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- Chaos – Mythopedia
Chaos also increasingly became associated with darkness and gloom, especially the darkness and gloom of the Underworld Other Interpretations Hesiod’s mysterious Chaos appears to have influenced early Greek philosophers as they began to search for the origins of the cosmos using science and reason rather than religion
- Erebus - Mythopedia
Aristophanes: A parodic (or semi-parodic) cosmogony in the comedy Birds (414 BCE) makes Erebus one of the first beings of the cosmos rather than a son of Chaos Plato: Timaeus (fourth century BCE) imagines a new philosophical cosmogony centered around a mysterious “Demiurge” rather than figures such as Erebus, Nyx, and Chaos Roman
- Set – Mythopedia
Set, Egyptian god of chaos and disorder, was a source of tremendous antagonism in Egyptian mythology After being killed by Anubis, he became a force for good in the afterlife, defending the sun from the monster Apophis
- Nyx - Mythopedia
Nyx, daughter of Chaos and personification of the night, was among the first Greek gods of the cosmos She bore numerous children, both with her brother-consort Erebus as well as on her own, representing various personifications and abstractions
- Greek Primordial Gods - Mythopedia
The Greek primordial gods were the first beings to populate the cosmos and gave birth to all the subsequent gods, creatures, and mortals of Greek mythology Two of these primordial gods, Gaia and Uranus, were the parents of the Titans and the grandparents of the Olympians
- Eris - Mythopedia
In the Dionysiaca, a lengthy epic by Nonnus (fifth century CE), Eris constantly foments chaos: she helps Typhoeus in his battle with Zeus (2 357–58), stands by Ares (32 176–77), leads fleets into war (39 384–85), appears in a dream to Dionysus (20 35–43), and nurses the Giant Damasen (25 485–89) Roman
- Demon Names - Mythopedia
Demon names are often tied to specific characteristics: a host of demons possessing one individual call themselves “Legion” in the Bible, referring to the fact that they aren’t one spirit but many Singular names reflect the otherworldliness of these entities; in Japanese myth, Raijin is the god of storms and chaos
- Theogony - Mythopedia
The poem’s violent cycle of divine births, usurpations, and successions explores themes such as order and chaos, power, and divinity There is a certain religious fervor underlying the Theogony, especially surrounding gods such as Zeus and (somewhat idiosyncratically) Hecate The gods—and Zeus specifically—serve as symbols of the justice
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