Timeless Myths Logo
Aphrodite Apollo Ares Artemis Athena Atlas Coeus Crius Cronus Demeter Dionysus Gaia Hades Hephaestus Hera Hermes Hestia Hyperion Iapetus Mnemosyne Oceanus Phobos Phoebe Poseidon Prometheus Rhea Tethys Themis Uranus Zeus
Bacchus Ceres Diana Juno Jupiter Mars Mercury Minerva Neptune Pluto Venus Vesta Vulcan
Amun Anubis Aten Atum Babi Bastet Bes Geb Hapi hathor heqet Horus Isis Khepri Khnum Khonsu Maat Nephthys Nut Osiris Ptah Ra Seshat Seth Shu Sobek Thoth
Alfheim Baldur Freya Freyr Frigg Heimdallr Helheim Idun Jotunheim Loki Nerthus Njord Odin Thor Tyr
Aengus Arawn Badb Brigid Cailleach Ceridwen Cernunnos Cu Chulainn Dagda Danu Gwydion Herne the Hunter Lugh Medb Morrigan Neit Nuada Taliesin Taranis
Chalchiuhtlicue Coatlicue Huitzilopochtli Mictlantecuhtli Mixcoatl Ometeotl Quetzalcoatl Tezcatlipoca Tlaloc Tonatiuh Xipe Totec Xochiquetzal Xolotl
Amaterasu Ame no Uzume Benzaiten Bishamonten Daikokuten Ebisu Fujin Fukurokuju Inari Izanagi Kagutsuchi Raijin Susanoo Tsukuyomi
Caishen Cangjie Dragon King Eight Immortals Erlang Shen Fuxi Guanyin Hou Yi Huxian Jade Emperor King Yama Leizi Lu-ban Mazu Nezha Nuwa Pangu Shennong Sun Wukong Xiwangmu Yue Lao Zhong Kui
Norse Classical Celtic Arthurian
Literature Stories Names
Aphrodite Apollo Ares Artemis Athena Atlas Coeus Crius Cronus Demeter Dionysus Gaia Hades Hephaestus Hera Hermes Hestia Hyperion Iapetus Mnemosyne Oceanus Phobos Phoebe Poseidon Prometheus Rhea Tethys Themis Uranus Zeus
Bacchus Ceres Diana Juno Jupiter Mars Mercury Minerva Neptune Pluto Venus Vesta Vulcan
Amun Anubis Aten Atum Babi Bastet Bes Geb Hapi hathor heqet Horus Isis Khepri Khnum Khonsu Maat Nephthys Nut Osiris Ptah Ra Seshat Seth Shu Sobek Thoth
Alfheim Baldur Freya Freyr Frigg Heimdallr Helheim Idun Jotunheim Loki Nerthus Njord Odin Thor Tyr
Aengus Arawn Badb Brigid Cailleach Ceridwen Cernunnos Cu Chulainn Dagda Danu Gwydion Herne the Hunter Lugh Medb Morrigan Neit Nuada Taliesin Taranis
Chalchiuhtlicue Coatlicue Huitzilopochtli Mictlantecuhtli Mixcoatl Ometeotl Quetzalcoatl Tezcatlipoca Tlaloc Tonatiuh Xipe Totec Xochiquetzal Xolotl
Amaterasu Ame no Uzume Benzaiten Bishamonten Daikokuten Ebisu Fujin Fukurokuju Inari Izanagi Kagutsuchi Raijin Susanoo Tsukuyomi
Caishen Cangjie Dragon King Eight Immortals Erlang Shen Fuxi Guanyin Hou Yi Huxian Jade Emperor King Yama Leizi Lu-ban Mazu Nezha Nuwa Pangu Shennong Sun Wukong Xiwangmu Yue Lao Zhong Kui
Norse Classical Celtic Arthurian
Literature Stories Names
  1. Classical Mythology
    Pantheon Heroic Age Royal Houses Geographia Facts & Figures Genealogy Bibliography About Classical Myths
  2. Heroic Age
    Heroes 1 Heroes 2 Heroines Amazons Perseus Theseus Heracles Argonauts Calydonian Boar Hunt Seven Against Thebes Trojan War Odyssey Aeneid Tales of Lovers Giants Centaurs Mythical Creatures
  3. Heroines
    Io Cyrene Atalanta Medea Antigone Helen Penelope Hecuba Andromache Cassandra Iphigenia Electra Harpalyce Camilla
  4. Penelope

Penelope

Penelope was the heroine of the Odyssey. Penelope (Πηνελόπη) was the daughter of Icarius, brother of King Tyndareüs of Sparta. Her mother was named Periboea. On her father's side, Penelope was first cousin of Helen Clytemnestra and the Dioscuri, Castor and Polydeuces (Pollux).

Tyndareüs did not forget Odysseus' wise advice, when his daughter had many powerful princes as her suitors. Tyndareüs helped Odysseus to win the hand of his niece Penelope in marriage. Penelope was the daughter of Tyndareüs' brother Icarius, so Penelope was first cousin to Helen. Tyndareüs encouraged his brother to arrange a footrace between the suitors. Odysseus, who was known for his fleetness of foot, won the race. They were married and stayed in Sparta for some time before Odysseus decided to return to his kingdom, on the island of Ithaca.

Icarius, however, opposed his daughter leaving him, because he doted on Penelope. Penelope had a tough decision of either staying with her father or leaving her father to go with her new husband. Penelope covered her face with her veil, and left Sparta with Odysseus.

Penelope became the mother of Telemachus, but their happiness was short-lived. The Trojan War arrived and Odysseus was conscripted to join the Greek army when Telemachus was still an infant. Odysseus was reluctant to join the army because he knew from the oracle that he would not return home until twenty years later.

Unlike her cousins Helen, Clytemnestra and Timandra, who had all committed adultery, Penelope was faithful to her husband during his absence. That's because Tyndareüs had forgotten to sacrifice to Aphrodite. Aphrodite punished Tyndareüs by making all three daughters into adulteresses. After Odysseus' absence from Ithaca for almost 17 years later, her home had 108 suitors from Ithaca and the surrounding islands, who wanted her to choose one of them as her new husband. She refused to accept any of them, but she was powerless to drive them out of her palace. When Odysseus returned and killed all the suitors, they were reunited as husband and wife. See the Odyssey for the entire tale about Odysseus' adventure after the war.

According to one peculiar Arcadian legend, Penelope was not as faithful as she had seemed in the Odyssey. It was said that she was seduced by one of her suitors, possibly Amphinomus or Antinous. Odysseus divorced her, so Penelope returned home to Sparta. But during her journey, she had somehow gotten lost in Arcadia. When she reached Mantinea, Hermes seduced her and she gave birth to the god Pan. But in other legends, Penelope remained faithful to Odysseus until his death.

According to the Telegony (Epic Cycle), Odysseus left Ithaca and stayed in Thesprotia for a number of years, married to Thesprotia's queen, Callidice, but the hero returned to Penelope when Callidice died. Penelope had another son with Odysseus named Acusilaus.

Odysseus also had a son named Telegonus, but by the sorceress Circe. Telegonus left home in the hope of finding his father. Father and son didn't recognise each other, so Telegonus unwittingly killed his father during a raid. Penelope and her son Telemachus forgave Telegonus. They left together to dwell in Circe's island palace. Circe married Telemachus, while Penelope married Odysseus' other son, Telegonus. Circe made Penelope and their sons immortal.

Related Information

Name

Penelope, Πηνελόπη.

Sources

The Odyssey, written by Homer.

The Cypria and Telegony come from the Epic Cycle.

Library and Epitome were written by Apollodorus.

Description of Greece was written by Pausanias.

Fabulae was written by Hyginus.

Related Articles

Trojan War, Odyssey.

Icarius, Tyndareüs, Odysseus, Telemachus, Helen, Circe, Hermes, Pan.

Genealogy:
   House of Sparta.
   House of Odysseus

Jimmy Joe Timeless Myths

By Jimmy Joe

Heroines:

  • • Io
  • • Cyrene
  • • Atalanta
  • • Medea
  • • Antigone
  • • Helen
  • • Penelope
  • • Hecuba
  • • Andromache
  • • Cassandra
  • • Iphigenia
  • • Electra
  • • Harpalyce
  • • Camilla
Odysseus

Odysseus

King of Ithaca. The Romans identified Odysseus as Ulysses. Odysseus (Ὀδυσσεύς) was the hero of the epic poem called The Odyssey . Odysseus was the son of Laërtes (Laertes) and Anticleia, daughter of the thief Autolycus and Mestra. Other writers sa...

April 24th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Telemachus

Telemachus

A young hero in the Odyssey . Telemachus (Τηλέμαχος) was the son of Odysseus and Penelope . Telemachus was only an infant when his father left for Troy. Apparently his father tried to pretend to be insane in order to avoid going to war, but one of...

April 24th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Odyssey

Odyssey

The Voyage Home Return to Ithaca The Voyage Home Odyssey Odyssey is an epic poem, written by Homer, about the adventures of the Greek hero Odysseus (Ὀδυσσεύς). Odysseus was the son of Laërtes (Laertes) and Anticleia. Odysseus had married Penelope ...

May 17th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Calypso

Calypso

A nymph or a minor goddess. Calypso was the daughter of Atlas . She lived on an island called Ogygia. Her only companions and attendants were nymphs. In the Odyssey , the hero Odysseus found himself shipwrecked at the narrow strait between the mon...

August 31st, 2002 • Jimmy Joe
Aeaea

Aeaea

The island of Aeaea was the home of the sorceress Circe. Homer never disclosed the location of the island, but later writers put it in the Tyrrhenian Sea, north of Sicily and southeast of Italy, probably on one of the Aeolian islands. Circe was a ...

February 4th, 2008 • Jimmy Joe
Idomeneus

Idomeneus

Idomeneus (Ἰδομενεές) was a son of Deucalion . He was also the brother of Crete and the half-brother of Molus. Idomeneus was the nephew of Catreus . Idomeneus married Meda, and became the father of Cleisithyra and Idamante. Idomeneus was a former ...

September 22nd, 2002 • Jimmy Joe
House of Odysseus

House of Odysseus

Other Children of Odysseus In later myths, Odysseus was the son of Sisyphus , king of Corinth. Sisyphus ravished Autolycus' daughter, Anticleia, as revenge for Autolycus theft of his cattle.

September 22nd, 2002 • Jimmy Joe
Helen

Helen

The most beautiful woman in the world. Helen of Sparta was better known as Helen of Troy. So she was really Greek, not Trojan. Helen (Ἑλένη) had two main possible mothers: One version says that Helen was a daughter of Nemesis , goddess of retribut...

June 22nd, 2003 • Jimmy Joe
Heroines

Heroines

Even though the societies in post-Dorian Invasion Greece were predominantly filled with myths about male heroes, some myths still survive about the heroines from the mythical past. Being skilled with a weapon was not the only requirement for being...

June 22nd, 2003 • Jimmy Joe
Menelaüs

Menelaüs

Husband of Helen of Sparta. Menelaüs (Menelaus or Μενέλαος) was the son of Atreus and Aerope, daughter of Catreus . He was the brother of Agamemnon , who became the king of Mycenae. Menelaüs seemed to be slightly less distinguished than his brothe...

August 17th, 2002 • Jimmy Joe

Explore Myths

All Stories

Characters

All Articles

Search

Site Map

Mythologies

Norse Mythology

Classical Mythology

Celtic Mythology

Arthurian Legends

Mythology Gods

Ancient Literature

About Us

Introduction

About Jimmy

Bibliography

FAQs

Retro Version

Resources

Timeless Myths

All Stories

All Articles

Characters

Copyright Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Contact

© 1999-2025

Timeless Myths

© 2025 Timeless Myths