Bia- the goddess of force, a daughter of Styx and the Titan Pallas who was killed by Athena. Sister to Nike, Cratos/Kratos and Zelus, with her siblings she sat by Zeus' throne.
Nike- the goddess of victory, she was winged and brought good luck. A daughter of Styx and Pallas and sister to Bia, Cratos/Kratos and Zelus. She was Zeus' charioteer during Titanomachy. She was depicted holding a wreath, bowl and cup, incense burner, lyre or palm branch. Her Roman counterpart was Victoria.
Enyo- a war goddess, linked to Ares and Eris. With Ares she may have had a son, his attendant Enyalios. Alternatively, Enyalios was a son of Kronos and Rhea. Like Ares she delighted in warfare, violence and bloodshed. She was given as a daughter of Zeus and Hera and thus was sister to Ares, Hebe and Eileithyia, who was said to be her twin.
She stayed neutral in the battle between Zeus and Typhon, and took part in the Trojan War, the Seven Against Thebes, and Dionysus' war with the indians.
Her Roman counterpart was Bellona, who was depicted with a helmet, spear and torch.
Eileithyia/Ilithyia- the goddess of childbirth and midwives. She was a daughter of Zeus and Hera who could be linked to Artemis who was associated with childbirth and midwives.
When Hera got Zeus to vow that a member of Perseus' family would become High King, Zeus agreed believing that Heracles, a descendant of Perseus, was about to be born. Hera forced Eileithyia to sit cross-legged with her clothes in knots, preventing the birth of Heracles and his mortal twin, and Eurystheus, another descendant of Perseus, was born first. Hera would've prevented Heracles birth entirely if his mother Alcmene's servant Galanthis had not lied to Eileithyia and claimed the child was already born. Eileithyia jumped up in surprise and thus Heracles was born, in rage Eileithyia or Hera turned Galanthis into a polecat/weasel.
Hera kept her from Leto as well to make her birth of Apollo and Artemis difficult but the other goddesses in attendance of the births sent Iris to bribe her with a golden necklace. Eileithyia then attended the birth.
She was depicted carrying a torch.
She was mother Sosipolis, protector of Elis who was said to be a child god wearing a starry robe and carrying a cornucopia. Rarely she was also said to be mother of Eros.
Her Roman counterpart was Lucina.
Hebe- the goddess of youth and a cupbearer to the gods. She was the daughter of Zeus and Hera and thus sister to Eileithyia, Enyo and Ares.
She served the gods ambrosia, attended Aphrodite, drew baths for Ares and helped Hera with her chariot. She was Heracles' fourth and final wife, given to him when he became a god. Their union ended his feud with Hera. With him she was mother to Anicetus/Aniketos and Alexiares, twins who remained as children and were the gods of the defence of towns and gatekeepers of Olympus.
Ganymedes, the Trojan prince her father Zeus abducted, was either her male counterpart or replacement as cupbearer to the gods.
Ovid says she restored Iolaus, Heracles' nephew, to his youth.
She was depicted as winged and in her role as a cupbearer or young bride.
Her Roman counterpart was Juventas. A goddess of young men, when they reached manhood they offered a coin to her.
Tyche/Tykhe- the goddess of fortune, chance and fate. A daughter of Hermes and Aphrodite or Zeus and Aphrodite, or she was an Oceanid.
She was depicted wearing a mural crown (crown like the towers or walls of a city), carrying a cornucopica or with the wheel of fortune.
When bad things happened it was sometimes said to be the judgement of Tyche. She was a companion of Nemesis, the goddess of retribution, and Ploutos/Plutus, the god of plenty, who was also sometimes said to be her son. Usually Ploutos was a son of Iasion and Demeter.
Her Roman counterpart was Fortuna. A daughter of Jupiter she was depicted as veiled and blind, holding a cornucopia and a ship's rudder, and she protected the grain supplies. A goddess of fortune and luck both good and bad, she was given the titles Fortuna Dubia (doubtful fortune), Fortuna Brevis (fickle fortune) and Fortuna Mala (bad fortune).
Her counterpart was Bonus Eventus, the personification of good outcome, a god of agriculture whose partner was Lympha, the deity of fresh water.
Chione/Khione- the goddess of snow, a daughter of the North wind Boreas and Athenian princess Orithyia. Boreas tried to woo Orithyia but when he was unsuccessful he abducted her and raped her, with her he had Chione, Cleopatra and the Boreads (Calais and Zetes), her sisters were the tragic Procris, who was wife to Cephalus who accidentally killed her, Creusa who was a lover of Apollo's, Chthonia who was sacrificed by their father so he could win a battle, and Protogeneia and Pandora who committed suicide after this as they had made a pact to kill themselves if one of them died. Her brothers were Pandorus, Metion and the future king Cecrops.
Chione's sister Cleopatra was the seer and Thracian king Phineus' first wife, with whom he had two sons who his second wife Idaea tricked him into blinding.
With Poseidon Chione had a son, Eumolpus/Eumolpos, but she threw him into the ocean to avoid her father's wrath. Poseidon rescued the infant and entrusted him to his daughter Benthesikyme, he was married to one of Benthesikyme's daughters (his own niece) but loved another and was banished for this. He then became a priest of Demeter.
Harmonia- the goddess of harmony, and a daughter of Ares and Aphrodite, her siblings were Anteros (unrequited love), Deimos (fear), possibly Eros (love), and Phobos (panic). Sometimes she was said to be a daughter of Zeus and Electra/Elektra, a Pleiad he raped, making her sister to Dardanus, founder of Dardania (later Troy), and Iasion, a lover of Demeter who was killed by the jealous Zeus.
She was viewed as Eris opposite. She was married to Cadmus/Kadmos, a prince and brother of Europa who founded Thebes whilst searching for her. When his men were killed by a dragon he killed it and from its teeth sowed men to help him build Thebes, on Athena's advice, but the dragon was sacred to Ares who made him do eight years of penance.
At their wedding Harmonia received a peplos (long garment women wore) from Athena, and the infamous necklace from Hephaestus. As Hephaestus was outraged with Aphrodite's affair with Ares of which Harmonia was a result, he cursed the necklace which doomed her family. The necklace, known as the Necklace of Harmonia, was described as golden in the shape of two serpents whose mouths formed the clasp. They rendered the wearer young and beautiful. In some sources it was given to Cadmus by Europa or Hephaestus to give to his bride, alternatively it came from Athena or Aphrodite. Sometimes Hephaestus gave a cloak with it, or it was a cloak rather than a necklace and came from Athena and Hephaestus.
Semele inherited the necklace from Harmonia. Jocasta, Queen of Thebes, who unwittingly married her son Oedipus was said to have worn it. Eriphyle was bribed with it by Polynices in exchange for her urging her husband Amphiaraus to take part in the Seven Against Thebes though she knew he would die. Amphiaraus demanded that his sons avenged him and Alcmaeon did by killing his mother for which the Erinyes tormented him. He married Phegeus' daughter Arsinoe/Alphesiboea and gave her the necklace. He was killed by Phegeus' sons when he tried to get the necklace back from him for the river god Achelous to give to his daughter Callirrhoe who he had either wed or was offered as a bride. Arsinoe was sold into slavery by her brothers for scolding them. Callirrhoe then asked Zeus that her sons by Alcmaeon grew old immediately so that they could avenge their father. Zeus granted her request and they killed Phegeus and his sons. The curse ended when Alcmaeon's sons, Amphoterus and Acarnan, dedicated the necklace to a temple of Athena at Delphi. A tyrant Phayllus is said to have stolen it and given it to his mistress. Their son went mad and set fire to the house killing his mother.
With Cadmus Harmonia had a son, Polydorus, who became king of Thebes when the ruler Pentheus was killed, but died young while his son Labdacus was a child. Labdacus too had a short reign and died young, either in battle or he was killed by Maenads. Harmonia and Cadmus also had daughters. Semele who was impregnated with Dionysus by Zeus but died in terror when she asked Zeus to come to her as he did to Hera, after Hera tricked her into asking for this. Ino who became Dionysus' foster mother and was also the wicked stepmother of Phrixus and Helle, her husband Athamas was stricken with madness and killed their son Learchus, thinking he was a ram/fawn/lion. Athamas then tried to kill Ino and their son Melicertes and she was forced to jump into the sea with him. Alternatively Ino too was mad and boiled Melicertes in a cauldron. Zeus turned the pair into the marine deities Leucothea (white goddess) and Palaemon. Autonoe and Agave were other daughters, they became Maenads and killed Agave's son, the current Theban king Pentheus. Agave carried his head back on a stick thinking him a lion and only realised the truth when she met Cadmus. Autonoe was mother to Actaeon who was turned into a stag by Artemis for spying her bathing naked and was killed by his own hounds. The sisters may have been driven mad because they were jealous of Semele and suggested that her lover Zeus was a man who merely claimed he was a god.
Cadmus abandoned his throne to his grandson Pentheus and he and Harmonia went to Illyria to escape their misfortune. Cadmus felt he was cursed for killing Ares' dragon and remarked that if the gods loved a serpent so he wished to be one and so they transformed him. Harmonia begged for the same fate so she could be with her husband. When they died they went to the Isles of the Blessed.
Her Roman counterpart was Concordia the goddess of agreement, understanding and marital harmony. She was usually depicted with a sacrificial bowl, a cornucopia or a caduceus. She was shown in the company of Pax (peace) and Salus (well-being) or Securitas (security) and Fortuna.
Pandia/Pandeia- goddess of the full moon, beauty and youth. A daughter of Zeus and Selene and sister to Herse/Ersa, Nemea and sometimes the Nemean Lion. She had the fifty Menae/Mene for half-sisters, daughters of Selene and Endymion.
Herse/Ersa- goddess of the dew. A daughter of Zeus and Selene and sister to Pandia, Nemea and sometimes the Nemean Lion. Half sister to the fifty Menae.
Menae/Mene/Menai- fifty goddesses of the lunar months. They were the daughters of the moon titan Selene and the mortal King Endymion of Elis. Their half sibilings were Pandia, Herse/Ersa, Nemea, and the Nemean Lion.
Brizo- a goddess worshipped by women in Delos, she protected sailors and fishermen and interpreted dreams. Food was offered to her but never fish.
Aidos/Aedos- a goddess of modesty, respect, shame and humility. A companion of Nemesis she was said to be the last goddess to leave earth when the Golden Age ended. Alternatively it was Astraea/Astrea the goddess of innocence and purity who was the last to leave, abandoning earth during the Iron Age.
Sometimes Aidos was said to be a daughter of Prometheus.
Asclepius and Epione, the goddes of soothing pain's daughters, Hygieia/Hygiea/Hygeia- a goddess of health, cleanliness and sanitation, Panacea/Panakeia- the goddess of medicines, Iaso- the goddess of recuperation, Aceso- the goddess of healing, and Aglaea/Aglaia- the goddess of splendor (probably confused with the Charite of the same name.
Aura- Titaness goddess of the breeze. Nonnus says she was a daughter of Cybele whilst other sources say she was a daughter of the Titan of air and stalking prey Lelantus/Lelantos and the Okeanid Periboea/Periboia. She could be linked to the naiad Nicaea/Nikaia, also said to be a daughter of Cybele seduced by Dionysus.
A virgin huntress who said that Artemis' body was too womanly to belong to that of a virgin. In anger with Nemesis' help Artemis brought about vengeance by having Dionysus rape Aura. She became pregnant and went mad killing men, and even swallowed one of her twin sons. Artemis rescued the other, Iakkhos/Iacchus who became a demigod attendant of Demeter. Alternatively, Dionysus loved her and requested Aphrodite to inspire her to love him back but when she gave birth to their twins she went mad.
Ariadne- the goddess of passion and mazes. Formerly a princess of Crete and daughter of Minos, she persuaded the inventor Daedalus to give her a ball of thread that would find the way of the labyrinth, this she gave to the hero Theseus as she loved him. She fled with Theseus only to be left on the island Naxos, either because Theseus did not want to wed her or because Dionysus demanded it. Dionysus married her, gifting her with the Corona Borealis, a diadem he later placed in the heavens.
With Dionysus she had the sons Oenopion, Staphylus, Thoas, Peparethus, Phanus, Eurymedon, Enyeus, Ceramus, Maron, Euanthes, Latramys and Tauropolis. Oenopion was a king of Chios associated with wine making who may have been a son of Theseus. He blinded Orion when Orion tried to rape his daughter Merope, when Helios restored his sight he returned to kill Oenopion but he hid in an underground fortress built by his followers, or an iron fortress built by Hephaestus. Staphylus was linked to grapes, said to be a general for his uncle Rhadamanthys, he founded Peparethos and was an Argonaut. Sometime he too was a son of Theseus'. He cast out his daughter Rhoeo in a casket in the sea when she became pregnant by Apollo, believing her pregnant to a mortal. She became mother to Anius. Thoas was king of Lemnos and possibly another son of Theseus. His daughter Hypsipyle sneaked him from the island in a boat or hid him when the women of Lemnos killed the men after Aphrodite cursed them with a bad odour causing their husbands to sleep with slaves. He became king of Tauris where Agamemnon's daughter Iphigenia became a priestess when Artemis took her there. When Iphigenia tricked him into giving her a chance to free her brother Orestes who he wanted to kill, he pursued them but Athena persuaded him to let them go. He was killed by Chryses, a priest of Apollo.
She was killed by Artemis or hung herself after Theseus abandoned her, or Perseus when Dionysus fought him and the Argives. Alternatively, Perseus turned her into stone with the head of Medusa. Dionysus then likely retrieved her from the Underworld and made her immortal as he had done with his mother Semele. Plutarch says when Theseus' ship was in a storm he sailed to an island and put the pregnant Ariadne ashore but when he went to secure the ship it was swept out to sea and Ariadne died before her child was born.
Thyone- goddess of inspired frenzy. Formerly the mortal princess Semele she was killed inadvertently by her lover Zeus when a jealous Hera in disguise suggested that her lover was not a god compelling Semele to ask Zeus to come to her as he did to Hera when he granted her a boon. The sight frightened her to death and to save the infant Dionysus, Zeus took the foetus from Semele and sewed it in his thigh until it was ready to be born. Alternatively, Dionysus was Zagreus, a son of Zeus and Persephone murdered by the Titans, Zeus took his heart and got Semele to swallow it causing it to be reformed as Dionysus.
Dionysus rescued Semele from the Underworld and brought her back as the goddess Thyone.
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