Title: Greek Gods and Religion
1Greek Gods and Religion
Science and Religion in Schools Project - Unit 3b
2Who were the Greek gods?
- A pantheon of gods and goddesses living on Mount
Olympus - Zeus, the supreme god, was god of the sky
- Poseidon was god of the sea and
- Hades was god of the underworld
The other Olympians were Aphrodite (Love), Apollo
(Prophecy), Ares (War), Artemis (The Hunt),
Athena (Arts and Crafts), Demeter (Agriculture),
Dionysus (Wine), Hephaestus (Fire), Hera
(Marriage), and Hermes (Messenger of the Gods),
There were also lesser gods like Eros, heroes
like Achilles and mythical beings like the Muses,
Centaurs and Satyrs.
3Family Tree
The Olympians are in yellow
4What were they like?
- The gods lived in a central stronghold on Mount
Olympus ruled over by Zeus rather like a kingdom.
Each god had a function or job. They fought
battles,and granted favours to mortals but could
also bring disaster.
5How did the gods interactwith the world?
- Each of the gods was connected with
- particular aspects of life. For example,
- the goddess Athene was connected
- with childbirth, the production of olives
- and the crafts. In Athens, where ceramics was a
major industry, she was regarded as caring for
all the workers in the city and the community as
a whole. So the gods offered protection and
guidance.
6Greek beliefs about creation
- Although Zeus is the main god he was not a
creator god and there are no real myths of
creation from ancient Greece. Instead the more
naturalistic explanations of creation by Greek
philosophers were commonly accepted. Man was
believed to have been made from clay by the minor
craftsman god Prometheus.
7Greek beliefs about the universe
- The gods (immortal) and humans (mortal) lived in
different realms. There was, however, a land of
perfect happiness at the ends of the earth where
favoured mortals lived for ever. It was called
Elysium. But there was also the underworld, the
world of the dead, ruled over by Hades.
8Greek myths
- Homers epic poem the Iliad tells the story of
Achilles and the Trojan war while his Odyssey
is about Odysseus. These Greek heroes win glory
by adventure and war. They show us what potential
there is for the human mind and spirit to explore
far beyond the limitations of ordinary, everyday
experience.
9Greek Gods and Religion
Science and Religion in Schools Project - Unit 3b