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1%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
2
3[[WMG:[[center:[-Myth/ClassicalMythology '''[[Characters/ClassicalMythology Main Character Index]]'''\
4[[Characters/ClassicalMythologyProtogenoi Protogenoi]] | [[Characters/ClassicalMythologyTitans Titans]] | [[Characters/ClassicalMythologyOlympians Olympians]] ([[Characters/ClassicalMythologyFirstGenerationOlympians First-Generation]] | [[Characters/ClassicalMythologySecondGenerationOlympians Second-Generation]]) | [[Characters/ClassicalMythologyMinorDeities Minor Deities]] | [[Characters/ClassicalMythologyMonsters Monsters]] | '''Mortals and Demigods''']]-]]]
5
6[[foldercontrol]]
7
8!!Semi-Divine Entities
9
10[[folder:Daimons]]
11Not to be confused with "demons"[[note]]though demons would be considered ''a subtype'' of daimon[[/note]], daimon is an umbrella term for any semi-divine being that is more than a mortal, but less than a god. In other words, when someone describes an entity as a "demigod" and are not referring to the offspring of a god and a mortal, they are describing a daimon. Many minor gods are classified as daimons instead of, or in addition to, being full-fledged divinities [[DependingOnTheWriter depending on who's classifying them]]. Though the words "daimon" and "demon" are linguistically connected, the former giving rise to the latter, daimon essentially means "spirit" and daimons can be good, evil, neutral, or anywhere in between; and nomenclature exists to distinguish good and evil daimons. With evil daimons being called ''kakodaimons'' (literally "evil spirits", making them synonymous with demons) and good daimons being called agathodaimons or eudaimons (literally "good spirits"). Nymphs and satyrs are often considered to fit under the banner of daimons.
12----
13%%* AngelsDevilsAndSquid: Daimons are so vast and varied as entities that they could fall into any one of the three categories.
14* AngelicTransformation: Two groups of agathodaimons, the chryseoi daimons (golden spirits) and the argryeoi daimons (silver spirts), were both early generations of humans before the gods raised them up to become daimons. The former were from the golden age humans while the latter were from the silver age humans. The chryseoi daimons lived in the air and guarded and blessed humans, while the argryeoi daimons lived underground/the Underworld and did the same.
15* OurAngelsAreDifferent: Agathodaimons, being good aligned daimons are functionally angels, serving the gods and often protecting and blessing mortals the gods favor.
16* OurDemonsAreDifferent: Kakodaimons are evil aligned daimons that spread misfortune and harm.
17
18[[/folder]]
19
20[[folder:Nymphs]]
21Beautiful female nature spirits, considered desirable maids by mortals and gods alike. There were many subgroupings of nymphs, but the most famous were the Hesperides (sunset nymphs who tend the garden with the golden apples), [[PlantPerson Dryades]] (tree spirits), [[ApparentlyHumanMerfolk Naiads, Nereids, Oceanids]] (different kinds of water nymphs), and the Pleiades (nymphs of the Pleiades constellation). Some types of nymph served as attendants to gods, like the Lampads (who followed Hecate around) and the Maenads (crazed nymphs who partied with Dionysus). The full list can be found [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nymph here]]. Be warned, it's ''very'' long.
22----
23* TheAgeless: Usually portrayed as being eternally youthful.
24* BornAsAnAdult: The Meliae Dryades were born fully formed from the Earth via the blood of Ouranos.
25* DependingOnTheWriter: Their status as gods. As a group nymphs are often treated as a separate (and lesser) species to gods but individually several nymphs are outright said to be goddesses (notably Amphitrite, Calypso, Chloris and Thetis). So whether nymphs count as minor gods or something else is anyone's guess.
26* TheFairFolk: Do remember that a Greek farmer does ''not'' live InHarmonyWithNature; that is a conceit of city folk. Nature brings blights and floods, and Nymphs know how to arrange such things when they get [[BerserkButton irritated]] at a farmer's disrespect.
27%%* FairySexy: Ever wonder where the word "nymphomaniac" originated? Now you do.
28* InhumanlyBeautifulRace: Their most famous trait is their youthful, irresistible appearance.
29* MsFanservice: It could be said the species wears this as their [[PlanetOfHats hat]], since they are considered extremely desirable, almost always depicted naked in paintings and statues, and very sexually liberated, hence the term "nymphomania" though there are exceptions such as the ones that followed Artemis and wished to remain chaste. Still, there is a good reason why several heroes and Gods took them as wives and lovers respectively.
30* NatureSpirit: Some of them, such as [[PlantPerson Dryades]], [[ApparentlyHumanMerfolk Naiads, Nereids, and Oceanids]].
31* OddJobGods: One interpretation of nymphs is that they're minor goddess of specific parts of nature; a Dryad is the goddess of a particular tree (or grove of trees), a potamides is goddess of a single river, and an Oread is a goddess of one mountain.
32* OneGenderRace: Pretty much all of them are female. The most notable exception is Nerites, beloved of Poseidon and the only male Nereid.
33* OurNymphsAreDifferent: Classic myth is the TropeMaker and TropeNamer. Nymphs -- ''nymphe'', which is also Greek for ''bride'', or a woman of marriageable age -- are a major class of semi-divine creatures, essentially minor female deities who watch over landscapes and natural landmarks. They're often depicted as the lovers, mothers or daughters of various heroes and divinities, and come in a staggering variety of types associated with specific landforms and environments.
34%% ** Alseids were an obscure type associated with glens and groves, and only mentioned by Homer.
35** Aurae were nymphs of winds and breezes; some texts treat them as a singular being, Aura, the daughter of the titan Lelantos.
36** Dryads (''druas'') were the nymphs of trees. Originally, the term specifically referred to the nymphs of oak trees (''drys'', in Ancient Greek), before expanding to tree nymphs in general; the nymphs associated with other trees had their own specific names -- meliads for ash trees, for instance. Hamadryads were a subtype who were associated with one individual tree, rather than forests and trees in general, and perished if that tree was cut down.
37** The Hesperides were the nymphs of the twilight and the West. There were only three, who guarded Hera's golden apples in a garden in the utmost west of the world. They're usually considered to be the daughters of the titan Atlas, although some myths have them as daughters of Zeus or of Nyx and Erebus.
38** The Hyades were a group of nymphs who brought rain.
39** The Lampades were the nymphs of the Underworld, and accompanied Hecate, the goddess of witchcraft and magic, in her nightly travels.
40** Naiads presided over fresh waters. They were further subdivided into numerous types associated with specific water bodies, such as limnads (lakes), potamides (rivers) and pegasides (springs). They were often associated with river gods, who were either their fathers, their sons, or just generally their male equivalents.
41** Nereids were the nymphs of the seas, particularly the Aegean and the Mediterranean as a whole. They were strongly associated with Poseidon, whom they often accompanied. Some myths describe them as the daughters of the sea god Nereus, hence their name, and the Oceanid Doris.
42** Oceanids, despite what the name would make you think, were the nymphs of both fresh and salt water, as well as rain. They numbered three thousand and were the daughters of the titans Oceanus and Tethys, and sisters of the three thousand river gods the two titans had also begat.
43** The Oreads were the nymphs of the mountains, and were associated with Artemis.
44** The seven Pleiades, another group of daughters of Atlas, were companions to Artemis and were at some point transformed into the stars that bear their name.
45** Individual nymphs include Amphitrite, a nereid and Poseidon's wife; Echo, who was cursed by Hera to only be able to repeat what others said and eventually faded away to only a disembodied voice and Metis, an Oceanid and Athena's mother. There's also a running theme of nymphs being transformed into plants after misadventures involving the gods -- Daphne[[note]]meaning "laurel" in Greek[[/note]], for instance, was a naiad who was pursued by an amorous Apollo, prayed to her river god father for escape and was transformed in to a laurel tree; the naiad Minthe tried to seduce Hades and was turned into the first mint plant by a furious Persephone; the dryad Syrinx met a similar fate to Daphne's, being transformed into a river reed by her sisters to escape Pan; the oread Pytis[[note]]"pine"[[/note]] was transformed into a pine tree under the same circumstances.
46* OurElvesAreDifferent: They share some traits with elves, what with their enchanting looks, eternal youth, and close relationship with nature.
47* OurFairiesAreDifferent: They're usually shown to be the benevolent type, being beautiful, playful nature spirits, but some of them, like the [[AxCrazy Maenads]], are more similar to TheFairFolk.
48* PaintingTheFrostOnWindows: Nymphs were often held responsible for making natural phenomena occur; the Aurae caused breezes, the Hyades brought rain, and so on.
49* SoBeautifulItsACurse: Many nymphs found themselves getting the wrong sort of attention and becoming victims of rape by male deities and monsters. Arethusa was relentlessly pursued by the river god Alpheus, Daphne was almost raped by Apollo and Galateia was desired by the cyclops Polyphemus, who crushed her lover Alcis with a boulder out of mad jealousy.
50* SpontaneousGeneration: The Meliae were born from the blood of Ouranos when it spilled upon the Earth.
51* WaterIsWomanly: The nereids are sea nymphs and symbolic of the sea's kindness and beauty, singing melodious songs as they dance around their father Nereus and appearing as gorgeous women.
52[[/folder]]
53
54[[folder:Satyrs]]
55Rustic fertility spirits, companions of Dionysus/Pan, they were depicted as short, goat-like hairy men with erect members.
56----
57* AdaptationalAttractiveness: Initially they were always shown as rather ugly, but later on better looking ones became common in art.
58* BeastMan: The upper body of a man, but with horns, goat-like ears, tails, and hooves. In earlier depictions, the satyrs appeared as ugly men with erect penises, horse-like ears and tails... and that's it.
59* BiggerIsBetterInBed: Were said to be well-endowed, and were usually portrayed as lewd and lecherous.
60%%* CarpetOfVirility: Due their goat-like appearance.
61* DistaffCounterpart: Originally the nymphs were this, but later artists implemented satyresses.
62* TheFairFolk: Modern audiences wouldn't see them as fairies, but were considered forest spirits by the Greeks and could be quite malevolent.
63%%* FaunsAndSatyrs: [[TropeNamers Trope Namer]]
64* GreekChorus: [[TropeNamers The original]], most Greek dramas had a chorus dressed up as Satyrs who commented in the action. In fact, the term "tragedy" roughly translates into "goat song" because of this.
65* KavorkaMan: Despite many being portrayed as ugly, they still had no trouble finding romantic partners.
66%%* GagPenis: Constantly had erections.
67* OneGenderRace: No female satyrs are explicitly mentioned in mythology, but as mentioned above do in later portrayals.
68%%* MagicalFlutist: With panpipes, like Pan himself.
69* RagingStiffie: They are described with permanent erections.
70[[/folder]]
71
72!!Named Demigods/Immortals
73
74[[folder:Achilles]]
75[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/guerriero_con_fanciullo_cd_achille_e_troilo_190_210_ca_5999_01.JPG]]
76The son of King Peleus of Phthia and the sea nymph (and sometimes his great-grandmother) Thetis. A powerful Greek warrior best known for his heroics and later death during the Trojan War. Also for being the TropeNamer for the AchillesHeel.
77----
78* AchillesHeel: TropeNamer, though it's not in the Illiad itself (the heel just happens to be where Paris shoots him); later folklore had it that his mother Thetis had dipped him into the River Styx, making him invulnerable- but as she held him by the heel, the waters of the Styx couldn't touch that spot and so his heel specifically remained vulnerable.
79* AchillesInHisTent: The TropeNamer. After losing his lover Briseis, he quits from the battlefield of the Trojan War, allowing the trojans to temporarily be the front runners of the war. He eventually leaves it when Patroclus dies, bringing his side back on top again.
80* AdaptationalSexuality: Contrary to popular belief, Achilles is at most bisexual rather than gay. He gets DraggedIntoDrag by his mother after initial protests after seeing the beautiful Princess Deidamia, who ends up giving birth to his son. He also is clearly attracted to Briseis, whom he sleeps with and might've married had he lived; fell in love with the Trojan Princess Polyxena in one account, to the point where he was prepared to end the war in exchange for her hand in marriage; and married Medea after he died and went to the Elysian Fields. At the same time, he and Patroclus also have a close, possibly romantic, relationship, with the homoerotic aspect emphasized in later works.
81* AmbiguouslyBi: He's indisputably attracted to women, as shown by his fathering of Pyrrhus and attraction to Briseis, but his relationship with Patroclus comes off as very homoerotic in nature.
82* AntiHero: Bordering on VillainProtagonist. Achilles performs many acts of douchebaggery throughout ''Literature/TheIliad'' and is one of the biggest jerks in ancient literature. This makes for a good foil between him and Hector (who is arguably much more heroic than his Greek opponent) and Patroclus, who ends up at the wrong end of Hector's spear because he, unlike Achilles, cared enough about his fellow soldiers to dress up as Achilles to rally them.
83* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: Achilles asks Zeus to help the Trojans punish the Greeks for Agamemnon's unfairness towards him, which ends in Patroclus's death.
84%%* TheBerserker: One of the most widely known in literature.
85* BloodKnight: He's not fighting in the Trojan War for honor or gain. He's fighting because he likes it... and because he's very, very good at it.
86* BreakTheHaughty: Achilles spends most of the ''Literature/TheIliad'' petulantly sulking in his tent over a slight... until Patroclus is killed. Suddenly, Achilles realizes he should have joined the battle a lot sooner.
87%%* BrokenAce: Best exemplified in ''Literature/TheIliad''.
88* ByronicHero: He is a charismatic, amazingly skilled fighter who is the one of the most handsome men in the world with ''serious'' personal issues.
89* DesecratingTheDead: His dragging of Hector's corpse behind his chariot after killing him in battle. [[EveryoneHasStandards Even the gods thought that was going too far]].
90* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: [[AvertedTrope Averted]]. When he tried to fight the local river god at Troy, he got his ass kicked and nearly drowned. Hephaestus had to come down and personally fight the river to make sure Achilles didn't die before his destined time.
91* DivineParentage: His mother, Thetis, is a goddess of the sea. Additionally, through his father, he is a descendant of Zeus.
92* DoomedByCanon: Ancient writers were pretty much in agreement that he died at Troy, so it's hardly a shock when it happens in any adaptation.
93* DyingMomentOfAwesome: Chasing the entire Trojan army into the city, only to be taken down by Paris with the help of Apollo? Achilles is just that badass.
94* EmotionalBruiser: He has no problem with crying or showing emotion. Granted, this is ancient Greece: the "MenDontCry" thing is a more modern trope.
95* EveryoneHasStandards: Some stories have Achilles going to throw down with the ''entire Greek army'' (given that Achilles is a OneManArmy himself, not an empty threat) to protect Iphegenia, disgusted at both the human sacrifice and how Agamemnon used Achilles as an UnwittingPawn (by saying that Iphegenia was to be married to Achilles) to trick Clytemnestra into sending Iphegenia over.
96%%* FatalFlaw: Both pride and wrath.
97* GloryHound: The '''one''' of ''Literature/TheIliad''. One of the biggest in literature. He even has a specific reason for it: it's prophesied that he'll either die old and be forgotten or young and be famous for all time, and he's made his choice.
98* HeartbrokenBadass: After Patroclus's death, he is completely wracked with guilt and swears to avenge him, going on one of the most famous {{Roaring Rampage Of Revenge}}s in the history of literature.
99* HeinzHybrid: Not only was his mother a sea goddess, he's a paternal descendant of Zeus, and many of his female paternal ancestors were also nymphs. Some sources add that his great-grandfather was the centaur Chiron. So human, nymph, Olympian, and centaur heritage. His father was also the king of the Myrmidons, who were descendants of ants made human by Zeus (though the Myrmidon Kings weren't usually said to be ant descendants).
100%%* HeroicBSOD: After Patroclus's death. His RoaringRampageOfRevenge happens shortly after he breaks out of it.
101* InvincibleHero: The reason why Homer keeps him out of the fighting for so long. Once Achilles starts fighting, it is game over for the Trojans.
102* InTheBlood: Achilles and Ajax are cousins, sons of the BashBrothers Peleus and Telamon. Peleus and Telamon were mighty warriors in their own right who became famous fighting alongside Heracles. Achilles's son Neoptolemus also proved to be a fierce warrior when he joined the fight in the final year of the war despite his likely ImprobableAge. Being a badass tended to run in their family.
103* ItsAllAboutMe: When he feels he's been ripped off by the Greeks he's fighting under, he not only withdraws from the conflict and refuses to fight (which comes as a serious blow to the Greek army) but ''prays to the Gods to make the Greeks lose''.
104%%* ItsAllMyFault: His belief regarding Patroclus's death. He's not wrong.
105* LikeFatherLikeSon: Achilles's father was the warrior Peleus, a badass in his own right and a frequent ally of Heracles. Achilles's own son goes on to be a brutal killing machine.
106* LoverAndBeloved: By the time of Plato's ''Symposium'', it was taken for granted that Achilles and Patroclus had a pederastic relationship. Plato asserts that Achilles is the Beloved, being the younger of the two, even though Achilles is vastly more powerful than Patroclus. In short, Achilles is a power bottom.
107* LoveHurts: His best friend and possible lover Patroclus dying at the hands of Hector has terrible consequences on his emotional state.
108* LoveRedeems: Achilles's most evil act is by far parading Hector's corpse around Troy in front of his family, including his father, wife, and infant son. However, when Priam sneaks into the Achaean camp to retrieve his son's corpse, Achilles sees his pain, which reminds him of the pain he felt when Hector killed Patroclus; breaks down in tears alongside the old man; and lets him take his son's body back to Troy.
109* ManlyTears: The most famous example being between Achilles and King Priam when Priam begs Achilles to return the body of his son Hector for burial. Priam's passion moves Achilles who begins thinking about his lost friend Patroclus, and the two men weep together over the respective loss.
110* MeaningfulName: His name is open to several interpretations, but a well-known one holds that it comes from ''akhos'' ("grief") and ''laos'' ("people" or "army"), making him someone who brings grief to armies (which he does -- both the Trojans' and his own).
111* MommasBoy: Borders on EvenBadMenLoveTheirMamas; Achilles cared deeply for his mother Thetis.
112* MoralityPet: Patroclus was one of the few people (other than himself) that Achilles cared about. Even though he'd withdrawn himself from the fighting, he even gave Patroclus his shield and armor to fight for the Greeks, just so he'd be safe.
113* {{Narcissist}}: Displays several symptoms of the disorder:
114** He has a very high opinion of himself and his capabilities, though to be fair he really ''is'' the WorldsBestWarrior.
115** His ego is very fragile, and when Agamemnon insults him by taking Briseis he responds by throwing a tantrum and not only withdrawing from the battle, but outright asking his divine mother Thetis to sabotage his own side.
116** He really couldn't care less about anyone other than Patroclus, Peleus, and Thetis (and maybe his son, Neoptolemus), something underlined when the far more empathetic Patroclus tries to get him to come back to help on the grounds that his fellow Acheans are dying in droves without him there to turn the tides, with Achilles refusing due to his wounded pride. When Agamemnon tries to resolve their feud by giving Briseis back, Achilles refuses, making it clear that he never cared about Briseis personally (despite Patroclus having apparently promised to get her and Achilles married when they returned to Greece), just the offense to his pride.
117* NighInvulnerability: In later versions of his story, he has this as a result of his mother dunking him into the River Styx or literally burning away his mortality in a fire. This doesn't appear to be the case in ''Literature/TheIliad'', as he does get wounded once before the whole heel thing.
118* NotSoInvincibleAfterAll: Turns out he has an AchillesHeel! Of course, at this point, everybody knows that.
119* OneManArmy: Even in stories where he's not invulnerable, his combat abilities are pretty much a StoryBreakerPower, hence why AchillesInHisTent happened.
120* PetTheDog:
121** Achilles is willing to fight the entire Greek army to defend Agamemnon's daughter, Iphigenia, when the latter has to sacrifice her to appease Artemis. Agamemnon had duped the girl into coming by promising her marriage to Achilles offending his honor, making him feel somewhat responsible, and he feels sheer disgust at the act, even after his own men nearly stone him to death when he protested the sacrifice.
122** His return of Hector's body is also a humanizing moment.
123** Achilles ''does'' genuinely love Patroclus and is [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone horrified when he finds his inaction in the war has led to Patroclus's untimely death]].
124* PsychoForHire: Some interpretations of the ''Literature/TheIliad'' depict Achilles and his Myrmidons as a tribe of BloodKnight mercenary nutjobs.
125* PsychopathicManchild: He has his moments; most notably, when Agamemnon insults him, his response is essentially to throw a tantrum, pray that his own side loses, and go on emo rants about the meaninglessness of heroism. He also utterly refuses to end his feud with Agamemnon even when its cause has been resolved (Agamemnon offers to give Briseis back along with mountains of treasure, so Achilles isn't being robbed anymore and Agamemnon's been forced to eat crow so he has revenge for Agamemnon humiliating him), and only returns to the fight after it's made personal when Patroclus dies.
126* ARealManIsAKiller: Could be the UrExample in ancient times, and it still holds up today. However, Achilles's experience in the battlefield was minimal compared to that of the rest of the kings taking part in the war, and he was more of a loose cannon at best.
127%%* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: He goes on one after Patroclus's death, which is the most legendary one in literature.
128* SadlyMythtaken: Medieval writers like Dante never read Homer because they didn't know Greek and only knew Achilles from later Latin sources, so they tended to {{Flanderize}} Achilles into a one-dimensional madman (with a heavy dose of ValuesDissonance).
129* StrawNihilist: Achilles predates Nietzsche by millennia, but he gets to rant about how life and the heroic code are meaningless, and they're all going to die and be forgotten anyway. He goes so far as to wish everyone but himself and Patroclus dead in the hope that then, their glory might actually endure. Even after he dies and descends into the Underworld, he's still a whiner!
130* SuperiorSuccessor: A prophecy said that his mother Thetis would have a son more powerful than his father. Because of this prophecy, Zeus and Poseidon, who had both desired her, made her marry Peleus, a mortal, fearing if she coupled with a god, the child could potentially overthrow Zeus. Achilles grew up to be a mightier warrior than his father.
131%%* TooPowerfulToLive
132* WhatADrag: Achilles drags Hector's body with his chariot after killing him.
133%%* WorthyOpponent: Memnon and Hector are this to him.
134%%* YourDaysAreNumbered: He's fully aware of it but prefers a glorious death to an obscure old age.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Aeëtes]]
138A son of the Sun Helios and the Oceanid Perse, making him a brother of Circe, Pasiphaë, and Perses. Originally the ruler of Corinth, Aeëtes founded a new civilization at Colchis (present-day Georgia) and became its first king, fathering two daughters, Medea and Chalciope, and a son, Absyrtus, along the way. He also welcomed Phrixus after his attempted murder by his stepmother, Ino, and gave him Chalciope's hand in marriage. In return, Phrixus gave him the Golden Fleece. Jason later came to get this along with Medea, who killed Absyrtus to stop him from following them. Aeetes was forced to let them go to collect Absyrtus' remains. He was later succeeded by Perses, either after his death or because Perses deposed him, though not for long, since Medea's son, Medus, later came into his rightful inheritance.
139----
140* DivineParentage: Son of a sun god (Helios) and a water nymph (Perse). This would make him a deity, too, but... (see below).
141* OutlivingOnesOffspring: He outlived his son Absyrtus... because Aeëtes's daughter Medea killed him.
142* SacredHospitality: Housed Phrixus kindly and even gave his daughter's hand in marriage. As thanks, Phrixus gave him the Golden Fleece, which allowed Aeëtes's kingdom to become one of the greatest in the ancient world (until it was taken by Jason, fairly though).
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Aeneas]]
146[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/aphrodx3_aeneasfleestroy.jpg]]
147Aeneas was a Trojan hero in Greek mythology, son of the prince Anchises and the goddess Aphrodite. He is more extensively mentioned in Roman mythology, and is seen as an ancestor of Remus and Romulus, founders of Rome.
148----
149* AscendedExtra: He started out as a very minor figure in the Iliad, only mentioned by name because he's the son of Aphrodite. When Rome became big, however, they elevated him to legendary hero on par with Odysseus and Achilles, seeing him as their mythical founder.
150* DivineParentage: The son of Aphrodite.
151* GuardianAngel: Aphrodite protects him throughout the Trojan War, Apollo also steps in now and then.
152* OurFounder: Considered the first hero of Rome, ancestor of Romulus and Remus and while a minor Greek Hero is a major Roman one often credited with it's founding.
153[[/folder]]
154
155[[folder:Ariadne]]
156The daughter of King Minos of Crete and Queen Pasiphaë of Colchis, Princess Ariadne of Crete became infatuated with the hero Theseus, who intended to put an end to the yearly sacrifices of Athenian boys and girls to the Minotaur. Minos tasked her to control the labyrinth where the sacrifices would be thrown in; she thus helped Theseus by giving him a ball of string to use to find his way inside the maze. Because of this, Ariadne is associated with labyrinths and mazes. She eloped with Theseus after he slayed Minotaur, but the latter left her on the island of Naxos. Dionysus took pity on and fell in love with her, eventually making her his immortal wife. Of course, there are versions where Dionysus forced Theseus to abandon her in the first place.
157----
158* BackFromTheDead: After she died, Dionysus descended into the Underworld to bring her to Olympus.
159* DivineParentage: She is the daughter of Minos, who is the son of Zeus, and Pasiphaë, who is the daughter of sun god Helios and the Oceanid Perse, not to mention being a goddess in her own right.
160* ExtremeDoormat: She mostly just resigned herself to her fate after Theseus abandoned her. However, some versions state the gods answered her prayers to punish Theseus by making him forget to change the black sails on his ship to white ones to signify that he survived; when his father Aegeus saw the black sails, he threw himself into the sea out of despair. Thankfully, Dionysus "found" her.
161* {{Foil}}: She and Medea were both princesses and granddaughters of Helios. Each also threw her whole life away due to her infatuation with a hero (Theseus and Jason, respectively), only for said hero to [[UngratefulBastard abandon her even after she had helped him escape alive]]. However, while Medea became an AxCrazy murderess who took matters into her own hands, Ariadne was possibly too meek to do much other than lament her fate and pray to the gods for justice after Theseus abandoned her.
162%%* HappilyMarried: To Dionysus.
163* TheMaze: She controlled the labyrinth. To this day, writers make nice allusions of someone in a labyrinth and maze using her name or its variants, Ariadna/Arianna/Ariane (like in ''Film/{{Inception}}'').
164* WarriorPrincess: She was tasked by her father to control the labyrinth, which contained the Minotaur.
165[[/folder]]
166
167[[folder:Calais & Zetes (Boreads)]]
168The twin sons of Boreas the North Wind and Oreithyia. They joined the Argonauts and chased the Harpies away from Phineas. Calais was the beloved of Orpheus in one tradition.
169----
170* AgentPeacock: A very effective SiblingTeam among The Argonauts, but very proud of their looks (they had great pride in who had the longest curls between the two of them and by boasting about these locks, they were uplifted).
171* MagicHair: Their curly hair enabled them to fly.
172* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: According to the Argonautica, they were the ones who convinced the Argonauts to leave Heracles behind as he searched for Hylas. An unamused Heracles would get even later down the line by killing them for their roles in his abandonment.
173%%* SiblingTeam
174%%* SuperSpeed: Inherited from their dad.
175* WingedHumanoid: With wings on their backs, feet, or sometimes both.
176[[/folder]]
177
178[[folder:Chiron]]
179The legendary centaur son of the titan Cronus and the Oceanid Phylra, he is an ever-present figure in Greek myths for tutoring many famous heroes including Herakles, Perseus, Theseus and Achilles.
180----
181* AccidentalMurder: According to a ''Scholium'' on Theocritos, Heracles unwittingly killed him with a Hydra-poisoned arrow while fighting some centaurs.
182* BadassTeacher: When you consider how his students such as [[OneManArmy Achilles]] and [[TheAce Herakles]] turned out, you gotta give him props for being this.
183* CoolUncle: Many of the heroes he mentored happened to be his nephews since they were children of his half-brother Zeus.
184* DroppedABridgeOnHim: Chiron pricks himself on Heracles's poisoned arrow-heads while examining them and dies completely anti-climatically afterward.
185* GeniusBruiser: Just because he was more intellectual than his common kin doesn't mean he was any less of an ass-kicker.
186* HeroicSacrifice: The most generally acknowledged version of his death is that he gave up his immortality to release Prometheus from his punishment.
187* LamarckWasRight: He turned out part horse because his father quickly disguised himself as a horse to avoid discovery by Rhea.
188* MentorArchetype: The TropeCodifier for Greek mythology. Chiron was known for being wise and skilled, and personally trained many heroes, including Herakles, Perseus, Theseus and Achilles
189* MentorOccupationalHazard: Chiron dies in the line of duty, though the circumstances change from version to version, they always seen connected to Herakles' poisoned arrows.
190* MySpeciesDothProtestTooMuch: Most centaurs were wild, brutish and vulgar creatures with the tendency to ravish nymphs and mortal women. Chiron, by contrast, was kind, noble, and civilized, but then again, he shared a completely different lineage than other centaurs. Chiron was a son of Cronus (yes, the Cronus who also fathered Zeus and several of the other Olympians), which explains his wisdom and compassion. All of the other centaurs were the offspring of the mortal king Ixion, who could charitably be described as a piece of human garbage.
191* OurCentaursAreDifferent: He differs from other centaurs by virtue of being pretty much a god of his own right in a centaur form since his dad was a Titan and his mom was a nymph. He is also different from other centaurs in that his front legs are human, rather than equine.
192* TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth: Doesn't matter which version of his death, he is one of the few genuinely noble characters in Greek myth and he bites it in one of the most painful ways imaginable.
193* UnevenHybrid: Depicted [[DependingOnTheArtist by some]] as a having a human body, just with what's best described as the hind of a horse where his human hind should be.
194[[/folder]]
195
196[[folder:The Dioscuri]]
197!! Castor and Pollux/The Dioscuri
198Twin brothers and siblings to Helen of Troy, and subjects of the constellation Gemini. While the stories about them are contradictory (like pretty much everything in classical mythology), the best-known version of their tale is that Pollux was the son of Zeus and immortal, while Castor was the mortal son of Leda's husband Tyndareus. After Castor died during a misadventure, Pollux begged Zeus to be allowed to share his immortality with his brother. Zeus obliged, with the result that the brothers are half-immortal and have to spend half of their time in Hades but spend the rest of their time on Olympus. The Dioscuri were associated with horsemanship and worshipped as rescuers of sailors, appearing in the form of St. Elmo's Fire.
199------
200* AlwaysIdenticalTwins: Completely identical despite, according to most writers, being ''half''-siblings. Scholars also think that the Dioscuri are the Greek version of the proto-Indo-European Divine Twins/Horse Twins, a pair of gods associated with horses, healing, and rescue who are always identical; other gods suspected to originate from the Horse Twins include the Hindu Ashvins and the Mesopotamian Lugal-irra and Meslamta-ea.
201* BigBrotherInstinct: Rescued their sister Helen after Theseus decides to kidnap and marry her.
202* BigDamnHeroes: Essentially the gods of this trope.
203* DependingOnTheWriter: The only real consistent things about them are that they're twins, Helen's siblings, and associated with Gemini.
204** In Homer's writings, they're both the sons of Tyndareus, mortal, and have died prior to the ''Illiad'' but apparently after Helen left Sparta, as she expects to see them among the Greek commanders. The ''Odyssey'' states that Zeus then resurrected them and gave them immortality on alternate days.
205** Hesiod states that they're both sons of Zeus. The Homeric Hymn to the Dioscuri also takes this tack.
206** Pindar is the first writer to say that the twins have different fathers and that only Pollux was a demigod.
207* DeityOfHumanOrigin: Whatever the source, it's generally agreed that they weren't always full gods, whether they were demigods, mortals, or one each, but Zeus deified them as gods of rescue.
208[[/folder]]
209
210[[folder:Endymion]]
211!!Ἐνδυμίωνος
212A handsome young man and the lover of Selene, the titan goddess of the moon. Because Selene wanted Endymion to remain eternally beautiful and youthful (or simply because she liked how he looked while he slept), Selene asked Zeus to grant him eternal youth, which Zeus delivered on by placing Endymion in a wakeless slumber. In another version, it was Endymion that made the choice.
213----
214* AbhorrentAdmirer: Myia is this for him. She fell in love with him, and kept waking him up with her sleep. He was not amused, and Selene turned her into a fly.
215* DeepSleep: He goes into a wakeless one to preserve his youth forever.
216* DeityOfHumanOrigin: In myths where he's not the son of Zeus, he was made immortal by either Selene's request to Zeus, his own request to Zeus, or by Hypnos. The catch is that the only way to preserve his deathlessness and perpetual youth is by keeping him in an eternal slumber.
217* DontWakeTheSleeper: As [[MotorMouth Myia]] learned the hard way...
218* DoubleStandardRapeDivineOnMortal: Possibly. Endymion is known for being placed into an endless slumber by Zeus, but he still managed to father 50 daughters with Selene, though it's not clear if this was before or after Selene petitioned Zeus. A lot of ancient artwork depict Selene next to a very awake Endymion.
219* DudeShesLikeInAComa: Selene has 50 daughters with the sleeping Endymion.
220* EvenTheGuysWantHim: In one version of his story, rather than Selene, it was Hypnos who placed him in an eternal slumber with his eyes open so that Hypnos could eternally admire his beauty.
221* HalfHumanHybrid: In the versions where Zeus is his father.
222* LiteralGenie: In one telling, Selene had learned from the incident where Eos asked for immortality but not eternal youth for ''her'' lover (guy aged until he shriveled into a cricket) and so instead asked Zeus to preserve Endymion as he was when she first met him... forgetting that as a moon goddess, she'd first seen him while he was asleep.
223* MultipleChoicePast: Who he was before the incident with Selene: either a shepherd, a hunter, an astronomer, or a king.
224* QuestionableConsent: In versions of the myths where he isn't the one who asked for it, it's never explained whether he consented to being put in a wakeless sleep. And then there's the fact that Selene has sex with his unconscious body every night... sure, they were lovers ''before'' he was put to sleep but...
225
226[[/folder]]
227
228[[folder:Galateia]]
229There are two characters named Galateia: one is a sea nymph from Ovid's ''Metamorphosis'' that is involved in a romance with the human Acis and the Cyclops Polyphemus. The other is a statue created by a stone carver named Pygmalion, who came to hate women and their flaws so much that he decided to create a perfect woman with his own hands. After falling in love with his own creation, he prayed to Aphrodite and she breathed life into the statue, who then became his wife.
230----
231%%* ApparentlyHumanMerfolk: The first Galateia was a nereid.
232* BeastAndBeauty: She is the Beauty to Polyphemus' beast.
233* BittersweetEnding: The Nereid Galateia. After her boyfriend is murdered by the jealous Polyphemus, she manages to revive Acis by turning him into a river stream and decides to join him for all eternity, never returning to the surface again.
234* DependingOntheWriter: Whether or not she returns Polyphemus's affections varies by writer.
235* LivingStatue: The second Galateia was created by a mortal and given life by a goddess.
236* LoveTriangle: The beautiful Nereid loved the handsome mortal Acis, but she was also coveted by the hideous cyclops Polyphemus.
237* MeaningfulName: Her name means "she who is milk-white".
238* PygmalionPlot: The second Galateia is the subject of the TropeNamer, being a statue sculpted by Pygmalion whom he fell in love with and was turned human by Aphrodite to marry him.
239[[/folder]]
240
241[[folder:Ganymede]]
242!!Γανυμήδης
243A young boy who was said to be the most beautiful of the mortals. While tending to sheep, he caught the attention of the gods and was promptly whisked away by Zeus in the form of an eagle, taken to Olympus where he would be given immortality, eternal youth, and serve as the cup-bearer of the gods. It is said that he relieved Hebe of her duties upon her marriage to Herakles. In some myths, he is the personal cup-bearer of Zeus rather than serving all of the Olympians.
244----
245* AbductionIsLove: He was abducted by Zeus in the form of an eagle and carried off to Mount Olympus.
246* AgeLift: Ganymede was either a toddler, a young boy, or a young man when Zeus abducted him, depending on the portrait depicting him.
247* AmbiguouslyGay: It's most commonly considered that Ganymede was one of Zeus' lovers, although he was selected to be Zeus' cup-bearer. While it's hardly the only time a male god took a male lover, it is notable that Ganymede is the only one that Zeus made immortal. Socrates (by way of Xenophon) disputed this interpretation, claiming that Zeus loved Ganymede for his mind. Either way, it's clear that Hera considered him enough of a rival for Zeus' affections for Zeus to turn him into a constellation to keep his safe from her wrath.
248* DeityOfHumanOrigin: Was once the child of a shepherd who was abducted by Zeus to become the cupbearer of the Gods. Once brought to Olympus he was made immortal and given eternal youth.
249* FlatCharacter: In most variations of the myth, little about Ganymede is known other than that he was the son of a shepherd that Zeus admired the beauty of and abducted to become the cupbearer of the gods. His feelings at the time of the abduction and what becomes of him after he's immortalized don't tend to be explored by writers. However, one myth portrays a post-immortalization Ganymede being quite hot-tempered, as he throws a tantrum at Eros' attempt to cheat him in a game of chance.
250* {{Stellification}}: In some myths, he was turned into the constellation Aquarius to keep him safe from Hera.
251* UniquenessValue: Not only is Ganymede the most famous of Zeus' male lovers, if not his only male lover, but he also has the distinction of being the only lover that Zeus immortalized.
252* WesternZodiac: He is associated with the constellation "Aquarius" and in some traditions is said to have been turned into the constellation by Zeus.
253* [[WorldsMostBeautifulWoman World's Most Beautiful Man]]: He was so beautiful that the gods decided to deify him so that his beauty would never fade.
254[[/folder]]
255
256[[folder:Helen]]
257Daughter of Zeus and either Leda or Nemesis, and wife of Menelaus, who was considered the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman. Her abduction by Paris kicked off the Trojan War. She is thought to be derived from a proto-Indo-European sun goddess, with her kidnapping a reflex of the broader Indo-European "marriage drama" myth, and was in fact still worshipped as the sun goddess of Sparta.
258----
259* AloneInACrowd: The only Greek who lived in Troy (at least briefly).
260* AmbiguousSituation: Neither the Iliad nor the Odyssey ever explicitly say why she went to Troy, though it's abundantly clear that whatever the reason was, she now regrets it. Why Helen left for Troy was a topic of much debate in Ancient Greek philosophical circles; the Judgement of Paris myth (which Homer doesn't mention in his poems) implies Aphrodite forced her into an infatuation with Paris as payment for him judging her worthy of the golden apple, but at least some Ancient Greek writers thought she went with him of her own accord (Euripides' ''Theater/TheTrojanWomen'' has Hecuba refute the idea that the Judgement of Paris ever happened on the grounds that the gods wouldn't be that ridiculously petty, and the sophist Gorgias's argument in defense of Helen was that Paris persuaded her to come with philosophical debate, so she wasn't at fault because debates can convince anyone of anything, which is a rather far cry from the common modern interpretation of 'Helen wasn't at fault because she was a victim of date rape via divine magic'), and one tradition (shown in ''Helen'', another one of Euripides' plays) proposed that she never went to Troy ''at all'', instead being spirited away to Egypt and replaced by an illusory double.
261* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: Her father Zeus turned her into a goddess when Agamemnon's son Orestes attempted to murder her.
262* DamselInDistress: Twice: first she was kidnapped by Theseus (in some versions, when she was ''twelve years old'') and had to be rescued by Castor and Pollux, and then she was abducted by Paris (though she goes with him willingly in other versions), which started the Trojan War.
263* DependingOnTheWriter: One of the most common examples of this. Was Helen kidnapped by Aphrodite/Paris, or did she go with him willingly? Did she go with him out of love, rebeliousness, stupidity, malice, or all of the above? Did she even love Menelaus in the first place (''The Odyssey'' suggests she did, as they have a happy life together post-Troy)? One philosopher has even argued that Paris ''persuaded'' her to come with logical debate while some more recent minds believe Paris might've actually threatened to murder Menelaus to force her to go with him.
264* DidYouJustFlipOffCthulhu: Early on in ''Literature/TheIliad'', she verbally flips off Aphrodite by basically stating, "If you think the bed needs filling, why don't you go screw [Paris] yourself?"
265* DistractedByTheSexy: There's four accounts about how this saves her life when Menelaus first meets her again as Troy is sacked, variably stopping him/his soldiers from executing her in his fury at her unfaithfulness. Two accounts of those accounts also said her clothes got wrecked and exposed her in the kerfuffle, for good measure.
266* DivineParentage: Her father is usually said to be Zeus, with the mother being the mortal woman Leda. Some writers, on the other hand[[note]]Stasinus of Cyprus or Hegesias of Aegina, the unknown author of Bibliotheca often called Pseudo-Apollodorus, Pausanias and the unnamed author of Astronomica often called Pseudo-Hyginus[[/note]] claim that the mother was Nemesis, goddess of vengeance, which is rather appropriate. On the other hand, the Iliad, the most famous story featuring Helen, has her being fully human.
267* EveryoneLovesBlondes: Depicted with golden hair in some paintings.
268* HalfHumanHybrid: Zeus impregnated her mother... assuming her biological mother was Leda, who was a mortal (Nemesis was the goddess of divine retribution).
269* HappilyAdopted: One story written down in the 2nd century claims that Helen was raised by Leda, whereas her real mother was Nemesis.
270* HappilyMarried: It depends on the writer, but the play “Hecuba” by Euripides, Helen willingly chose Menalaus as her husband out of all her suitors, as opposed to having him be chosen for her.
271* InformedAttractiveness: Because she's supposed to have beauty so great that a war happened because of it, it can be somewhat hard to get across in paintings of her. Especially when the writers didn’t really describe that much of what she looked like.
272* ItsAllMyFault: zigzagged. In the Odyssey, she expresses regret regarding her hand in starting the Trojan War, going as far as to call her younger self a "selfish whore" (which adds more credence to the idea that she went with Paris willingly). She does however show resentment at her, the Trojans and Greeks being used as pawns in Aphrodite and the gods petty games to where she gives Aphrodite a TheReasonYouSuckSpeech.
273* LonelyRichKid: Despite being a wealthy queen, Helen was essentially friendless in Troy, besides Hector, and missed her home very much.
274* LoveMakesYouCrazy[=/=]LoveMakesYouDumb: Whether or not she actually loved Paris back varies: some versions say that Aphrodite effectively brainwashed her into an infatuation with Paris, while others say that she loved Paris of her own volition and went with him willingly.
275* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: She's mainly known as "Helen of Troy" because of her abduction by a Trojan prince and very uncommonly as "Helen of Sparta" (what she was known as when she was married to Menelaus).
276* ThePowerOfTheSun: Originally a sun goddess and still worshipped as such in Sparta.
277* QuestionableConsent: Her tale is ambiguous about whether she was brainwashed into loving Paris by Aphrodite, legitimately wanted to leave with him, forced, or even outright abducted without her consent.
278* ShipTease: With Hector, to an extent. He's one of few people in Troy to treat her decently, and in turn, she subtly derides Paris for making Hector do all the fighting and at one point wishes that Paris were more like Hector.
279* SoBeautifulItsACurse: Her legendary beauty gave her a ''lot'' of unwanted attention, and was what got her to be Aphrodite's bribe to make Paris choose her as the most beautiful goddess on Olympus over Hera and Athena.
280* TalkingToTheDead: At Hector's funeral:
281-->'''Helen:''' Hector, dearest to me of all my husband's brothers! These tears of sorrow that I shed are both for you and for my miserable self. No one is left, in all of Troy, that is gentle or kind to me.
282* TeenPregnancy: Based on the fact she was twelve when Theseus abducted her near the end of his reign, traditionally said to have ended in 1205 BC, Helen's date of birth is at least in 1217 BC. Her daughter Hermione was said to be nine (other sources say six) when she was abducted by Paris and the traditional date for the Trojan War is 1194-1184 BC. If Hermione was born in 1203 BC, then that means Helen was fourteen years old when she gave birth.
283* WorldsMostBeautifulWoman: The TropeNamer and TropeMaker. Helen is specifically described by Aphrodite herself as "the most beautiful of mortal women", and "the face that launched a thousand warships" is how she's remembered.
284[[/folder]]
285
286[[folder:Herakles/Heracles (Hercules)]]
287[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/herakles_farnese_man_napoli_inv6001_n01.jpg]]
288Son of Zeus and mortal Queen Alcmene and the most famous classical hero, known as '''Hercules''' in Latin. His name means ''glory of Hera'' (explanations for this name are varied), but she hated him and tried her best to kill him since his infancy. His real name was Aclides (Aclaeus) but after seeing the priestess at Delphi, he changed his name. Most famous for his Twelve Labors (essentially one FetchQuest after another), [[MassiveMultiplayerCrossover turning up in other people's stories]] whenever a strongman is needed. He eventually became a full god upon his death and married the Goddess of Youth, Hebe. Was worshiped as a God of Strength, athletics and health.
289----
290* AccidentalPornomancer: Hercules got a lot of action thrown his way. In particular, there was the matter of the fifty princesses in one night...
291* AdaptationalCurves: In classical artwork, Heracles was depicted as well-built, but leaner than one might expect. From UsefulNotes/TheRenaissance onward, he's generally been depicted as very brawny.
292* AlcoholInducedIdiocy: Heracles once got wasted and [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu beat up the personification of death]] to bring his friend Admetus' dead wife back to life in atonement for failing to realize Admetus was politely accommodating him while hiding his bereavement over his wife's demise. When you're Heracles, alcoholic foolishness will of course ''still'' lead to over-the-top heroism.
293* AllAmazonsWantHercules: TropeNamer. The Amazon Queen Hippolyta took one look at the handsome new arrival to her island's muscular frame and she immediately [[ReadyForLovemaking gave up her belt to him both literally and figuratively]].
294* AntiHero: By modern standards, he wasn't exactly a paragon of heroic virtue. He killed more than one innocent person simply for being too close when his temper got the better of him. That said, he went to great lengths to help his friends, and by killing monsters like the Hydra and the Nemean Lion and murderous humans like the ghoulish Cycnus he did mankind a world of good. He also tended to feel great sadness and remorse whenever he killed an innocent person.
295* AscendedToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: After his death, it's said he became a full god himself. This is due to Zeus' deifying him and his funeral pyre burning away his mortal side, leaving only his immortal half.
296* TheAtoner: His twelve labors were to atone for killing his family in a Hera-induced rage.
297* BadassFamily: Heracles's mortal stepfather Amphitryon, his half-brother Iphicles, and his nephew Iolaus all accompanied him on many of his military expeditions.
298* BarbarianHero: As the most important person in Greek myth, he was the TropeCodifier. He was a HotBlooded, BookDumb BoisterousBruiser with SuperStrength and a HairTriggerTemper who went around dressed in [[PeltsOfTheBarbarian the skin of the Nemean Lion]], solved most of his problems by hitting them with his club, and was very resourceful in overcoming challenges he couldn't just beat up.
299* BigBrotherInstinct: Heracles was inconsolable when his younger half-brother Iphicles was killed in Heracles's punitive expedition against King Hippocoon of Sparta. Heracles was also a mentor to Iphicles's son Iolaus, who he took under his wing and relied on as a charioteer and lieutenant. One myth also has a now-divine Heracles get his goddess wife Hebe to restore Iolaus's youth so that he can protect Heracles's children from a vengeful Eurystheus.
300* BigEater: According to Euripides in his play "Alcestis", Herakles ate so much to ''terrify Admetus' servants''. Well, he had to fuel the SuperStrength after all.
301* TheBigGuy: He was pretty big and took this role when in adventures with other heroes, like the Argonauts.
302* BoisterousBruiser: The most famous one in the myths.
303* BookDumb: He doesn't seem all that educated outside of his combat skills, and was in fact a DreadfulMusician, but Heracles was extremely resourceful at figuring out how to overcome problems he couldn't just beat up.
304* BoulderBludgeon: His tenth Labor was to retrieve the cattle of the ogre Geryon. When he brought them back to Greece, he was confronted by the giant Alcyoneus [[OneSteveLimit (not the same Alcyoneus he'd kill in the Gigantomachy)]]. Alcyoneus demanded Heracles hand over the cattle, and hurled a boulder at him when he refused. Heracles easily dodged the boulder and hurled it right back at Alcyoneus. [[SquashedFlat Heracles didn't miss]].
305* BreedingSlave: One of his lesser-known feats occurred during his stay with the Amazons alongside Theseus. The queen, wanting to enjoy Theseus' company as long as possible, told them they were prisoners until Hercules had impregnated 50 Amazon women. Being, well, Hercules, he did so in ''one night''. Similarly, another story during his tenth labor has him be subject to SexualExtortion by either Echidna or the Scythian Dracaena after she stole and hid his horses -- this was for the intent of her producing children, by which she had three from Hercules.
306* BrokenAce: He was the strongest hero of Greek Mythology, but he suffered from occasional fits of murderous rage thanks to Hera.
307* TheCameo: He occasionally shows up in tellings of Daedalus' and Icarus' ill-fated escape from Crete to fetch Icarus' dead body from the sea and give it funerary rites (which Daedalus could not do himself because he was still [[ItMakesSenseInContext trying to keep himself aloft]]).
308* CarryABigStick: Heracles's iconic weapon was a club he carved from the wood of an olive tree he ripped up by the roots. Notably, it was the weapon with which he secured his first victory, killing the Lion of Cithaeron.
309* TheChosenOne: The Gigantomachy (the attempt by the Giants to overthrow the Olympians) was arguably the greatest threat the gods ever faced. They could not be killed by the gods, although a mortal man could kill them ...if he were strong and brave enough. Prometheus foresaw that Zeus would have a son, born of a mortal woman, that would save the Olympians during the Gigantomachy. Heracles, born of Zeus's union with Alcmena, proved to be that hero, finishing off the giants after the Olympians had wounded them.
310* CloakOfDefense: Some depictions of Heracles have him wearing the [[NemeanSkinning Nemean Lion pelt]] as a cloak instead of as a full leather armor.
311* CombatPragmatist: He saved the horrifically poisonous blood of the Lernean Hydra and used it to poison his arrows in order to kill several other opponents.
312* CruelAndUnusualDeath: Being poisoned by the Hydra's blood apparently proves to be so agonizing that Heracles literally builds his own funeral pyre to burn himself on while still alive to help get it over with.
313* CulturedBadass: Well-educated, a successful military commander, an occasional trickster and a master of {{Indy Ploy}}s.
314* DeathGlare: The reason Charon gave him a free ride for the twelfth labor. Completely understandable [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu judging from his other feats]].
315* DeusExitMachina: He was originally supposed to be one of the Argonauts, but his arms-bearer/boy-toy, Hylas was abducted by nymphs and the Argo had to set sail without him.
316* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: So many, but beating up Thanatos (the Greek personification of '''Death''') is just one example. He takes it even further when he decides to sack Pylos. Hercules takes on '''Hera''', '''Ares''', '''Hades''' and '''Poseidon''' with only Athena to aid him. He spears Ares in the thigh, wounds Hera in her right breast and shoots Hades in the shoulder with his arrows. If that wasn't overkill, he shoots Apollo in the shoulder just for trying to heal Ares. It's worth pointing out that he may very well have been ''drunk'' when he beat Thanatos (Ancient Greek wine is ''not'' something to be taken lightly; a few cups is enough to knock out a full grown cyclops).
317* DoNotTauntCthulhu: Occasionally, he got permission from other gods before fightings them.
318* DreadfulMusician: Heracles was highly skilled at many things and very crafty, but music was not one of his gifts. He had so much trouble trying to learn music as a child that his teacher Linus slapped him. Bad idea; little Heracles was so incensed that he whacked Linus with the lyre so hard it killed him on the spot.
319* EasilyForgiven: Even Heracles's TrueCompanions weren't safe from his HairTriggerTemper. He killed Iphitus in a moment of fury, and in one myth he nearly killed Telamon when the latter was helping him invade Troy. Telamon was the first one to breach the Trojan walls, and Heracles was so angered at Telamon gaining an honor he coveted that he raised his sword to kill him. Telamon saved himself by quickly building an altar in honor of Heracles. Heracles was so pleased by this that he not only forgave Telamon but gave him the Trojan princess Hesione as a wife.
320* EternalLove: With Hebe.
321* FamedInStory: It eventually applies to most heroes in Greek mythology, but Heracles stands out. When the young heroes gathered for Jason's quest, they wanted Heracles to lead them because he was already a long established hero.
322* FourStarBadass: Led an army for the first time when he was 16-18 years old and literally kept on winning wars until the day he died. He and his [[BadassCrew friends]] conquered Troy in a couple of days. 2-3 generations later it took all of Greece sending their badasses at the Trojans and a 10-year siege to beat them.
323* GeniusBruiser: It's SadlyMythtaken, but Heracles was smart. Examples include his defeating Antaeus, tricking Atlas to take back possession of the sky and his escaping from a sacrificial altar by using the claws of his lion cloak to cut through the bindings. Not for nothing did Athena like Heracles more than any other Olympian except Zeus. He was a natural battle strategist. A standout example is the cleaning of the Augean Stables. Having failed to kill him in earlier labors, Eurystheus wants to humiliate him by having him shovel feces and orders him to clean the Augean Stables (which hadn't been cleaned in 30 years). Heracles knows this and scouts the area noticing the two rivers. He then goes to Augeas and promises to clean the Stables in 1 day if the King gives him a 10th of his cattle without telling him that he was under orders to clean them anyways. [[BatmanGambit The King thinking that it's impossible]] and that he'd be getting a free day's labor agrees and [[GuileHero Heracles]] brings his own sons to watch him swear an oath. He then diverts the two rivers to wash the stables clean, doesn't get his hands dirty and has Augeas' own sons testify against him when he tries to deny him his reward.
324* GirlsVsBoysPlot: For whatever reason, there's a lot of very interesting gender symbolism present in many myths of Heracles:
325** Heracles' main heroic trait is his super strength, and his flaw is rage, both of which are traditionally associated with masculinity.
326** Heracles has to retrieve the girdle of Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons, a race of warrior women who have taken on all the traditionally male roles in their society.
327** At one point, Heracles is sentenced to serve queen Omphale, who forced him to wear a dress and sew while she wore his lion skin and club. This actually ''cures'' him of his rage!
328** Heracles meets his ultimate end at the hands of his 4th wife, Deinara, which means '''husband-destroyer'''.
329* GladiatorGames: He didn't take part in these in the myths for obvious reasons, but the Ancient Romans considered him the patron God of Gladiators and when Gladiators were freed, their weapons would be left in his temples as an offering.
330* HappilyAdopted: Amphitryon, the mortal husband of Heracles's mother Alcmena, treated Heracles like his own born son. He oversaw Heracles's training as a warrior, and also accompanied him on some of his military expeditions.
331* HelloSailor: An interesting subversion. His bisexuality was never a central focus, and "sailor" was one of [[RenaissanceMan many hats he wore]]. He was one of the Argonauts, and often sailed and took male lovers with him.
332* HeroicBuild: According to ancient sources he was very tall and extremely muscular. Ancient Greeks even used the term ''Herculean'' to describe a heavily muscled physique.
333* HeroicLineage: Heracles is a descendant of Perseus, who is in turn a descendant of Cadmus who is a descendant of Io. Heroism is clearly in Heracles' blood.
334* HotBlooded: This trope pretty much defines Heracles's personality.
335** If you crossed him, he would never forgive you and exact a violent, brutal revenge even if [[BestServedCold he had to wait years to do it]]. King Laomedon of Troy refused to honor his pledge to give Heracles a pair of magic horses he'd received from Zeus in exchange for saving Laomedon's daughter Hesione from a SeaMonster, King Neleus of Pylos refused to purify him when he was cursed for killing Iphitus, and King Augeus of Ellis refused to give Heracles the tenth of his cattle herds he promised in exchange for cleaning out his stables, and King Hippocoon of Sparta usurped the throne from Heracles's friend Tyndareus and killed another friend of Heracles's for defending himself against a Spartan dog that attacked him. In every case, Heracles led a massive army against his enemies and proceeded to utterly destroy them.
336** On the other hand, if he was your friend Heracles would move heaven and earth (sometimes literally!) to help you if you were in trouble. When Tyndareus was deposed as King of Sparta by his rival Hippocoon, Heracles led the army that restored his throne. Heracles was so overwhelmed at Admetus's honoring him with SacredHospitality despite being in mourning for the death of his wife Alcestis, he [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu fought Thanatos, Death himself, to bring her back to life]].
337* HumbleHero: He was offered a throne among the 12 Gods upon his death, but refused.
338-->They report of Heracles further that Zeus enrolled him among the twelve gods but that he would not accept this honour; for it was impossible for him thus to be enrolled unless one of the twelve gods were first cast out; hence in his eyes it would be monstrous for him to accept an honour which involved depriving another god of his honour.
339* IconicOutfit: If you're looking at a guy in ancient Greek or Roman artwork wearing a lion's skin, then you're probably looking at Heracles wearing the Nemean Lion's pelt.
340* InconsistentSpelling: While "Hēraklês" is the original ancient Greek spelling, his name is more commonly rendered as "Heracles", i.e. without the diacritics -- and that's not even mentioning the Roman rendition of "Hercules", which is the overwhelmingly more popular way of spelling his name [[SadlyMythtaken even when people are thinking of him as being a Greek myth]] rather than a Roman one.
341* IronicName: His parents renamed him to something translating to "Glory of Hera" in an attempt to appease her. It didn't work, and he ended up being tormented by her arguably more than all the other children of Zeus combined.
342* TheJuggernaut: If you weren't Zeus or Apollo, you might as well just pack it in if Herc wanted a piece of you. Notably, he conquered Troy with ''12 men'' at his side. A generation later, it would basically take all of Greece throwing their badasses at Troy to take it down, and it still took ten years to do it.
343* KillItWithFire: Defeats the hydra by chopping its heads off and searing the necks shut with a torch to keep the heads from growing back.
344* TheLancer: To Jason on the Argo.
345* LoverAndBeloved: Sometimes traveled with PrettyBoy attendants who unfortunately wound up getting kidnapped by nymphs.
346* ManlyMan: The reason the Greeks admired Heracles more than any other hero was that he best represented the traits they admired, such as sexual prowess, intelligence, athleticism, [[StrongAndSkilled strength and skill]], hard work, willpower and success in war.
347* MasterArcher: Because he's the WorldsBestWarrior, he is of course a legendary archer. His bow was so powerful that no one without his SuperStrength could draw it, and after he dipped his arrows in the blood of the hydra they were so poisonous that a single scratch would be fatal.
348* MeaningfulName:
349** According to some authors, the name came from the glory he gained overcoming all the obstacles Hera threw his way.
350** Later on, [[FountainOfExpies anyone named Hercules]] or a derivative of Hercules or Heracles was usually either very powerful or a hero.
351** Alcaeus/Alicides, his birth name before he was renamed to try to placate Hera, means "strength".
352* MeaningfulRename: In addition to the theory that interprets his name as glory gained from Hera's obstructions against him, it's definitely a fair guess that Hera will heavily impact his life after he was renamed into Heracles.
353* TheMedic: The ancient Greeks believed he had the power to heal.
354* MrFanservice: A handsome man with a HeroicBuild who's very often depicted nude in art. Of course he ReallyGetsAround.
355* MySuitIsAlsoSuper: Heracles was already a tough guy, but the impenetrable Nemean Lion's pelt cloak made him almost invulnerable. He even dons the aegis of Zeus himself when he's in a pinch against Alebion, his brother Bergion and their army; with Zeus' aegis, he manages to come out on top. According to Hesiod, he's also got a kick-ass suit of armor forged by Hephaestus, with a shield wrought in ''adamant''.
356* NemeanSkinning: One of his most famous accomplishments was killing the [[NighInvulnerability nigh invulnerable]] Nemean Lion and making a coat out of its skin (although another version says that it was from a different lion he killed before starting the Labors). A great deal of ancient Greek or Roman depictions of him can be easily noted by presence of his Nemean Lion coat.
357* NonIndicativeName: In other versions, his name was an attempt to appease Hera but really didn't work at all to that end.
358* OurFounder:
359** The Spartans claimed descent from him, typically from his son Hyllus.
360** It wasn't just the Spartans. Most Greek Kings claimed descent from him to justify their right to rule. Even Alexander the Great claimed descent from [[WorldsStrongestMan Heracles]] through his father, and descent from [[InvincibleHero Achilles]] through his mother.
361** He is also often credited as the founder of the original Olympic Games.
362** The story of him impregnating the Scythian Dracaena/Echidna has it that the youngest of the three sons (Scythes) from their union started the line of kings of Scythia, Scythian Dracaena/Echidna following Heracles' instructions to [[StrengthEqualsWorthiness only keep the sons that can bend his bow and wear his belt]] after they reach adulthood. The other two sons' (Agathyrsus and Gelonus) are who the Agathyrsi and Gelonians are named after.
363* ParentalFavoritism: Zeus liked to brag about Heracles to the extent that it intensified Hera's hatred of Heracles.
364* PhysicalGod: Becomes this after he joins the Olympians on Olympus. He's arguably this before ascending too.
365* RealMenHateSugar: Preferred eating bread and [[RealMenEatMeat meat]] over honey and fruit.
366* RealMenWearPink: [[ManlyMan One of the manliest characters]] in all of mythology [[TextileWorkIsFeminine actually quite liked weaving]] -- Queen Omphale attempted to humiliate him by making him take up it up whilst [[DraggedIntoDrag wearing a dress]], which actually backfired as he grows to enjoy it, primarily because it eases a lot of his tension compared to fighting and killing gigantic monsters. No word on whether or not he started liking the dress though.
367* ReallyGetsAround: Like father, like son. He slept with 50 princesses in a single night as a reward for killing the Lion of Cithaeron (not to be confused with the Nemean Lion). Every single one of them was knocked up. There are versions of this where he only slept with 49 (the 50th declined) but still had 50 children due to one having twins. Also like his father, he had male lovers -- indeed, unlike Zeus, his many male lovers have names attached.
368* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: Becomes this by the time he visits Philoctetes and convinces him to go to Troy via Godhood.
369* RenaissanceMan: Demigod, adventurer, bodybuilder, sailor, mercenary, shepherd, athlete... [[RealMenWearPink weaver]] (he was rather forced to, but he did end up liking it)... Heracles did it all.
370* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Laomedon and Augeas both tried to cheat him, while Neleus refused to purify him. Heracles responded with this trope in spades.
371* SadlyMythtaken: While he's definitely a HeroicBuild sort, Herakles was ''not'' depicted as a "nothing but skin and muscles" kinda guy in ancient artwork. [[https://i.pinimg.com/originals/da/59/07/da590755176fc98356f392ea201258ad.jpg His muscle definition looked]] [[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3d/Mosaic_Herakles%2C_Paros5.JPG more like that]] [[http://www.theoi.com/image/M12.2Kerberos.jpg of a typical]] [[https://i.pinimg.com/736x/94/fc/b7/94fcb7b3748e2017237a44b0a7e6867e--hercules-roma.jpg modern long-time exercising]] [[http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/6549/unknown-maker-statue-of-hercules-lansdowne-herakles-roman-about-ad-125/?dz=0.5000,0.5000,0.86 and health-conscious man.]] It seems that it was in the Renaissance that [[http://albertis-window.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Bos-Jocob.-Engraving-of-the-Farnese-Hercules-1562.jpg particularly muscle-defined]] [[https://i.pinimg.com/736x/00/e9/a8/00e9a8456875fc7fc3dc896560fbbd44--hercules-tattoo-hades-tattoo.jpg depictions of]] [[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bf/Hercule_et_Cacus_Bandinelli_Florence_Signoria.jpg/1200px-Hercule_et_Cacus_Bandinelli_Florence_Signoria.jpg him came about.]]
372* SexGod: Not literally which one might be could be mistaken for actually being the case with a demigod like Heracles, but it's implied he was ''very'' good in the sack, since he impregnated fifty women in one night... Or, [[SpeedSex maybe that means he was bad]].
373* ShootTheMedicFirst: Inverted, as he only shoots Apollo after he starts healing Ares, whom Hercules had previously speared in the thigh.
374* ShoutOut: That bit in Franchise/{{Superman}}'s intro about how he can "change the course of mighty rivers"? It's a deliberate reference to Hercules' unusual method of stable-cleaning.
375* SoProudOfYou: Most versions agree on that fact that Zeus thinks [[JesusWasWayCool Heracles was way cool]]. Unfortunately, his bragging about his son's exploits just draws even more of Hera's ire.
376* StrongAndSkilled: He wasn't just incredibly strong, he was also skilled at using his strength in combat, even ''inventing Pankration'' to be better at it.
377* SuperStrength: He's stronger than most gods, let alone mere mortals, but you probably already knew that. It's even in the dictionary after all.
378* SuperpowerLottery: One of the few demigods in Greek myth to inherit incredible outright superpowers from his divine progenitor. To put this feature into perspective, Perseus, who is also a bastard son of Zeus, is pretty much a bog standard human.
379* TooDumbToLive: This doesn't apply to Heracles himself, but rather to anyone who deliberately crossed him. King Augeas and King Laomedon both broke the agreements they made with him, while King Neleus refused to purify him after he'd killed his friend Iphitus in a moment of temper. Heracles exacted an act of rather bloody revenge on them for screwing him over.
380* TropeCodifier: What people usually think of as ''the'' original [[ManlyMan man's man]] and [[WorldsStrongestMan strong guy]] ([[Literature/TheEpicOfGilgamesh Gilgamesh]] has Heracles beat in being the truly-earliest surviving example of both, though). It's not for nothing that thousands of years later we're still using Herculean as an adjective. Even Ancient China got in on it, as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajrapani the guardian deity of the Shaolin Temple]] is based on Heracles. [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajrapani#/media/File:Buddha-Vajrapani-Herakles.JPG Which is how artwork like this depicting Heracles defending a Buddha comes to be]].
381* VictoryByEndurance: As noted above, Heracles captured the Ceryneian Hind by chasing it for so long that it became too tired to keep running.
382* WeDoTheImpossible: As can be plainly noted by Eurystheus hiding in a jar/pot in terror whenever Heracles brought him back some famous monster that he ordered him to get, Eurystheus never expected him to actually succeed in doing so. This proves to just be a bit of a starting point [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu Heracles' superhuman deeds]].
383* WellDoneSonGuy: Some interpretations of his character attribute many of his feats to seeking the regard of Zeus.
384* WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer: One of his Twelve Labors is to capture the Ceryneian Hind, a sacred deer of Artemis, so fast that it can [[SuperSpeed outrun an arrow]]. In one version, he simply chased after it, and while he wasn't fast enough to catch it, it was enough that the deer didn't have a chance to rest either. After '''a whole year''' of running, the deer gave up.[[note]]This is also [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persistence_hunting an actual hunting method]].[[/note]]
385* WholesomeCrossdresser: Omphale, Queen of Lydia, forced him to dress in woman's clothing and do women's work. To add insult to injury, she wore his Nemean Lion skin during this. It turns out to be beneficial for Heracles though, a couple of peaceful years of cross-dressing and housework [[CharacterDevelopment made him much calmer]].
386* WorldsStrongestMan: In pure strength he is unrivaled. Even Zeus was shocked to see him take the sky on his shoulders.
387* WrestlerInAllOfUs: Probably one of the oldest and well-known examples. He is said to have invented Pankration, one of humanity's oldest martial arts that saw widespread use across the entirety of the Hellenic Medditeranean, and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQ923Vy1ETk&t=4s resembled a mix of wrestling, boxing, Kung Fu and Muay Thai or Kickboxing]]. Heracles himself used it in defeating a number of different opponents, including the Nemean Lion and bear-hugged the giant Antaeus to death after holding him aloft as he was invincible while touching the ground.
388[[/folder]]
389
390[[folder:Hyacinthus]]
391Hyacinthus, or Hyakinthos was a demigod prince of Sparta. He was the lover of the god Apollo. Another god, the west wind Zephyrus had a one sided obsessive crush on the prince and murdered him out of jealously.
392----
393* DeityOfHumanOrigin: In some sources he was resurrected and transformed into a god by Apollo.
394* FloralMotifs: He is transformed into the hyacinth flower upon death.
395* GodCouple: In the versions in which Hyacinthus is deified he becomes this with Apollo.
396* IfICantHaveYou: Was the victim of his trope. Zephyrus did not take Hyacinthus' rejection in favour of Apollo lightly.
397* HalfHumanHybrid: Most sources agree that his mother was the goddess Clio, Muse of History.
398* LoverAndBeloved: With the sun god Apollo.
399* MeaningfulName: Hyacinthus means rain blossom. He gets turned into a flower that blooms in early spring, a rather rainy time.
400* MassiveNumberedSiblings: Had three brothers and three sisters according to the versions in which King Amyclas of Sparta was his father.
401* PrettyBoy: Three gods were in love with him.
402* RichSuitorPoorSuitor: He had literal gods courting him and at least one mortal, the musician Thamyris.
403* SemiDivine: In some versions the muse Clio is his mother, making Hyacinthus a demigod.
404* ShroudedInMyth: Very little about him is known. What sources agree is that he was royalty, was exceedingly beautiful, was killed via discus to the head and turned into a flower. It is also possible that he was a pre-Hellenic nature god.
405* SoBeautifulItsACurse: He was beautiful enough that three gods: Apollo, Zephyrus and Boreas fell in love with him. Unfortunately one of them, Zephyrus turned murderous out of jealousy.
406* TrueLoveIsExceptional: He is one of the very few lovers of Apollo not to spurn, reject or betray the god, and whose tragic end is in no way Apollo's fault.
407* WarriorPrince: He was Spartan and loved to play throwing the discus.
408[[/folder]]
409
410[[folder:Hippolyta]]
411Hippolyta, or Hippolyte (/hɪˈpɒlɪtə/; Greek: Ἱππολύτη Hippolyte) was a daughter of Ares and Otrera (the original Amazon queen) and the most prominent member and queen of the Amazons of myth. Her sisters were Antiope and Melanippe. She bore a golden girdle given to her by her father.
412----
413* BestHerToBedHer: This is how most interpret her relationship with Theseus (and occasionally her relationship with Heracles, if it is depicted as consensual).
414* SuperStrength: Said to have inherited such from her father hence why Heracles defeating her was such a feat.
415[[/folder]]
416
417
418[[folder:Io]]
419A Naiad Nymph born to the river god Inachus. Infamously goes through a series of trials and tribulations at the hands of both Zeus and Hera after being turned into a cow.
420----
421* EarnYourHappyEnding: After being turned into a cow, forced into captivity by Hera, stung continuously by a gadfly on Hera's orders and ultimately collapsing from exhaustion, she finally regains her humanity, bears two divine children, marries an Egyptian king and becomes hailed as a goddess in Egypt. Additionally, her bloodline would give rise to some of the most famous Greek Heroes, such as Cadmus, Perseus and Heracles.
422* ForcedTransformation: Zeus turned her into a cow to cover his tracks when Hera caught him trying to sleep with her, with the likely intention to change her back ASAP...unfortunately, Hera knew Zeus a little too well and demanded that he give the "cow" to her as a gift.
423* HeroicLineage: Io's bloodline would eventually produce many heroes, namely Cadmus, Perseus, Rhadamanthys, Minos and Heracles, as well as Semele, who would give birth to Dionysus. That said, she's also the great-great-great grandmother of the Danaides, who are most well-known for being punished in Tartarus -- although one of them, Hypermenstra, would escape that fate and become a mother of heroes in her own right.
424* TheScapegoat: Or scape''cow'' as it were, Hera's response to Hermes killing Argus to free Io is to get angry at ''her'' for it and sic a Fury on her.
425* TraumaCongaLine: Maybe not on Cassandra's level, but Io is, in order: impregnated by Zeus, who then transforms her into a cow (granted, he had every intention of changing her back but Hera prevented that), is turned into a pet by Hera under the guard of Argus, [[TheScapegoat gets blamed for Argus' death by Hera]] who then sics a gadfly on her and is finally chased throughout the Mediterranean by said fly, who stings her throughout the chase. Fortunately, [[EarnYourHappyEnding things turn out alright for her in the end]].
426[[/folder]]
427
428[[folder:Lamia]]
429Lamia was a daughter of Poseidon and beautiful queen of Libya who had an affair with Zeus. When Hera learned of this, she stole their children (or killed them, DependingOnTheWriter). Lamia went mad with grief and tore out her own eyes. Zeus then transformed her into a monster allowing her to exact her revenge by hunting and devouring the children of others.\
430Lamia often appears as a bogey-monster, a night-haunting demon which preyed on children. She was sometimes pluralised into ghostly, man-devouring demon Lamiai.
431----
432* EatsBabies: Lamias were often known to prey on children in particular. This is because the original lamia had lost her own children and was envious of other parent's having them when her's were forever lost to her.
433* EyeScream: The original lamia, in addition to being turned into a monster, was also cursed to be unable to sleep. Out of compassion for his former lover, Zeus gave her the ability to circumvent this curse by giving her removable eyes, thus granting her the ability to sleep while they were removed.
434* {{Hermaphrodite}}: Despite being female, Aristophanes claimed that her monster form had testes.
435* OurVampiresAreDifferent: Lamiai are just one of four kinds vampire-like monsters in Myth/ClassicalMythology, the other three being Empusai, Keres, and [[OminousOwl Strix]].
436* SharkMan: Lamia means "Large Shark", which may indicate that she is a shark woman. She also had a son by Zeus named Akheilos who was transformed into a shark man by Aphrodite.
437* SnakePeople: Lamiai were sometimes described as serpentine from the waist down.
438* WoobieDestroyerOfWorlds: She EatsBabies as a very-unhealthy form of coping with her grief/envy of her children having been lost or killed.
439[[/folder]]
440
441[[folder:Medea]]
442A powerful demigoddess, sorceress and princess of a distant kingdom, who ends up betraying her own father and brother for Jason. Jason proceeds to [[IdiotBall royally piss her off]]: see [[{{Theatre/Medea}} the tragedy named after her]] for the results.
443----
444* AdaptationalVillainy: Originally, it was the citizens of Corinth who killed Medea's children to avenge their murdered king and princess. Medea killing her own children just to spite Jason seemed to have been Euripides's invention, but it eventually became the more popular version.
445* AntiHero: Oddly enough, she is this regarding her story with Jason, if one takes into account the values of Ancient Greece. Despite the gruesome murders she commits, including her own children and brother, all of her actions are justified in the eyes of the gods, since retribution was considered as a valid version of justice. In contrast, while Jason's crime is much more tame by our standards, this labels him as an oath-breaker and an adulterer, aka the {{Berserk Button}}s of Zeus and Hera, his patron goddess at the time, respectively.
446* AxCrazy: One of her most consistent character traits is how bloodthirsty she is.
447* BullyingADragon:
448** Jason, you ''knew'' she was AxCrazy and capable of killing immortals with just a [[DeadlyGaze look]], why did you cheat on her?
449** The Thebans too. They drove her out of town while she was Herakles' guest after she left Corinth. In a [[SubvertedTrope subversion]], Medea and Herakles didn't destroy the city and we all know either of them could have done that alone if they wanted to.
450* ChariotPulledByCats: Medea's chariot was pulled by flying dragons that were born of Titans blood.
451* DarkActionGirl: She's got powerful magic and a high body count.
452* DependingOnTheWriter:
453** In some versions, her brother Absyrtus was an adult who had been sent out by their father to find her after she and the Argonauts fled with the Golden Fleece, and Medea helped Jason ambush and kill him by fooling her brother into think she'd been kidnapped. Alternatively, he was a child whom she'd taken aboard the Argo with her; when their father began pursing them, Medea later chopped Absyrtus into pieces and threw them overboard, knowing her father would need to stop to gather the pieces if he wanted a body to bury.
454** Her children might have been killed by the angry Corinthians whose king and princess she had just burned to death, or she might've killed them herself just to get RevengeByProxy on their father. She might've also killed her children by mistake or as part of a MercyKill so they won't be enslaved.
455* EvilChancellor: To Theseus' father. Her plan to kill Theseus was foiled but again she escaped.
456* EvilGenius: She's very clever, resorting to elaborate tactics and manipulation to achieve her goals, and assuring a way out for herself before unleashing her revenge.
457* TheEvilPrincess: The daughter of King Aeëtes of Colchis. Betrayed her family to help Jason get the Golden Fleece.
458* {{Foil}}: Of Ariadne. Both were clever princesses and granddaughters of Helios who fell in love with a hero and helped him achieve his goal, betraying their kingdom in the process. Both of their respective heroes [[UngratefulBastard ended up screwing them over]]. Ariadne was largely powerless to do anything to Theseus (although some versions say her prayers to the gods resulted in Theseus forgetting to change the sails and thus caused Theseus's father's death). Medea, however, took matters into her own hands and ''really'' made Jason pay.
459* HorrifyingTheHorror: Accorting to the ''Argonautica'', Medea's dark rites left ''[[HumanoidAbomination Nyx]]'' aghast.
460* HotWitch: Not just a sorceress, but also a demi-goddess.
461* KarmaHoudini: A very notable example in the famously punishment-happy Greek myths. Medea is a mass murderer, and as if that weren't enough, she's a kinslayer, considered one of the most unforgivable crimes of all. Yet despite all that, she never loses the favor of the gods--if anything, it's when she kills her children and burns down half a city that the gods seem to favor her most, with her being handed the same symbolism normally reserved to them. Medea doesn't face death at the hands of some other hero, either; she faces some setbacks here and there, but as far as mythology is concerned, she might as well be immortal. ''Why'' she's allowed to get away with all this is a matter of some scholarly debate, with one of the more common appraisals being that Medea has stopped acting as a person and started acting as a divine agent, where PayEvilUntoEvil is seen as entirely acceptable.
462* LadyOfBlackMagic: An incredibly powerful sorceress who can kill with a look and regal princess to boot.
463* LightIsNotGood: Her powers stem from her association with the sun, and she is ''not'' a nice woman in even the most charitable interpretations.
464* MagicalEye: She can kill an unkillable bronze giant by ''looking at it in the eyes'', either [[DrivenToSuicide torturing him into killing himself]] or hypnotizing him into doing the deed. Either way, it just took her a look. This power is traditionally seen in Hellenic culture to be derived from [[ThePowerOfTheSun Helios]], and predictably it's mostly seen by witches descending from him.
465* TheMedic: She's good enough to ''raise the dead younger and healthier than when they died''. Assuming you can actually convince her to do it...
466* OffingTheOffspring: She killed her children after burning Glauce.
467* ThePowerOfTheSun: As a granddaughter of Helios, her powers came from the Sun, and are what Greeks believed to be spells associated with his domain. Examples include casting the evil eye (see below) and invoking a dragon-pulled Sun chariot in order to flee.
468* PsychoExGirlfriend: The consequences of Jason dumping her were not pretty. Although there were not-so-subtle hints that there was something wrong with her from before Jason left her.
469* QuestionableConsent: Like Helen, it's ambiguous how much of Medea's love for Jason, and his hers, was their own choice or the will of the gods -- especially in Pindar's version, where Jason seduced her with magic.
470* TragicVillain: Especially when you consider that, according to certain versions of the myth, [[JerkassGods an entire cabal of goddesses]] conspired to essentially brainwash her into falling in love with Jason, while in other versions Jason himself learned how to use music and dance to brainwash her.
471* TheUnfettered: She's not above manipulating Pelias's daughters into chopping him off into pieces to get her beloved on the throne or killing Glauce and her father using her own children by Jason as conduits for the murder. In some versions, she's even willing to murder her own children to get back at her former beloved when he betrays her.
472* WickedStepmother: To Theseus. She tried to poison him to ensure her own son would get the throne.
473* WomanScorned: [[TropeNamer The phrase comes from Euripides' play]] entitled ''Theatre/{{Medea}}'', making her the TropeNamer. When Jason left her, she ''[[KillItWithFire burned her rival alive]]'' with a fire so intense ''it set on fire the royal palace'', set on fire the city of Corinth for being ruled by the man who got Jason to dump her, and killed her own children to end his line.
474* {{Yandere}}: As she escaped with Jason, she took her brother along and chopped him up and threw his body parts into the sea to slow down their pursuers. [[FailedASpotCheck You'd think Jason would notice that there's something wrong with her at this point]].
475[[/folder]]
476
477[[folder:Memnon]]
478The son of the Titaness of Dawn, Eos, and the Trojan Prince Tithonus, Memnon is an Aethiopian king who arrives with his vast army to defend Troy.
479----
480* CycleOfRevenge: A rather fast-paced one. Memnon kills Antilochus after the latter slays Memnon's dear comrade Aesop. Antilochus's anguished father Nestor tries to avenge his son by challenging Memnon to a fight, but Memnon declares that it'd be shameful for him to fight such an elderly man and refuses. Nestor then convinces Achilles to avenge Antilochus in his stead, and after a long fight, he kills Memnon before losing his own life to Memnon's cousin Paris soon afterwards.
481* EveryoneHasStandards: Nestor challenges him to a fight after seeing his son Antilochus get killed by Memnon. The Aethiopian King refuses on account of Nestor's old age and lets him go instead.
482* HopeSpot: His arrival gives a huge morale boost to Troy, which had just lost its greatest warrior Hector. However, the city's destruction is a ForegoneConclusion.
483* MirrorCharacter: He and Achilles are emphasized to be extremely alike each other despite fighting on opposite sides of the Trojan War. Both are demigods with a divine mother and a mortal father descended from Zeus and wear armor made by Hephaestus. They each have a touching PetTheDog moment towards an enemy; Achilles when he lets Priam have Hector's body so the king can give his son a proper funeral, and Memnon when he refuses to fight Nestor due to the man's old age and lets him go free. They're also basically evenly-match in battle prowess, which is what makes them {{Worthy Opponent}}s for each other.
484* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: He spares Nestor's life due to the elderly king's advanced age after killing the man's son Antilochus. Nestor then tells Achilles about what happened and begs him to avenge Antilochus on his behalf, and Achilles is only too happy to oblige. The resulting fight between Achilles and Memnon ends with the latter's death.
485* ThickerThanWater: Marches his army all the way to Troy to help defend the city ruled by his paternal uncle.
486* WorthyOpponent: Is this to Achilles. They're so evenly matched, Zeus decides to make them the size of giants so that everyone can see them clash against each other, as well as tireless to draw out their fight. He also orders all the other gods not to help one or the other.
487[[/folder]]
488
489[[folder:Minos]]
490The first King of Crete. He and his brothers Rhadamanthys and Sarpedon were the sons of Zeus and Europa, and had been raised by Asterion of Crete. After Asterion died, Minos ascended to the throne and banished his brothers, before marrying Pasiphaë of Colchis and having eight children with her, though [[ReallyGetsAround he already had relationships with other women and had many other children too]]. When he refused to honor Poseidon by killing a precious white bull, Poseidon cursed Pasiphaë to fall in love with the bull and give birth to the Minotaur ("Minos' bull"). Minos then invaded Athens and demanded they send yearly sacrifices of young boys and girls to the Minotaur, which was eventually put to an end by Theseus. Later, the architect whom he employed to design the labyrinth, Daedalus, double-crossed him by manipulating his daughters into killing him. After his death, Minos became one of the judges of the Underworld.
491----
492* ButNotTooForeign: Downplayed. His mother, Europa, is a Phoenician of Argive descent, while his father is Zeus, a Greek god.
493* TheCaligula:
494** What else do you call a king who gladly sacrifices his war prisoners to a horrible monster? When his characterization is split, it's almost always the younger Minos who is portrayed this way.
495** He also shows spectacularly bad judgement when he prays for Poseidon to send him a mighty bull so he can provide a worthy sacrifice, then decides to keep it for himself. Needless to say, Poseidon made him regret it.
496* DeadGuyJunior: When portrayed as a DecompositeCharacter, [[TheCaligula the Tyrannical King Minos]] is usually portrayed as [[TheGoodKing the Good King Minos']] grandson.
497* DecompositeCharacter: Due to a mix of the contradictory characterization of him being a grade A tyrant yet still ending up as a judge of the Underworld and the timeline issues of one "King Minos" somehow ruling Crete for several generations, many have rationalized that there are two Minos -- the "Good King Minos" being the first king and brother of Rhadamanthys held in high regard by the Olympians, "King Minos II" being his grandson who was named after him and the one who sacrificed Athenians to the Minotaur.
498* DivineParentage: A son of Zeus, the king of the gods. It's possibly because of this parentage that he was allowed to become a judge of the Underworld, despite his {{Jerkass}} records. It didn't stop Poseidon from punishing him when he refused to sacrifice the Cretan Bull, which he specifically prayed for so he could honor Poseidon with a worthy sacrifice.
499* DoNotTauntCthulhu: Poseidon sent a magnificent bull out of the sea at Minos's request so he could honor the god by sacrificing it. Minos then idiotically decided to keep the Cretan Bull as part of his own herds. An angry Poseidon got Aphrodite to make Minos's wife fall in love with the Bull and bear the Minotaur, and then he made the Bull rampage all over the island.
500* TheGoodKing: When portrayed as a DecompositeCharacter, the elder King Minos is often portrayed as a fair, just and wise man, which earned him a place as one of the judges of the Underworld.
501* KarmaHoudini: Despite him being the one who didn't honor Poseidon, the god instead had Aphrodite curse Pasiphae, ''Minos's wife'', by making her fall in love with the Cretan Bull. Then Minos demanded yearly sacrifices of 14 teenagers from Athens as a peace treaty for invading them. What punishment did he get? Being tasked to be a judge of the Underworld. Then again, he is a demigod son of Zeus, known for his douchebaggeries and ability to get away with them, just because he can. Moreover, prior to becoming a judge of the Underworld, he died a horrible, painful death by being tricked into taking a bath where either boiling hot water or oil scalded him to death. As for Pasiphae, his wife bearing a monstrous bastard child through an affair with a bull was a way of humiliating Minos, making him look like a really pathetic husband by ancient Greek standards.
502* MultipleChoicePast: What exactly he did to piss of the gods varies. Sometimes it was the standard hubris, other times he refused to sacrifice the Cretan Bull, causing Poseidon to call in a favor from Aphrodite.
503* PapaWolf: Minos's vendetta against Athens is usually due to his son being killed during some games being held there, sometimes by the Cretan Bull.
504* ReallyGetsAround: Polyamory isn't forbidden even to this day, let alone in the past. Though his sorceress wife Pasiphae did slow his affairs by slipping him a potion that made vipers and scorpions shoot out of his penis and kill his mistresses every time he cheated on her. The only lover who avoided that was also a sorceress who gave Minos a potion that counteracted the one Pasiphae slipped him.
505[[/folder]]
506
507[[folder:Narcissus]]
508Depending on the writer, either a son of Selene and Endymion or a river god and the nymph he raped. Narcissus was a beautiful hunter so proud and self-absorbed that he rejected all suitors. When one ended up dying as a direct result of his brutal rejection (either Echo suffering a DeathByDespair or Amenias [[DrivenToSuicide killing himself]] -- sources vary on the suitor's identity), Nemesis takes notice and makes Narcissus suffer the same as his suitors by cursing him to fall in love with the only thing he considered good enough for him -- himself, in the form of his reflection on a nearby pool. Narcissus pined away looking at his reflection until he died (either [[DrivenToSuicide committing suicide]] when he realized he couldn't actually interact with his reflection, or wasting away because he was too enamored with his reflection to eat), with the Narcissus flower sprouting in that spot.
509------
510* EvenTheGuysWantHim: There are two different stories on whose death pushed things over the edge and caught Nemesis's attention -- in one, it's the nymph Echo, and in the other, it's a man named Amenias. This was Ancient Greece, so it was expected that a young beauty like Narcissus would have suitors of both genders. What made him unusual was his careless attitude towards their feelings.
511* FaceOfAnAngelMindOfADemon: Narcissus was so gorgeous that EvenTheGuysWantHim, but he was a careless and cruel person who left broken hearts and wrecked lives behind him.
512* FatalFlaw: [[{{Pride}} Vanity]]. Narcissus was so self-absorbed and proud of his own beauty that the only thing he could love was himself.
513* ItsAllAboutMe: Narcissus is the gold standard for selfishness in Greek mythology. He never cared that his cruel treatment of his suitors lead to at least one death -- in fact, in the Amenias version, he actually ''encouraged'' Amenias to kill himself.
514* JerkJock: His two main character traits are 1) that he's a hunter, and 2) he's a JerkAss who drove at least one person to suicide.
515* LaserGuidedKarma: As doled out by Nemesis, the goddess of karmic punishments. Narcissus forced all his suitors to pine for him without any reciprocation (or even an attempt to let them down nicely), so his fate was to fall in love with his own reflection, forcing him to experience what his suitors did when he ignored them.
516* {{Narcissist}}: The TropeNamer, although we only get to see him display traits 1,2, and 3 (with no real opportunity in the myth for him to show [[CantTakeCriticism trait 4]] and [[AmbitionIsEvil trait 5]]). Narcissus firmly believes that he is in a class above his suitors (trait 1) and couldn't care less how he hurts them (trait 2). And in some versions of the myth, he commits suicide when he realizes that his reflection can't have a positive opinion of him since it's just a reflection (trait 3, to an extent, though like traits 4 and 5 we don't get to see him in situations where other humans think poorly of him).
517* PrettyBoy: Gorgeous enough to get men, women, and some divine entities pining after him.
518* SpurnedIntoSuicide: He's the one doing the spurning. With Amenias, he even encouraged it by sending Amenias a sword.
519* SuicideDare: He gave Amenias a sword with the clear implication that Amenias was to use it on himself.
520[[/folder]]
521
522[[folder:Orion]]
523Handsome giant gifted with the ability to walk on water by his father Poseidon. Actually, he has three fathers. He was born from the urine of Zeus, Poseidon, and Hermes. Yeah... Orion is most notable for being the only man Artemis ever loved. This didn't go down well with her twin brother Apollo, so he had him killed, using methods that vary depending on the writer.
524----
525* BigCreepyCrawlies: The most famous version of his death has Apollo and/or Gaia sic a giant scorpion on him.
526* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: A CasanovaWannabe who caught the eye of Eos, a serial rapist and became abducted and raped by her.
527* TheBigGuy
528* CarryABigStick: His weapon of choice was a jeweled club.
529* ChickMagnet: You'd better believe it! Even famous virgin goddess Artemis went for this guy.
530* EgomaniacHunter: While hunting with Artemis he gets it in his head he could hunt down every animal on Earth. [[DependingOnTheWriter Some accounts]] attribute this to a jealous cursing by Apollo. Either case, the Earth itself didn't appreciate this boasting and [[GaiasVengeance sent the aforementioned scorpion as retribution]].
531* ExtraParentConception: The stories that don't give him conventional parentage state he was conceived by three gods urinating on a cowhide and leaving it buried for ten days. The latter detail also makes Gaia his mother.
532* EyeScream: One story has a king poke out his eyes with a dagger for attacking[=/=]making the moves on his daughter. He gets his sight back from Helios, though.
533* HunterOfMonsters: His preferred quarry. Spent years clearing out all the dangerous creatures plaguing an island kingdom so he could win the hand of the local princess. Unfortunately for Orion, the king went back on his word, and refused to let the two marry, and even went as far as to stab Orion's eyes out.
534* MasterArcher: He was so impressive with the bow that he drew the attention of Artemis, goddess of the hunt, herself.
535* MeaningfulName: His name makes sense if you read his description.
536* MultipleChoicePast: The aforementioned urine thing aside, another possible backstory for him is as the son of Poseidon and Euryale -- usually assumed to be a daughter of King Minos rather than the second Gorgon sister.
537* PlatonicLifePartners: It depends on the telling, but some myths claim that Orion was this with Artemis -- sharing a love of hunting with her, but not being interested in her romantically (in stark contrast to his views on other ladies).
538* RapePortrayedAsRedemption: After getting banished because he tried to seduce a princess, Eos kidnapped and raped him. This seemingly killed off his player side, since Artemis grew to genuenly love him.
539* RescueRomance: Depending on who you ask. After Eos raped him he ended up on Delos where he was cared for by Artemis, and Eos husband stopped envying Orion after that. This implies that Artemis was protecting Orion from her.
540* RuleOfThree: The stories that give him three parents. Some scholars go so far as to infer he's an allegorical character whose parentage each contribute an aspect in some metaphor for the water cycle.
541* WalkOnWater: He was said to be capable of this, which is why the more popular sources say Poseidon is his father.
542[[/folder]]
543
544[[folder:Orpheus]]
545Son of Oeagrus, King of Thrace, and the Muse Calliope, Orpheus learned musical skills from Apollo, and joined Jason and the Argonauts. Even the famous Sirens couldn't beat Orpheus when it came to singing. After his wife Eurydice died, Orpheus travelled to the underworld and got past all obstacles by his music, even softening the hearts of Hades and Persephone. Hades agreed to allow Eurydice to return with him to earth on one condition: he should walk in front of her and not look back until they both had reached the upper world. Orpheus failed, either because he was careless or just unable to trust Hades wholeheartedly. Heartbroken and still grieving his wife, Orpheus avoided the company of women, until he was torn into pieces by the women of Thrace for not reciprocating their advances.
546
547Besides his musical talent, Orpheus was known as a poet and prophet, and is said to be the founder of Orphism, a religion focused on worship of Dionysus. What hymns survive conflate several gods and goddesses and are told in second-person to his disciple/son, Musaeus.
548----
549* TheAce: The Orphic Argonautica, as related to his disciple Musaeus, has Orpheus as the glue holding the Argonauts together as he calms arguments with his music, performs sacrificial rites to please the gods, defeats the Sirens as in other tellings, and knows what herbs to use in medicine and magic.
550* AnArmAndALeg: He was torn limb-from-limb by either the Maenads or generic Thracian women, depending on the telling.
551* BelatedHappyEnding: In some versions of his myth, Orpheus' spirit passed to the underworld after his head was buried in Lesbos, where he was finally reunited with Eurydice.
552* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: His Argonaut adventure has him in love with the son of the wind spirit Boreas named Calais, but what happened to Calais or how their relationship ended is unknown. One tradition says Orpheus was torn to pieces while thinking of Calais, ignoring all else around him.
553* ContinuitySnarl: Most accounts agree Orpheus was dismembered by maddened women, but one single account (Erastothenes' report on a lost play by Creator/{{Aeschylus}}) attributes his death to the ''Bassarae'', the Thracian worshippers of Dionysos sent by the god due to Orpheus disdaining his worship in favour of Apollo, which of course contradicts with the common tradition of Orpheus having spread the worship of Dionysos and his Mysteries accross Greece. Another account (a fragment attributed to Conon) casts Orpheus as a priest of Dionysos who forbade the presence of women in his rites, until, jealous for how he has lured away their husbands, infiltrating his sacred precint the Ciconian women snatched their husbands' weapons and killed Orpheus as well as any men who rushed to defend him. Seems something got LostInTranslation...
554* {{Determinator}}: Nothing in the Underworld stops him from making a case for Eurydice's life back, not Cerberus, Charon, or Hades himself.
555* DisproportionateRetribution: On the receiving end, DependingOnTheWriter: the Maenads, either AxCrazy followers of Dionysus or generic Thracian women driven mad by the god (or by Aphrodite), tore him apart for not singing happy songs, not worshiping their god the way they did, and/or ignoring their advances, sometimes in favor of young men while other times he was too focused on losing Eurydice to respond.
556* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: Early accounts of his Underworld trip told through oral tradition had him be successful in retrieving his wife, but by the time Virgil wrote it down, the tale had morphed into the familiar tragedy.
557* FriendToAllLivingThings: His music was so good it made animals, trees, and rocks congregate to listen, and he soothed Cerberus, Hades, and Persephone themselves. In Ovid's version of his death, the women initially failed to harm him because everything they threw stopped short as if apologizing.
558* HeroicBSOD: Has one since Eurydice's death; he recovered for a while, but losing her for a second time put him over the DespairEventHorizon.
559* LosingYourHead: Orpheus's head was still alive post-dismemberment and still sang songs. In some tellings his head became an oracle until Apollo got jealous and had the Muses bury it, finally freeing his spirit.
560* MagicMusic: His music and singing can charm birds, fish and wild beasts, coax the trees and rocks into dance, and even divert the course of rivers. His song even beat the song of Sirens; some texts even say the Sirens committed suicide afterward. Then he calmed down Cerberus, got Charon to let him ride for free, and made Hades shed ManlyTears.
561* MultipleChoicePast: He's either a mortal, a son of a Muse, Apollo's son, or son of Oeagrus, the king of Thrace. Similarly, he can either be an only child, have Linus of Thrace as a brother, or the Charites/Graces as sisters.
562* MusicSoothesTheSavageBeast: If anything's known about him, it's that he got past Cerberus by playing his lyre for him to get him to calm down and sleep.
563* NiceGuy: Orpheus is among the kindest of Greek heroes and is known for charming anything around him with his music, neither speaking nor singing an ill word against anyone even during his own murder.
564* NonActionGuy: He is not remembered for killing monsters or slaughtering warriors, but for his beautiful music that made even Hades shed tears.
565%%* RescuedFromTheUnderworld: The former TropeNamer, and the most famous story involving him.
566* RiddleForTheAges: Why Orpheus turned around has been debated since the myth's inception, with reasons ranging from doubting Hades' promise, to turning in joy at the sunlight, to hearing Eurydice stumble and turning back to help her.
567* ThrowTheDogABone: Though he failed his quest to resurrect his wife, after his death she is right there waiting for him to guide him to Elysium.
568* TogetherInDeath: In his death, he was finally able to reunite with his wife that he tried to resurrect.
569[[/folder]]
570
571[[folder:Perseus]]
572[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/perseo_con_la_testa_di_medusa_originale_di_et_flavia_o_traianea_dalle_terme_presso_porta_laurentina_01.JPG]]
573One of Zeus' most famous demi-god children. Perseus was the Greek hero who killed the Gorgon Medusa in order to fulfill the evil king Polydectes' demands and save his mother Danae from the guy who wanted to marry her against her will under threat of death. Along the way he married Andromeda, having rescued her from a sea monster sent by Poseidon in retribution for Andromeda's mother Queen Cassiopeia declaring herself more beautiful than the sea nymphs. Herakles is a descendant of him.
574----
575* HundredPercentHeroismRating: Everybody liked Perseus and those that didn't were usually [[HateSink Hate Sinks]]. Even Hera–who is infamous for hating Zeus' bastards–liked Perseus and was willing to help him (being a mommas boy and good husband probably helped endear him to her).
576* AbsurdlySharpBlade: What Perseus uses to kill Medusa.
577* AccidentalMurder: He accidentally killed his own grandfather at an athletic competition when the old man wandered into the path of his discus.
578* BerserkButton: Do not try anything with his mother, just… don’t.
579* BewareTheNiceOnes: While he's one of the most conventionally heroic (by modern standards) figures of Greek Mythology, pissing him off is very unwise. Just look at the multiple incidents where he [[TakenForGranite turned groups of enemies into statue galleries]].
580* BigDamnHeroes: He pulls this twice. The first time is the saving of his future wife and lover, Andromeda, from the Cetus (sea monster) to which she was to be sacrificed. The second one was to his beloved mother, as he manages to arrive just in time to stop her marriage to King Polydectes and in fury he uses Medusa’s head on him.
581* CallingTheOldManOut: Some myths have him doing this to Andromeda’s parents for their actions, especially her mother. Subverted with his grandfather Acrisius: in the major part of the myths, Perseus killing him is a genuine accident.
582* TheChosenOne: The Gods themselves chose him to slay Medusa, and the prophets set him on that path by seeing another aspect of his future and telling what they saw.
583* CombatPragmatist: When he has to kill someone or something, he's perfectly okay with taking an underhanded tactic. He killed Medusa by decapitating her [[SlainInTheirSleep in her sleep]], and used her head to petrify groups of enemies on at least two occasions.
584* ComboPlatterPowers: In addition to his demi-god abilities, Perseus is gifted weapons and items by various gods to aid him on his journey that make him damn-near close to an Ancient Greek ComicBook/{{Superman}}. These include:
585** [[AbsurdlySharpBlade An unbreakable sword]]
586** [[InvisibilityCloak A helmet of invisibility]]
587** [[LuckilyMyShieldWillProtectMe A mirror shield]]
588** [[HatOfFlight A pair of winged sandals that let him fly]]
589** [[BagOfHolding And a magic satchel]]
590* GoodIsNotSoft: One of the nicest heroes of Greek Mythology, but capable of surprising ruthlessness.
591* TheGoodKing: He becomes king of Mycenae and is revered as a strong and just ruler who cares deeply for his people who adore him in turn.
592* GruesomeGrandparent: His grandfather locked him and his mother and sent them out to sea because of a prophecy that he'd kill him. Unlike most examples of this kind of prophecy he kills his grandfather by complete accident rather than getting back at him for it.
593* GuileHero: Sometime seen as this, as he overcame the two biggest challenges in his trip to kill Medusa; his introduction to the Graeae and the killing of Medusa herself, with quick thinking and rather ingenious planning. Could also be considered to be a GeniusBruiser. In one account Athena guided his hand to slay Medusa.
594* HairOfGoldHeartOfGold: He's often described as having blonde hair and is one of the few unambiguously heroic and virtuous characters in Greek Mythology.
595* HappilyAdopted: After she got pregnant, Perseus' mother Danae was set adrift at sea in a large chest. When she washed up on shore, she was found by the kindly fisherman Dictys, who brought her into his home and effectively served as an adoptive father to Perseus. Perseus later paid him back by giving him Polydectes' throne after the bastard was turned to stone (not to mention, Polycdetes was Dictys' brother and threw him out of the court), and had him marry Danae.
596* HappilyMarried: Perseus and Andromeda have this, one of the incredibly few and most memorable in Greek Mythology. Perseus being a kind and [[SeductionProofMarriage faithful]] husband made him one of the incredibly few children of Zeus to be on Hera's good side.
597* HeroicBastard: One of the many, many, many offspring of Zeus.
598* IdealHero: He's one of the very few heroes of Greek Mythology who meets the modern standard of this trope.
599* ImpossibleTask: King Polydectes sending Perseus to bring him the head of Medusa.
600* ItWasAGift: The other interpretation being that rather than his wits, it was the gifts various gods gave him that made it possible for him to kill Medusa. Maybe it was a combination of the two.
601* LuckilyMyShieldWillProtectMe: Perseus using his shield as a mirror in order to kill Medusa without having to look at her is a classic example from Greek mythology.
602* MommasBoy: An incredibly badass version of one. Not to mention a sympathetic one: Danae was a [[GoodParents very sweet mom]] to him, so Perseus obviously loves her lots and would lay down his life for her.
603* NiceGuy: By far one of the most heroic characters in Greek Mythology by modern standards, he is a fiercely devoted and protective son to both his mother and adoptive dad, a loving and completely faithful husband to Andromeda, a good father to his children, and a fair and just ruler of Mycenae.
604* OurFounder: The first demigod hero and the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycenae#Mycenae_in_Classical_Greek_mythology_and_legends mythical founder of Mycenae]], kicking off the [[TheTimeOfMyths Mycenaen age]] of UsefulNotes/AncientGreece.
605* OutOfCharacterMoment: In one version of his myth, [[JerkassBall he tosses the Graeae's eye into a river for no apparent reason]], which runs counter to his usual NiceGuy portrayal.
606* PrinceCharming: A very straight example, especially for classical mythology. He even saves a princess, and he is technically a prince on his mother's side.
607* RescueRomance: With Andromeda.
608* SelfFulfillingProphecy: His killing of Acrisios. So the grandpa spirited baby and Danae away to save his own skin and avoid being murdered by a descendant? Years later, Perseus kills him ''by complete accident'' -- he was practicing with the discus for a nearby city's sport competitions not knowing Acrisius was visiting, his throw veered, Acrisius got hit on the head…
609* SupernaturalAid: The Gods themselves are on his side, especially Athena. Though they can't help him ''directly'', they can give him advice and the stuff he needs.
610* TakenForGranite: With Medusa’s head, he does this to the sea monster Cetus (saving Andromeda), Phineas (saving himself) and Polydectes (saving his mother). In an alternate version, he accidentally uses it on Acrisius, who happened to be visiting Polydectes.
611* TokenGoodTeammate: He's the only Greek hero who has no morally ambiguous qualities.
612[[/folder]]
613
614[[folder:Phaethon]]
615The son of the Oceanid Clymene and the Titan sun god Helios.
616----
617* BoltOfDivineRetribution: His death comes when Zeus shoots him out of the sky in order to end his unintentional destructive rampage.
618* DependingOnTheWriter: Some versions of his story differ on whether he's a bastard seeking to prove his paternity, or the legitimate offspring of a married couple who wants to live up to his divine father's legacy.
619* OhCrap: He quickly comes to realize that he made a mistake when he loses control of the fire horses.
620* SemiDivine: Even though his father was a Titan and his mother a Nymph, Phaethon was considered to be a mortal who died after his ill-fated ride.
621* TooDumbToLive: Helios desperately warns him that nobody else can fly the sun chariot, but Phatehon insists, leading to not only his death, but to mass destruction across the world.
622* WellDoneSonGuy: One interpretation of his behaviour is that he was simply trying to emulate his father Helios by driving his chariot.
623[[/folder]]
624
625[[folder:Polyphemus]]
626Man-eating cyclops son of Poseidon, most famous for being blinded by Odysseus. One less well-known story has him fall in love with the nymph Galateia, who turned him down for love of the beautiful youth Acis. The jealous cyclops discovered the couple lying together, and crushed Acis with a boulder. [[DependingOnTheWriter In other versions, Galateia returns his affections]] and they eventually marry.
627----
628* AbhorrentAdmirer: In some versions, Galateia has absolutely no interest in him whatsoever but he still pursues her.
629* BeastAndBeauty: The Beast to Galateia's beauty. DependingOnTheWriter, the beautiful Galateia either isn't interested in the monstrous Polyphemus or returns his love.
630* BigOlUnibrow: As he was a one-eyed giant, he is often drawn with one. Of course media usually depicts at as pretty broad.
631* CarpetOfVirility: Was consistently described as shaggy. "Trees without their leaves are ugly, and a horse is ugly too without a mane to veil its sorrel neck. Feathers clothe birds and fleeces grace the sheep: so beard and bristles best become a man."
632* ClassicalCyclops: Polyphemus is the TropeCodifier for the stupid and evil man eating Cyclops in popular culture. That said, Polyphemus is still treated as a sapient being, and once Poseidon learns what Odysseus did to him, he makes an already bad voyage home even worse.
633* DependingOnTheArtist: Polyphemus is either drawn with one eye under his brow, or one eye in the middle his forehead with two empty sockets under his brow.
634* DependingOnTheWriter: Polyphemus's relationship with Galateia varies a lot; sometimes she has no interest in him whatsoever, other times his affections are more reciprocated. In one story, they even had a son.
635* DisproportionateRetribution: Polyphemus was so furious when he found Odysseus's crew sitting in his house and eating his food, that he decided to trap them there and [[ToServeMan eat them one by one]]. Not even Odysseus offering wine as an apology was able to calm Polyphemus down.
636* HiddenDepths: Despite his crude, barbaric exterior, he was quite musically skilled. He was skilled with the kithara, and panpipes, and according to one story, he even taught Galateia how to sing.
637* EyeScream: Odysseus stabs his eye out.
638* IKnowYourTrueName: Averted at first, since Odysseus called himself "Nobody", but the guy just couldn't keep his mouth shut.
639* ToServeMan: Munched down four of Odysseus' men, two at a time, purely [[DisproportionateRetribution because he was angry at them for making themselves at home in his house]].
640* TooDumbToLive: This exchange sums it up:
641-->'''Other Cyclops:''' Brother! Who has blinded you!?\
642'''Polyphemus:''' Nobody[[note]]Odysseus' alias[[/note]]! Nobody has blinded me!\
643'''Other Cyclops:''' ...Then we're going back to sleep.
644* WhosOnFirst: As can be noted under TooDumbToLive. He probably should have realized Odysseus was just using an alias and perhaps yelling "This guy I'm planning to eat later blinded me!" would have prevented any of them from getting out alive. As a result, his brothers assumed Polyphemus had either blinded himself or been punished by the gods.
645[[/folder]]
646
647[[folder:Romulus & Remus]]
648Twin sons of [[WarGod Mars]] appropriately given their cities' [[WarIsGlorious most famous occupation]] and their adoptive mother was equally appropriately a NobleWolf. Remus is killed by Romulus in a quarrel.
649----
650* CainAndAbel: They argued about which hill to build their city that would become Rome on. They tried to settle it by watching for omens from birds (which Romulus wins from saying he saw twelve birds to Remus' six), but the argument continued and saw Remus killed either by his brother or one of his followers. Also, their tale is said to have predated Cain and Abel's by at least three centuries.
651* DivineParentage: They are the sons of Mars, result of the syncretism between Ares and an Etruscan agricultural deity.
652* FounderOfTheKingdom: Romulus is said to be founder of the city of Rome.
653* HeroicLineage: In addition to being sons of Mars, they were descendants of Aeneas (and by extension Venus) through their mother.
654* RaisedByWolves: Either that or a prostitute; it's the same word in Latin.
655* SiblingTeam: They were this until their argument that ended with Remus' death.
656[[/folder]]
657
658[[folder:Semele]]
659Daughter of Cadmus and Harmonia, Semele was once the mortal lover of Zeus and the mother of Dionysus. Incinerated when Zeus revealed his true godly form to her, Dionysus later found her in the Underworld after seeking to revive his wife Ariadne, resulting in him bringing them both back and making them goddesses.
660----
661* AmicableExes: Oddly enough, some sources claim that after her deification, she and Zeus remained on mostly good terms despite no longer pursuing a relationship.
662* BackFromTheDead: Thanks to her son, she's brought back and made immortal.
663* BrownNote: Her death from seeing Zeus' true form, which was far too powerful for her to comprehend.
664* DeathByChildbirth: An odd variant -- she doesn't die ''giving'' birth to Dionysus, she dies while pregnant with him when Zeus accidentally vaporizes her and Dionysus is recovered from her remains.
665* DeityOfHumanOrigin: Semele is granted apotheosis, and becomes the goddess Thyone.
666* DivineDate: She has one with Zeus. It doesn't end well.
667* HardDrinkingPartyGirl: Acccording to some myths, Semele becomes Thyone, the goddess of Bacchic frenzy, post-deification.
668* SeductionAsOneUpmanship: In the ''Dionysiaca,'' Semele views Hera as her romantic rival, and demands that Zeus show her his true form in order to one-up her.
669--> '''Semele:''' I want no honour equal to some earthly bride. Leave Europa her bull, leave Danaë her shower of gold: Hera’s state is the only one I envy. If you hold me worthy of honour, deck out my chamber with your heavenly fire!
670* TooDumbToLive: Demands to see Zeus' true form despite being warned why that would be a ''really'' bad idea.
671* YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm: She found this lesson out the hard way.
672[[/folder]]
673
674[[folder:Theseus]]
675Perhaps the most famous son of Poseidon -- unless the mortal Aegeus was his real father after all (accounts often say both are) -- and the second most famous hero, after Heracles. He is most well known for slaying the Minotaur and ruling the city of Athens. Among his other deeds are killing serial killers, founding the Isthmian Games, inventing the mixed martial art of pankration (with Heracles), [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking and inventing]] the ''geranos'' [[DanceSensation dance]]. He also interacted with other famous mythological people like Heracles, Oedipus, and Medea.
676----
677* AbductionIsLove: Theseus had a nasty habit of kidnapping women against their will or their husbands.
678* AdaptationalHeroism: Given that he was the founder king of UsefulNotes/{{Athens}}, it's no surprise that a lot of Athenian versions of myths involving Theseus tend to try and explain away or justify his less noble actions, including aging up Helen of Troy to an adult when he kidnaps her and claiming that Dionysus forced him to abandon Ariadne so he could have her all to himself.
679* AllAmazonsWantHercules: Married the queen of the Amazons, Hippolyta.
680* AssholeVictim: With the obvious exception of Athens, most city-states in Ancient Greece agreed that Theseus was a douche and any karma and divine punishments he received were well-deserved.
681* BadassNormal: Unlike Heracles, the hero synonymous with godlike strength, the almost-as-famous Theseus isn't especially known for having any superhuman abilities (except maybe SuperNotDrowningSkills).
682* CainAndAbel: Many of the serial killers Theseus killed on the way to Athens were either his half-brothers through Poseidon or otherwise related to him.
683* ContinuitySnarl: As very popular heroes, Theseus, Hercules, and Jason are very commonly stuffed into one another's stories in ways that don't really make a clean timeline.
684** Theseus is sometimes listed as one of Jason's Argonauts, which doesn't mesh with the common understanding that Medea (Jason's sorceress ex-wife) was already consorting with King Aegeus when Theseus first arrived in Athens. Theseus' heroic career starts with his journey to Athens and thus would have to come before he could join the Argo, but Medea's presence in Athens indicates the voyage of the Argo was already long over.
685** Several of the famous labors of Hercules influence Theseus' adventures. Hercules captured the Cretan Bull, which in many tellings goes on to become the same Marathonian Bull that Theseus captures and/or kills King Minos' son Androgeus (whose death leads to the sacrifice of Athenian children to the Minotaur); Hercules also rescues Theseus from the underworld during his final task. Unfortunately, Hercules' famous labors are usually considered to have been undertaken over the course of ten years, which is a tighter schedule than Theseus' adventures tend to allow for. (Hercules is also commonly cited as adventuring with the Argonauts during his labors, so the gap in time between the Argo's voyage and Medea's arrival in Athens also snarls things up).
686** Theseus is usually said to confront the Minotaur during the ''third'' sacrifice of Athenian children to Crete, which occurred every seven or nine years, so Androgeus died at least fourteen years prior to that fight. If Androgeus died to the [=Cretan/Marathonian=] Bull after Hercules brought it from Crete, Theseus' encounter with the Minotaur doesn't happen until well after Hercules' labors should be over, which doesn't fit with the common understanding that the death of the Minotaur happens more or less right after Theseus' early triumphant arrival in Athens. In some versions Androgeus is killed by the Marathonian Bull after Theseus captures it and brings it to Athens.
687** Theseus' abduction of Helen, especially the versions where she's a young child, is hard to fit together with the details of her birth and siblings, the twins Castor and Pollux, who were famously members of the Argonauts. In the versions where Helen is similar in age to the boys (indeed, sometimes she's said to be born [[ItMakesSenseInContext from the same egg]]), who were adults when they sailed with the Argonauts, then she was probably not a little girl when Theseus abducted her.
688* DanceSensation: According to some, after witnessing the Nereids dance when he dived under the sea to fetch Minos' ring Theseus invented the ''geranos'', a type of dance which supposedly mimicked the movements and interweavings of the Labyrinth.
689* DeathByIrony: Theseus, son of the Sea God Poseidon who famously had his ''other'' father Aegeus commit suicide by throwing himself in the Aegean sea, was notably killed by... being thrown off a cliff by King Lycomedes at the island of Scyros, right into the sea.
690* DivineParentage: DependingOnTheWriter. Sometimes Theseus' father is the mortal King Aegeus, sometimes it's LordOfTheOcean Poseidon, sometimes [[ExtraParentConception it's both]].
691* DrivenToSuicide: Not him, but his father -- after Theseus went off to try to kill the Minotaur, he told his father he'd herald his return with white sails on his ship. Failing to do this [[DependingOnTheWriter for whatever reason]], his father Aegeus saw black sails returning to him and committed suicide in grief (some sources saying by jumping off a cliff into the sea, leading to said sea being named the Aegean Sea).
692* ExtraParentConception: Some versions of his story give him two fathers: Aegeus and Poseidon. Some scholars believe that the god of the sea was added to his family tree later on to [[JustSoStory explain Athens being the dominant sea power of Ancient Greece]].
693* GeniusBruiser: Not very well known, but the way he retrieved his father's sword and shoes in the SecretTestOfCharacter and the way he completed his Six Labors while on the road to Athens showcase this.
694* HeroOfAnotherStory: Guest stars in several stories where he is not the focus, but his other adventures are alluded to.
695* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Theseus traveled overland to Athens to meet Aegeus to confront many of the bandits and murderers that still infested Greece at the time. This trope became his trademark in dealing with several of them:
696** Periphetes the Clubman earned his nickname for [[CarryABigStick the giant club he carried]]. Theseus stole it from him in their battle and bashed his head in.
697** Sinis the Pine-Bender was known for tying his victims between two bent pine trees and then having the trees tear them in half. Theseus tied him between two of his own pines and ripped him apart the same way.
698** Sciron had a giant pet turtle that he fed by throwing travelers off a cliffside path. Theseus put Sciron on the turtle's dinner menu.
699** King Cercyon of Eleusis challenged travelers to a wrestling match and killed everyone he beat. Theseus was the first man to beat him and the last man to see him alive.
700** Procrustes invited travelers to stay in his house and sleep on his "magic bed" that supposedly stretched to whoever fit it. In fact, he made them fit either by stretching them out on the rack if they were too short, or by cutting off their heads and limbs if they were too tall. Theseus trapped him on his own bed and then chopped his head and legs off.
701* IGaveMyWord: He and his friend Pirithous once swore oaths to help each other get new wives. Theseus wanted Helen, but [[TooDumbToLive Pirithous decided to abduct Perspheone]], wife of Hades. This was ''not'' a good idea, and Theseus [[ThisisGonnaSuck knew it]], but could not break his oath.
702* InformedAbility: Frequently labeled as highly intelligent, but most of his feats of cleverness in the Six Labors amounted to "figure out this person is a murderer, then kill them right back", whereas fellow GeniusBruiser characters like Odysseus and Heracles tended to be far more overt in thinking out solutions to their problems -- and that's if one disregards his TooDumbToLive moments, of which there are many.
703* KarmaHoudini: King Pitthius, Theseus' maternal grandfather, who deliberately got Theseus' father King Aegeus to violate the terms of the prophecy from the Oracle of Delphi the night Theseus was conceived, and was thus directly implicated in Aegeus' grief-stricken death after Perseus had grown. Nothing ever befalls him for this.
704* TheJailBaitWait: When Theseus kidnapped Helen, she was just a little girl. He intended to marry her when she got old enough, but her brothers (Castor and Pollux) rescued her while Theseus was trapped in the Underworld.
705* {{Jerkass}}: Even by Ancient Greek standards, Theseus is regarded as kind of a dick. He's significantly more well-liked in Athens [[OurFounder for obvious reasons]], but most other city states depicted him as a jerk with a nasty habit of being TooDumbToLive.
706* OldManMarryingAChild: Decided to abduct and marry Helen of Troy. She was so young he had to [[JailBaitWait wait till she reached marriageable age]] compared to himself, who was already fully grown and married once. Subverted as he soon got trapped in the underworld and Helen got rescued by her brothers Castor and Pollux.
707* PayEvilUntoEvil: Does this to all the {{Serial Killer}}s (because seriously, that's what they are) that he meets on the road to Athens, killing them all in the same way that they killed their victims.
708* PetTheDog: He gladly and without hesitation gave asylum to Oedipus when so many cities had denied him this. In Euripides' and Seneca's plays about Heracles, he does the same for Heracles after he murdered his wife and child.
709* TheProphecy: Childless King Aegeus received an obscure prophecy from the Oracle of Delphi -- "Do not loosen the bulging mouth of the wineskin until you have reached the height of Athens[[note]]Don't get out the wine until you've returned to the city of Athens[[/note]], lest you die of grief" -- and seeking to understand it stops off in Troezen to seek the advice of the wise King Pitthius. Pitthius understands the prophecy, and then proceeds to get Aegeus drunk and has his guest get his daughter Aethra pregnant with the man who would become Theseus.
710* StrengthEqualsWorthiness: Theseus proved he was King Aegeus's son by lifting the boulder Aegeus had placed over his own shield, sword, and sandals when he left Theseus's mother, and showing up in Athens wearing them.
711* SuperNotDrowningSkills: In Bacchylides' account, Theseus dived under the sea to fetch Minos' ring, and was received in Poseidon's underwater palace by Amphitrite herself. It's ambiguous if he had the ability to breathe underwater or if he merely held his breath for a really long time, but considering [[DeathByIrony his death]], it's probably the latter.
712* SuperStrength: Some accounts claim he killed the Minotaur with his bare hands.
713* TooDumbToLive:
714** He and his friend Pirithous once swore oaths to help each other get new wives. Theseus wanted Helen, but Pirithous decided to abduct Perspheone, wife of Hades. This was ''not'' a good idea, and Theseus [[ThisisGonnaSuck knew it]], but could not break his oath. Thus, the trope is subverted for Theseus, but played completely straight with Pirithous. Theseus was eventually freed from the underworld by Heracles, but Pirithous was not so lucky.
715** On Theseus' way back to UsefulNotes/{{Athens}} from Crete, he experienced several idiotic moments. For example, he managed to leave Ariadne, the woman who had helped him to exit the labyrinth by giving him a thread to tie to the entrance, on an island. He just got up and sailed away without her. Later on that same journey, he forgot to change the sails on his ship -- he had set out with black sails -- and promised to switch them for white if he returned victorious. Seeing the ship with black sails enter the harbor, his father Aegeus was overcome with grief and threw himself into the sea (now called the 'Aegean'). Justified in some versions where he didn't just abandon Ariadne but was forced to leave her by a deity (Athena, Hermes or Dionysus himself) so the latter could seduce her. And [[HeroicBSOD as he didn't recover from his sorrow]], he completely forgot about the white sails until it's too late.
716* TheUnchosenOne: Unlike Perseus or other famous heroes, Theseus was not famed for receiving divine help. [[DependingOnTheWriter Depends on the Writer]]; some accounts have Amphitrite herself help him fetch Minos' ring under the sea, and she gives him a wreath of roses and a purple cloak to prove his divine heritage. Poseidon or Dionysus helped [[OffingTheOffspring getting Theseus' son Hippolytus killed]] after his wife Phaedra told him that Hippolytus raped her, but that wasn't exactly helping him perform a great deed.
717* UngratefulBastard: After Ariadne helped him survive the Labyrinth, he left her on a beach. Fortunately for her, Dionysus came to her rescue. As noted, some versions (the ones most popular in Athens, for obvious reasons) subvert this as either Athena, Hermes or Dionysus himself forced him to abandon her.
718* WolverinePublicity: As a side-effect of Athens ending up curating most of the mythology handed down to moderns, Athenian hero Theseus shows up in tellings of adventures that it may or may not make sense for him to actually be on, like the voyage of the Argo.
719* WrestlerInAllOfUs: The tales that claimed he killed the minotaur with bare hands attribute him as another originator for the Pankration martial art along with Hercules, variably saying he finished off the minotaur with a good punch to the face or strangling it.
720[[/folder]]
721
722[[folder:Tityos]]
723A Giant, conceived by Zeus and Elara, then carried to term by Gaia when Zeus hid Elara from Hera underground and Elara died. Tityos is, like Tantalus, Sisyphus, Ixion and the Danaides, most famous for his eternal punishment in the Underworld -- after he tried to rape the titaness Leto as she traveled to the temple of her son Apollo, Tityos was slain by Apollo and his sister Artemis who pelted him with a rain of arrows. In Tartarus, Tityos was condemned to be nailed to the ground while a pair of vultures pecked at his eternally regenerating liver (similar to Prometheus).
724----
725* AndIMustScream: Like Prometheus, he spends eternity having his liver eaten by birds.
726* AssholeVictim: His punishment seems harsh until you learn what he did to deserve it.
727* AttemptedRape: Sometimes at Hera's behest, he tried to rape Leto. Fortunately, Artemis and Apollo killed him before he could.
728* {{Foil}}: Suffered pretty much the same punishment as Prometheus. Unlike Prometheus, who was punished for an act of kindness and ultimately freed, Tityos was truly guilty of a cruel, heinous deed and punished accordingly.
729* {{Jerkass}}: Yeah, trying to force yourself on a woman while she's on her way to meet her son is kind of a dick move.
730* OurGiantsAreBigger: He's a giant.
731* TooDumbToLive: Tried to rape Leto... while she was approaching her son's temple.
732[[/folder]]
733
734!!Mortals
735
736[[folder: Actaeon]]
737
738A hunter who was turned into a stag by the goddess Artemis and was then chased down and devoured by his own hounds.
739------
740* AdaptationalRelationshipOverhaul: In one early version Actaeon and Artemis were not strangers to each other: They were often hunting companions and Actaeon even desired marriage with her.
741* AintTooProudToBeg: Before his hounds catch him, he raises his eyes towards Mt. Olympus (and he would have raised his arms as well if he wasn't [[ForcedTransformation a deer]]) in an effort to [[DivineIntervention beseech the gods for help.]]
742* BlasphemousBoast: He's cited in Euripides' play ''Bacchae'' as being devoured by his own hounds as a punishment for saying he was a better hunter than Artemis.
743* CosmicPlaything: The most commonly cited version of his story has him be eaten by his own hunting dogs because he happened to accidentally see Artemis naked.
744* DivinePunishment: Artemis [[ForcedTransformation turns him into a stag]] when she catches him spying on her as she bathes.
745* EatenAlive: After he's been turned into a stag his hounds chase him down and devour him.
746* ForcedTransformation: Some versions of his story state that Artemis turned him into a deer before his hounds got to him.
747* TheHunterBecomesTheHunted: Perhaps the [[OlderThanFeudalism earliest known use of this trope.]] He's out hunting when Artemis turns him into a stag. He then gets hunted by his own hounds.
748* {{Irony}}:
749** He's a hunter who gets hunted by his own hounds.
750** He's a hunter who is sent to his doom by the goddess of hunting.
751* JustDesserts: Leering at a bathing goddess will get you devoured by your own hounds!
752* NakedFirstImpression: While out in the woods hunting one day he comes across the goddess Artemis bathing and is transfixed by her beauty. When she sees him spying on her she turns him into a stag.
753* OhCrap: According to the narrative, after Artemis turns him into a stag he runs away from her and then spies his reflection in a pond. He lets out a groan when he sees what the goddess [[ForcedTransformation has done to him.]]
754* StrongAndSkilled: He's a young man in his prime who is an expert hunter.
755* TalkingAnimal: Averted. After he is turned into a deer he loses the ability to speak and so he is unable to call off his hounds.
756[[/folder]]
757
758[[folder: Admetus and Alcestis]]
759
760The king and queen of Pherae, Thessaly. Minor players in the Argonautica and the hunt for the Calydonian Boar, they are major characters in Euripides' {{Theatre/Alcestis}}.
761----
762* AccidentalMurder: Alcestis isn't always among the daughters of Pelias who are tricked into butchering their father by Medea, but when she is, this is the result.
763* BackFromTheDead: Alcestis dies in Admetus' place, but returns to life after Heracles beats Thanatos in a wrestling match for her soul.
764* BadassNormal: Admetus ''is'' distantly descended from Prometheus, but he's still an otherwise normal human, who participated in the search for the Golden Fleece and the hunt for the Calydonian Boar.
765* BalancingDeathsBooks: Apollo gets the fates drunk and persuades them to let Admetus escape his fated early death, as long as someone else dies in his place. Unfortunately, Alcestis is the only one to offer.
766* BigScrewedUpFamily: not as screwy as, say the House of Atreus, but Alcestis' father murdered at least one of his brothers and exiled the others, including Admetus' father, and Pelias' successor Acastus doesn't prove to be a much more moral person, either.
767* EngagementChallenge: King Pelias declared that anyone who wanted to marry Alcestis had to [[ImpossibleTask yoke a lion and a boar to a chariot and drive it to Iolcus.]] Admetus accomplishes the task with help from Apollo.
768* GodWasMyCopilot: After Admetus treats Apollo well while the latter worked as his shepherd, Apollo helps him to win the hand of Alcestis, protects him from Artemis' anger when he neglects to offer her sacrifices, and even extracts a deal from the fates to let him escape an early death.
769* TheGoodKing: Admetus is renowned for his hospitality, kindness and justice.
770* HappilyMarried: completely devoted to each other. Alcestis choosing to die in Admetus' place utterly devastates him.
771* HeroicSacrifice: Alcestis volunteers to die so that Admetus can live.
772* JerkassHasAPoint: Admetus' parents are understandably less than impressed that [[WhatTheHellHero he expected one of them would be willing to die for him,]] but he has good reason to want to avoid an early death, since his heirs are still children and his death would only bring trouble to Pherae.
773* KarmicJackpot: Admetus' kindness to Apollo saves him from dying young. Later, his kindness to Heracles is what saves Alcestis from dying in his place.
774* KissingCousins: half-cousins, through their fathers.
775* TheLostLenore: narrowly averted.
776* LoverAndBeloved: by some accounts, most notably Callimachus and Ovid, Admetus had this kind of relationship with Apollo. Which of them held which role is up for debate.
777* TheMourningAfter: Admetus swears to never remarry after Alcestis dies. Fortunately, she doesn't stay dead.
778* SacredHospitality: possibly Admetus' defining trait.
779** He shelters Apollo while the latter was exiled to live as a mortal shepherd, and treats him well while he's in his employ; Apollo rewards him by causing his cattle to birth twins, and by helping him complete King Pelias' ImpossibleTask to marry Alcestis.
780** Welcomes Heracles into his home despite being in mourning for Alcestis, and tries to hide that he is in mourning to do his duty as a host. As a result, Heracles [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu fights Thanatos to bring Alcestis back to life.]]
781* TakeMeInstead: Alcestis chooses to die in Admetus' place.
782[[/folder]]
783
784[[folder:Adonis]]
785Most famous for being considered the world's most beautiful man, Adonis was conceived when his mother, Myrrha, [[ParentalIncest fell in love with her father, Theias]], and tricked him into impregnating her, and subsequently had the gods turn her into a tree to escape punishment. When Adonis was born from his tree-mother, his beauty was already so great that he charmed not ''one'', but ''two'' goddesses: Aphrodite and Persephone. When Adonis came of age and chose Aphrodite to be his lover, he was killed by a wild boar sent by Ares (Or the boar was Ares. It's confusing), who was jealous of the relationship between Adonis and Aphrodite. (Though there are versions of the myth that say it was Artemis, or Apollo who was jealous of Adonis' skill with a bow, that sent the wild boar to kill him.) Another myth says that Apollo was angered by Aphrodite blinding his son Erymanthus for accidentally seeing her bathing, and sent the Boar to kill Adonis in revenge.
786----
787* AdaptationalWimp: Ultimately has roots in [[Myth/MesopotamianMythology Canaanite veneration of Tammuz (Dumuzid)]], under the title ''adon'', meaning "lord." For whatever reason, Adonis [[AmbiguousSituation (sort-of)]] lost his divine status, perhaps because the Greeks had a pre-existing shepherd god and his own myth was far too close to Persephone's, who would become his ward. This being so, the divide between the Underworld and the living world was recast as taking place during Adonis's life, and in most accounts, Adonis is KilledOffForReal. Given, the original ''Inanna's Descent'' stopped at Dumuzid's death, making this transformation understandable.
788* AdaptationalAttractiveness: The original myth of Dumuzid has him as more-or-less a god of rarer agricultural commodites like milk, and eventually [[DisproportionateRetribution punished]] for not mourning his wife Ishtar enough during her yearly descent to the Underworld. In Classical Mythology, Adonis is so hot it's essentially [[SoBeautifulItsACurse what kills him]]. Also see ReallyGetsAround below.
789* AmbiguouslyHuman: Definitely mortal at ''some'' point, at least in Classical Mythology, but the Late Antiquity figure Origen references that there was some recognition of Adonis as being BackFromTheDead in some manner, at least when more closely syncreticized with his origin Tammuz. This could indicate a continued deification, as women continued to mourn Adonis in the Adonia.
790* CanonForeigner: He was originally a Middle Eastern god called Tammuz/Dumuzid, whose cult was spread into Ancient Greece.
791* GreenThumb: Quite {{downplayed|Trope}} -- if you've heard only one thing about him, [[MrFanservice you heard about how hot he was]]. However, he had roots in a fertility god, was born from a tree, raised by Persephone (the daughter of ''the'' Olympian of the GreenThumb, Demeter), and part of the Adonia festival celebrating him involved growing lettuce and fennel in terracotta pieces. So while he didn't have power over plants himself, he was still associated with them.
792* LoveTriangle: He was at the middle of one between Aphrodite and Persephone, and was in another with Aphrodite and Ares (which was what led to his death, see MurderTheHypotenuse). He also had multiple other suitors.
793* MrFanservice: It's probably not a coincidence his festival was celebrated by women...indeed, the celebration of his festival is the only surviving indication of him being worshipped in Athens.
794* MurderTheHypotenuse: He's the hypotenuse in this case. He was gored by a boar sent by a jealous Ares, Aphrodite's lover.
795* ReallyGetsAround: He was also pursued by [[EvenTheGuysWantHim the equally bisexual Apollo, Heracles and Dionysus]]. Funnily enough, the centaur Nessos was also smitten with him, and was taught by Aphrodite herself how to get his attention. Possibly because unlike [[MyBelovedSmother Persephone]], Nessos didn't ask for undivided attention.
796* RevengeByProxy: One myth has Apollo sending the Erymanthian Boar to kill Adonis as revenge on Aphrodite for blinding his mortal son when the son accidentally saw Aphrodite naked.
797* SoBeautifulItsACurse: Ultimately, his beauty was one of the main factors behind his death. In some myths, the Erymanthian Boar is so enamored with Adonis that he tries to kiss him... [[AccidentalMurder but forgot about his tusks and accidentally gored poor Adonis]].
798* WifeHusbandry: His main caretaker, Persephone, fell in love with him and tried to raise him to be her lover, but he chose Aphrodite instead (although whether the choice was his alone or if he made it with some "encouragement" from Aphrodite varies from story to story).
799* WorldsBestCharacter: Helen was the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman, but that left space for Adonis to be the World's Most Beautiful Man.
800[[/folder]]
801
802[[folder:Agamemnon]]
803King of Mycenae and brother of Menelaus, who commanded the Greek forces in the Trojan War. When he prepared to sail to Troy with his army from Aulis, he incurred the wrath of Artemis ([[DependingOnTheWriter the reasons for this vary]]) and was forced to offer his daughter, Iphigenia, as a sacrifice to appease her. In the war itself, he actively fought on the battlefield and, in the final year, had a quarrel with Achilles over a slave named Briseis, which resulted in AchillesInHisTent and nearly cost the Greeks victory. When he returned from Troy, he was killed, either by Aegisthus' henchmen (per Homer) or by his own wife, Clytemnestra (per Aeschylus).
804----
805* AdaptationalVillainy: The man was '''no''' saint, but he was no more "evil" than the rest of the Greek or Trojan warriors during the war. The film ''Troy'' has him as an example of AmbitionIsEvil. More prozaic interpretations of the Trojan tend to ascribe this to him since if it's ''not'' the gods scheming to create the Trojan War, then Agamemnon would seem more like just a warmonger.
806* AdaptationalWimp: In the original stories, he's a badass on the same tier as Achilles and even known to go berserk at a few moments and take entire Trojan battalions alone, to the point that even Achilles has to admit begrudging respect after a major battle. But going hand-in hand-with the above AdaptationalVillainy, most modern adaptations of the Iliad and Greek mythology portray Agamemnon as a cowardly backstabbing armchair general who sits behind his troops in the midst of battle. The worst offenders, such as the film ''Troy'', show him as being solely responsible for many of the Greeks' defeats in the Trojan War with his arrogance and never portray him clashing in melee with the Trojans. Even the most favorable modern TV and film portrayals downplay Agamemnon's martial prowess and simply portray him commanding far from the front lines with 20 or more bodyguards.
807* AssholeVictim: In the ''Oresteia'', at the hands of his wife, Clytemnestra -- or at least by modern standards. In this particular case is rather hard and difficult to pinpoint which of them really is the bigger asshole: they both have countless moments, and even the main driving reason for Clytemnestra's killing of him (the sacrifice of Iphigenia) rings rather hollow when one takes into consideration that she's more than willing to kill two of her ''other'' kids (Electra and Orestes) and neglects her remaining daughter Crysothemis.
808* AsskickingLeadsToLeadership: If Achilles is so badass, why is Agamemnon in charge? He has the most ships, by ten.
809* TheBerserker: To the surprise of anyone familiar with the various adaptations. Seriously, read his rampage in Book 11 of the Iliad. It screams UnstoppableRage.
810* BigBrotherInstinct: Agamemnon in the original Myth/ClassicalMythology has this in spades. Paris fucks with Menelaus, Agamemnon will make Troy ''burn''.
811* BigGood: Agamemnon is a subversion. He's the leader of the Greeks and the one who begins the campaign, but not even he can resist the temptation to KickTheDog.
812* BigScrewedUpFamily: Agamemnon is part of the House of Atreus, a family descended from Tantalus who were best known for murdering each other in a big CycleOfRevenge...[[HistoryRepeats guess what happens to him and his immediate family]].
813* BlasphemousBoast: Depending on the source, Agamemnon incurs the wrath of Artemis by boasting that he is her equal after killing a deer that was sacred to her. The first but far from last of his mistakes.
814%%* BreakTheHaughty
815* FatalFlaw: Agamemnon's is his pride. His refusal to initially release the captive daughter of Apollo's priest leads to a plague. His failure realize that his treatment of Achilles is unfair leads to his army's near-defeat, although this consequence pales in comparison to Achilles' and Hector's. He does later realize the foolishness of this action but never admits any blame or apologizes. And of course, in some stories there is his BlasphemousBoast that leads to him having to sacrifice Iphigenia.
816* GeniusBruiser: Nowhere near Odysseus' level, but being a GeniusBruiser was the norm for any king at the time. His ghost actually gives Odysseus some rather sage advice about being prepared for anything when returning to one's own home.
817* GoodParents: Tragically, it's strongly implied by Electra's memories of him that he ''was'' this before everything when to hell.
818* TheHighKing: Rules the wealthiest and most powerful of a motley of Greek city-states, and thus takes charge of the campaign against Troy.
819* LaserGuidedKarma: {{Subverted|Trope}} in some cases -- his sacrifice of his daughter to appease Artemis' anger gets him murdered by his wife's lover and her (who definitely cheated and killed him out of anger) upon his return, but in some versions he actually never succeeds in killing her through the mercy of Artemis, who whisks her away and leaves a deer/goat, and in Homer's version, the sacrifice of Iphegenia is never mentioned at all and he gets killed by Aegisthus as part of the CycleOfRevenge the House of Atreus was caught in.
820* RankScalesWithAsskicking: {{Downplayed|Trope}} -- he's a pretty bad motherfucker who's overall in charge of the Greeks at Troy, but he's just a bit behind Achilles and Diomedes in sheer asskickingitude.
821* RightfulKingReturns: It goes much less pleasant than some of his other brethren.
822* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: Both personally leads and fights on the frontlines of a major war.
823* SecretTestOfCharacter: Early on, in preparation for an attack, Agamemnon tests the Greeks' fighting spirit by saying, in short, "We'll never take Troy; let's pack up and go home." The leaders [[DidntThinkThisThrough then have to stop their troops from following through]], which [[Funny/TheIliad is as hilarious as it sounds]].
824* ShipperOnDeck: Agamemnon becomes exponentially funnier if you view him as a Helen/Menelaus shipper. It's not even inaccurate.
825* TragicHero: Technically, he is fighting to avenge his brother's dishonoring at the hands of Paris, who kidnapped his wife (whether willingly or not). Due to values dissonance he's more considered a TragicVillain in modern days for his many character flaws and less than noble deeds.
826* VirginSacrifice: Agamemnon had to kill one of his daughters, Iphigenia, for a favorable wind in order to go to war. It's never explicitly stated that she's a virgin, but due to her age she probably would've been.
827[[/folder]]
828
829[[folder:Andromeda]]
830A princess of either Aithiopia (in older versions) or Joppa in Judea (in Roman versions), who was ChainedToARock as a sacrifice for a sea monster, Cetus, sent by Poseidon when her mother Cassiopeia [[DoNotTauntCthulhu boasted that her daughter was more beautiful than the Nereids]]. However, she was saved from Cetus by Perseus, who she married.
831----
832* ButNotTooForeign: Though an Aithiopian, her thrice-great-grandmother was the Argive princess Io.
833* ChainedToARock: As a sacrifice to the sea monster Cetus.
834* DamselInDistress: One of the earliest examples. What's more, she did ''nothing'' wrong or stupid; her mother was the one who caused the mess, Andromeda was involved by proxy, and shit went down for her.
835* HappilyMarried: To Perseus, which is one of the incredibly few, and most memorable, examples in Greek mythology.
836* HumanSacrifice: Intended to be one for Cetus, in order to keep the coast of Joppa from being ravaged. Fortunately, Perseus saves her from this fate.
837* RaceLift: She's generally described in the original sources to have the dusky appearance of the Aithiopians, which ancient authors likened with the modern Middle East, North Africa and Northern India. Modern depictions tend to make her either white (if they assume her to be Greek) or black (if they confuse Aithiopia with Ethiopia).
838** Aithiops is derived from the two Greek words, from αἴθω + ὤψ (aitho "I burn" + ops "face"); translating as Burnt-face in noun form and red-brown in adjectival form, as a reference to the red-brown skin tones of the North Africans and Middle Easterners.
839* RescueRomance: With Perseus.
840[[/folder]]
841
842[[folder:Arachne]]
843A mortal woman with a talent for weaving. She boasted about being better than even Athena herself. Athena was so offended that she challenged Arachne. Regardless of what happened next, it always ends with Arachne becoming a spider.
844----
845* AdaptationalBadass: While as usual with Greek Mythology, there are many versions, the myth usually depicts Athena as turning Arachne into a ''normal'' spider, small size included. Practically all the adaptations since then have despicted her post-transformation either as a GiantSpider or SpiderPeople.
846* BlasphemousBoast: The reason Athena got angry at her, since {{Pride}} was one of the worst sins that a human could ever commit against the Gods.
847* BrokeYourArmPunchingOutCthulhu: Athena may have turned her into a spider, but in the most popular version (Ovid's), she still won the contest. Against the goddess of handcraft. Think about this for a minute.
848* DoNotTauntCthulhu: She made fun of Zeus in her weaving. Knowing [[DaddysGirl Athena]], what did you expect?
849* ForcedTransformation: There's a reason that spiders are called "'''Arachn'''ids"
850* InterruptedSuicide: One of the oldest versions of the myth says that Arachne tried to hang herself after beating Athena in the weaving contest. Athena [[{{Forgiveness}} tried to save her]], but accidentally turned her into a spider in the process. Another version holds that she lost to Athena, and attempted suicide because the terms were that the loser would never use a needle or spindle again. Athena stopped her and turned Arachne into a spider so that she could weave without tools. A ''third'' version has her try to commit suicide after Athena destroyed her blasphemous tapestry, only to again be interrupted by Athena who turned her into a spider.
851* JustSoStory: She was a girl who loved weaving and was turned into the first spider by Athena, explaining why spiders weave webs.
852* MultipleChoicePast: More like "Multiple Choice Future". The story is rarely consistent with what happens between Athena challenging her and Arachne turning into a spider.
853* SmugSuper: She may not be a superhero, but not only she was very honest about her arrogance, but she had the skills to back it up. In some versions of the myth, her tapestry matched or exceeded Athena's in quality, only for her to get turned into a spider either because Athena was a SoreLoser or she decided to use said tapestry to make fun of Zeus.
854* TooDumbToLive: Arachne, Arachne, Arachne...did you ''really'' believe Athena would let you get away with claiming to be better than her?
855** In some versions, she used her tapestry to make fun of Zeus...AKA, Athena's ''father''. With Athena [[DaddysGirl being Athena]], you can guess that this didn't end well for her.
856[[/folder]]
857
858[[folder:Atalanta]]
859Greek mythology's most famous heroine and the only female member of the hero team-up known as the Argonauts, Atalanta was a mortal princess exposed at birth because her father wanted a boy. Was found and suckled by a she-bear before she was discovered and raised by hunters. Grew up to be very beautiful and very fast. Eventually she was reunited with her father, who insisted that she get married. She wasn't too keen on this, so she promised to marry the man who could beat her in a foot race, but the losers would be executed. When Hippomenes (or Melanion) defeated her, she married and made love with him in Zeus or Aphrodite's temple. Zeus (or Aphrodite) was so enraged by the desecration that he (or she) turned them both into lions.
860----
861* ActionGirl: Much like Artemis (who she worshipped), Atalanta was a woman (quite atypical for ancient Greek culture) able at hunting. She was said to have killed two centaurs with her bow for attempting to rape her. One account of the Argonauts has her fight alongside them in a battle in Colchis. Another has Jason refuse to let her join the Argonauts, ''only'' because as a woman she'd likely cause strife among the men on the ship while entirely acknowledging her skill otherwise.
862* AttentionDeficitOohShiny: She got distracted from her footrace with Hippomenes by the gold apples he rolled while he ran, which cost her the race and gave Hippomenes the chance to marry her.
863* BadassNormal: One of Greek Mythology's "A-Lister" heroes but she was completely mortal with no divine parents. Despite this she's a skilled warrior and hunter who played a major role in the Argonauts' adventures and battles. Atalanta was such an amazing runner the only person who could beat her in a footrace had to use divine apples made to distract mortal eyes to win, and even then, it's implied ''she only barely lost'' despite taking her sweet time to pick up and admire each apple. Damn.
864* BattleCouple: Her relationship with Meleager. Some sources even claim they consummated their relationship, resulting in a son named Parthenopeus.
865* BestHerToBedHer: Atalanta challenged her suitors to a race in order to marry her...the losers were killed. The one guy who actually won had to cheat to do it, though in some versions, Atalanta was cool with that because he was the only one she actually liked.
866* CharlesAtlasSuperpower: She seems to have some superhuman abilities despite her apparent lack of divine parentage.
867* ContinuitySnarl: Did she [[TheSmurfettePrinciple sail with the Argonauts]] or was she rejected because being the only woman on the ship would lead to problems later into the quest? Sources vary.
868* CursedWithAwesome: Her and Hippomenes turning into lions. The idea was that they could never have sex again because lions supposedly only mated with leopards, but from a modern perspective, they get to be PantheraAwesome and the separation part is moot because lions do in fact mate within their species. The historian Adrienne Mayor even thinks that the incompatible-lions belief is without basis and interprets turning them into lions was allowing a perfect couple to live free of judgement from Greek society.
869* ForcedTransformation: She and her husband, were turned into lions for having sex in Zeus' temple. Some Ancient Greeks believed that [[ScienceMarchesOn lions could only mate with leopards, not other lions]] which thus should have cursed them to never make love with one another again.
870* LegFocus: A lot of writers, both ancient and modern, love to put emphasis on the shapeliness of her legs. Which makes sense, given how famously fast she was.
871* MsFanservice: Often depicted in artwork wearing quite revealing clothes, usually very short skirts, and bare breasts, but [[https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/f9/2a/ba/f92abaa95aedebde7c762f220a479c9c.jpg this vase painting]] demonstrates that the trend of depicting female heroes wearing skimpy bikinis is much OlderThanTheyThink.
872* PantheraAwesome: She and her husband, were turned into lions for having sex in Zeus' temple.
873* ParentalAbandonment: Not only was she herself abandoned by her father, she later abandoned her own son Parthenopeus on Mount Parthenius in Arcadia, to conceal the fact that she was no longer a virgin.
874* PrettyPrincessPowerhouse: She was a princess in addition to being a powerful huntress and warrior, though sources contradict each other on what land she was the princess of. One states she was from Arcadia and her parents were named Iasus and Clymene; another has her as the daughter of King Schoeneus from Boeotia.
875* RaisedByWolves: She was raised by a female bear who cubs were killed by hunters until eventually those hunters found Atalanta as well.
876* TheSmurfettePrinciple: The only woman who sailed with the Argonauts in the quest for the Golden Fleece.
877* SuperSpeed: Her defining trait. No explanation is given for why a baseline mortal would have such an ability, but she was fast enough that the only chance anyone had at beating her in a race was to cheat.
878* VirginPower: She swore an oath of virginity to Artemis, and became well-known as a virgin huntress. She didn't do a very good job keeping it, though. See BattleCouple and ParentalAbandonment above.
879* WrestlerInAllOfUs: Everyone more or less stopped doubting her after she beats Peleus in wrestling, who you might recall is ''Achilles' dad'' and a bonafide badass in his own right.
880[[/folder]]
881
882[[folder:Baucis and Philemon]]
883An elderly couple who lived in a shack on a hill. One night, despite their crushing poverty, they hosted two guests who found no one else in the area willing to take them in. Said guests happened to be Zeus and Hermes in disguise, and in gratitude for the hospitality, the gods turned their house into a temple, made them its priests, and offered them a wish. Their wish was to die at the same moment so one wouldn't have to live alone, and this was granted by having them turn into trees, Baucis into a linden and Philemon into an oak, with branches forever intertwined.
884-------
885* CoolOldGuy: And Old Lady. They were already up there in years when Zeus and Hermes knocked on their door.
886* HappilyMarried: So happily married that their greatest wish was that neither of them would be widowed.
887* KarmicJackpot: For offering two strangers SacredHospitality despite their own poverty, their house was made into a temple, they became priests, and were granted a wish. The nearby town where everyone rebuffed Zeus and Hermes was instead turned into a lake.
888* OhCrap: Freaked out a bit when they realized that none of their food was running out and put it together that their guests were gods.
889* SacredHospitality: Their tale is an example of why it's a good idea to offer travelers hospitality -- Baucis and Philemon were gracious to their guests and won a KarmicJackpot for it.
890* {{Transflormation}}: They were both turned into trees so they would always be together.
891[[/folder]]
892
893[[folder:Bellerophon]]
894A mighty warrior whose greatest feat was slaying the TropeNamer for ClassicalChimera while riding {{Pegasus}}. He accomplished several other great deeds, but was eventually struck down by Zeus for his hubris in thinking he was equal to the gods.
895----
896* AssassinOutclassin: To kill Bellerophon without violating ''[[SacredHospitality xenia]]'', King Iobates sent him on a series of quests he was sure were impossible. Bellerophon succeeded at all of them, fighting the Chimera, the warlike Solymi, the Amazons, the pirate Cheirmarrus and his assassins to finally even Iobates's own guards.
897* BlasphemousBoast: As Bellerophon's fame became greater and greater, he started to think he was on the same level as the gods. When he tried to fly to Mount Olympus, an offended Zeus sent a gadfly to sting Pegasus, making it rear up and causing Bellerophon to fall to his death.
898* BoulderBludgeon: After Bellerophon killed the Chimera, King Iobates sent him on a further series of quests to try and kill him. One of them was a foray against the Amazons, who Bellerophon defeated by flying over them with Pegasus and dropping a series of large boulders.
899* CombatPragmatist: Bellerophon couldn't get close enough to attack the Chimera because of her fiery breath. Instead, he tied a lump of lead to his speartip and thrust it into the Chimera's mouth. Her fire breath melted the lead, causing it to fill her throat and choke her to death.
900* CoolHorse: On his quest to kill the Chimera, he tamed no less than {{Pegasus}}, ''the'' original cool horse. It would later be the death of him, as he tried flying to Olympus after thinking he was good enough to hang out with the gods.
901* FalseRapeAccusation: King Proteus's wife came on to Bellerophon, then lied and accused him of rape when he rejected her advances. Proteus was livid, but he knew that killing Bellerophon would violate xenia. Instead, he sent Bellerophon to his father in law King Iobates with a letter asking him to PleaseShootTheMessenger.
902* FatalFlaw: {{Pride}}. As his list of heroic deeds grew, so did his ego and pride. He thought he was good enough to be in the company of the gods and tried flying to Olympus. Zeus didn't appreciate this.
903* KinslayingIsASpecialKindOfEvil: Bellerophon was exiled from his homeland for supposedly killing his brother, although the myths aren't entirely clear on his brother's name or even how it happened. He sought refuge as a guest of King Proteus, who cleansed him of his crime.
904* MamasBabyPapasMaybe: DependingOnTheWriter, he was either the son of the mortal Glaucus or of Poseidon. The latter would explain why some myths have Poseidon helping Bellerophon tame Pegasus, and sent a flood to protect him from Iobates's palace guards when Iobates sent them against him.
905* PleaseShootTheMessenger: Proteus was angry at Bellerophon supposedly raping his wife, so to kill him without violating xenia he asked Bellerophon to take a letter to King Iobates. The letter asked Iobates to kill Bellerophon, so Iobates sent him to fight the Chimera. He thought this would get Bellerophon killed without his violating xenia.
906* SacredHospitality: This trope, known as "xenia", is ''extremely'' SeriousBusiness to the classical Greeks and saves Bellerophon twice. The first time, King Proteus's wife claimed that Bellerophon tried to rape her out of anger at his rejecting her advances, but the host didn't want to risk violating xenia. Proteus instead sent Bellerophon to his father-in-law King Iobates with a request to kill Bellerophon for him. Iobates didn't want to violate xenia either, so he sent Bellerophon on a mission to kill the Chimera, convinced that Bellerophon would be killed.
907* UriahGambit: Pulled on him multiple times in fact. The first and most famous, was when he was sent to slay the Chimera. Iobates wanted to kill him without violating xenia, see above, and thought the monster, which had felled multiple warriors by herself, was the perfect way to solve the problem. When Bellerophon returns triumphant from this quest with a flying horse, Iobates sent him to single handedly fight a tribe of barbarians and then the Amazons. The king eventually dropped the pretense and sent his royal guard to kill Bellerophon directly.
908[[/folder]]
909
910[[folder:Cadmus]]
911The founder-king of Thebes and husband to the goddess Harmonia. Cadmus may not be as well-known in the modern day, but he's an important figure in the mythology as the very first Greek hero ever, descendant of Io and ancestor of Dionysus. The story of Cadmus was a turbulent one, beginning with being sent by his father to rescue his sister Europa from Zeus, to founding Thebes, to slaying a water-dragon sacred to Ares and serving him for eight years as punisment, to finally being transformed into a serpent at the end of his life.
912----
913* ButtMonkey: Most of his life was wrought with ill-fortune due to both slaying a sacred water-dragon and the Necklace of Harmonia gifted to his wife at their wedding, bringing misfortune upon his family and unrest to his city.
914* TheDragonslayer: Slew a water-dragon of some sort after it killed several of his men. Unfortunately for him, that dragon was sacred to Ares, leading to the start of his troubles.
915* FounderOfTheKingdom: He founded Thebes, one of the most important cities in Greece.
916* GenreSavvy: Some sources say it wasn't that he was unsuccessful in his search for his sister but rather that he was reluctant to go against Zeus. Given how capricious the gods are it was probably a wise choice.
917* HappilyMarried: Harmonia, [[StandardHeroReward while a reward for his eight years of penance,]] genuinely loved him and bore him several children. In one version of his transformation into a serpent after asking the gods for it, she immediately begs to share his fate and is granted it.
918* HeroicLineage: He's Dionysus maternal grandpa.
919* {{Irony}}: Married the goddess of harmony. His life was anything but.
920* RageAgainstTheHeavens: When he finally had enough of the misfortune brought upon him by killing a sacred water-dragon he remarked to the gods that if they were so enamoured by the life of a serpent then he might as well wish for that himself. [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor They granted it]].
921* ScaledUp: Became a serpent at the end of his life, either before or after his death and either alongside or shortly followed by his wife, depending on the source.
922* UrExample: He was the first Greek hero.
923[[/folder]]
924
925[[folder:Callisto]]
926'''Callisto''' is usually an Arcadian princess born to King Lycaon, although a writer or two made her a nymph. She was one of Artemis' followers, and was expected to remain a virgin. This wasn't meant to be as she caught the eye of Zeus, who slept with her, sometimes while transformed into Artemis. She fell pregnant, and then either Hera or Artemis transformed her into a bear when found out, each for her own reasons. In some versions, Artemis kills her for breaking her vows, in others it's her teenage son who kills her while hunting. Zeus turned mother and son both into constellations, Ursa Major and Ursa Minor respectively.
927----
928* ActionGirl: A gifted hunter, though not known for doing any great feats.
929* AdaptationalSexuality: Versions where Zeus shapeshifts into Artemis to deceive her came later than those where they he just seduced her, but then again there's no "right" or "wrong" version in mythology.
930* BadassNormal: An excellent huntress who is merely a mortal princess. [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] in the versions where she is a nymph.
931* BedTrick: In some versions, Zeus disguised himself as either Artemis or Apollo (rare) in order to sleep with her.
932* BlackComedyRape: The playright Amphis wrote ''Callisto'' based on this myth, which was a ''[[PlayedForLaughs comedy]]''. In his version, Zeus disguises himself as Artemis, rapes the unsuspecting Callisto and leaves her pregnant. When Artemis questions her about her pregnancy, Callisto replies to her face that she got her pregnant.
933* BlamingTheVictim: Both Hera and Artemis did this, depending on version, transforming Callisto into a bear and/or straight up ''killing'' her, Hera is angry that Zeus had cheated on her again, Artemis is furious that Callisto had lost her virginity, never mind that it was beyond her control. Their anger comes off as somewhat more understandable in the versions where Callisto willingly slept with Zeus.
934* BreakTheCutie: Is possibly raped by Zeus, loses Artemis' favour and trust, is expelled from the group, is transformed into a bear by either Artemis or Hera and in the end is killed, possibly by her former patroness or her own son, not recognizing her.
935* BrokenBird: After everything goes to hell.
936* ButchLesbian: A huntress who is romantically and sexually interested in women.
937* CelibateHeroine: She was supposed to be this, but...
938* ChildByRape: Her son Arcas.
939* CosmicPlaything: For Zeus, Artemis and Hera. Nothing goes Callisto's way.
940* DependingOnTheWriter: Almost every detail of her story, the most notable whether Zeus simply slept with her, or transformed into Artemis to deceive her.
941* DisproportionateRetribution: Even when you take into account the versions where she willingly had sex with Zeus (and was thus not a rape victim), Artemis and Hera still turned her into a bear, and perhaps killed her. Artemis's anger is probably the most justified (in situations where she wasn't raped) as Callisto ''did'' break an oath to her.
942* DoubleStandardRapeDivineOnMortal: Her rape at the hands of Zeus, although some versions say the sex was consensual or that it was rape by deception as he shapeshifted into Artemis to seduce her.
943* ForcedTransformation: One of the few consistent elements across versions is that Callisto is turned into a bear, either by Artemis for losing her virginity, Hera for sleeping with Zeus, or Zeus wanting to hide her from Hera.
944* GirlOnGirlIsHot: Just count all the Renaissance paintings featuring Artemis!Zeus being ''very'' intimate with Callisto.
945* HomosexualReproduction: In one version, Callisto doesn't suspect a thing and when she falls pregnant, she 100% buys it that Artemis got her pregnant. To be fair to her, although a male god, Zeus ''did'' impregnate Callisto in female form.
946* IHaveYouNowMyPretty: In one version Zeus actually reveals himself to Callisto after having cornered her; Callisto cannot escape, and he forces himself on her.
947* KickTheDog: Zeus, Artemis and/or Hera tend to end up doing this to her in her tale, and pretty hard. Zeus rapes a companion of his daughter and brings about an unraveling of her entire life, Hera punishes a woman already in dire straits because her husband raped her, and Artemis provides no sympathy whatsoever to a previously-valued companion.
948* JustSoStory: One explanation for the Ursa Major and Ursa Minor constellations is that Zeus barely prevented Arcas from unwittingly committing {{Matricide}} by whisking them both into the sky as stars.
949* {{Matricide}}: In some versions she is killed by Arcas, the son she had by Zeus, who does not realize that this bear is his long lost mother.
950* MeaningfulName: Her name translates to "the most beautiful one."
951* MissConception: Some versions have Callisto genuinely believing that Artemis had impregnated her...in spite of Artemis being female, which casts doubt that Artemis' followers had much of anything resembling a sexual education (...which would be unsurprising given they were also all virgins). Amphis' play on her tale even had it PlayedForLaughs.
952* NatureAbhorsAVirgin: Callisto loses her virginity via rape (possibly by fraud) and then loses her goddess' favor, her social circle, [[ForcedTransformation gets turned into a bear]], and is later killed by her unwitting son. Callisto's tale has '''got''' to be pretty up there in severity of this trope.
953* PetTheDog: Deplorable as Zeus generally comes off during this tale, he does do this in the version where he prevents Arcas from [[{{Matricide}} unknowingly killing his mother]] [[ForcedTransformation (now a bear)]] by turning them both into the Ursa Major and Minor constellations just before Callisto would be killed.
954* PlatonicLifePartners: Some versions paint her relationship with Artemis like this. The ones with Zeus' {{Bed Trick}} on the other hand...
955* RapeAsDrama: In Ovid, Callisto actually realizes at the last moment that this is not Diana; but it's too late by this point, and Jupiter simply overpowers her while she fights him off in vain. Later, when the real Diana finds her, Callisto panics for a moment, thinking it's Jupiter again.
956* SuperGullible: The joke in Amphis's version is that Callisto appears to genuinely believe she slept with Artemis despite a) Artemis being famously completely chaste, and b) Callisto having gotten pregnant from the encounter.
957* SoBeautifulItsACurse: Her beauty only brought her unwanted attraction...[[CosmicPlaything and then it got much worse]].
958* TokenLesbian: She is the only female character ''in the entire Greek and Roman mythology'' to show sexual affection toward women (at least, explicitly so), and [[DependingOnTheWriter even that depends on version]].
959[[/folder]]
960
961[[folder:Cassandra]]
962A seer and the sister of Hector who was cursed by Apollo in shady circumstances. The curse was that no one would ever believe her visions of the future. She is the trope namer for TheCassandra and CassandraTruth.
963----
964* BelatedHappyEnding: In death, she is accepted into the Elysian Fields due to her piety.
965* BreakTheCutie: It starts with Apollo deciding to curse her [[DisproportionateRetribution for not letting him force himself on her]] and keeps going south from there.
966* BrokenBird: Cassandra was (possibly) raped, cursed, and was stuck on the losing side of the Trojan War, already aware of its ultimate outcome and her fate. She was eventually taken as a slave by Agamemnon and killed alongside him by Clytemnestra.
967* TheCassandra[=/=]CassandraTruth: Duh, she's the {{Trope Namer|s}}.
968** Subverted in the ''Orestiada'' -- she begins to describe the bloody story of the city of Argos and Agamemnon's lineage ''as clearly as if she had been there'', which is impossible for obvious reasons. This prompts the initially unconvinced [[GreekChorus Argos Elders]] to have sympathy for her plight.
969* ChildByRape: In Pausanias' ''Description of Greece'', Agamemnon impregnated Cassandra after raping her (as a concubine/war prize, she didn't have the ability to say no and thus couldn't consent). Cassandra became pregnant with and possibly birthed twin boys Agamemnon named Pelops and Teledamus...who were then [[DeathOfAChild murdered]] by Aegisthus.
970* CosmicPlaything: Dear Gods, absolutely ''nothing'' ever seems to go right for this poor girl!
971* DependingOnTheWriter: Some versions say that Cassandra was a priestess of Apollo and made a chastity vow as a part of said devotion, with Apollo cursing her when she broke it. Others state that she and Apollo were lovers and he cursed her when she either dumped him or cheated on him. In others, see RapeAsDrama.
972* DisproportionateRetribution: Uhm, where do we start...?
973* KickTheDog: Like you wouldn't believe.
974* MadOracle: What people saw her as. Later she becomes this for real.
975* TheOphelia: ''Specially'' in the ''Orestiada'', due to the TraumaCongaLine she endured in the Trojan War.
976* RapeAsDrama: In some myths, Apollo almost raped her and refusing him is believed to be how she was cursed in the first place. In all of them, Ajax the Lesser ''successfully'' raped her.
977* SanitySlippage: Around the time the Trojan War rolled in and her brother died, she pretty much snapped.
978* {{Seers}}: She was a gifted prophet, but nobody believed her predictions. Some say that she got the ability from having her ears licked by snakes (most sources say that she could only hear the future, not see it); others said that Apollo gave her her powers as a gift.
979* TraumaCongaLine: Her entire life is one traumatic event after another. By the end of it all, [[SuicideByCop she actually lets someone kill her just to get out of it]].
980* WorldsMostBeautifulWoman: Her beauty was even compared to ''Aphrodite!''
981[[/folder]]
982
983[[folder:Clytemnestra]]
984Half-sister to Helen, wife of Agamemnon and mother of Iphigenia, Electra, Chrysothemis and Orestes, whom she kills in revenge for the sacrifice of their daughter Iphigenia [[DependingOnTheWriter or allows to be killed by her lover Aegisthus]], who has his own vendetta. Killed in revenge by her son Orestes.
985----
986* AbusiveMom: Towards Electra.
987* CycleOfRevenge: She's smack dab in the middle of a particularly nasty cycle, killing her husband in revenge for his killing their daughter, and then being in turn killed by their son Orestes, who then had to seek absolution by court to break the cycle.
988* DependingOnTheAuthor: Her personality: {{Creator/Homer}} depicts her as weak and submissive while {{Creator/Aeschylus}} portrays her as ruthless and manipulative. Her motives also change: Most commonly she's said to have wanted revenge for Iphigenia, but Homer never mentions Iphigenia (though he might have mentioned her by the name Iphianessa; in any case, Homer didn't have her sacrificed, as she's one of the daughters whose hand Agamemnon offers to Achilles) and merely has Clytemnestra become morally corrupted by Aegisthus (who had his own grudge against Agamemnon- it's a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aegisthus very long story]]), and in some versions of the myth, she had a previous husband whom Agamemnon killed.
989* EvilMatriarch: To Electra.
990* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Played with; while she's manipulative and vengeful, there isn't much evidence of her being a bad ruler.
991* TragicVillain: She is pushed into villainy after the death of her daughter and ultimately her act of revenge comes to bite her later on.
992* UnholyMatrimony: With Aegisthus.
993* UnwantedSpouse: In some versions of the myth Agamemnon killed her first husband and forced her into marrying him.
994* WomanScorned: In ''{{Theatre/Electra}}'' she cites Agamemnon taking on Cassandra as his concubine as one of the reasons for murdering him.
995* WouldHurtAChild: She murdered Agamemnon and Cassandra's children.
996[[/folder]]
997
998[[folder:Creon]]
999Regent King of Thebes between Laius and Oedipus, then again following Oedipus' exile and the deaths of his sons. Brother-in-law to Laius via his sister Jocasta, Uncle/brother-in-law to Oedipus also via Jocasta, and father-in-law of Heracles via his daughter Megara. Plays a major role in both ''Theatre/OedipusRex'' and ''Theatre/{{Antigone}}''.
1000----
1001* AntiVillain: In ''Antigone'', where he rules Thebes with an iron fist, but he keeps his word and is surprisingly willing to listen to reason, and he is only actively malicious towards people who've committed a crime. When he realizes the unnecessary death his authoritarianism has caused, he is horrified.
1002* BreakTheHaughty: Creon's arrogance leads to tragedy. He ends up lording his own judgement over that of his son, a seer, and ''the gods'' until that judgement leaves him without a son or wife. His despair is so great that he's little more than a "breathing corpse."
1003* TheCreon: The TropeNamer, if not also TropeMaker and TropeCodifier. He defends himself against Oedipus' accusations of treason by saying quite frankly that he's not interested in being king, finding it much more pleasant to be the one with the power and not the responsibility.
1004--> "Would any mortal choose a troubled reign of terrors, rather than secure repose, if the same power were given him? As for me, I have no natural craving for the name of king, preferring to do kingly deeds, and so thinks every sober-minded man. Now all my needs are satisfied through thee, and I have naught to fear; but were I king, my acts would oft run counter to my will. How could a title then have charms for me above the sweets of boundless influence? I am not so infatuate as to grasp the shadow when I hold the substance fast. Now all men cry me Godspeed! wish me well, and every suitor seeks to gain my ear, if he would hope to win a grace from thee. Why should I leave the better, choose the worse? That were sheer madness, and I am not mad. No such ambition ever tempted me, nor would I have a share in such intrigue."
1005* DesecratingTheDead: He orders that Polynices go unburied and his body be left to rot as punishment for his treason of attacking the city to claim kingship. The plot of ''Antigone'' follows Polynices eponymous sister working against Creon to see that Polynices is buried.
1006* DisasterDominoes: Creon does seem like he is doing what he thinks is best for Thebes, but things just keep getting worse and worse until he loses everything.
1007* EvilUncle:
1008** Subverted to Oedipus, who thinks this, even accusing him of working with the BlindSeer Tiresias to frame Oedipus and overthrow him. Creon, however, has no designs on the throne. In fact, Oedipus and Creon do not even realize [[ParentalIncest the nature of their nephew/uncle relationship]] until much later.
1009** Played straight toward Antigone. However, unlike many other examples, this is due to his treating Antigone like he would any other who broke the law.
1010* GenreSavvy: Though stubborn, he (unlike Oedipus) is smart enough to ultimately realize that Tiresias is always right and he has to reverse his actions before it is too late. Unfortunately, it still [[AcquittedTooLate comes too late]].
1011* TheGoodChancellor: He serves as one for Laius, Oedipus, Oedipus' twin sons Eteocles and Polynices, and then finally Eteocles young son Laodamas. He always does what he thinks is best for Thebes (even though it doesn't always work out) and has no designs on becoming king himself.
1012* HorribleJudgeOfCharacter: Many of Creon's mistakes come from the time he wastes misinterpreting the motives of everyone around him rather than any malice or ill intent. He doesn't understand that Antigone is appealing to a different law than the one he's upholding, he unjustly accuses the Sentry and then Tiresias of being corrupt, and when Haemon tries to persuade him to think again, he gets upset about the fact that his own son is daring to question his judgement.
1013* IdiotBall: After being much more reasonable and even outright GenreSavvy in previous tales, he does not seem to realize how bad of an idea it is to go against the will of the gods in ''Antigone'', despite pretty much every other Greek myth being about how bad of idea it is.
1014* IDidWhatIHadToDo: What he genuinely believes about his second regency. He is trying to hold Thebes and his cursed family together by upholding the law.
1015* MirrorCharacter: Creon's story very closely mirrors that of the title character of prequel work ''Oedipus Rex''. Both start out as kings on top of the world, but their stubborn pursuit of their goals despite the advice of those around them causes their entire lives to come apart.
1016* PyrrhicVictory: Creon succeeds in having Antigone executed for her crimes, but loses everything he cares about in the process.
1017* TragicHero: As with so many Greek heroes. He is upholding the law by executing Antigone, but by not realizing how unjust it is, doing so ultimately costs him everything he cares about.
1018* WellIntentionedExtremist: He believes he is doing what is best for Thebes by upholding the law and having Antigone, his niece and foster daughter, executed. No one, not an always-right BlindSeer, his own son, nor the ''gods themselves'' can convince him otherwise.
1019[[/folder]]
1020
1021[[folder:Daedalus]]
1022An inventor and craftsman of both Cretan and Attic legend, who is most renowned for building the labyrinth of Crete to contain the Minotaur and for fashioning artificial wings allowing himself and his son Icarus to fly away from Crete after losing the favor of Minos, for whom the labyrinth was built.
1023----
1024* AdaptationalNationality: Originally Cretan by birth, the Athenians later made him an Athenian living in exile in Crete.
1025* BestServedCold: Managed to get even with Minos for everything by arranging for the Cretan king to be boiled alive.
1026* BestialityIsDepraved: Daedalus did not suffer an impulse to bestiality himself, but he played a key role in the birth of the Minotaur by providing Pasiphae with the disguise of a cow (one of his [[{{Golem}} living statues]]) that she used to trick the Cretan bull into impregnating her.
1027* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Daedalus' son Icarus. While in classical times Icarus was used as an icon of hubris (hence flying too high spelled his doom), later interpreters like to see in Icarus a figure of ambition and pushing the limits of human capability and technology.
1028* DivineParentage: Certain lineages trace his ancestry to Erechtheus or Erechthonius (who may or may not be the same king of Athens, [[DependingOnTheWriter depending on who you talk to]]), which makes him a distant descendant of Hephaestus and Gaia.
1029* DrivenByEnvy: One of the main reasons that he fled Athens for Crete was the attempted murder of his nephew for rivaling and even outdoing him in invention while still under Daedalus' tutelage. (Athena saved his nephew by turning him into a partridge, a bird [[{{Foil}} allegedly too clever]] for the risky high-flying that later killed Icarus).
1030* GadgeteerGenius: The wings of wax and feathers he made to escape Minos were frankly old hat compared to his ability to making ''moving statues'' somehow.
1031* {{Golem}}: A UrExample. A lesser known feature of Daedalus' renown was his ability to craft living statues and sentient gold. Some of these statues had to be tied down lest they up and wander away. It is known that he never quite managed to imbue them with the gift of speech, though.
1032* ItsPersonal: Minos imprisoned Daedalus, forcing him to escape on wax wings which resulted in Icarus dying. It does not get more personal than that.
1033* OutlivingOnesOffspring: Daedalus had to helplessly watch as his son Icarus ignored his instructions and ultimately plummeted to his doom.
1034* RoyalBlood: Daedalus was the grandson of Athenian king Erechtheus via his father Metion and was part of the effort to drive out his uncle King Pandion II (son of Erechtheus' brother and successor to the throne Cecrops I), with Metion's other sons Eupalamus and Sicyon.
1035* SomethingOnlyTheyWouldSay: Minos was so incensed at Daedalus for turning against him that he spent the rest of his life chasing him down, not overtly with an army but in secret. Minos would travel from city to city offering a very complicated riddle that only Daedalus could solve, and ultimately succeeded.
1036* WriterOnBoard: Evidence indicates that Daedalus originated in the legends of Crete before the Athenians got ahold of him and gave him an Athenian birth and backstory.
1037
1038[[/folder]]
1039
1040[[folder:The Danaides]]
1041Among the less well-known denizens of Tartarus, these are the fifty daughters of Danaus. They were supposed to be married to the fifty sons of Aegyptus (their father's twin brother). Danaus didn't want the marriages to go through, but feared starting a war if he prevented them, so he gave all his daughters knives and instructed them to kill their husbands on their wedding nights. All but one followed through, and so all but one wound up condemned to Tartarus, where their punishment was to carry water in sieves to fill up a bath with which to wash away their sins, but either the jugs, the basin, or both had holes so the task would never be completed. Danaus himself was killed by Lynceus, the only one of Aegyptus's sons to be spared.
1042----
1043* AndIMustScream: Part and parcel for those punished in Tartarus, the Danaides were condemned to constantly repeat a meaningless task forever.
1044* {{Asshole Victim}}s: Given that they were noteworthy for having ended up in [[{{Hell}} Tartarus]], this is a given.
1045* DidntThinkThisThrough: Despite Danaus's extreme measures to prevent the Danaides's first marriages to the sons of Aegyptus, he later ends up...having trouble finding suitors for his many daughters, causing him to offer their hands in marriage as prizes in a foot race.
1046* KissingCousins: Their husbands were the sons of their father's twin brother. This may be why they were punished so harshly, as they effectively committed kinslaying.
1047* MassiveNumberedSiblings: There are fifty of them.
1048* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: Subverted. Hypermnestra spares her husband's life because he respected her wish to remain a virgin. Her father threw her to the Argive Courts for her disobedience, but Aphrodite saves her. Later, Hypermnestra is the only one among her sisters who goes to Elysium, with the rest eternally punished in Tartarus.
1049* PerfectlyArrangedMarriage: One out of fifty isn't a great batting average, but nonetheless -- Lynceus respected Hypermnestra's desire to remain a virgin, and the two would later have a fruitful marriage that would found the Danaid dynasty.
1050* RedemptionEarnsLife: Hypermnestra was the sole Danaid to spare her husband, and was spared from both her angry father killing her (Aphrodite saved her) and from her sisters' fate in Tartarus.
1051* TheSmurfettePrinciple: Okay, there's forty-nine of them, but they're all more or less treated as TheDividual and they have the ''highly'' dubious honor of being the only named mortal women with an explicitly described punishment in Tartarus. (Though there were implicitly many unnamed ones and ones whose torments were never described.)
1052* TilMurderDoUsPart: The reason they're in Tartarus is that all but one of them murdered their husbands.
1053* TokenGoodTeammate: Hypermnestra, who opted to let her husband, Lynceus, live when she learned he respected her desire to remain a virgin. She ended up founding the Danaid dynasty with Lynceus and escaped the punishment of her sisters.
1054[[/folder]]
1055
1056[[folder:Deianira]]
1057Deianira was Herakles's third and last mortal wife. After their marriage, they come across a river and Nessus offers to ferry her across. However, once he reaches the other shore he tries to rape her. Herakles shoots him with poisoned arrows. In a final gambit before he dies, Nessus convinces Deianira that his blood is a love potion. She takes a vial of it, and he tells her to smear it on her husband's clothes if he ever proves unfaithful. She does just that, but it doesn't end well. The sister of Meleager and a princess of Calydon.
1058----
1059* DrivenToSuicide: After she finds out that she actually killed her husband.
1060* GreenEyedMonster: It was shockingly easy for her to goaded by her dying, would-be rapist about fears over her husband's faithfulness (...who is the reason the would-be rapist was just would-be). Granted, Herakles' second most famous trait after his SuperStrength was that he ReallyGetsAround.
1061* MeaningfulName: Her name roughly translates to "Husband Destroyer".
1062* MurderTheHypotenuse: Mentions it, but refuses to murder her husband's other woman.
1063* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: After she finds out that she killed her husband.
1064* TooDumbToLive: Let's just say that it was...unwise to trust the guy that Herakles just killed for trying to ''rape her''.
1065[[/folder]]
1066
1067[[folder:Diomedes]]
1068A fierce Greek warrior and king of Argos who fought at the Trojan War. Not to be confused with the other Diomedes, owner of the man-eating horses that were one of Heracles's Labors.
1069----
1070* TheAce: Diomedes was the second greatest warrior at Troy, surpassed only by Achilles -- though Hector's brother says Diomedes is the better warrior and greatest overall out of all the Greek forces -- and only equaled by Hector and Ajax the Greater, he was wise and intelligent, young, handsome, well respected, brought the third largest force to Troy and was the only full mortal to get away with wounding Gods. He was favorably compared to even Herakles.
1071* BadassNormal: He was no demigod and had no divine lineage. Yet he managed to do something that very few demigods managed it: defeat a god in open battle.
1072* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: Defeating ''two'' of the gods. On top of that, he did it in the same day, and those gods were Aphrodite, who was trying to save her son, Aeneas, from Diomedes. After Apollo made him back off, Diomedes ended up having to face off against Ares himself, who was there to punish him for wounding Aphrodite. Athena liked him enough to aid him against Ares, and he actually wounded the god of war.
1073* TheDreaded: The Trojans were scared of him a lot more than they were Achilles. Beating the god of war in single combat, with no one aware Athena herself is helping you, tends to do that.
1074* FireBreathingWeapon: Both his [[LuckilyMyShieldWillProtectMe shield]] and CoolHelmet could expel a stream of flame.
1075* GeniusBruiser: When he realizes Ares is fighting alongside the Trojans, he quickly pulls back his troops, not out of fear but because he knew that they couldn't hope to stand against Ares. Only with Athena's encouragement and a promise of her aid does he take the field and defeat Ares. He also frequently shows himself a pragmatic warrior on the battlefield.
1076* HumbleHero: Though he has his moments, Diomedes avoids committing the sin of hubris more than any other character in the Literature/TheIliad. He's able to handle insults from Agamemnon without lashing out like Achilles, and though he attacks Ares and Aphrodite with Athena's blessing, he backs off from Apollo and later Hector when Zeus sends thunder as a warning Diomedes to leave. He also declares that regardless of any current setbacks, Troy will fall BecauseDestinySaysSo and YouCantFightFate, showing his humility as a mortal before the power of fate and the gods.
1077* LaserGuidedKarma: Aphrodite got revenge on him for attacking her by having Diomedes's wife take his best friend's son as a lover. When Diomedes finally returned home, he was banished from his own kingdom.
1078* MeaningfulName: His name means "god-cunning" referencing his intelligence and wisdom.
1079* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Usually was the one to give the best advice during meetings of the Greek generals.
1080** When Agamemnon insults him for taking so long to get his men into battle, he tolerates it and rebukes his companion who tries to defend him, reminding him that Agamemnon is their commander, and that he will get all the glory if Troy falls or be blamed for failing to capture the city.
1081** Nevertheless, he still calls Agamemnon out on his bad decisions, namely trying to bribe Achilles into rejoining the fight. Diomedes correctly points out that doing so has only made things worse by encouraging Achilles's pride.
1082* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: Like many of the Greek generals, he was a member of nobility, as his father was Tydeus, king of Argos before him, who was one of [[Literature/TheThebaid the Seven Against Thebes]]. However, before the Trojan War, Diomedes had already made a name for himself by avenging his father's death, crushing Thebes when he was just a teenager alongside the other sons of the Seven Against Thebes. He was the most experienced of all the Greek generals despite being the youngest as well.
1083[[/folder]]
1084
1085[[folder:Electra]]
1086Daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra. Plots her death in revenge for the death of Agamemnon. She's the focus of ''Theatre/{{Electra}}'' by Sophocles and an eponymous play by Euripides. Also appears in ''Theatre/TheOresteia''
1087----
1088* AntagonisticOffspring: Towards Clytemnestra
1089* BigBrotherWorship: Towards Orestes, but it is entirely contingent on the fact that she thinks he will kill Clytemnestra one day. If he chose to stay happily in exile for the rest of his life she'd probably disown him, but as her only ally and potential saviour, he is the recipient of all her love.
1090* BrokenBird: Due to the years of mistreatment on the hands of Clytemnestra and Aegisthus.
1091* ChildSupplantsParent: Electra hated her mother for her abusive nature and murdering her father, and encouraged Orestes to go forward with Clytemnestra's murder.
1092* {{Determinator}}: Relentlessly holds onto her hatred at her own expense until her father's murderers are brought to justice.
1093* FatalFlaw: Her desire for revenge and her obsession with her brother, Orestes, and her father, Agamemnon.
1094* {{Foil}}: Chrysothemis towards Electra
1095* HotBlooded: She gets it from her father
1096* RebelliousPrincess: Her behavior under the rule of Clytemnestra and Aegisthus.
1097* SealedRoomInTheMiddleOfNowhere: What Aegisthus plans to do to her.
1098* TheUnfavourite: Because unlike Chrysothemis, she openly rebels against her abusive mother.
1099[[/folder]]
1100
1101[[folder:Eurystheus]]
1102Eurystheus was the King of Mycenae and the cousin Heracles had to serve under for a decade to atone for the crimes he committed while possessed by the Goddess Hera, ordering him to performing the famed Twelve Labours.
1103----
1104* ButtMonkey: The myths depict him as a pathetic weakling, he's constantly humiliated by running and hiding whenever Heracles brings back a dangerous monster, he lives in terror when Artemis threatens him for forcing Heracles to capture the Golden Hind, he gets his ass kicked when he tries to kill Heracles's children, and [[DependingOnTheWriter either Heracles's son Hyllus or nephew Iolaus]] finally puts him out of his misery.
1105* DirtyCoward: He was an arrogant, boastful prick when Heracles had to be subservient to him. However, Heracles revealed his true colors by unleashing many of the creatures he captured as part of the Labours, such as the Erymanthian Boar, the Cretan Bull and Cerberus. Every time, Eurystheus ran away screaming in terror and hid in a giant brass pot.
1106* EvilIsPetty: After Heracles successfully completes several of his labors, Eurystheus sends him to clean Augeas' Stables figuring that if he can't kill him, he'll at least embarrass him by making a Son of a God do menial work. [[OutGambitted Hercules figured a way around it]].
1107* GeneralFailure: He leads an army to try and kill Heracles's children, gets his ass kicked, and finally suffers a KarmicDeath either from [[DependingOnTheWriter Heracles's son Hyllus or his nephew Iolaus]].
1108* GreenEyedMonster: He was jealous of Heracles' power, abilities and fame.
1109* ImpossibleTask: The general idea of the labors he ordered Heracles to perform, but what's impossible for most of us is dramatically different from what's impossible for Heracles.
1110* JerkAss: He was a real asshole to Heracles when he was his servant.
1111* OffWithHisHead: Some say he was ultimately decapitated by Hercules’ son Hyllus.
1112* RevengeByProxy: After Heracles ascends to Olympus, Eurystheus tries to kill off Heracles' many children in revenge for [[RunningGag all of the terrified hiding-in-a-jar he caused him]]. This ends up costing him and his sons their lives as they fail in attacking Athens where Heracles' children took refuge.
1113* RulesLawyer: He did this to give Heracles grief during the Twelve Labors by refusing to credit him for some of them. He wouldn't accept Heracles's killing the Lernean Hydra because Iolaus helped him, and refused to accept his cleaning the Augean Stables [[DependingOnTheWriter either because he got "help" from the rivers he rerouted through the stables or because he'd arranged with King Augeas to get a share of the royal herds as payment]].
1114* RunningGag: Every time Heracles brought back some sort of dangerous creature during the Labours, Eurystheus would run and hide in a large brass pot, screaming in terror until Heracles took the creature away.
1115* TheWrongfulHeirToTheThrone: Subverted. Heracles was originally set to become King of Mycenae, but Hera tricked Zeus into decreeing that Eurystheus should be the king instead. As their profiles show, Heracles would have made a ''far'' more impressive king than Eurystheus turned out to be.
1116[[/folder]]
1117
1118[[folder:Galanthis]]
1119Maid to Alcmene, she was present when the latter went into labor with Heracles. Realizing that Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth, was preventing Alcmene from giving birth, she tricked the goddess into thinking the baby had already been born, distracting Eileithyia just enough for Heracles to be born. For deceiving a goddess, she was transformed into a weasel.
1120----
1121* AnimalMotifs: Associated with weasels due to being turned into one after deceiving a goddess.
1122* BatmanGambit: Lies to Eileithyia that Alcmene's already given birth, knowing that Eileithyia would lose her concentration from the shock.
1123* DidYouJustScamCthulhu: Succeeds in tricking the goddess of childbirth into thinking Alcmene had already been born.
1124* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: Seeing how much pain her mistress was in due be being stuck in labor, Galanthis decides to trick Eileithyia so that Aclmene could finally give birth. She was turned into a weasel as punishment.
1125* SelfFulfillingProphecy: Invoked. By telling Eileithyia that Alcmene's child had already been born, Galanthis surprises the goddess enough to break her concentration and allow Alcmene to indeed give birth.
1126* SmallRoleBigImpact: Responsible for Heracles being born. Additionally, her becoming a pet after her transformation started the practice of weasels being kept as household animals.
1127* ThrowTheDogABone: Alcmene was grateful to her for what she did and let her live with the family as a house pet after her transformation. Hecate also later took pity on Galanthis and made the weasel her sacred animal, while Heracles built a sanctuary to Galanthis when he was an adult.
1128[[/folder]]
1129
1130[[folder:The Horatii]]
1131Roman triplets and great warriors. Most famous for defending a bridge against the Etruscan forces.
1132----
1133* AndThisIsFor: Publius said he killed the first two Curiatii for his fallen brothers, but the last one was for Rome.
1134* BadassFamily: These triplets were all legendary warriors.
1135* HeroicVow: The Oath of the Horatii, where they swear an oath to defend Rome before their father. [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oath_of_the_Horatii A famous painting]] in the late-18th century depicted it.
1136* HitAndRunTactics: With his brothers dead and realizing it would be folly to fight the three Curiatii together (even if they were injured), Publius ran from them to kill them as they separated to chase him, unable to keep in step with other as they were differently injured in degree.
1137* MortonsFork: Camilla got to lose someone important to her no matter whether the Horatii or the Curiatii won the fight because she was the Horatii's sister and the fiance of one of the Curiatii. Publius proved unsympathetic to her dilemma.
1138* PatrioticFervor: Publius killed his sister Camilla on the spot for mourning one Rome's fallen enemies, as she was overcome with grief after realizing Publius killed her fiance since she was betrothed to one of the Curiatii and gave him a cloak which Publius was wearing while it was blood-stained from his death. Publius gets in trouble for his sororicide, though he manages to get his sentence commuted and his family had to atone for it.
1139* SiblingTeam: The three fought together.
1140* SoleSurvivor: Publius was the only one of the Horatii to survive the combat against the Curiatii.
1141* YouShallNotPass: Their defining legendary moment was preventing the Etruscans from crossing a bridge.
1142[[/folder]]
1143
1144[[folder:Hector]]
1145Paris's brother, and a genuine hero. It's just such a shame he was fighting on the wrong side.
1146----
1147* AdaptationalHeroism: While he fights to defend his home and is definitely ALighterShadeOfGrey than most of his enemies, the original Hector frequently comes off as more of a flawed, prideful AntiHero than the ones you'll find in ''Troy'' or ''Helen of Troy''.
1148* AdaptationalNationality: When Pausanias visited Thebes, Greece, he was shown Hector's tomb and was told the bones had been transported there according to a Delphic oracle. Moses Finley observed that this meant there was an old Greek hero named Hector whose myths predated Homer's poems and even after he was turned into a Trojan the Thebans held onto their hero. A shame he was made Trojan, Achilles and Hector fighting on the same side would have been quite the team.
1149* BadassNormal: Not a demigod, not favored by a god, not washed in a river and given NighInvulnerability, yet he is ''the'' best warrior in Troy, and is only defeated by Achilles.
1150* CombatPragmatist: Hector only attacks Patroclus with a swarm of men, runs like the wind when confronted by Achilles, and only goes out to fight him when he thinks his brother Deiphobus is with him. That being said, he was up against ''Achilles''. He ''knew'' he was outclassed on his own and knew he was going to die if he fought him alone that didn’t stop him from going down fighting when he was forced to.
1151%%* GoodParents
1152* HappilyMarried: With Andromache.
1153* HeroAntagonist: Many regard Hector as the closest thing to one in the ''Iliad'' as he is the most sympathetic main character fighting to protect his nation from foreign invaders... Unfortunately, these foreign invaders happen to be the Greeks.
1154* HonorBeforeReason: Treats Helen with the utmost courtesy and fights to keep her at Troy, despite knowing how utterly insane and self-destructive the latter will turn out to be for literally everyone inside of it.
1155* JerkassBall: Planned to decapitate Patroclus' body in revenge for Patroclus killing his charioteer.
1156* OnlySaneMan: Seems to be the only Trojan other than Cassandra and his wife who realizes that kidnapping Helen was a spectacularly stupid idea that would only end in blood and tears if not rectified immediately. He is certainly the only one with authority who tried to peacefully stop the conflict before it even began by advocating that Helen be sent back to her husband with all the reparations included as an apology for Paris’s actions (or have Paris explain himself to Menelaus in person), too bad for him and Troy that he was overruled by almost everyone else (with Cassandra and his wife being the sole exceptions).
1157* RankScalesWithAsskicking : The commander of Trojan army and their greatest warrior.
1158* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: Unlike the other royals of Troy who stay behind its walls Hector instead rides out and fights among the soliders of Troy and their allies and is a formidable opponent for the Greeks despite being a BadassNormal. In fact it takes Achilles himself to bring the prince down to stop him in a one-sided battle; Hector’s funeral actually briefly halts the war so that both sides can pay their respects as Homer actually describes his funeral ceremony in detail which shows just how much admired and respected Hector was especially in comparison to Paris’s own pitiful murder of Achilles followed by him being KilledOffScreen in the Odyssey.
1159* ShipTease: Despite being married, he gets some of this with Helen. He was always nice and courteous to her, and she herself wished her husband was more like Hector. At his funeral, she even gave a big eulogy about how upset she was at his death and how she essentially had no one else in Troy.
1160* WarriorPrince: Crown Prince of Troy and their champion to boot.
1161[[/folder]]
1162
1163[[folder:Icarus]]
1164----
1165* DeathOfAChild: It is ambiguous on how old he was but all sources agree that he was very young even if he was not a literal child when he died.
1166* DidNotThinkThisThrough: Flying too close to the sun on wax wings is not a good idea. He paid the ultimate price.
1167* DrivenToSuicide: Another interpretation of why Icarus flew too close to the sun. He had lived most of his life imprisoned by a powerful and wrathful king. Minos did chase Daedalus for decades after the escape. Icarus could have foreseen that he would have to live on the run and chose to die on his own terms.
1168* FamousForBeingFamous: He is known for his death and for being the son of the smartest mortal man in classical mythology. There are no other myths about him.
1169* IcarusAllusion: Is the Icarus.
1170* MeaningfulName: Icarus either means reaching for the sky or follower.
1171* {{Pride}}: What ancient Greeks thought caused him to fly to close to the sun. The culprit is most likely just recklessness.
1172* SinsOfTheFather: Some sources indicate that Athena cursed Daedalus for killing his nephew Perdix. Likely not a coincidence that Icarus died by falling.
1173* SpotlightStealingSquad: Almost everyone knows the story of Icarus, the boy who flew too close to the sun. Daedalus is mostly known as Icarus' father.
1174* TooDumbToLive: Refused to listen to his dad and flew too close to the sun, which melted his wings and cause him to fall from the sky and drown.
1175* ValuesDissonance: In antiquity he was an example of the consequences of hubris. In modern times he represents freedom.
1176[[/folder]]
1177
1178[[folder:Iolaus]]
1179Iolaus was Hercules' nephew, squire, and sidekick (and sometimes lover), accompanying him on many of his adventures.
1180----
1181* BigBrotherInstinct: He fought to protect his cousins (Heracles's children) from King Eurystheus. Some myths depict him as the one who finished the wicked king off.
1182* HourOfPower: When Eurystheus tries to kill all of Heracles's children, their cousin Iolaus is either aged or in some myths ''dead''. Either Heracles gets his wife Hebe to restore Iolaus's youth, or Iolaus himself pleads with Hades to return to life for just one day, so he can help his cousins in their battle.
1183* LikeFatherLikeSon: Much like his father Iphicles, Iolaus was a skilled warrior in his own right and accompanied Heracles on some of his military expeditions.
1184* OldSoldier: By the time Heracles ascends to Olympus he's this. He's given his youth back for the day by the Goddess of Youth, Hebe (Heracles' wife) so that he can fight Eurystheus.
1185* SideKick: He was Heracles' squire, and often went with him on his adventures. One of the oldest examples.
1186[[/folder]]
1187
1188[[folder:Iphicles]]
1189Iphicles was Herakles's mortal half-brother, the son of his mortal adoptive father Amphitryon.
1190----
1191* BadassNormal: Iphicles obviously couldn't match Heracles's divine strength or skill, but he was still a fine warrior and a trusted lieutenant to his brother.
1192* BashBrothers: A few sources have him accompanying Heracles on some of his military expeditions, where he is wounded or killed.
1193* LikeFatherLikeSon: Iphicles was a skilled warrior who served as a faithful ally to Heracles. Iphicles' son Iolaus was a similarly brave warrior and had a similar relationship with his uncle.
1194* OvershadowedByAwesome: Iphicles is seen by some modern writers as cowardly and weak, but several sources say that he actually participated in the Calydonian Boar hunt and also accompanied Heracles on some of his military expeditions.
1195[[/folder]]
1196
1197[[folder:Ixion]]
1198Ixion was the king of the Lapiths, who invited his father-in-law to a feast and then murdered him by throwing him into a pit of burning coals and wood in a dispute over a bridal payment. He went mad from his violation of ''xenia'', the Greek custom of SacredHospitality, but the other Greek kings were so disgusted by his actions that they refused to purify him. Ixion eventually fled to Mount Olympus and begged Zeus for mercy. Zeus granted this, but then got suspicious that Ixion was lusting after Hera. To test Ixion, Zeus created a duplicate of Hera out of clouds named Nephele. When Ixion was tricked into laying with her, she bore the race of Centaurs. Zeus was so enraged by Ixion's violation of ''xenia'' and his attempts to rape Hera that he lashed Ixion to a flaming wheel and sent it spinning [[DependingOnTheWriter either through the night sky or through Tartarus]] for the rest of eternity.
1199----
1200* AndIMustScream: Ixion is tied to a flaming wheel that spins for all eternity, either through the sky or through the Underworld.
1201* AssholeVictim: Like most inmates of Tartarus, he was a terrible person in life.
1202* EveryoneHasStandards: While Zeus and company were often JerkassGods, sometimes they also gave mortals like Ixion exactly what they deserved.
1203* LaserGuidedKarma: Zeus gave this in spades to Ixion.
1204* LikeFatherLikeSon: With the obvious exception of Chiron (who wasn't related to the other Centaurs, much less fathered by Ixion), most Centaurs were drunken, violent thugs who never passed up a chance to harass nymphs or human women. Sounds like Ixion's spawn, alright.
1205* {{Pride}}: Ixion acts as though the rules of ''xenia'' don't apply to him, first by murdering his guest and then lusting after his host's wife. For extra pride points, he acted this way when his host was ''the king of the gods''.
1206* TooDumbToLive: First Ixion violates ''xenia'' by killing his father in law. Then he violates it ''again'' by lusting after his own host's wife. Said wife is also the ''queen of the gods''.
1207[[/folder]]
1208
1209[[folder:Jason and the Argonauts]]
1210One of the few mortal heroes of Greek myth. He is famous for assembling the Argonauts, virtually every hero of worth in ancient Greece before Troy, and questing for the Golden Fleece. He is also somewhat infamous for his stupidity in his treatment of the sorceress Medea.
1211----
1212* BadassNormal: Purely mortal and lacking any magical weapons unlike nearly every other Greek Hero. That's only Jason, mind. Several Argonauts have unique powers: Periclymenus is a shapeshifter, Euphemus can WalkOnWater, Lycenus has X-Ray Vision, Mopsus can see the future, Aethalides has... [[WhatKindOfLamePowerIsHeartAnyway really good memory]]... [[DependingOnTheWriter Depends On The Writer]], though; [[SubvertedTrope sometimes]] Jason has [[ThePowerOfLove Erotic Magic]] as [[HeartIsAnAwesomePower his ability]], taught in it by none other than [[LoveGoddess Aphrodite]] herself.
1213* BookEnds: The tales of his heroics truly begins with the Argo. Fittingly then, after all glory had left him, the Argo would be what ends his life entirely.
1214* TheCasanova: In Pindar's account, Jason learned (from none other than LoveGoddess Aphrodite) how to seduce Medea through sorcery and his own charm, leaving her with only eyes for him.
1215* TheChosenOne: Jason is perhaps the only mortal hero to be favored by Hera and was chosen to avenge the killing of a woman in Hera's temple by his uncle Pelias.
1216* DownerEnding: One of the most downers in all of Greek myth thanks to his own stupidity. Jason ends up losing his family, any kingdom he might have had, and spend his last years wandering the early as a lonely beggar before falling asleep under the rotting timber of the Argo, reflecting on past glories, and a piece falls off, killing him.
1217* DwindlingParty: His crew suffers a number of casualties over the course of their voyage, but the losses aren't so bad as they were with, say, Odysseus'.
1218* FallenHero: Started out as the classic RightfulPrinceReturns. Then he was exiled from Thessaly, set his eyes on Glauce, and it all went downhill until he died a beggar.
1219* FatalFlaw: Ambition and bigotry. Jason courted Glauce because the throne of Thessaly was denied to him and he wanted to rule, and he dismissed Medea because she was a) a woman, and b) a barbarian.
1220* AFriendInNeed: Sometime after Jason betrayed Medea, his last heroic act was helping Peleus defeat Queen Astydameia and King Acastus' army so Peleus could get his revenge on them after Astydameia tricked Peleus' first wife, Antigone of Phthia, into committing suicide, then pulled a FalseRapeAccusation on him so that Acastus would try to murder him.
1221* HelpingGrannyCrossTheStreet: He gained Hera's favor by carrying her across a river while she was disguised as an old woman.
1222* HeroOfAnotherStory: Heracles departs from the Argonauts about a third of the way through to look for his missing friend (and possible lover) Hylas. It is usually stated that he was required to return to his labors.
1223* TheQuest: The most famous one from Greek myth guest starring everyone with a name.
1224* StoryBreakerPower: The most likely reason Heracles was written out. Who needs Medea and her magic or any other hero when you have someone that can fight gods?
1225* SuperTeam: The Argonauts may be the UrExample. The exact list tends to vary ranging from forty to fifty heroes. Lists typically include the most famous heroes of Greece alive at the time: Heracles, Orpheus, Atlanta, Meleager, [[Literature/TheIliad Nestor]], Castor and Pollux.
1226* TooDumbToLive: Eager to advance in power and position, Jason abandoned the sorceress Medea. The same sorceress who had been instrumental in obtaining the fleece, defeating a bronze giant, and chopped her own brother to pieces for him. This not only angered her, but angered his patron goddess Hera, '''the goddess of marriage, women and children''', Zeus, the patron of law and oaths, and further the other Olympians for breaking an oath sworn by their names. It did not end well for him.
1227* UngratefulBastard: His treatment of Medea. She gave up everything for him and was the one who made his successes possible, saving his life multiple times in the process. After all this and years of marriage, he divorces her to marry another princess ''and'' claims he owed her nothing, owing only the gods. She disagreed ''and so did the Olympians.''
1228[[/folder]]
1229
1230[[folder:Lucretia]]
1231The epitome of Roman femininity and the reason Romans disliked admitting they had had Kings even well into the time of the Emperors. When a wager was made over who the most virtuous wife in Rome was, spies were sent out and she was found patiently working at her weaving. Shortly thereafter, the Etruscan RoyalBrat Sextus raped her in what may count as one of the [[StupidEvil stupidest]] acts in ancient history. Following this, Lucretia is so shamed that she goes before her husband and family and stabs herself [[ValuesDissonance to remove her shame]]. Her family and all of Rome are outraged at the deed done to a [[ProperLady proper Roman woman]] and respond as [[ARealManIsAKiller proper Roman men]] should.
1232----
1233* DefiledForever: Played with. She thought she was, but her husband had no such thoughts at least according to one version. In any case she is remembered as a heroine of Rome; whether or not it was because her suicide was felt to have "cleansed" her is debatable.
1234* DrivenToSuicide: She was so shamed by her rape that she stabbed herself to remove said shame.
1235* EndOfAnAge: Her story serves as a conclusion to the Roman monarchy and, by extension, the age of mythology as a whole.
1236* MuggingTheMonster: Well, Rome wasn't exactly the [[UsefulNotes/TheGloryThatWasRome most famous]] military power in the history of civilization yet. Still, that kind of thing was not well-advised.
1237* ProperLady: She was considered the epitome of Roman ladyhood.
1238* RapeAsDrama: Her rape and subsequent suicide prompt the Romans to turn against Sextus and his father Tarquinius.
1239* SacredHospitality: Part of the reason the Romans were so furious with Sextus, aside from the obvious, was that he was a guest of Lucrecia and her husband when he raped her.
1240* StuffedIntoTheFridge: Her entire story is about her rape and suicide inspiring her male relatives to overthrow the Roman monarchy.
1241* TextileWorkIsFeminine: The Romans thought so, hence why she wins the 'best wife' contest by being occupied weaving when she's visited.
1242[[/folder]]
1243
1244[[folder:Lycaon]]
1245The tyrant of Arcadia, Lycaon was paid a visit by Zeus. Determined to prove that this was not really a god, Lycaon plotted not only to kill Zeus in his sleep, but to serve him human flesh at dinner. In punishment for this, Lycaon was transformed in the first werewolf, so that his outside might reflect what he had been on the inside all along.
1246----
1247* ZeroPercentApprovalRating: Hated by his people; this is one of the reasons why he sets out to prove to them that Zeus is not really paying them a visit.
1248* {{Expy}}: Started out as one of Tantalus. By the time of the Roman versions, and especially Ovid's take on the myth, he's become a rather different character -- a barbarous tyrant to Tantalus' wannabe EvilGenius.
1249* FirstOfItsKind: The first werewolf.
1250* ForcedTransformation: Transformed into a wolf in punishment for his savagery.
1251* FreudianExcuse: According to some accounts, Callisto, who was raped by Zeus and then punished for it by Artemis by ForcedTransformation, was his daughter, which may explain his hatred of Zeus.
1252* GruesomeGrandparent: Some takes on the story has his grandson be the person he cooks, rather than his son.
1253* ImAHumanitarian: He not only serves human flesh to Zeus, but dines on it himself.
1254* OffingTheOffspring: Depending on the version of the myth, Lycaon serves Zeus a prisoner -- or one of his own sons/grandsons (usually the WhiteSheep of the family).
1255* ReallyGetsAround: Has fifty sons, forty-nine of whom are as bad as he is.
1256* WouldHurtAChild: In one version, he sacrifices a baby on Zeus's altar to see how his guest will react.
1257[[/folder]]
1258
1259[[folder:Menelaus]]
1260The King of Sparta and Helen's husband.
1261----
1262* CurbStompBattle: Beats Paris in single combat. He would've killed him too, if Aphrodite hadn't stepped in.
1263* SillyReasonForWar: ''Actually'', [[SubvertedTrope not the case]] when examined a bit more closely. Menelaus herds together the other former suitors of Helen to get her back not just because some punk ran off with his wife and [[HonorBeforeReason they promised to preserve his marriage]], but because she was actually "Helen of Sparta" before the whole Trojan War happened and so his marriage to her was his claim to the Spartan throne, making his Trojan War also a prevention of a SuccessionCrisis.
1264* TokenGoodTeammate: One of the few members of the House of Atreus who isn't a revenge/power-hungry madman.
1265* YoungestChildWins: He escapes the curse on the House of Atreus and lives happily ever after with Helen.
1266[[/folder]]
1267
1268[[folder:Midas]]
1269The King of Phrygia, and the [[TropeNamers origin of the phrase]] "MidasTouch". While we all know his wish to turn everything he touched to gold and how it backfired on him, in a lesser known myth, he judges a contest for Apollo and again shows poor judgement.
1270----
1271* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: What he wished for; the ability to turn everything he touches to gold. What he got; the ability to turn ''[[GoneHorriblyRight everything]]'' he touches into gold, including food and water and even his own daughter! At least it didn’t end up being permanent.
1272* BlessedWithSuck: Turning anything you touch into gold sounds great until you have to eat. However unlike most examples of this trope Midas was successfully able to get it removed.
1273* DoNotTauntCthulhu: He [[DownplayedTrope got off surprisingly easy]] compared to Apollo's other victims, but by insulting his musical skills (when Apollo is the ''god of music''), he gets his ears turned into donkey ears.
1274* ForcedTransformation: For claiming Apollo (the god of music) was bad at music during a contest, Apollo said he must have the ears of an ass. Right after, Midas grew donkey ears. As stated above he got off easy.
1275* MidasTouch: The TropeNamer and perhaps most famous example. He made a deal with Dionysius that everything he touches would turn to gold. He got what he asked for at his expense. He later lost this power by washing his hands in the river Pactolus -- this was a JustSoStory since the Pactolus River had reserves of electrum at one point.
1276[[/folder]]
1277
1278[[folder:Niobe]]
1279A queen of Thebes who made the mistake of boasting she was better than Leto since she had 14 children: seven sons and seven daughters compared to Leto's two: Apollo and Artemis. The twins quickly retaliated by killing all of her children despite pleas to spare at least one. [[note]]In some versions of the myth, they do spare one of each, which no longer gives Niobe any reason to boast.[[/note]] Her husband was either killed for swearing revenge or committed suicide. Eventually, she was turned to stone by the gods in an effort to make her stop crying. Her children's bodies remained unburied for nine days because Zeus had turned every citizen of Thebes to stone despite pleas for mercy. All in all, one of the most tragic figures in Greek mythology.
1280----
1281* BlasphemousBoast: Her crime of comparing herself to Leto.
1282* CurbStompBattle: Her husband in some versions of the tale tries to avenge his children against Apollo. Apollo of course just kills him with his arrows easily.
1283* DisproportionateRetribution: Might as well be the poster child for this trope. Sadly, there were several others who suffered as much as she did if not more.
1284* HistoryRepeats: In the version where one of Niobe's children do get spared (Chloris gets to live), she ends up marrying Neleus and having many children by him...then Herakles goes to Neleus asking to be absolved for killing Iphitus in a madness, Neleus refused, and Herakles does as Apollo did by killing him and all of his sons save for one in retaliation (Nestor, who just wasn't there at the time). Poor Chloris...though at least there's no tale of her bereavement after almost all of her kids were killed, so she's presumed to have not entirely shared her mother's fate.
1285* KickTheDog: Killing her children...perhaps barely passable. Turning everyone in the city to stone is just plain cruel.
1286* InelegantBlubbering: She sobbed over her many dead children so much that the gods themselves thought they should turn her to stone to quiet her down.
1287* JustSoStory: Niobe being [[TakenForGranite turned to stone]] wasn't just some godlike-action for the gods to do to her: the story explains why Mount Sipylus, the place Niobe was turned to stone at, has a rock formation which looks a woman's face and "weeps" whenever it rains due to the rainwater going through its limestone.
1288* MercyKill: Niobe was [[TakenForGranite turned to stone]] to end her nigh-incapacitating (she was said to have not had any sustenance for an entire nine days after her children's deaths) bereavement. Of course, [[JustSoStory since Mount Sipylus has a cliff which resembles a woman's face that seem to "weep" whenever it rains]], one could speculate that being turned to stone wasn't truly her end...
1289* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: The gods themselves upon realizing they maybe they went a tad too far, what with the stench of rotting corpses and her incessant mourning, buried the children themselves and turned her to stone to try and shut her up.
1290* PapaWolf: Her husband gets points for ''trying'' to be this in some variants of Niobe's story, but since he was up against Apollo, [[CurbStompBattle he just ended up another warning mark of the disparity between mortals and gods]].
1291* SayYourPrayers: The versions that have Chloris survive the massacre of her siblings have that be because she prayed to Leto.
1292* SinsOfOurFathers: For her blasphemy, Apollo and Artemis killed her children, not her.
1293* TakenForGranite: Her demise, [[MercyKill to end her wailing and suffering]]. Apparently, [[JustSoStory this explained a unique-looking rock formation at Mount Sipylus]].
1294* UndeathlyPallor: {{Invoked|Trope}}. In some versions, one of Niobe's children are spared an immediate demise from Artemis and Apollo, namely Chloris. She's said to have had her skin become uncannily pale out of the horror of her siblings' deaths and her name means something to the tune of "greenish-yellow", "pale green", "pale", or "pallid". However, the point is she is ''not'' dead (though certainly rather associated with the concept...) and she ends up giving birth to many children herself ([[HistoryRepeats which also ends badly]]).
1295[[/folder]]
1296
1297[[folder:Ocnus]]
1298The son of Manto and Tiberinus Silvius, who founded modern Mantua to honor his mother. Alternatively, he was the son or brother of Auletes and founded Felsina. Ocnus was condemned to Tartarus after death, where he was forced to weave a rope out of straw, only for it to be eaten by a donkey as quickly as it was made. Why he was punished is unknown.
1299----
1300* RiddleForTheAges: What he did to receive his punishment has been lost to the mists of time.
1301[[/folder]]
1302
1303[[folder:Oedipus]]
1304The man who was prophesized to kill his father and marry his mother, and the responsible of defeating the Living Sphinx outside the walls of the city-state of Thebes by outsmarting it and answering all of its riddles. Following the defeat of the Sphinx, the queen of Thebes tells Oedipus that the King was killed and that the city needed a new king, which he agrees by marrying her, becoming the King of Thebes. Many years later he would find out that he indeed fulfilled the prophecy by killing his father (which was at the center of a procession he slaughtered years before for blocking his path one day) and married his mother, making their children his half-siblings, this revelation leads to the Queen's suicide and Oedipus to rip out his eyes in rage and disgust and flee city.
1305----
1306* AbdicateTheThrone: In Creator/{{Sophocles}}'s play ''Theatre/OedipusRex'' he exiled himself from Thebes out of shame. Although Creator/{{Homer}} had Oedipus continue ruling until his death, Sophocles' take became the norm even in Homer-esque epics like ''Literature/TheThebaid'', where Oedipus dwells in the depths of Thebes in shame and poverty.
1307* AntiHero: How he comes off to modern readers depending on which version of his confrontation with Laios you know.
1308* AwfulTruth: The woman he fell in love with is actually his mother.
1309* BerserkButton: Some versions of the story depict him with a club foot, and him being very sensitive about it (his name, "Oedipus," actually means something like "lame foot"). In these version the crossroads incident where he unknowingly killed his father was triggered when the chariot driver accidentally ran over said foot.
1310* BlindSeer: He becomes this in Creator/{{Sophocles}}'s ''Theatre/OedipusAtColonus''.
1311* BreakTheHaughty: In spades. Oedipus goes from a strong and beloved king to a shell of his former self in the course of a single day.
1312* {{Determinator}}: He ''had'' to find out who killed the king. The plague was ravaging Thebes and he wanted to stop it.
1313* EyeScream: A broach pin to the eye cannot feel good. That is one painful version of BrainBleach.
1314* FisherKing: A plague afflicted Thebes at some point while he was ruling it. The Oracle at Delphi said this was because the killer of the preceding king of Thebes had to be brought to justice, hence the plague was caused because of Oedipus' {{Patricide}}.
1315* GuileHero: His defeat of the Sphinx makes him the epitome of this.
1316* HairTriggerTemper: He has a very short fuse which comes back to haunt him. He unwittingly killed his faither Laius when they argued over the right of way at a crossroads, causing the plague that later ravaged Thebes. When the oracle tells him that the reason Thebes is suffering is because the people are harboring a murderer, he immediately swears to bring the villain to justice.
1317* HappilyAdopted: He clearly left his adoptive parents out of care for them, due hearing of the prophecy that he could would kill his father and marry his mother.
1318* HiredToHuntYourself: His crusade to find out who killed the king. The issue being [[TomatoInTheMirror he was unaware that this was the case]].
1319%%* IHaveNoSon: Although Antigone is so great she's almost a substitute for one.
1320* {{Irony}}: One of the oldest examples. His attempts at averting the prophecy caused it to happen.
1321* KarmicDeath: Killing a man and his entire retinue in an argument over the right of way might seem extreme, but Oedipus fulfilled this trope when he killed King Laios. When Laios was forced into exile by a usurper years before, he took refuge with his fellow King Pelops. He became the tutor to Pelops's son Chrysippus, who he later kidnapped and raped. Laios, his family and Thebes were cursed by the gods for his ghastly crime. In some myths, Chrysippus killed himself out of shame and an enraged Pelops cursed Laios to be killed by one of his own sons.
1322* ObliviousAdoption: He was not aware that Polybius and Merope were his adoptive parents. This caused him to leave them when he learned of the prophecy, [[SelfFulfillingProphecy which just caused him to unknowingly get involved with his biological parents]].
1323* OlderAndWiser: In ''Theatre/OedipusAtColonus''.
1324* ParentalIncest: As you probably already knew, Oedipus's wife is his mother and all his children are also his half-siblings.
1325* {{Patricide}}: The killing of King Laios.
1326* PoorCommunicationKills: All of the situation might have been avoided if had his adoptive parents just ''told'' him he was adopted. Perhaps they were justified, since in those days being of uncertain descent could cause no end of problems for a person in a prominent position.
1327* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Part of the great tragedy of his life was the fact that he was this as a king. He searched for the killer of King Laios because that person being at large was causing a plague to be upon the kingdom of Thebes according to the Oracle at Delphi.
1328* SelfFulfillingProphecy: Despite his and his birth father's best efforts to avoid the prophecy being true, he did end up killing his father and marrying his mother.
1329* SurpriseIncest: One of the most famous examples. His parents abandoned him because his father was prophecised to die by his son's hands. Oedipus got a similar prophecy telling him that he'd kill his father and marry his mother, and mistakenly thought it was referring to who he didn't know were his adoptive parents. Since nobody recognised each other, Oedipus fulfilled the prophecy by unknowingly killing his father and marrying his mother. When Oedipus and his mother found out the truth, she committed suicide and he blinded himself out of rage, horror and disgust.
1330* ThanatosGambit: Oedipus makes sure that Thebes will not benefit from his death, and ensures the future success of Athens.
1331* TomatoInTheMirror: The killer of the preceding king of Thebes was...himself.
1332* ATragedyOfImpulsiveness: Prior to becoming a king in Thebes, he kills his father for basically cutting him off at the crossroads (and being a complete {{Jerkass}} about it). He marries his mother, completing the other half of the famous complex, at leisure though. Having been adopted by another family and kept in the dark about his parentage, he did not recognize either one.
1333* TragicHero: In Sophocles's plays, Oedipus is one that has survived from his tragic fall and since gained some measure of dignity back through the blessing his bones will bring to Athens.
1334* WalkingTheEarth: In Creator/{{Sophocles}}'s plays, after leaving Thebes, until he found asylum at Athens.
1335* YouCantFightFate: Despite his best intentions to avoid it, Oedipus ends up fulfilling the prophecy.
1336[[/folder]]
1337
1338[[folder:Odysseus]]
1339[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/head_odysseus_mar_sperlonga.jpg]]
1340King of Ithaca, husband of Penelope, father of Telemachus, and son of Laertes and Anticlea, Odysseus is renowned for his guile and resourcefulness, and is hence known by the epithet Odysseus the Cunning (mētis, or "cunning intelligence"). He is most famous for the ten eventful years he took to return home after the ten-year Trojan War and his famous Trojan Horse trick. The Romans called him '''Ulysses'''.
1341----
1342* AbdicateTheThrone: Odysseus leaves Thesprotia to Polypoites after the queen dies. Admittedly, he just goes right back to being king in Ithaca.
1343* ActuallyIAmHim: He disguised himself as a tramp.
1344* AdaptationalJerkass: The Telegony, which was written down by an unknown author but definitely not Homer, makes Odysseus far less likeable, including having him ''leaving Penelope and marrying a different woman''.
1345* AdaptationalVillainy: Odysseus (Ulysses) is treated as a slimy villain in Roman mythology, such as in ''Literature/TheAeneid'' and later works influenced by it, like ''Literature/TheDivineComedy''. In part, this was due to the Romans seeing themselves as the distant descendants of the Trojans whom Odysseus tricked and defeated. This is why Dante has him in Hell in ''Literature/TheDivineComedy''. Although e.g. the Julian family was proud to claim descent from Ulysses through Aeneas' wife Lavinia, who was descended from Odysseus' grandsons Latinus and Italus. Earlier than that, Creator/{{Euripides}} detested him for his apparent lack of ethics.
1346* TheAlliance: It was his idea in order to stop a battle between the Kings Of Greece for the hand of Helen by creating this. It actually came to bite him in the ass later on. But he tried to escape even this.
1347* AntiHero: By Ancient Greece standards, he was this, almost always using trickery. He does fit the modern understanding of the trope: he has no problem killing people at his mercy when they've surrendered, is pretty brutal when dealing with his enemies, and is mostly motivated by self-interest.
1348* RankScalesWithAsskicking: King of Ithaca and no slouch in combat.
1349* BadassNormal: Considered a major Greek hero, alongside Heracles, Achilles, Perseus, Theseus...you get the idea. But unlike most other Greek heroes, Odysseus isn't a demigod.
1350* BashBrothers: With Diomedes. It also has a BrainsAndBrawn dynamic, especially in the 10th book
1351* BadassBoast: Odysseus does this to Polyphemos the cyclops. This, however, bites him in the ass when Polyphemos, having learned Odysseus's name through his boasting, invokes a favor from his father Poseidon to make his journey home a living nightmare. Daddy delivers.
1352* BadassBookworm: While his cunning is his greatest quality and the one he's most renowned for, he's also a very strong and capable fighter.
1353* BluffTheImposter: Invoked when he returned home and revealed himself to his wife. She doesn't quite believe him, and makes an offhand remark that their bed was moved. Odysseus states that his bed's headboard is part of a massive tree (which he himself carved) that the palace is built around, and that it's virtually impossible to move. This removes any lingering doubt.
1354* CallToAgriculture: Odysseus' goal after going home.
1355* CunningLikeAFox: He's never actually associated with this in the Odyssey itself, but other writers thereafter brought up the comparison and it's not a rare thing in modern adaptations.
1356* DoubleStandardRapeFemaleOnMale: A lot of people try to treat Odysseus' non-consensual relationships with Circe and Calypso as though they were affairs.
1357* EyeScream: Eat Odysseus' sailors and reap the consequences!
1358* GeniusBruiser: Smart enough to think up how to end a decade-long siege in a day, strong enough to use a bow that few others can, and brave enough to enough to blind a cyclops when he could just escape it because the big asshole ate some of his troops. He's not smart enough to not [[{{Pride}} boast about his name and titles to the cyclops]] after the fact, though.
1359* GuileHero: His most dangerous weapon by far was his tremendously sharp mind. Which makes sense when you remember that he is the grandson of [[LovableRogue Autolycus, the world's greatest thief]], which makes Hermes, a TricksterGod himself, his great-grandfather.
1360* TheGoodKing: An InformedAttribute as we never see him rule, but while pleading for his freedom with Zeus and the rest of the Olympians, [[OddFriendship goddess Athena]] curses humanity to never again have a fair ruler; enraged by the way Odysseus' men and subjects treat him in his / their absence, abusing his SacredHospitality and [[NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished repeatedly mutineering against him when he has tried his damndest to keep them alive]]. It's notable that even when they have tried to woo his wife, Odysseus does wish for Athena to show mercy to the suitors that gave him food while he was disguised as a beggar and the servants that are not vying for Penelope's hand still profess UndyingLoyalty for him after 20 years of absence.
1361* HappilyMarried: In ''The Odyssey'', where all he wants to do is get home to his wife. Yes, there are stories where he cheats on her and/or she cheats on him, but they're not by Homer, which makes them the ancient Greek equivalent of ''fanfiction''; in the real canon, he is faithful to Penelope and she to him.
1362* InconsistentSpelling: He's known as "Ulysses" in Latin, likely because his Greek name was sometimes spelled with an L instead of a D, i.e. as "Olysseus". Never in Homer, though.
1363* TheInfiltration: Odysseus's recon of Troy.
1364* KingIncognito: Before taking his final revenge on the suitors.
1365* InTheBlood: One of [[GuileHero the trickiest]] heroes ever was the great-grandson of the Greeks' TricksterGod, Hermes.
1366* OnlySaneMan: During the Trojan War, being blinded neither by pride, wrath, nor greed.
1367* PapaWolf: He tried to feign madness to not go to war, but when an emissary named Palamedes put him ''and'' his infant son Telemachus in a really risky situation to see what he would do, he immediately dropped the charade so the kid wouldn't be hurt. He would later exact revenge on Palamedes for ruining his attempt to keep out of the war, either getting him executed by planting evidence that he was betraying the war effort for the Trojans or just murdering him with much less of a pre-text.
1368* {{Pride}}: He probably would have got home a '''lot''' smoother and faster if he ''just'' didn't have to tell his real name to Polyphemos to boast about it, letting Polyphemos pray to his father Poseidon to make the journey back... difficult.
1369* QuestionableConsent: His relationships with Circe and Calypso. Even if they ''did'' ask his permission, he was also completely at their mercy and in no position to give true consent.
1370* RightfulKingReturns: He successfully got home and regained his throne.
1371* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Odysseus slaughters every suitor and twelve maids in his home once he returns.
1372* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: Besides being king, he is also a genius strategist and a warrior.
1373* SadisticChoice: ScyllaAndCharybdis. One will eat some of his men, the other will eat ''all'' his men.
1374* SchmuckBait: He thinks and plans the greatest one in recorded legend, the TrojanHorse.
1375* TheSmartGuy: After ten years of failure by force, Odysseus's stroke of genius breaches Troy's walls -- the Achaeans break camp, sail out of sight, and leave the TrojanHorse with a number of Achaeans concealed within it. The Trojans bring the horse inside, celebrate the end of a decade-long siege and are left unprepared when the Achaean infiltrators kill off the sentries and open up their gates. This plan is actually especially genius since it's [[MortonsFork a lose-lose situation]] for the Trojans, because even if they didn't let the horse inside, refusing the gift would have disrespected Poseidon as the horse was also a tribute to him and surely cause him to end his protection upon the city.
1376* SoleSurvivor: He's the only member of his crew to survive the Odyssey.
1377* SupernaturalAid: Athena took a shine to him during the Trojan War and continued to help him on his journey home.
1378* TraumaCongaLine: Possibly the TropeCodifier. In the 10 years it takes for the man to reach Ithaka after leaving Troy, Odysseus is put through so much shit that by the time he finally gets home to see the suitors lining up to steal his wife, there is no wonder the man [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge snaps]]. The man in summary: has his men drugged and is faced with mutiny when trying to retrieve them, is imprisoned by a Cyclops and forced to watch as one by one his 12 companions get their brains smashed against the rocks, is set free only to be antagonized by the god of the sea himself, finally finds help from wind god Aeolus only to have his men piss him off as well -- setting their journey back to square zero right when they were about to dock on Ithaca, sees all except one of his ships eaten by sea giants, has his [[TooDumbToLive men]] transformed to pigs by a sorceress and [[QuestionableConsent has to sleep with her under threat of death]], finds his friends and [[DrivenToSuicide mother]] (all except a couple alive when he left) dead in Hades, is tortured by Sirens (though this was his own fault, really), once again has a sea beast eating his men, has the remainder of his men mutineer against him by [[CosmicPlaything adding Zeus and Helios to the roster of gods wishing hell upon him]], is left the SoleSurvivor when Zeus subsequently strikes their ship, is saved from the brink of death by goddess [[GoMadFromTheIsolation Calypso]] only to be imprisoned and raped every night for so many years even [[JerkassGod Zeus]] starts to feel sorry for him, upon release has Poseidon send him back to Carybdis to drown, miraculously survives this event and is saved by Phaecians only to have Poseidon turn his saviors to stone, has his dog die at his feet upon homecoming, returns to his palace to find the subjects he once treated as a father abuse his wife and hospitality in his absence, is hurt and humiliated ceaselessly for the next few days, has Athena force him to kill men he would otherwise spare when ridding himself of the suitors, and finally -- in the impopular sequel -- gets killed by his own ChildByRape in an extremely embarassing fashion.
1379* TrojanHorse: The mastermind of the trope.
1380* WhosOnFirst: Calling himself the Greek version of "Nobody" to Polyphemos would basically cause one of the oldest recorded examples of this trope ever -- after [[EyeScream blinding Polyphemos during his sleep]], Polyphemos would explain to other cyclops responding to his pained anguish that "Nobody blinded me", causing them to think that an unfortunate accident or divine punishment that they could do nothing about occurred.
1381* WhoWantsToLiveForever: Odysseus could have become immortal living with eternally youthful Circe or Calypso, but chose to return to Ithaca and his aging wife. Ironically, in a common continuation of the myth, his two sons and his widow do become immortal.
1382* WorthyOpponent: Even the Trojans were in awe of this man. He was considered one of the mightiest and most respectable Achaians during the war.
1383[[/folder]]
1384
1385[[folder:Pandora]]
1386The first human woman created by the gods. She was married to Epimetheus. Also the owner of the box (actually a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pithos pithos]], that is, a large jar) which she later opened, releasing all evils to the world until she managed to close it with Hope left inside.
1387----
1388* TheAce: She's named Pandora ("all-gifted") because every Olympian gave her some gift or talent; Hephaestus gave her beauty, Hermes gave her intelligence, Athena gave her knowledge of all crafts (and some nice clothes), Aphrodite gave her seductiveness, the Graces gave her jewelry, and the Seasons gave her a garland of flowers.
1389* BlindIdiotTranslation: It's widely accepted that the whole 'box' thing got started when Erasmus mistranslated ''pithos'', a large storage jar, as ''pyxis'', a woman's jewelry box.
1390* CuriosityIsACrapshoot: She gave in to her curiosity and opened the box despite being told not to, causing all sorts of problems.
1391* TheVamp: Creator/{{Hesiod}} wrote her as the embodiment of his fears of women. See, [[HeManWomenHater Hesiod]] believed that women were inherently evil and lived to deceive and hurt men; his ideal for a woman was simply someone too passive to act on said villainous desires. Pandora was the ultimate woman, and therefore the ultimate evil; she was beautiful, so she could [[DistractedByTheSexy distract men from her true nature]], she was intelligent, so she could trick men, and she was curious and willful, so she could not be cowed into accepting her place. Later writers who did ''not'' have Hesiod's pathological gynophobia tended to instead see Pandora as an UnwittingPawn whose intense curiosity just meant she couldn't resist the SchmuckBait.
1392[[/folder]]
1393
1394[[folder:Paris]]
1395The Prince of Troy, who was supposed to be killed at birth to avert a prophecy that he'd bring about Troy's downfall. But since nobody was willing to actually kill the baby, he was exposed at Mt. Ida and raised by a herdsman. When he grew up, he was chosen to judge who amongst Aphrodite, Athena, and Hera was the most beautiful. His choice of Aphrodite (and her promise of giving him Helen of Sparta, the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman, as a wife) ended up causing the Trojan War.
1396-----
1397* BitchInSheepsClothing: He was being hosted by Menelaus in Sparta and he was wooing his wife behind his back, before stealing her and a lot of Menelaus's treasure. This was even ''worse'' by Greek standards as a violation of SacredHospitality.
1398* TheCasanova: When offered a choice between ruling the world, becoming a master strategist and tactician, or getting to marry the world's most beautiful woman, he chose the latter. He did not go back on this decision when he learned that said woman was married.
1399%%* TheCharmer
1400* TheChosenOne: Chosen to damn Troy that is.
1401* CombatPragmatist: When he realizes he sucks at hand-to-hand combat, he uses a bow and arrows instead. He wounds Diomedes and kills Achilles with them. The Greeks considered him a coward for killing from a distance.
1402* DirtyCoward: A defining example. It's why he's depicted using long-range weapons while the other characters were fighting in melee range, since long-range weapons were considered cowardly back then.
1403* DisappearedDad: Left his wife Oenone and his young son Corythus to be recognized of his Trojan royal blood and abduct Helen. He'd eventually doom them both anyway -- Corythus would grow up to go to Troy, not be recognized, and murdered by Paris for falling in love with Helen. Oenone would kill herself in grief during Paris' funeral.
1404* DoomMagnet: Everyone who interacts with Paris suffers for it. Sometimes, it's not even his fault.
1405* JerkassHasAPoint: Returns to Oenone over a decade after he left her and their son to pursue Helen and begs her to heal him, saying he abandoned her because it was the will of fate and the gods. He's not entirely wrong, as Aphrodite had bribed him by offering him Helen of Sparta, and it was prophesized that Troy would eventually fall, as well as that Paris would be the reason for it. However, him trying to deny any personal responsibility for his own choices and actions, as well as the fact that he only bothered returning to Oenone to save his own life, robs him of any sympathy.
1406* LaserGuidedKarma: Paris had married and had a son with a nymph named Oenone before the whole Trojan War mess occurred. He would be mortally wounded during the war but live long enough to go over to Oenone for her to [[MurderByInaction refuse to save his life with her herbal arts]].
1407* LonelyFuneral: Oenone, ironically despite the MurderByInaction mentioned for Paris' LaserGuidedKarma, would prove to be the only genuine mourner for his funeral in Troy, the city and all of its people that they all know he doomed. She would kill herself by the end of it, the most extensive account saying [[TogetherInDeath she threw herself onto his funeral pyre]].
1408* LoveMakesYouDumb: Abducting the wife of the powerful king of Sparta is probably one of the least sensible decisions anyone's ever made. Hoping that sheltering at Troy would save them both rather than trying to disappear wasn't great either. It's hard to say how much of that isn't Aphrodite's fault, though.
1409* MilesGloriosus: Paris is often described as being very eager to get into combat and help out his brother. It's a pity he mostly sucks at it.
1410* NeverMyFault: When he finally returns to Oenone after being mortally wounded, he begs for her to save his life, saying he only abandoned her due to the will of fate and the gods. Unsurprisingly, Oenone is not impressed [[MurderByInaction and lets him perish]].
1411* OffingTheOffspring: Is said to have killed Corythus, his abandoned son from his first wife Oenone, in jealousy after Corythus grows up, goes to Troy, and, like a lot of people, falls in love with Helen. Paris was unaware of their relation.
1412* ProtagonistJourneyToVillain: In his youth, Paris earned the epithet Alexander ('Protecter of Men') for defeating a gang of cattle thieves and was chosen as judge for the apple contest because he'd earlier demonstrated his trustworthiness by honoring his offer of giving a golden crown to any bull that could defeat his own in a fight (Ares was the eventual winner, after disguising himself as a bull). Then Aphrodite told him that she could hook him up with the hottest girl in Greece, and it all went downhill from there.
1413* SissyVillain: This is how the Greeks generally portrayed him; note that he fights with a bow, which was generally considered as coward's way to avoid directly facing foes.
1414[[/folder]]
1415
1416[[folder:Patroclus]]
1417Achilles' cousin and/or lover, and in either case the soldier he was closest to among the Achaean forces. Tried to help rally the Achaeans by pretending to be Achilles, only to be slain by Hector.
1418------
1419* AesopCollateralDamage: He's the collateral damage for Achilles' aesop about how a) you shouldn't let petty slights rule you and b) there's no such thing as 'not my problem' in war. Achilles thought the war had nothing to do with him after Agamemnon stole his share of the loot, but in the end, this only made it ''become'' personal when Achilles' inaction ended up getting Patroclus killed.
1420* BadassNormal: A mortal and a skilled soldier. Sadly, he was a bit ''less'' of this trope than Hector.
1421* MoralityPet: He's the only human who Achilles consistently shows consideration and kindness towards.
1422* NiceToTheWaiter: He was apparently quite kind to Briseis and promised to get her and Achilles married for real after the war.
1423* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: The whole reason he donned Achilles' armor was because, ''unlike'' Achilles, he cared about his fellow soldiers and didn't want to see them slaughtered because Achilles was off having a sulk over being personally insulted by their commander. This ended up helping nothing (everyone could tell he wasn't Achilles) and just getting Patroclus killed.
1424 [[/folder]]
1425
1426[[folder:Peleus]]
1427A mortal grandson of Zeus through King Aeacus, Peleus is perhaps best known for his marriage to the sea goddess Thetis. Their wedding led to the infamous Judgement of Paris and then the Trojan War, which their son Achilles died fighting in.
1428----
1429* AccidentalMurder: In some versions, he and his brother Telamon accidentally killed their half-brother Phocus (most accounts say it was on purpose due to jealousy). Peleus was purified of this by King Eurytion of Phthia, whom he then accidentally killed in the Calydonian boar Hunt.
1430* BashBrothers: With his brother Telamon. The two were members of the Argonauts, participated the Calydonian boar hunt, and helped their friend Heracles invade Troy a generation before the Trojan War.
1431* DesecratingTheDead: Dismembered Astydameia (and in some cases, her husband Acastus) and then marched his army between the pieces.
1432* DesignatedHero: Was chosen to marry the sea goddess Thetis because he was "the noblest of men." However, in many accounts, he and his brother Telamon murdered their own half-brother Phocus out of jealousy. It's also arguable that Peleus DesecratingTheDead crossed the line, especially if he gave the same brutal treatment to Acastus, who had purified Peleus for murdering Eurytion and only betrayed him due to being lied to. Then there's the QuestionableConsent (at least by modern standards) regarding how he got Thetis to agree to marry him when she initially refused.
1433* PayEvilUntoEvil: Him DesecratingTheDead after killing Astydameia. Given this was the woman who tried to seduce Peleus while he was her husband Acastus's guest and then, when rebuffed, turned her husband against Peleus via a FalseRapeAccusation and tricked Peleus's wife Antigone into committing suicide, [[AssholeVictim it's hard to feel sorry for her]].
1434[[/folder]]
1435
1436[[folder:Pelops]]
1437Tantalus' son. Tantalus killed and cooked Pelops in a meal he served to the gods. They discovered what he had done, and Zeus had Pelops restored to life. Pelops later became a lover of Poseidon and a king in his own right, fathering the cursed House of Atreus. The Peloponesse peninsula in Greece was named after him.
1438----
1439* AmbiguousSituation: Why did he push Myrtilus off a cliff, causing Myrtilus to curse his line? As with many things in Greek mythology, there are multiple versions:
1440** Pelops didn't want anyone to know he won the race by cheating, so he offed his co-conspirator.
1441** Myrtilus was promised the first night with Hippodamia but got impatient and tried to rape her. Pelops shoved him off a cliff to protect his wife.
1442** Pelops promised Myrtilus half the kingdom and a night in bed with Hippodamia, but later decided he didn't actually want to ''give'' Myrtilus all of that and killed him instead.
1443** ''Hippodamia'' made the promise to Myrtilus behind Pelops' back. Pelops saw another guy with his wife (not knowing it was part of their deal) and acted against what he ''thought'' was rape by throwing Myrtilus off a cliff.
1444* BackFromTheDead: Thanks to Zeus asking the Fates to bring him back to [[MustMakeAmends atone for Tantalus' actions]]. This is probably the only time [[YouCantFightFate the Fates]] have ever decided to do such a thing. In another version of the myth, Hecate takes Pelops's remains and placed them in a magical brew which brought Pelops back to life. In either case, Demeter accidentally ate one of Pelops's shoulders because she was distraught over losing Perspehone. The Olympians gave Pelops a new shoulder made of ivory, courtesy of Hephaestus.
1445* BigScrewedUpFamily: Pelops's crimes led to Myrtilus casting a terrible curse on his family, and they turned into this. Pelops' descendants would commit a serious of hideous crimes on each other for Pelops's kingdom until Orestes finally ended the curse several generations later.
1446* LikeFatherLikeSon: Pelops was almost as treacherous and spiteful as his father. He courted a princess named Hippodamia, whose father Oenomaus forced her suitors to beat him in a chariot race and killed the losers. Pelops prayed to Poseidon for some magical horses and a chariot to help him, which Poseidon granted. This wasn't enough, so he got Oenomaus's charioteer Myrtilus to help him cheat. Myrtilus agreed to rig Oenomaus's chariot to crash in exchange for Hippodameia's virginity and half the kingdom. While Myrtilus held up his end of the bargain and Oenomaus was killed, Pelops murdered Myrtilus by throwing him off a cliff, and as he fell Myrtilus placed a curse on Pelops' family.
1447* LoverAndBeloved: Got together with Poseidon after being brought back, and later married Hippodamia.
1448* OurFounder: Worshipped as the founder of the Olympic Games.
1449* SinsOfTheFather: Pelops's family suffered the effects of Myrtilus's curse.
1450* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: Pelops's role in the Tantalus myth is very similar to the role Nyctimus plays in his father Lycaon's myth (see above). Like Pelops, Nyctimus was killed, cooked and fed to Zeus by his evil father. Like Pelops, Nyctimus was resurrected by Zeus once he'd punished Lycaon.
1451[[/folder]]
1452
1453[[folder:Penelope]]
1454Wife to Odysseus, mother to Telemachus, and also cousin to Helen and Clytemnestra. She is famously a devoted, classy wife, but in ''Literature/TheOdyssey'' she shows some serious SilkHidingSteel material while dealing with a bunch of crass, greedy suitors who want to fill the power void left by her husband, while the poor guy is not even officially dead.
1455----
1456* BirdsOfAFeather: Odysseus and Penelope. They even unknowingly echo each other to drive this home.
1457* BluffTheImpostor: When a stranger walks up to Penelope and claims to be her lost husband Odysseus, Penelope casually asks for Odysseus's bed to be prepared, but outside the bedroom. The stranger, who really ''is'' Odysseus, is dismayed by this, since he had built the bed himself on the stump of an olive tree, making it impossible to move the bed without sawing off the stump (something only he and Penelope knew about, supposedly). As he recounts all the work he put into making it he realizes that she had just been testing him. The funny thing is that he ''expected'' her to test him, and told his son that she would, and he still fell for it.
1458* GuileHero: The lady has wits to match her husband's. She's clearly in command of her conversation with [[KingIncognito a certain stranger]] in figuring out his purpose there, she's been manipulating a throng of men straight for three years, and on top of that, she sets up the archery tournament, which basically spearheads Odysseus's reclamation of his home. To top it off, when Odysseus finally reveals his identity, she uses a masterful BluffTheImpostor to make sure he truly is who he claims to be (which, of course, he is). And people wonder why Odysseus would ditch a goddess for this woman.
1459* HappilyMarried: Before Odysseus left for Troy, they were very happy together, and that's why they are both so determined to reunite.
1460* HerosMuse: She's the one for Odysseus, who despite all the odds (and the goddesses who throw themselves at him) wants to return to her.
1461* IWillWaitForYou: The UrExample and perhaps the most famous in literature.
1462* KeepTheHomeFiresBurning: Her story is staying at Ithaca, waiting for Odysseus' return. She's not spared from troubles, though.
1463* MyGirlBackHome: One of the most famous examples, if not ''the'' UrExample. She waited her husband for twenty years, but her suffering was rewarded.
1464* ProperLady: Domestic and beautiful, she has stayed faithful to Odysseus, waiting for him for twenty years.
1465* SilkHidingSteel: Penelope is no wallflower. She ''will'' defend herself and her house, but in her own way. That is the one that doesn't make you even notice you've been fooled for years.
1466* TextileWorkIsFeminine: Her trick in the book to keep her UnwantedHarem at bay is faking to weave a shroud for her father-in-law, and she will take a decision after the work is done. She keeps the charade going on for three years.
1467* TricksterGirlfriend: Yes, a ProperLady can be one too. She is revealed to be pretty sharp herself (Odysseus must have married her for a reason) as she keeps the suitors under her thumb with various tricks...and then she plays a mind game with her husband, the King of Tricksters when he shows up in disguise, ordering a slave to drag Odysseus's bed from their chamber -- causing Odysseus to demand who dared to cut the bed from the living olive tree he carved it from. It's something only the two of them knew, thus tricking him into proving his identity while she proved her fidelity to him in a single move.
1468* UnwinnableByDesign: The last challenge for her suitors is stringing and shooting with Odysseus' old bow, a weapon so heavy and thick that no one save himself was able to use it. Penelope was quite sure that anyone would fail, save for a wandering stranger...who is Odysseus himself in disguise.
1469* YouHaveWaitedLongEnough: The suitors want to convince Penelope of this. She's not buying it. Correctly, as Odysseus isn't actually dead.
1470[[/folder]]
1471
1472[[folder:Pythia]]
1473The Oracle at Delphi, high priestess sworn to Apollo. Unlike many of the others, she's confirmed to be based on a real person, but appears often enough in the myths that she warrants a mention.
1474----
1475* HighPriestess: To Apollo, in his temple at Delphi. It is generally believed that Apollo gave her the gift of prophecy in the first place, though others claim that Gaia gave them to her through vapors coming from the ground.
1476* HistoricalBadassUpgrade: The Oracle at Delphi was a real person, but obviously, it's unlikely that she was all-knowing or could see the future for real. There are actually [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythia#Scientific_explanations attempts at scientifically explaining her prophecies]], including, hilariously, that she was [[IntoxicationEnsues constantly high]].
1477* MsExposition: Gods, demigods and mortals alike come to her seeking information.
1478* TheOmniscient: She's frequently portrayed as such, knowing all and providing vital info for the Gods and mortals alike.
1479* PropheciesAreAlwaysRight: A recurring detail about the Oracle in Greek Mythology: EVERY prophecy she makes comes true. Not always in the way the subject therein expects it, but no matter what, they come true.
1480* ProphecyTwist: Every prophecy she makes comes true, but few of them do so in any straightforward manners.
1481* {{Seers}}: As her title suggests, she sees the future.
1482[[/folder]]
1483
1484[[folder:Sisyphus]]
1485One of the worst of Tartarus' residents, Sisyphus was damned to eternally roll a rock up a hill. The rock would inevitably turn and roll back down just as he was achieving anything. This was ''not'' DisproportionateRetribution for his crimes.
1486----
1487* AssholeVictim: He ended up in Tartarus for being a murderer and a con man.
1488* BedTrick: Some versions of his myths say he performed one on Odysseus' mother, thus conceiving Odysseus and explaining the latter's knack at trickery.
1489* CainAndAbel: With his brother, Salmoneus, going so far as to consult the oracle at Delphi on how to kill Salmoneus without incurring any penalties, and seducing his niece Tyro just to hurt Salmoneus.
1490* TheCasanova: In addition to seducing Odysseus' mother on her wedding night, Sisyphus had numerous other affairs, including one with his niece, Tyro.
1491* TheCharmer: Conned Persephone out of death with a well-told sob story, and was widely known for being a charming trickster.
1492* TheChessmaster: Planned for almost everything, including his own death.
1493* ConMan: He frequently invited people in his house, only to murder them and take their possessions.
1494* {{Determinator}}: You definently need guts to cheat death, defying multiple gods in the process. [[DeconstructedTrope Deconstructed]] in some variations of his tale. He's told that if he gets the rock to the top, he will be let free. He can stop at any time but arrogantly believes he can succeed once again, trapping him in an endless, unwinnable cycle.
1495* DidYouJustScamCthulhu: Repeatedly. He persuades Death to put on the handcuffs that were meant for him, talks Persephone into letting him to return to life to haunt his wife, exposes Zeus' secrets...this guy was a one-man Cthulhu-conning operation. This backfired when Hades pulled a BatmanGambit on ''him'' after he died of natural causes, by seemingly leaving an obvious loophole in his punishment that would allow him to con the gods once again... only for the "loophole" itself to become the trap, so the only way to escape his ''real'' punishment is to admit that the gods conned ''him''- something he's too prideful to do.
1496* DirtyCoward: His story is often seen as an explanation of why being so desperate to stave off your own mortality is foolish. Death is inevitable and resorting to underhanded tactics to escape it is cowardly.
1497* EnemiesWithDeath: Ohhh boy do Hades, Persephone and Thanatos ''hate'' this guy. Trapping Thanatos, deceiving Persephone and just generally messing with Hades, Sisyphus managed to piss off all three death gods so effortlessly that by the time his inevitable demise finally catches up to him, all three of them are ready to trap him in as miserable a punishment as possible.
1498* EpiphanicPrison: Hades finally puts an end to his nonsense by trapping him in one. There is nothing keeping him rolling the boulder up the hill other than his own pride, and that’s the point. (In most tellings it is implied Hades [[BatmanGambit intentionally avoids telling Sisyphus he can only try to roll the boulder up once]] before he goes to Tartarus, utterly confident Sisyphus will keep trying to do it, even after he’s figured out Hades is making sure the boulder will always roll back because that would mean admitting he can’t outfox a god.
1499* EvilGenius: It takes a great deal of cunning to manage to literally trick death. ''Twice''.
1500* {{Greed}}: Killed travellers and took their stuff.
1501* HatedByAll: He gets not the slightest kind of sympathy from those that can see beyond his charming tricks. It's especially notable that he got ''five'' major deities (Zeus, Ares, Persephone, Hades and Thanatos) to completely despise a human like him.
1502* HopeSpot: This is essentially his punishment in a nutshell as he's forced to roll a boulder up a steep hill only to lose his grip just as he reaches the top, forcing him to do it over and over again.
1503* IronicHell: The greatest offense he committed against the Cthonic gods was to defy their will and cheat death, which eventually failed when he died of old age. Thus, their punishment for him is to endlessly push a boulder up a hill only for it to inevitably roll at the bottom. As such, in life as in death, he performs a tiresome task that he will never succeed, and thus meaningless.
1504* JustSoStory: One theory says the Rock is meant to be the sun, which keeps rolling across the sky and going back where it was.
1505* KarmaHoudiniWarranty: Despite killing his guests and looting their bodies, [[SacredHospitality which was a huge deal in Ancient Greece]], capturing Thanatos, stopping everyone on Earth from dying for months, and seriously pissing off Ares in the process, and tricking Persephone into letting him get back into the world of the living, where he stayed for a few extra decades until his trick was discovered and was faced by a very pissed Hades, Persephone, and Thanatos who proceeded to [[DraggedOffToHell drag him to Tartarus]]. This time for good.
1506* LoopholeAbuse: Zig-zagged with his eventual punishment. Hades told Sisyphus that if he could roll a boulder up a hill, he could go to Elysium. Sisyphus noticed immediately that Hades never said he only had one chance and kept repeatedly failing and trying again... which itself was the punishment. The boulder was of course subject to Hades' will as part of the Underworld and would ''never'' reach the top of the hill, condemning Sisyphus to spend eternity performing backbreaking and meaningless labor. The ''real'' loophole is that Hades ''also'' never said Sisyphus ''had'' to push that boulder, so he could stop at any time... but in order to do that, he'd have to admit he fell for the SchmuckBait, which in most tellings is [[BatmanGambit what Hades was counting on]].
1507* LukeIAmYourFather: He may be Odysseus' real father.
1508* ManipulativeBastard: When he is dragged off to the Underworld, he takes advantage of Persephone's gentle nature by telling her his wife didn't even bother to give him a proper funeral, and asked to go back to the land of the living to haunt her for a bit. Persephone accepted, Sisyphus hopped back into his body and stayed for a few extra decades until his ruse was found out and he was dragged back.
1509* MetaphoricallyTrue: He didn't lie when he said to Persephone that his wife threw his body in the street without even bothering to give him the proper funeral rites. However, he did omit to mention that she did so because he told her to, in order to further his plans to evade death.
1510* TheProblemWithFightingDeath: Antics not withstanding... things did not end well for him.
1511* {{Pride}}: Believed himself to be smarter than Zeus. Then again...
1512** In some interpretations, this is his downfall even in death; there's nothing actually ''forcing'' him to roll the rock up the hill; if he wanted to stop, he could with no consequences. However, since he sees it as another attempt to outsmart the gods, he'll never willingly stop because admitting that that boulder would never reach the top of the hill would be to admit that Hades had got one over ''him'' by tricking him into a wild goose chase after a loophole that didn't really matter.
1513%%* SealedEvilInADuel: The former {{Trope Namer|s}} ("Sisyphus vs. Rock").
1514* ShmuckBait: Hades leaves a gaping loophole in his wording that Sisyphus can’t help but exploit, but the loophole is a trap and now Sisyphus is stuck trying to roll a boulder up a hill for eternity or else admit to himself he’d been had.
1515* TailorMadePrison: Was forced to roll a rock up a hill every day. It took his mind off of plotting and scheming a way to escape the Underworld a third time.
1516* TalkingYourWayOut: Talked his way out of death, and then Hades, until he couldn't anymore.
1517* TheUndead: Persuaded Persephone to let him return to life to haunt his wife.
1518[[/folder]]
1519
1520[[folder:Telamonean Ajax (Ajax the Greater)]]
1521* AnimalMotifs: One myth describes Ajax as being born when Heracles was visiting his father Telamon. Heracles swaddled little Ajax in the skin of the Nemean Lion, prophesying that by the will of Zeus Ajax would grow up to be as strong and courageous as a lion.
1522* AxCrazy: Driven to this after his BlasphemousBoast.
1523* BadassNormal: Ajax has no divine blood, and actively refuses divine aid. He proceeds to withstand the strength of multiple gods.
1524* BashBrothers: Ajax and his illegitimate brother Teucer. Typically the latter will hide behind Ajax's shield and fire over it, providing long-range support, while Ajax handles the close up stuff. It's rather heartwarming when you realize that despite Teucer's bastard status, the two of them are very close.
1525* TheBigGuy: Of the Achaians as their largest warrior. He is described as the "castle of Achaians" in text.
1526* BlasphemousBoast: Ajax rejects the gods' help and boasts that he will be the best fighter on his own merit. He pretty much does.
1527%%* BoisterousBruiser
1528* BrainsAndBrawn: The Brawn to Teucer’s Brain.
1529* BreakTheHaughty: Athena, helped along by Ajax himself, does a stellar job of this.
1530* CarryABigStick: Homer describes Ajax as wielding a large two-handed war hammer as if it weighed nothing. Notably, he even did this with ''one'' hand, while using the other to carry his shield.
1531* {{Determinator}}: Ajax is a man who is determined to follow his will, no matter what, without the help of the gods.
1532* DissonantLaughter: Though his protracted torture of sheep is upsetting enough for his friends and family, the sheer glee Ajax derives in doing it just makes it worse.
1533* DrivenToSuicide: Once his madness is lifted.
1534* DudeWheresMyRespect: Coming from a culture where self-worth is relative to publicly received respect, Ajax's anger is slightly more understandable. Odysseus wins Achilles' armor through persuasion, but Ajax, now the greatest warrior on the Greek side, has reason to think he deserved it more. Adding the fact that Achilles was actually his cousin, Ajax has more right to the armour than Odysseus, with only Achilles' son Neoptolemus having a better right to it than him.
1535* DueToTheDead: Odysseus, filled with fear and pity at how the gods can humble men, refuses to continue his grudge against Ajax and argues for his proper funeral rites.
1536* GeniusBruiser: The norm for any of the Greek Generals. Ajax actually was quite eloquent and verbose.
1537* GlorySeeker: Not to extreme levels, but it certainly gets it to him that Achaians do not value his martial skill.
1538* HeroicBSOD: Ajax is fairly subdued once he is relieved of his madness and discovers everyone knows what he's done. This is a prelude to suicide.
1539* HonorBeforeReason: And this in part tragically turns out to be his own undoing.
1540* InTheBlood: Achilles and Ajax were cousins, sons of the BashBrothers Peleus and Telamon. Peleus and Telamon were mighty warriors in their own right, who became famous fighting alongside their uncle Heracles. Being a badass tended to run in their family.
1541* LargeAndInCharge: He was by far the largest champion of the Greeks, as well as one of their leaders.
1542* LikeFatherLikeSon: Ajax's father was the warrior Telamon, a badass in his own right who was a nephew and frequent ally of Heracles.
1543* LuckilyMyShieldWillProtectMe: In one hand, Ajax wielded a massive hammer that would take lesser men two hands to swing. In his other hand, Ajax carried a large shield made of seven cow hides and a layer of bronze.
1544* NowYouTellMe: PlayedForDrama when Calchas arrives too late to warn against Ajax leaving his tent.
1545* OneManArmy: Diomedes may have defeated two gods in one day (Ares and Aphrodite), and Patroclus may routed an army until he lost his armor, but both were defeated by Apollo. Ajax, however, was never beaten in the Illiad, even by the gods. In fact, when Zeus forbids the gods from helping the Greeks (but not from opposing them), all the Greek heroes are driven from the field, one by one, except Ajax, who is wounded by several gods, but never stops fighting. How many times can you put "the combined efforts of several gods, while he had none to help him, failed to stop this guy" on someone's resume? He racks up a mook body count roughly equal to Achilles, he defeats Hector in a fair fight within the first five chapters (yeah, that's right, if not for the gods intervening -- by making his own allies throw themselves in the way -- to keep Ajax from finishing Hector then and there, Ajax would have cut the Illiad down from an epic poem to a short story), and when he actually does die in later it's by suicide. That's right, the only thing badass enough to defeat Ajax is... Ajax. Wow.
1546* RankScalesWithAsskicking: He was prince of Salamis and among the most powerful of Greece's warriors at Troy, second only to Achilles.
1547* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: As with all Achaians kings.
1548* TragicHero: Flawed through his pride and individualism which are also his best assets.
1549* WorthyOpponent: After his CombatByChampion against Hector, both warriors are so impressed with the other that they exchange tokens as symbols of respect and admiration.
1550[[/folder]]
1551
1552[[folder:Tantalus]]
1553One of Tartarus' most infamous residents, Tantalus was a Greek king and a favored host of Zeus'. In order to prove that Zeus was not all powerful via tricking him, Tantalus murdered his son Pelops, cooked him in a stew, and served him at a banquet with Zeus in attendance. Enraged, Zeus resurrected Pelops, and condemned Tantalus to eternity in Tartarus.
1554----
1555* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: [[invoked]] Played with due to ValuesDissonance. What so outraged the gods about Tantalus, in addition to stealing ambrosia from Olympus and the obvious "murdering your son" thing, was his horrible treatment of his guests. This is actually a bigger deal than it sounds, as at the time, [[SacredHospitality guest right was one of the most sacred facets of Greek culture]].
1556* AssholeVictim: Seeing as he murdered and cooked his own son, it's hard to feel any sympathy for him when he suffers eternal torment in Tartarus.
1557* EvenEvilHasStandards: Set out to prove the Greek gods were idiots. Instead he proved that even JerkassGods have standards, and got himself thrown in an IronicHell to boot.
1558* FatalFlaw: His ego. This is standard for mythical villains and heroes of course.
1559* IdiotBall: ''Big time''. Some versions of the myth even have him thinking that killing his son, cooking him, and serving him to the gods [[InsaneTrollLogic would be the ultimate honor to them, since he sacrificed something very important to him in order to please the gods]].
1560* IronicHell: Stands up to his neck in water, with fruit hanging over his head. When he reaches for the fruit the wind blows them away. When he bends to take a drink, the water recedes. This is what gave us the word 'tantalize' to mean tormenting someone by dangling something unobtainable in front of them.
1561* MoralEventHorizon: InUniverse, his murder of Pelops and cooking him in an attempt to trick the gods into cannibalism, which gets him smote straight to Tartarus. It's often thought that Tantalus's story was the original morality myth on why you shouldn't a) disrespect the gods, b) disrespect your guests, c) commit cannibalism, and d)kill family members, all of which were serious taboos for the ancient Greeks.
1562* OffingTheOffspring: Tantalus is in the running for "worst father ever" after what he did to Pelops.
1563* {{Pride}}: Not atypically for this sort of myth, Tantalus' FatalFlaw is his own egoism, and need to prove he is smarter than Zeus.
1564* RoyallyScrewedUp: His line, the House of Atreus, was best known for backstabbing, kinslaying, and generally being completely messed up. Unsurprisingly, Agamemnon was also of this line.
1565* SmugSnake: Very commonly portrayed as such in adaptations. Not an inaccurate portrayal, of course; this is the guy who killed his own child just so he could say he tricked the gods.
1566[[/folder]]
1567
1568[[folder:Tiresias]]
1569A Theban oracle of Apollo and advisor to Cadmus. He angers Hera after hitting a pair of copulating snakes with a stick, so she transforms him into a woman for seven years. Later, he is blinded by the gods with different accounts giving different reasons, the most famous of which being that Zeus and Hera came to him to settle an argument as to whether men or women get more pleasure out of sex given his unique experience with both. He says that it is women, which Zeus claimed (as part of his AllWomenAreLustful argument), again angering Hera who blinds him. Zeus consoles him by giving him the gift of prophecy. The other common version states that he saw Athena bathing (possibly with his mother Chariclo) and was blinded by her in a fit of anger before regretting her actions; unable to undo them, she gave him the gift of prophecy to compensate. Either way, Tiresias dies after drinking water from a tainted spring.
1570----
1571* BerserkButton: In ''Theatre/{{Antigone}}'', he is enraged at being accused of taking bribes and gives a scathing TheReasonYouSuckSpeech to Creon.
1572* BlindSeer: The archetypal example, if not also the TropeMaker and TropeCodifier. In fact, his name became a title for prophets, oracles, and soothsayers throughout classical mythology. When prophesying, he reportedly spoke in short, cryptic, but always accurate statements that required a little interpretation to understand. For example, he tells the mother of Narcissus that "the boy will thrive as long as [[{{Narcissist}} he never knows himself]]".
1573* TheCassandra: Oedipus doesn't believe him when he claims that it was Oedipus himself that killed the previous king, Laius.
1574* FaintingSeer: In ''Theatre/OedipusTheKing'', while giving his signature warning to Oedipus, he repeatedly collapses to the ground and has to be aided back to his feet.
1575* FirstLawOfGenderBending: Averted as, after spending seven years as a woman, he is turned back into a man. The myths give several varying reasons as to ''why'' he is turned back.
1576* GenderBender: Went from man to woman for seven years as a punishment from Hera, then back to man.
1577* IfOnlyYouKnew: He doesn't tell Oedipus all he knows for this reason, particularly the part about ParentalIncest.
1578* PropheciesAreAlwaysRight: His prophecies, while they cryptic and requiring some thought to understand at times, were said to be "always accurate".
1579* SecondLawOfGenderBending: Downplayed in that he never stated whether he preferred being a man or a woman, but he does admit to Zeus and Hera that sex is more pleasurable for women.
1580[[/folder]]

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