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Uranus (god)

Ouranos is the Greek name of the sky, latinized as Uranus. In Greek mythology it is personified as the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. The two of them were ancestral to most of the Greek gods. His Roman equivalent was Coelus ("sky").

Uranus hid the youngest children of Gaia, the one-hundred armed giants (Hecatonchires) and the one-eyed giants, the Cyclopes, in Tartarus so that they would not see the light, rejoicing in this evil doing. This caused pain to Gaia (Tartarus was her bowels) so she created grey flint and shaped a great sickle and gathered together Cronus and his brothers to ask them to obey her. Only Cronus was willing to do the deed, so Gaia gave him the sickle and set him in ambush. Cronus jumped out and lopped off his father's testicles, casting them behind him. From his blood on the Earth came forth the Gigantes, Erinyes and Meliae. From the testicles of Uranus in the sea came forth Aphrodite. For this, Uranus called his sons Titans, meaning "strainers" for they strained and did presumptuously a fearful deed, for which vengeance would come afterwards. After Uranus was deposed, however, Cronus returned the Hecatonchires and Cyclopes to Tartarus.

From the blood of Uranus, Gaia later brought forth the Gigantes, who were destroyed by the gods with the help of Heracles. His genitals also turned into the goddess of beauty, Aphrodite.

Consorts/Children

  1. No mother
    1. Aphrodite
    2. Erinyes
      1. Alecto
      2. Megaera
      3. Tisiphone
    3. Gigantes
      1. Alcyoneus
      2. Athos
      3. Clytias
      4. Enceladus
      5. Echion
    4. Meliae
  2. With Gaia
    1. Cyclopes
      1. Brontes
      2. Oceanus
      3. Steropes
    2. Hecatonchires
      1. Briareus
      2. Cottus
      3. Gyes
    3. Titans
      1. Coeus
      2. Crius
      3. Cronus
      4. Hyperion
      5. Iapetus
      6. Mnemosyne
      7. Phoebe
      8. Rhea
      9. Tethys
      10. Theia
      11. Themis
  3. Unknown mother
    1. Aristaeus

Referenced By

Acidalia | Aegaeon | Alcyoneus | Alecto | Alkyonios | Aphrodite | Aphrodite Acidalia | Aphrodite Pandemos | Aphroditê | Aristaeus | Briareus | Ceneus | Centiman | Centimani | Clytias | Coltus | Crius | Cronion | Cyclopes | Cytherea | Deities | Deity | Dieties | Diety | Dirae | Dyaus Pitar | Earth Mother | Echidna (mythology) | Enkelados | Erinyes | Erycina | Etna | Eumenides | Furies | Gaia (mythology) | Gigantes | Gigantês | Gods | Greek god | Greek gods | Gyes | Gyges (mythology) | Hecantocheire | Hecantochires | Hecatoncheire | Hecatoncheires | Hecatonchires | Hephaestos | Hephaestus | Hephaistos | Hephestus | Hyperion (mythological) | Hyperion (mythology) | Iapetos (mythology) | Iapetus (mythology) | Jove | Jupiter (god) | Jupiter (mythology) | Jupiter Caelestis | Jupiter Fulgurator | Jupiter Latarius | Jupiter Lucetius | Jupiter Optimus Maximus | Jupiter Pluvius | Jupiter Stator | Jupiter Totans | Jupiter Victor | Klytias | Kronion | Kroníon | Kyklopes | Kyklopês | Kypris | Kythereia | List of Di Indigetes | List of Greek mythological characters | List of deities | Megaera | Meliae | Phoebe (mythology) | Rhea (god) | Rhea (goddess) | Rhea (mythology) | Roman/Greek/Etruscan equivalency in mythology | Roman/Greek equivalency in mythology | Semnai | Sethlans | Similarities between Roman, Greek, and Etruscan mythologies | The Erinyes | ZeuS | Zeus Ceneus | Zeus Cronion | Zeus Kronion | Zeus Kroníon | Zeus Lycaeus | Zeus Panhellenios

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Uranus (god)".

 

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