Protogenoi

Greek deities
series
Titans and Olympians
Aquatic deities
Chthonic deities
Personified concepts
Other deities
Primordial deities

In Greek mythology the Prôtogenoi (pl.; Gr. Πρωτογενοι, sing. Protogenos) are a genealogy of primordial Greek gods, the name literally means "first born" or "primeval" and are a group of deities whose births are coterminous with the beginning of the universe.

The Protogenoi are the first entities or beings that come into existence. They form the very fabric of the universe and as such are immortal. The Prôtogenoi are a group of gods from which all the other gods descend. They preceded the Titans, the descendants of Gaia and Uranus.

Contents

Prôtogenoi

Although generally believed to be the first gods produced from Chaos, some sources mention a pair of deities who were the parents of these Prôtogenoi. These deities represent various elements of nature. Chaos has at times been considered, in place of Ananke, the female consort of Chronos. The female Prôtogenoi are capable of parthenogenesis as well as sexual reproduction.

Hesiod

According to Hesiod's Theogony(c. 700 BC):

Other sources

Alternatively attested genealogy structures

The ancient Greeks proposed many different ideas about primordial deities in their mythology, which would later be largely adapted by the Romans. The many religious cosmologies constructed by Greek poets each give a different account of which deities came first.

Philosophers of Classical Greece also constructed their own metaphysical cosmogonies, with their own primordial deities:

References

  1. ^ Homer. The Iliad (Book 14)
  2. ^ PHANES: Greek protogenos god of creation & life

External links