Greek god
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External Websites
- Greek Gods and Goddessess - Zeus
- UEN Digital Press with Pressbooks - Zeus
- Ancient-Greece.org - Zeus (Jupiter)
- Humanities LibreTexts - Zeus
- Ancient Origins - The unshakeable power of Zeus, prime mover of ancient Greek deities
- Theoi - Zeus
- Greek Legends and Myths - The Supreme god Zeus in Greek Mythology
- Encyclopedia Mythica - Zeus
Britannica Websites
Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.
- Zeus - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- Zeus - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
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While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies.Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
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Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
External Websites
- Greek Gods and Goddessess - Zeus
- UEN Digital Press with Pressbooks - Zeus
- Ancient-Greece.org - Zeus (Jupiter)
- Humanities LibreTexts - Zeus
- Ancient Origins - The unshakeable power of Zeus, prime mover of ancient Greek deities
- Theoi - Zeus
- Greek Legends and Myths - The Supreme god Zeus in Greek Mythology
- Encyclopedia Mythica - Zeus
Britannica Websites
Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.
- Zeus - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- Zeus - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
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Top Questions
Who is Zeus?
Who is Zeus?
Zeus is the god of the sky in ancient Greek mythology. As the chief Greek deity, Zeus is considered the ruler, protector, and father of all gods and humans. Zeus is often depicted as an older man with a beard and is represented by symbols such as the lightning bolt and the eagle.
Where does Zeus’s name come from?
Where does Zeus’s name come from?
Zeus’s name shares a similar origin with the sky god Dyaus of Hinduism, mentioned in the Rigveda. It is believed that many proto-Indo-European mythologies (e.g., Greek, Hindu, and Norse) have distinct similarities and may share an origin.
Who are Zeus’s children?
Who are Zeus’s children?
Zeus fathered many children. Among the most well-known are Athena, the goddess of war; Perseus, the hero known for slaying Medusa; and Persephone, Demeter’s daughter and wife to Hades. Zeus is known for his many sexual (and oftentimes nonconsensual) relationships outside of his marriage to his wife and sister Hera.
Why did Zeus eat his wife?
Why did Zeus eat his wife?
In some versions of Greek mythology, Zeus ate his wife Metis because it was known that their second child would be more powerful than him. After Metis’s demise, their first child Athena was born when Hephaestus cleaved Zeus’s head open and the goddess of war emerged, fully grown and armed.
Zeus, in ancient Greek religion, chief deity of the pantheon, a sky and weather god who was identical with the Roman god Jupiter. His name may be related to that of the sky god Dyaus of the ancient Hindu Rigveda. Zeus was regarded as the sender of thunder and lightning, rain, and winds, and his traditional weapon was the thunderbolt. He was called the father (i.e., the ruler and protector) of both gods and men.
According to a Cretan myth that was later adopted by the Greeks, Cronus, king of the Titans, upon learning that one of his children was fated to dethrone him, swallowed his children as soon as they were born. But Rhea, his wife, saved the infant Zeus by substituting a stone wrapped in swaddling clothes for Cronus to swallow and hiding Zeus in a cave on Crete. There he was nursed by the nymph (or female goat) Amalthaea and guarded by the Curetes (young warriors), who clashed their weapons to disguise the baby’s cries. After Zeus grew to manhood he led a revolt against the Titans and succeeded in dethroning Cronus, perhaps with the assistance of his brothers Hades and Poseidon, with whom he then divided dominion over the world.
Britannica QuizFrom Athena to Zeus: Basics of Greek MythologyAs ruler of heaven Zeus led the gods to victory against the Giants (offspring of Gaea and Tartarus) and successfully crushed several revolts against him by his fellow gods. According to the Greek poet Homer, heaven was located on the summit of Olympus, the highest mountain in Greece and the logical home for a weather god. The other members of the pantheon resided there with Zeus and were subject to his will. From his exalted position atop Mount Olympus Zeus was thought to omnisciently observe the affairs of men, seeing everything, governing all, and rewarding good conduct and punishing evil. Besides dispensing justice—he had a strong connection with his daughter Dike (Justice)—Zeus was the protector of cities, the home, property, strangers, guests, and supplicants.
Zeus was well known for his amorousness—a source of perpetual discord with his wife, Hera—and he had many love affairs with both mortal and immortal women. In order to achieve his amorous designs, Zeus frequently assumed animal forms, such as that of a cuckoo when he ravished Hera, a swan when he ravished Leda, or a bull when he carried off Europa. Notable among his offspring were the twins Apollo and Artemis, by the Titaness Leto; Helen and the Dioscuri, by Leda of Sparta; Persephone, by the goddess Demeter; Athena, born from his head after he had swallowed the Titaness Metis; Hephaestus, Hebe, Ares, and Eileithyia, by his wife, Hera; Dionysus, by the goddess Semele; and many others.
Though regarded by Greek religionists everywhere as omnipotent and the head of the pantheon, Zeus’s very universality tended to reduce his importance compared with that of powerful local divinities like Athena and Hera. Although statues of Zeus Herkeios (Guardian of the House) and altars of Zeus Xenios (Hospitable) graced the forecourts of houses, and though his mountaintop shrines were visited by pilgrims, Zeus did not have a temple at Athens until the late 6th century bce, and even his temple at Olympia postdated that of Hera.
In art Zeus was represented as a bearded, dignified, and mature man of stalwart build; his most prominent symbols were the thunderbolt and the eagle.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Alicja Zelazko.