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Zeus's father, Satu, well.
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Half-human, half-god Perseus.
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1. Kaos.
Kaos (also translated as Kaos, Kaos, Latin: chaos; Greek: Void Rift, the beginning of all worlds and concepts, the first god born in Greek mythology.
According to the ancient Greek poet Hesiod's "Theogony" (8th century B.C.), the universe was born with nothing at the beginning, and Caius was the first to be born alone, a boundless space with nothing.
Kaos was followed by Gaia, the goddess of the earth, Tartarus, and Eros, the goddess of the abyss of hell. From Kaos were also born Erebus, the god of the nether, and nyx, the goddess of the night, and the world began.
2, Nyx.
Nyx (Greek: English: nyx), also known as Knox (Roman), is the goddess of night in Greek mythology, one of the primordial gods, the essence and incarnation of the night, and her husband Erebos was born in Kaos.
Not only is Nyx one of the few great gods in Greek mythology who has great power in all mythological systems, but he also has great power to restrain both mortals and gods.
3. Helios.
Helios (Helios), the god of the sun in ancient Greek mythology, according to Hesiod's "Theogony", is the son of the Titans Epperion and Thea, the brother of the goddess of the moon Selene and the goddess of dawn Eos, Legend has it that he rode in the sky every day on the chariot pulled by four fiery horses, from east to west, morning and evening, so that the light shines on the world.
In later mythology, he and Apollo were gradually conflated. In Rome he was called sol.
4. Zeus. Zeus (ancient Greek: Greek: δ English: Zeus) is the king of the gods in ancient Greek mythology, the first of the twelve main gods of Olympus, and the supreme chief god who rules over all things in the universe (in ancient Greek mythology, the main god refers exclusively to Zeus).
He is often referred to as "father of gods and men" and "god-king", and is the greatest god among the gods of Greek mythology. The god corresponding to Zeus in Roman mythology is Jupiter or Jove, considered the patron saint of Sagittarius.
5. Hera. Hera (Greek: English:
Hera), the goddess of marriage and fertility in ancient Greek mythology and the third generation of the queen of heaven, one of the twelve main gods of Olympus. The daughter of the second god-king god queen Cronus and Rhea, the co-ruler who shared power with Zeus, the sister and seventh wife of Zeus.
1. Borrowing mythological themes, with the theme of the struggle between man and fate, it reflects the way of life of people at that time and the social issues that they were generally concerned about. >>>More
1. Eric Thous.
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The age order of the twelve main gods in Greek mythology is as follows: >>>More