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- Menoetius – Mythopedia
Menoetius, the son of Iapetus and the brother of Atlas, Prometheus, and Epimetheus, was a rash and violent Titan Caught on the wrong side of the war between the Olympians and the Titans, Menoetius was ultimately struck down by Zeus’ lightning and cast into Tartarus
- Iapetus – Mythopedia
Iapetus was one of the original Greek Titans who fought (unsuccessfully) against the Olympians in the Titanomachy He fathered several well-known mythological figures, including Atlas, Prometheus, and Epimetheus
- Epimetheus – Mythopedia
Epimetheus, brother of Prometheus, was a Greek Titan, known for being as slow-witted as Prometheus was quick Neglecting his wiser brother’s warnings, Epimetheus accepted Pandora as his bride and thus inadvertently helped unleash all the evils of the cosmos upon mankind
- Patroclus – Mythopedia
Patroclus was the son of Menoetius, a hero from the region of Eastern Locris who had taken part in the voyage of the Argonauts His mother’s name varied depending on the source, but we know that she was Menoetius’ wife Patroclus by Jacques-Louis David (1780) Musée Thomas-Henry, Cherbourg-Octeville Public Domain Where did Patroclus live?
- Iliad: Book 11 (Full Text) - Mythopedia
Menoetius thus: ‘Though great Achilles shine In strength superior, and of race divine, Yet cooler thoughts thy elder years attend; Let thy just counsels aid, and rule thy friend ’ Thus spoke your father at Thessalia’s court: Words now forgot, though now of vast import
- Atlas – Mythopedia
Atlas was a Greek Titan famed for his prodigious strength and endurance, condemned to shoulder the heavens for eternity He once passed the burden of holding up the world to the hero Hercules, but was tricked into taking it back
- Prometheus – Mythopedia
Prometheus, the son of Iapetus, was a quick-witted Greek Titan who sided with the Olympians in their war against his Titan brethren For gifting fire to humanity, he was sentenced to eternal torment by Zeus, but was eventually saved by the hero Heracles
- Iliad: Book 9 (Full Text) - Mythopedia
With like surprise arose Menoetius’ son: Pelides grasp’d their hands, and thus begun: “Princes, all hail! whatever brought you here Or strong necessity, or urgent fear; Welcome, though Greeks! for not as foes ye came; To me more dear than all that bear the name ”
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