The Greek Titan Cronus (Kronos) ate his children—Hestia, Demeter, Hera, Hades, and Poseidon—as they were born, because he feared a prophecy that one of them would overthrow him, just as he had overthrown his own father, Uranus. His wife, Rhea, saved their youngest, Zeus, by tricking Cronus into swallowing a stone instead, and Zeus later freed his siblings, leading to the Titanomachy.
Cronus was the ruling Titan who came to power by castrating his Father Uranus. His wife was Rhea. There offspring were the first of the Olympians. To insure his safety Cronus ate each of the children as they were born.
Saturn Devouring His Son is the name given to a painting by Spanish artist Francisco Goya. According to the traditional interpretation, it depicts the Greek myth of the Titan Cronus (in the title Romanized to Saturn), who, fearing that he would be overthrown by one of his children, ate each one upon their birth.
Apollo, the god of sun and music, is considered the patron of same sex love, as he had many male lovers and was often invoked to bless homosexual unions. He is also called "the champion of male love" by Andrew Callimach.
As New Testament Scholar Daniel Kirk has pointed out, Christians today would do well by the tradition of the apostles and our current witness in the world to recognize that theological abstractions aside, God has already clearly embraced LGBTQ+ people into full communion, and it is now the church's responsibility to ...
Apollo: The God of Bisexuality.
With his sister Rhea, another Titan, Cronus had many children, including the goddesses Hestia, Demeter, and Hera and the gods Hades and Poseidon. To prevent his father's prophecy from coming true, Cronus swallowed all his offspring at birth.
This is the most famous portrait in the world. It shows Lisa Gherardini, wife of the Florentine silk merchant Francesco del Giocondo – hence her Italian name La Gioconda and her French name La Joconde.
To prevent this, Saturn ate his children moments after each was born, eating the gods Vesta (Hestia), Ceres (Demeter), Juno (Hera), Pluto (Hades), and Neptune (Poseidon).
Zeus swallowed a pregnant Metis to prevent the son that would overthrow him from being born. The prophecy stated first Metis would have a daughter (who she was pregnant with when she was swallowed, Athena), and then a son who would overthrow him. The son had never been conceived at the point, and so he was never named.
In various Asian religious traditions, the Nāgas (Sanskrit: नाग, romanized: Nāga) are a divine, or semi-divine, race of half-human, half-serpent beings that reside in the netherworld (Patala), and can occasionally take human or part-human form, or are so depicted in art.
However, after seven years, Clytemnestra and Agamemnon's son Orestes returned to Sparta. He had visited the Oracle at Delphi and had been commanded by the god Apollo to kill his mother, taking revenge for the murder of his father, Agamemnon. Orestes killed his mother, along with his infant sister Helen.
Apollo is the model of Greek male excellence in physical, intellectual and ethical terms. This model of masculine perfection was compatible with a sexuality beyond the limits of heterosexuality. Apollo, like other gods such as Zeus, had both male and female lovers in myth.
Furthermore, Kronos began to fall deeply in love with Rhea, his most beautiful sister. He seemed to believe that marrying her would improve his personality and induce his siblings to visit him more often. In the end, Kronos confessed his deep feelings for Rhea and proposed to her.
Hestia was known to be very gentle and mild. She was kind, forgiving, and content. She chose the life she wanted — a life that did not include marriage or wild adventures. She was able to provide for others and to devote her life to her family and community.
Most scholars believe that da Vinci was a homosexual due to his penchant for surrounding himself with young men, though some believe he was bisexual. Sigmund Freud even published an essay in 1910 that came to the conclusion that he was gay, but sublimated all his sexual urges into art and research.
Painting is the art of applying paint, pigment, or color to a surface (like canvas, wood, or paper) to create images, express ideas, or decorate, using tools like brushes to form shapes, lines, and textures that convey emotion, narrative, or abstraction, and the term also refers to the final artwork itself. It can be purely artistic expression, capturing feelings, or serve a practical purpose like protecting a wall.
Leonardo da Vinci: IQ 180–220
While IQ tests weren't around when Leonardo da Vinci was living, some have estimated that his score would have been between 180 and 220. Like other people considered geniuses, he had a wide range of skills, excelling in everything from art and science to music and architecture.
Yes, many Greek gods had male lovers, with the norm being bisexuality, though figures like Zeus (with Ganymede), Apollo (with Hyacinthus), Hermes, Dionysus, and the hero Heracles are famous examples, often involved in pederastic relationships or deep bonds that modern interpretation calls homosexual or bisexual. While gods like Ares, Hades, and Hephaestus had fewer or no male lovers, same-sex relationships were common across the pantheon, with Zeus often cited as the prime example of a powerful god with male paramours.
Rhea was a Vestal Virgin who became pregnant with the twins after being raped by the god Mars; after giving birth, they were taken from her and raised by a she-wolf. These events were frequently portrayed in Roman art and literature.
Zeus became the leader of the cosmos, completing the prophecy from Uranus. The Olympians doomed Kronos and the other Titans to Tartarus, the darkest pit of Hades. Though Kronos was immortal and could not be killed, Zeus would chop him up and throw him into Tartarus.
/ˈkjuː.pɪd/ the ancient Roman god of love, represented by a naked baby boy who has wings and shoots arrows at people to make them start to love each other.
Romans believed that Ganymede was gay and served as Zeus's lover because he was one of the few mortals granted immortality by Zeus in Greek mythology. Ganymede is sometimes framed as the god of homosexual love, placed in the pantheon beside Eros and Hymenaois.
But of the six females, three - Athena, Artemis and Hestia - are dedicated virgins, steadfast in their refusal to marry; while one- Zeus' consort Hera - is what might be called a semi-virgin, since she is able to renew her virginity annually by bathing in a sacred spring at Canathus, near Argos.