Iapetos the Titan god of the west, mortality and craftmanship? Lazy and unfounded. Now, Iapetos the fundamental force of gravity personified? Sourced and sexy.
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My Greek myth AU designs that I have yet to draw (Post 2)
+ lore
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Eurynome
Titaness
Goddess of flowery meadows, pastures, meadows, and flowers
Very pretty :3
Good friends with Astraios, they like practicing balldancing together
Melisseus
Titan
God of bees and honey
He is a bee, and is much shorter than the other titans, and barely taller than the gods; what he lacks in height he makes up for with good baked honey treats
Can often be found in swarms of bees
Klymene
Titaness
Goddess of fame and renown
Wife of Iapetos (iapetos)
Is 100% a diva and mainly talks in exaggerated hand and body movements.
She believes fame is earned, not given, and will fuck over anyone who asks for fame outright
"Shake my hand. Come on boys, won't you shake a poor sinner's hand?"
Iapetos (iapetos)
Titan
God of mortality
Husband of Klymene
The most pessimistic, melodramatic mf ever. Gave Tithonos eternal youth as a gift to his niece Eos. Zeus tried to stop him, he made Zeus sit through seventy hours of opera and musicals. Zeus fucked off.
Eurybia
Titaness
Goddess of the power and currents of the seas
Her vibe is "spookily ethereal" or "ethereally spooky", and honestly I headcanon she is where the Will-O-Wisp and Banshee myths come from
Hyperion
Titan
He retired as the god of the sun, and became the god of heavenly light
Husband of Theia
Doesn't do much until a deity wants to make a dramatic entrance, so he's technically the lighting technician of the gods and goddesses
Pallas
Titan
God of warships and battle
Husband of Styx
Has all the battle prowess of Ares and the strategic mind of Athena, lucky for them he prefers battling on the seas (and he doesn't really care, they're all best friends who pretend to hate each other lmao)
He is proud of his daughter Nike
Perses
Titan
God of destruction
He has a very explosive temperament
Had a heated argument with Ares, it led to a fight, Perses was significantly outmatched and lost a hand, he replaced it with a blade
Daughter Hecate was raised by his brother because Perses did not want her
Phoebe (DRAWN)
Titaness
Goddess of intellect and prophecy
Wife of Coeus
She can be found in Olympus's library 98% of the time. Nobody knows where she goes the other 2% of the time.
Styx
Titaness
Goddess of the River Styx and oaths
Wife of Pallas
The only way I could describe her is "supportive cryptic grandma" and "she sings hauntingly beautifully, almost in a tragic tone, like a dead Appalachian forest spirit, alongside the River Styx"
Theia
Titaness
Goddess of sight and the aether
Gives metals their shine and value
Wife of Hyperion
Sweet woman, unless you cross her somehow, she holds grudges and is very petty
Theia and her husband would burn down the world for one another; they are literally Morticia and Gomez Addams
Eos
Titaness
Goddess of Dawn
Wife of Tithonos
She is way kinkier and hornier than Zeus
She is a cicada
She moves with etheral beauty and grace
is very close with her brother Helios and sometimes accompanies him on his trips with the sun
Tithonos
Husband of Eos
Grasshopper
Was given immortality by Zeus and eternal youth by Iapetus
earrings were given to him by his wife, they are a mosaic of the dawn
Epimetheus
Titan
God of afterthought
Husband of Pandora
flower crown was given to him by his wife
clumsy mf
brother of Prometheus
is the idiot sibling
loves his wife
Pandora
Goddess of childlike wonder and curiosity
Wife of Epimetheus
Person: what do you see in him? (gestures to Epimetheus)
Pandora: he makes me laugh :)
anywho gifts that Pandora got from the gods:
Taught her crafts and weaving (Athena)
Grace and beauty (Aphrodite)
Cunning mind, crafty tongue, and good speech skills / charisma / social skills (Hermes)
Curiosity (Hera)
Jewlery (the Graces + Persuasion
Golden headband (Hephaestus)
Flower crowns (the Horae)
Ability to sing well and how to play any instrument (Apollo)
Pearl necklace to prevent drowning (Poseidon)
Hecate
Titaness
Goddess of witchcraft, magic, and ghosts
Has a lot of pet polecats and black dogs
Is probably where the legend of Black Shuck comes from
yes her mask is based off a black dog
torn socks, a design trait I don't use often
loves listening to Styx sing
Helios
Titan
God of sight and the sun
Apollo, the one who controls the sun, prefers dedicating his time to medicine and music rather than the sun, so Helios, the one who pulls the sun, is the main god of the sun
Is a red junglefowl rooster
Sun crown
Very close with his sister, Eos, and sometimes allows her to come on trips with the sun
Mnemosyne
Titaness
Goddess of memory, the inventor of language
The one 30+ year old friend that always gets ID'd at bars because the bouncer and bartender don't believe their age
Oceanus
Titan
God of saltwater and freshwater
Husband of Tethys
Fish.
Yea that's it, that's my only comment.
Tethys
Titaness
Goddess of freshwater and nursing
Wife of Oceanus
Winged brows, like she has in myth
I wanted to contrast her husband, who looked far more abyssal, so I made her look more pelagic
seafoam incorporated into her design
rain cloud necklace because she is the mother of rain clouds
Themis
Titaness
Goddess of divine law and order
She never takes her golden robes off around anyone, so nobody really knows what she looks like underneath
Selene
Titaness
Goddess of the moon
âšđ HER âšđ
Prometheus
Titan
God of afterthought
Absolutely hates birds.
Rhea
Titaness
Goddess of mountains, menustration, and fertility
Mother of Poseidon, Zeus, Hades, and Hestia.
Proud of almost all of her kids and grandchildren. Loves all of them. Gave Hera permission to throw hands with Zeus. Can you tell who the singular child she's not proud of is? No? Me neither. It's totally not obvious.
If you see a fir tree on the garden of Olympus, she 100% planted it.
Ananke
Primordial goddess of necessity and compulsion
Wife of Chronos
Worshipped by gods and mortals alike
Chronos
Primordial god of time and eternity
Husband of Ananke
Like many of you, I am fascinated by the Titans as the âprevious generation of godsâ, as the âgods before the godsâ, as the âlost pantheonâ. And like many of you I read Riordan and his take on the Titans and loved it.
But there is a problem I see arising everywhere. The repetition of something oddly specific - something present and popularized by Riordan himself. The idea that for example âCoeos was the Titan of hindsightâ, âCrios was the Titan of the starsâ, âJapet was the Titan of mortalityâ. It is repeated everywhere as if it was fact. But it is wrong.Â
Letâs consider it in two steps, shall we?
1) Yes, Titans are the gods of something. Well... some of them are
A first confusion arose from the fact that several of the deities we know as âtitansâ are explicit deities of given concept. Themis and Mnemosyne were the embodiment of justice and memory, Rhea and Tethys were important and well-defined figures, Prometheus was a hero of legends and Helios was the sun... This led to the idea that ALL of the Titans had to be the âgod of somethingâ. After all, if half of the Titans were attested deities of given concepts, the other had to, right? Because all the Greek gods embodied or reflected something, so they HAD to, right?
Well... no. One has to consider that the Titans are mythologically distinct in two groups: those that âsurvived the warâ so to speak, and thus became part of the Greek mythological tales ; and those that âlost the warâ and completely left the story (such as Kronosâ brothers - except Okeanos). But this distinction isnât just mythological: it is also a religious and cultural difference. All the Titans that âsurvived the warâ in texts are actually deities whose cult and worship was well-installed and attested in Ancient Greece, or whose folkloric presence was undeniable, while those that âlost the warâ were not present in any form in Greeceâs religion and culture, often limited to one obscure literary mention.
Of course, from the fictional point of view of âThey were locked in Tartarus so of course they wouldnât be known or veneratedâ it makes sense... But we are talking here from a real-life point of view, an actual look at those entities. We have to take into account that the âsurviving Titansâ were actually considered equal to and regularly mixed with the other âOlympianâ gods, to the point that a lot of texts and legends donât actually specify they are Titans or doesnât identify them as such. Which led to so many retellings of Greek mythology where these deities are not Titans but Olympians or âother Greek godsâ. Which are NOT wrong interpretations of mythology - it just depends on which side you stand on. Titan wasnât a clear-cut religious category, but rather a literary and poetic construct (but more on that later), and all in all they were all gods - so after the war, that âdestroyedâ the Titans, the gods became just gods.
But from a logical, outside-story, real-life point of view... it is very probable that these âTitan godsâ did not start as Titan at all. It is possible that they simply started as gods. They were gods, deities, part of the same pantheon as the Olympians, and only later through epic and poetic texts did the âTitansâ appear, invented by authors for their cosmogny - a new pantheon that mixed together the well-known deities (well-known because they âsurvivedâ the war) and literary inventions (to fill the gap and explain who was defeated - they couldnât have picked gods part of Greeceâs religion).Â
This explanation of the inclusion of âactualâ deities alongside literary inventions seems to be the most reasonable one, and is especially revealing when you compare the discrepancy between these enormous and important figures, such as Themis, and these unknown figures with no background or backstory, such as Theia or Crius. Now I am not saying that the authors didnât try to have these âinvented Titansâ mean something - after all you canât just drop a random name between âJusticeâ and âMemoryâ, or have some random name birth âSun, Moon and Dawnâ. There was probably allegories and symbols in those invented figures, they probably were meant to embody or personify something... But people shouldnât treat them as if they were actual gods of Ancient Greece - at least until we find archeological proof that there were cults of them.
That being said...
2) Where does this Titan-system comes from?
There is a âTitan systemâ that keeps being repeated around the Internet. A reading of mythology that claims things such as how Theia is the goddess of âbrightness and sightâ, how Coeos is the âlord of insight, curiosity and intellectâ, how Japet embodies âmortalityâ. A part of it appeared in Age of Mythology ; it was heavily used by Riordan in his books ; it is in fact described by the website Theoi - which is a huge and very useful resource when it comes to Ancient Greek texts, Greek gods analysis and mythology comparison.
But this âsystemâ and these âinterpretationsâ have to be taken with CAUTION! Because when you actually read the reasoning behind those interpretations, you realize that these are not âtruthsâ about the Titans. These are theories, and hypothesis, a guessing game based on clues - but nothing certain, and sometimes the guesses even feel stretchy.Â
Given studying all of the Titans would take too much time, I will only take four cases: the âdefeated brothers of Kronosâ. Iapetos, Coios, Crios and Hyperion.Â
A) Hyperion. This one is actually the one we know the most about, and the interpretations of him are pretty correct. Hyperionâs name itself means âhe who is aboveâ and hints at a celestial position, reinforced by how Hyperion gave birth to the three main âlight-giversâ of the world: Helios the sun, Selene the moon and Eos the dawn. It makes sense to identify him as âTitan of lightâ. Even more; the name Hyperion was known to be use as an epithet or synonym of Helios himself, the sun-god, who was also known as the god watching humanity from above - to the point we can even claim that the literary Hyperion was probably invented by splitting Helios from his alternate name. (After all, Homer does call regularly Helios âHyperionâ, while Hesiod splits the two, and it is pretty much agreed that the Homeric pantheon reflects an âolderâ state of Greek mythology and the Hesiodic one a ânewerâ).Â
So clearly he is a sun or light figure ; and it is something that Diodorus Siculus, in his âLibrary of Historyâ, understood very well: when he re-wrote the Titans as the â human inventers of primitive civilizationâ, he gave to Hyperion the discovery of the movement of the celestial bodies and of the cycle of seasons, leading to him being called in legend the âfather of the sun and the moonâ when, according to Siculus, he was just a man who studied them very closely (the whole text was an attempt at proving that Greek myths were just real stories of men that got taken out of context - after all Siculus was an historian).Â
B) Coeos/Coios. We canât guess much from his children, unlike Hyperion, as he fathered the strange duo of Leto and Asteria ; but from his name we can find what he possibly meant, as âKoiosâ comes from the Greek word for âqueryâ, âquestionningâ. This is a clue that opens up to a LOT of various possibilities and interpretations - the most notably being a tie to the âpropheticâ and âknowledgeableâ grandchildren of Koios, Apollo son of Leto and Hecate daughter of Asteria (yeah people tend to forget Apollo and Artemis are Hecateâs cousins). A great open road of interpretations... But sometimes people will also use to defend their theories the âother nameâ of Koios, âPolusâ or âPolosâ, which is supposed to mean the celestial axis, the north pole or something like that... Completely ignoring the fact that this alternate name comes from ROMAN texts, not Greek ones. While interesting when considering the figure as a whole, it makes any attempt at recreating its âGreek selfâ wrong.
C) Crios. As with Coeos we can only trust the eventual clue left by the name, as we know Krios was the Greek word for âramâ. And once more the possibilities are VAST. As with most Titans we can only rely on his children to bring additional information, but the trio of Crios children is even more mysterious and disparate than Coiosâ: Pallas, Perses, Astreos. For some âthe ramâ has to be understood as a constellation, and theyâll read star-thematic and signification in Criosâ children. For others the âramâ rather indicates a form of animality and will highlight the animal nature of Crios children (associated with horses, dogs, goats...). But in truth? We know nothing. We cannot ignore that the children of a deity are always important for the meaning of the deityâs role, especially in Hesiodâs writings (Themis births the Fates because fate is just in a Greekâs mind) - but people tend to be too simple in their reading and forget how complex things can be (after all, Mnemosyne isnât the mother of the Muses because she is a goddess of art - she births the Muses because art is nothing without memory).Â
D) And then comes the âworst offenderâ so to speak... Iapetos. Japet as we call him in France. Heralded by many as the âgod of mortalityâ when truly there is NOTHING that tells us that. People that defend this theory use three elements. One, the fact his children were involved in the creation of humanity and mortal beings: but in truth only two of his children were involved in that, as the other two had no link whatsoever to humanity. Two, the meaning of his name: âiaptĂŽâ, âthe piercerâ. It is true that Iapetos name reveals a brutal, hostile nature as something that pierces, that empales, that stabs. But does it truly mean he is a being of death or mortality? It could just as well mean he is an entity of violence, war or brutality. And third, the idea that he is a âTitan of the westâ.
And there I have to burst one of the most-beloved modern beliefs about the Titans... The whole thing of the âTitans embody the four cardinal pointsâ is bullshit. Riordan took it back and reinvented it for his fiction, okay. And Theoi.com promotes it - but this is a very stretchy interpretation, probably born out of a comparative mythologist who was bothered the Greeks didnât had the same âguardians of the four cardinal pointsâ that other Indo-European mythologies had. NO ANTIQUE TEXT WHATSOEVER can even lead to guessing that the four Titans were embodiments of the cardinal points. THERE WAS NO FRIGGIN LINK BETWEEN THE FOUR TITAN BROTHERS AND THE CARDINAL POINTS in Ancient Greece. Heck the idea that they represent the cardinal points because they were four Titans who held the sky doesnât even stand in front of Hesiodâs text, as the Theogony makes it clear the FIVE Titans brother held down their sky-father.Â
So the idea of the âcardinal Titansâ, while truly lovely from a poetic point of view, and clever as a mythological reinterpretation, is not âaccurateâ or âtrueâ to mythology.
And all of this shows that in truth, when dealing with ânot-well-known Titansâ one should always be VERY careful, because while some are attested deities that âbecameâ Titans (Helios or Themis, who all seem pretty âOlympianâ from a worship point of view and yet are Titans), others are just names invented to fill a fictional family tree and a poetic pantheon - significative names, open to interpretation, but not the names of actually recognized and known figure of Ancient Greeks. You ask an Ancient Greek what Iapetos was a god was and theyâll be confused because they donât have a god named Iapetos, but if they read Hesiodâs text (and they probably did given how popular and widespread it was), theyâll answer âOh heâs not a god! Heâs this character from Hesiodâs poem!â. Remember that when it comes to Titans, either you have a solid and complex deity ; either you have just a name and nothing else.
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â iapetos "the piercer" was probably the titan god symbolising mortality and the mortal life-span as his sons prometheus and epimetheus were the creators of mankind and all other mortal creatures.