In Greek mythology, the chief of the Olympian gods (Roman
Jupiter). He was the son of
Kronos, whom he overthrew; his brothers included Pluto and Poseidon, his sisters Demeter, Hestia, and Hera. As the supreme god he dispensed good and evil and was the father and ruler of all humankind, the fount of kingly power and law and order. His emblems were the thunderbolt and aegis (shield), representing the thundercloud. The colossal ivory and gold statue of the seated god, made by Phidias for the temple of Zeus in the Peloponnese, was one of the
Seven Wonders of the World.
Zeus ate his pregnant first wife Metis, goddess of wisdom, fearing their child
Athena would be greater than himself. However, Athena later sprung fully armed from Zeus' head when
Hephaestus split it with an axe. His second wife was
Themis, the personification of order, and third
Hera, but he also fathered children by other women and goddesses. The offspring, either gods and goddesses or godlike humans, included Apollo, Artemis, Castor and Pollux/Polydeuces, Dionysus, Hebe, Heracles, Hermes, Minos, Perseus, and Persephone.
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