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Who is Atlas?In Greek mythology, Atlas was a Titan, one of the race of gods who ruled before Zeus and the Olympians. Most of the well-known Titans — Oceanus, Coeus, Crius, Hyperion, Iapetus, Thea, Themis, Mnemosyne, Phoebe, Tethys, Cronus, and Rhea — were children of Uranus and Gaea. But two members of the next generation — Prometheus, and Atlas, the sons of the nymph Clymene and the Titan Iapetus — were also counted as Titans. Hesiod is the first to mention the twelve Titans, and an early and important reference to Atlas comes in the Theogeny of Hesiod, when Prometheus says in lines 384–388: For lo! my mind is wearied with the grief Prometheus is describing Atlas’s punishment for joining in the rebellion against Zeus. Having been the guardian of the pillars of heaven which upheld the sky, Atlas then is forced to hold up the sky himself. The punishment of Atlas figures prominently in one of the labors of Hercules. Hercules is sent to procure the Golden Apples of the Hesperides — nymphs who were Atlas’s daughters — as the eleventh or final one of his twelve labors, depending on which author is being consulted. Hercules needed Atlas to get the apples for him, but Atlas couldn’t fetch them with the sky on his shoulders. So Hercules was induced to hold the sky while Atlas brought back the apples. When Atlas returned, however, he was unwilling to resume his punishment. He proposed that he would deliver the apples on Hercules’ behalf. Fearing that Atlas would never return, Hercules pretended to agree, and asked if Atlas could just hold the sky for a moment so Hercules could adjust the lion skin on his shoulders a bit to create better padding. Atlas agreed, put down the apples, and took the sky from Hercules, who snatched up the apples and hurried off to complete his labor. Atlas also appears in the story of Odysseus in Homer’s The Odyssey. In this story, Atlas is the father of Calypso, the nymph who kept Odysseus on her island after his shipwreck, hoping to make him her husband. But Odysseus prefers to return to his wife, Penelope. Written by Mary Elizabeth |
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