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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
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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
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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. Pantheon
    Creation Primeval Deities Titans Olympians Mother Goddesses House of Hades Thracian Deities Anatolian Deities Nymphs Minor Greek Deities Etruscan Deities Roman Deities The Wrath of Heaven Mysteries
  3. Olympians
    Twelve Gods Zeus (Jupiter) Poseidon (Neptune) Hera (Juno) Demeter Hestia (Vesta) Athena (Minerva) Apollo Artemis (Diana) Hermes (Mercury) Ares (Mars) Aphrodite (Venus) Hephaestus (Vulcan) Dionysus (Bacchus)
  4. Apollo

Apollo

A god of youth, music, prophecy, archery and healing. Twin brother of the goddess Artemis (Diana), Apollo was the son of Zeus and the Titaness Leto, daughter of the titans Coeüs (Coeus) and Phoebe.

Apollo

Apollo
Roman marble copy, c. 350 BC
Garden of Belvedere, Rome

He was popularly known as Phoebus Apollo and therefore known as the god of light and the sun. Apollo was depicted with a perfect male body: muscular but youthful. He always appeared beardless on statues.


Apollo was the god of archery, and he carried a silver bow like his sister. Apollo often enjoyed hunting with his sister, and sometimes with his mother. He also possessed a golden sword.

Apollo was the god of music. Hermes gave him the lyre that he invented, making the instrument with a tortoise shell and sheep guts for strings. No one, god or mortal, could play the lyre better than Apollo could.

Some say that Apollo was the father of the greatest mortal musician, Orpheus, by Calliope, one of the Muses. Other writers say that Orpheus' father was the Thracian king Oeagrus. Nevertheless, Orpheus also played the lyre. Another son of Apollo named Linus was also a great musician, but was killed by his pupil Heracles.

Several times, mortals and lesser divinities did challenge Apollo in music contests and were punished for it. Apollo often punished those who dared to compete against him. A satyr named Marsyas who played a flute invented by the goddess Athena challenged Apollo. Marsyas was flayed alive when the satyr lost the contest.

Another time, Apollo competed against the god Pan in a music contest. Three judges were to decide the winner. Two judges voted in favour of Apollo, but King Midas thought that Pan's reed pipe produced better music. Instead of turning against the musician, Apollo punished the judge. He transformed Midas' ears to those of a jackass. Midas had to hide his ears in a cap, in shame.


Apollo was the god of prophecy and oracle. The oracle in Delphi was the main seat of his power, though it originally belonged to Gaea, then Themis and Phoebe, before the oracle was given to him. Delphi was only a small settlement during the Mycenaean period. It wasn't until the 8th century BC that they rebuilt the area, and it became the centre of his worship.

Apollo was also god of medicine and healing. In earlier accounts, Paeëon (Paeeon) may have been a god of healing; but the name may also have been one of Apollo's epithets.

Perhaps the most famous of his children was Asclepius, by Coronis, daughter of Phlegyas. While she was still pregnant, she took a mortal lover, Ischys. When Apollo heard about this, he killed Coronis, but saved the unborn baby. Asclepius became the greatest physician, with the ability to restore life to the dead. Some would even call Asclepius a god of healing.

However, his gift of restoring life proved to be his undoing. Zeus killed him with his thunderbolt, because he feared that he would change the fates of men. Angry that his father had killed his favourite son, Apollo slew one of the Cyclops, who make Zeus' deadly weapon – the thunderbolts. Zeus would have thrown his own son to Tartarus, had Leto not pleaded for their son's life.

Zeus punished Apollo where he was to work for one year for a mortal named Admetus, king of Pherae. Admetus was a pious man and treated the god well during Apollo's service. After one year, Apollo repaid Admetus' kindness by warning him of his fate. Admetus could escape his fate if he found someone willing to die in his place. No one but his wife Alcestis was willing to sacrifice her own life for his. Admetus immediately regretted allowing his wife to take his place. Only through the intervention of Heracles was Alcestis' life restored for the king.

Apollo and Poseidon were also punished by Zeus by having to serve Laomedon, king of Troy, for one year. With the help of the mortal Aeacus, king of Aegina, they built the wall of Troy. Both gods asked for payment at the completion of the wall construction. However, Laomedon refused to pay the gods so Poseidon sent a sea monster. Though Apollo was regarded as god of healing, he punished Laomedon by sending an outbreak of pestilence in Troy.

During the Trojan War however, he favoured the Trojans, particularly the Trojan hero Hector and to some extent Aeneas. Again, he was associated as the god of pestilence (for the second time in Troy. See the Iliad). This time he sent the pestilence to the Greeks in Troy, because of Agamemnon's refusals to return one of his captives and concubines, Chryseïs (Chryseis), to her father Chryses who was a priest of Apollo. Apollo punished Agamemnon by raining his deadly arrows from heaven, causing an epidemic within the Greek camp.

In the myth about Niobe, Apollo killed Niobe's sons while Artemis killed Niobe's daughters with arrows. Niobe had foolishly boasted that she had bore seven sons and seven daughters, while Leto had only bore twins.

Because Achilles killed his son Tenes, king of Tenedos, in the first year of the Trojan war, Apollo would be responsible for Achilles' death in the last year of the war. When Achilles pursued the retreating Trojans, Paris shot an arrow at Achilles; Apollo guided the arrow to Achilles' weakness, his heel.


Like many of the younger gods, Apollo never married, but seduced many girls and women. Among the girls he ravished were Creüsa (Creusa), daughter of Erechtheus, who became the mother of Ion. Apollo and Hermes both fell in love with Chione, daughter of Daedalion. On the same day, Hermes raped Chione during the day, while Apollo ravished her at night. She bore twins, a son to each god: Autolycus (thief) to Hermes and Philammon (bard) to Apollo.

The best known affair of them all was also his most unsuccessful. Apollo told Eros (Cupid) to leave archery to him. Angry at the reproach, Eros used one of his gold-tipped arrows and made Apollo fall in love with a nymph named Daphne, daughter of the river-god Peneius. But Eros shot Daphne with a leaden arrow-point, which would cause Daphne to reject any love. Apollo pursued the unfortunate girl. Praying to the earth-goddess Gaea, she was transformed into the laurel tree. Apollo broke off a laurel branch and wore it on his head. In Greek, Daphne means "laurel". A festival held in his honour every nine years in Thebes commemorated this event. There was a small procession where a boy walked with a priest and one of his nearest relatives who carried an olive branch, bearing laurel flowers and bronze balls.

Another girl who escaped the god was Marpessa, whom the hero Idas wanted to marry. When Apollo took the girl, Idas, undaunted by the god, pursued the fleeing god and his betrothed. Zeus prevented the two rivals from fighting and asked the girl to choose between them. She chose Idas.

In Troy, he gave the gift of prophecy to Cassandra, daughter of Priam and Hecuba, in the hope he could win her favour. When Cassandra rejected him, Apollo made her gift to foresee always true, but no one would take heed of her prophecy.

Apollo wasn't only attracted to maidens. He was also a lover of a Spartan youth named Hyacinthus, son of Amyclas and Diomede. Apollo accidentally killed him with a miscast discus. The flower Hyacinth grew where his blood fell. Each year, the festival Hyacinthia was held in honour of both Hyacinthus and Apollo at Amyclas.

Ida was not the only time a mortal hero confronted Apollo,and still lived. Diomedes was divinely inspired by Athena when he wounded Aeneas, and then Aphrodite and later Ares. When Diomedes tried to finish Aeneas off, Apollo had to rescue the fallen Trojan hero. Diomedes wasn't discouraged by the god's presence. Three times he tried to deliver a death blow, and three times Apollo had to shield Aeneas. Diomedes only retreated when Apollo rebuffed him with his shield, and gave him a warning.

When Heracles asked the oracle at Delphi for a cure for his skin disease, the prophetess refused to answer, so the hero seized the tripod and told the prophetess and priestesses that he would set up his own oracle. Apollo would have confronted and perhaps fought the hero but Zeus intervened, separating his two sons with a thunderbolt. Heracles didn't want to fight Apollo, he only wanted a cure. On the other side Apollo admired the hero's boldness and conceded to order the prophetess to deliver the oracle to Heracles.

When Heracles took part in the Olympic Games and won all the events, each of the powerful gods awarded the hero a gift. Apollo gave a bow to Heracles, but the hero preferred to use his own bow that he had made.

In one myth, the Olympic Games were actually first established in Olympus by Zeus. When Apollo took part in such events, he defeated Hermes in a footrace and Ares in boxing.


Apollo was introduced to Rome from the Greek cities in central and southern Italy, as well as from the Etruscans, where he was known as Apulu. Apollo probably started out as the god of healing, but as time passed he inherited many of the attributes of the Greek god, such as the god of oracles and prophecy, of light and music. Apollo appeared in many myths that were probably derived from Greek sources. His temple in Rome was first erected in 432 BC.

Apollo had many epithets: Acersecomes (unshorn) Acesius (healer), Cynthius, Delius, Loxias, Lycius (wolf-god), Moiragetes (guide of the moirae), Musagetes (patron of the muses), Paean (healing-god), Phoebus (shining), Smintheus (mouse-god).

His sacred places of worship were Delphi, Delos and Tenedos. His sacred tree was the laurel, while his sacred animals were the wolf, raven, swan, hawk, snake, mouse and grasshopper.

Related Information

Name

Apollo, Ἀπόλλων – "Destroyer" (Greek & Roman).
PA-JA-WO, Paian, Paean (Mycenaean).
Phoebus Apollo, Φοἳβός τ᾽ Ἀπόλλων.

Apulu (Etruscan).

Festivals

Delia.
Thargelia.
Pyanopsia.
Daphnephoria.

Pythian Games.

Sources

Homeric Hymns.

The Iliad and the Odyssey were written by Homer.

Theogony and Works and Days were written by Hesiod.

Catalogues of Women and Shield of Heracles were possibly written by Hesiod.

The Cypria, Aethiopis, and Telegony from the Epic Cycle.

Library and Epitome were written by Apollodorus.

Metamorphoses was written by Ovid.

Fabulae and Poetica Astronomica were written by Hyginus.

Agamemnon, Libation Bearers and the Eumenides were written by Aeschylus.

Orestes, Electra, Iphigenia among the Taurians, and Ion were written by Euripides.

Pythian Odes was written by Pindar.

Hymns was written by Callimachus.

There are too many other references to Apollo, to be listed here.

Related Articles

Artemis, Leto, Zeus, Daphne, Orpheus, Idas, Hector, Paris, Achilles, Orestes, Cassandra, Creüsa, Midas, Marsyas.

Trojan War.

Jimmy Joe Timeless Myths

By Jimmy Joe

Olympians:

  • • Twelve Gods
  • • Zeus (Jupiter)
  • • Poseidon (Neptune)
  • • Hera (Juno)
  • • Demeter
  • • Hestia (Vesta)
  • • Athena (Minerva)
  • • Apollo
  • • Artemis (Diana)
  • • Hermes (Mercury)
  • • Ares (Mars)
  • • Aphrodite (Venus)
  • • Hephaestus (Vulcan)
  • • Dionysus (Bacchus)
Apollo

Apollo

Apollo: Greek God of Practically Everything, Except the Sun Apollo god of light, knowledge, and much more, was one of the most loved gods in Greek mythology. He was considered the essential embodiment of Greek culture, physically and intellectuall...

April 2nd, 2002 • Timeless Myths
Asclepius

Asclepius

God of healing. Asclepius (Ἀσκληπιός) was the son of Apollo and Coronis, daughter of Phylegyas, king of Thessaly. The Romans called him Aesculapius. Asclepius married Epione, the daughter of Merops. Asclepius was the father of two sons, Machaon an...

April 24th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Artemis (Diana)

Artemis (Diana)

Virgin goddess of childbirth and of wild animals. Artemis was daughter of Zeus and the Titaness Leto , offspring of the Titans Coeüs (Coeus) and Phoebe . Artemis was the twin sister of Apollo . Artemis was the goddess of hunting and the chase. Art...

April 19th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Aplu

Aplu

A god of light and weather. Apulu or Aplu was often identified with the Greek god, Apollo . He was usually depicted wearing a laurel leaf, and partially in a cloak, otherwise he was naked. His symbols were the staff and the laurel twig.

August 29th, 2004 • Jimmy Joe
Paeëon

Paeëon

Paeëon (Paeeon) was the god of healing. Later writers usually used the name as an epithet of other gods, particularly with Asclepius and Apollo. The name that appeared in the Iliad was actually the god who healed Ares, when the god of war was woun...

April 24th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Marsyas

Marsyas

In Greek myths, most of the musical instruments were invented by the gods. Pan invented the reed pipe. Hermes invented the lyre, which he gave to Apollo . As a musician and singer, Apollo was unmatched. The Muses , the nine daughters of Zeus, were...

March 17th, 2001 • Jimmy Joe
Hermes (Mercury)

Hermes (Mercury)

Herald and messenger of the gods. Hermes was son of Zeus and Maia (a Pleiad, see the Pleiades ), a daughter of Atlas and Pleïone (Pleione). He was identified as the Roman god Mercury . Hermes was born in a cave within the forest near the mountain ...

April 19th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Helius

Helius

Sun and the god of the sun. Helius was the son of Hyperion and Theia . The Romans identified Helius as Sol. Helius was the brother of the goddesses Selene and Eos . Helius married Perseïs (Perseis) or Perse , daughter of Oceanus and Tethys. They w...

April 24th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Maponus

Maponus

Maponus (Maponos) was the Roman-Celtic god of music and poetry. Maponus was identified with the god Apollo , who was also a god of music. Maponus was also equated with the Irish god Angus Og or Mac Oc , the son of Dagda. However, Maponus frequentl...

May 13th, 2000 • Jimmy Joe
Delos

Delos

Delos was a small island in the Cyclades, located between two larger islands, Rhenea and Myconus. It was probably called Asteria or Ortygia after Asteria, daughter of the Titans, Coeüs and Phoebe, and sister of Leto. Asteria was changed into a qua...

August 8th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe

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