Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Apollo (mythology)

Advertisement

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Apollo

    Greek mythology offers information on the gods goddess and myths of ancient Greece, with superb student myth homework help. All about pandora, hercules, jason, odysseus, minotaur ...

  • Apollo, Greek Mythology Link - www.maicar.com

    Apollo is the god of prophecy, of musical and artistic inspiration, of archers and of healing. Leto persecuted. When the Titaness Leto had been seduced by Zeus, she was hunted over ...

  • Apollo - Mythology Wiki

    Apollo is the god of music, archery, and healing.[1] He is the son of Zeus and Leto.[2] ... Related Communities. Entertainment TV shows, movies, cartoons and comics. Gaming Get ...

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results

Apollo (mythology)

Encyclopedia Article
Find | Print | E-mail | Blog It
Multimedia
Apollo BelvedereApollo Belvedere

Apollo (mythology), in Greek mythology, son of the god Zeus and Leto, daughter of a Titan. He also bore the epithets “Delian” from Delos, the island of his birth, and “Pythian,” from his killing of the Python, the fabled serpent that guarded a shrine on the slopes of Mount Parnassus. The functions of the Greek sun god Helios were transferred to Apollo, in his identity as Phoebus. In Homeric legend Apollo was primarily a god of prophecy. His most important oracle was at Delphi, the site of his victory over the Python. He sometimes gave the gift of prophecy to mortals whom he loved, such as the Trojan princess Cassandra.

Apollo was a gifted musician who delighted the gods with his performance on the lyre. He was also a master archer and a fleet-footed athlete, credited with having been the first victor in the ancient Olympic Games. His twin sister, Artemis, was the guardian of young women, and Apollo was the special protector of young men. He was also the god of agriculture and cattle and of light and truth. He taught humans the art of healing (see Asclepius).

Some tales depict Apollo as stern or cruel. According to Homer's Iliad, Apollo answered the prayers of the priest Chryses to obtain the release of his daughter from the Greek general Agamemnon by shooting fiery, pestilential arrows into the Greek army. He also abducted and ravished the young Athenian princess Creusa and abandoned her and the child born to them. Perhaps because of his beauty, Apollo was represented in ancient art more frequently than any other deity.



Find
Print
E-mail
Blog It




© 2008 Microsoft