsters. Its parents were the creatures Typhoeus and Echidna, and its siblings included other multi-headed beasts, such as Cerberus and the Chimera. The Hydra itself was a serpent with numerous heads (the exact ...

  6. Echidna - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/echidna

    Echidna was a female serpent-monster of Greek mythology, the daughter of the sea gods Phorcys and Ceto. She was usually represented with the head and torso of a woman and the tail of a serpent. Echidna mated with another monster, Typhoeus, and together they spawned a new generation of monsters, including Cerberus, the Chimera, the Hydra, and ...

  7. Ladon – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/ladon

    Because Ladon’s name is so uncommon, its etymology is obscure. It does, however, resemble the names of other snakes and dragons of Greek myth, which tend to exhibit a similar “-on” ending; examples include Typhon (also called Typhoeus), Python, and Glycon (as well as the generic Greek word drákōn, mentioned above). Pronunciation

  8. Greek Creatures - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/greek-creatures

    Overview. Greek mythology is full of fantastic and terrifying creatures, many of whom were born at the dawn of creation. The one-eyed Cyclopes and the Hecatoncheires (“Hundred-Handers”), for example, were offspring of Gaia, the primordial earth deity. But there were countless other creatures in Greek mythology, diverse in appearance and ...

  9. Hecate – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/hecate

    Avi Kapach is a writer, scholar, and educator who received his PhD in Classics from Brown University. Hecate, daughter of Asteria and Perses, was a powerful but mysterious goddess usually associated with magic, witchcraft, and the Underworld. Though often an object of dread, Hecate was sometimes seen as a kind goddess and a protector of justice.

  10. Susanoo – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/susanoo

    Other Mythology. One of the most common tropes in mythology is that of storm gods fighting powerful serpents. In Greek mythology, this was Zeus and Typhon; in Norse tradition, it was Thor and Jormungandr; in Hindu tradition, conflict arose between Indra and Vrita. Closer to Japan, Yu the Great fought the dragon Xiangliu, a nine-headed serpent.

  11. Hades – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/hades

    Overview. One of the most dreaded and fearsome deities that Greek mythology had to offer, Hades was king of the Underworld (also called Hades) and ruler of the dead. He was a shadowy figure, both literally and metaphorically, thanks in part to a helmet of invisibility fashioned for him by Hephaestus. The only child of Cronus and Rhea who did ...