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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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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
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    Pantheon Heroic Age Royal Houses Geographia Facts & Figures Genealogy Bibliography About Classical Myths
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  3. House of Pelops
    Tantalus Pelops Atreus and Thyestes Agamemnon Orestes Tisamenus Pittheus Alcathous
  4. Tantalus

Tantalus

Tantalus (Τάνταλος) was the king of Sipylus, in Lydia. Tantalus was the son of Zeus and Pluto, daughter of Cronus. Tantalus was married to the Oceanid Dione, and was the father of Pelops and a daughter, Niobe.

Tantalus

Tantalus
Willi Glasauer
Pencil drawing, 1864

The gods would often invite him to dine with them, or he would host the gods. He was one of the few mortals honoured by the gods, but he foolishly and cruelly wanted to test their omniscience.

During the feast he gave to the gods, he killed his son Pelops and served the flesh of his son to the gods. All but Demeter recognised human flesh and was repulsed by the horrid crime.

According to the Boeotian poet Pindar, he wrote that his crime was not only those mentioned above, but also that Tantalus had abused his privileges by trying to share ambrosia and nectar, the food and drink of the gods, with his companions.

Zeus sent his son immediately to Tartarus. His punishment was that a great rock hung over his son's head, while he would suffer from great pangs of eternal hunger and thirst but could never satisfy them. Tantalus was forced to stand in a pool of water that would drain away when he bent down for a drink, and then refill itself with water to his chin when stood up straight. Also, a single branch of figs would hang above his head, but a wind from nowhere would blow away the fruit, always just out of his reach.

Pelops was restored to his life and lived as king in Pisa, but his life was hardly innocent when he had committed murder, forever fearing the curse for the murder he had done. Pelops, however, managed to escape the curse that would rip apart the family of his sons and descendants. (See Pelops for his tale.)

His daughter Niobe brought about the destruction of her family and her own downfall when she let her good fortune and foolish pride get the better of her, when she made a boast and challenged the gods. (See the Wrath of Heaven, for Niobe's folly.)

Related Information

Name

Tantalus, Tantalos, Τάνταλος – tantalise

Sources

The Odyssey, written by Homer.

Nostoi ("The Returns") was part of the Epic Cycle.

Olympian I was written by Pindar.

Description of Greece was written by Pausanias.

Library was written by Apollodorus.

Fabulae was written by Hyginus.

Related Articles

Pelops, Niobe, Atreus, Thyestes.

Genealogy: House of Pelops.

Jimmy Joe Timeless Myths

By Jimmy Joe

House of Pelops:

  • • Tantalus
  • • Pelops
  • • Atreus and Thyestes
  • • Agamemnon
  • • Orestes
  • • Tisamenus
  • • Pittheus
  • • Alcathous
Pelops

Pelops

Pelops (Πñλοψ) was the son of Tantalus and brother of Niobe . His father had killed him and served his flesh to the gods, hoping to fool the gods. The gods punished Tantalus and restored Pelops to life. Demeter , who had eaten part of Pelops' shou...

August 23rd, 2003 • Jimmy Joe
Sisyphus

Sisyphus

Sisyphus (Σίσυφος) was the king of Ephyra (Corinth). Sisyphus was the son of Aeolus and Enarete. He was the brother of Cretheus , Athamas , Perieres and Salmoneus . He married a Pleiad named Merope and became the father of Glaucus (Glaucos), Ornyt...

April 27th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Atreus and Thyestes

Atreus and Thyestes

During Perseus' reign, Pelops was king of Pisa while his wife Hippodaemia bore him many children, including Pittheus (king of Troezen), Atreus (Ἀτρεύς) and Thyestes (Θυέσης). Pelops cleverly married most of his daughters to the sons of Perseus : A...

August 23rd, 2003 • Jimmy Joe
House of Pelops

House of Pelops

Another important family arrived in Greece. Pelops won a wife and kingdom in a chariot race in Pisa, and his children and descendants would establish an important dynasty in Mycenae and Argos. For Niobe, see Wrath of Heaven, Folly of Niobe . House...

August 23rd, 2003 • Jimmy Joe
Ixion

Ixion

King of the Lapiths in Thessaly. Ixion was the son of Antion, the son of Periphas, and of Perimela, the daughter of Amythaon and sister of the seer Melampus . When Ixion married Dia, the daughter of Eioneus, Ixion refused to pay his father-in-law ...

March 17th, 2001 • Jimmy Joe
Tartarus

Tartarus

Tartarus was the deepest region of the Underworld. It was said that it took nine days and nine nights for an anvil to fall from the earth's surface to the very bottom of Tartarus. Tartarus was the area where Zeus and the Olympians had confined Cro...

September 29th, 2002 • Jimmy Joe
Lycaon

Lycaon

Lycaon was a king of Arcadia, possibly reigning in the time before the great Deluge . Lycaon was said to have founded the city of Arcadia, and named the city after himself, Lycaeum. Lycaon was a son of Pelasgus, who was either the son of Zeus and ...

March 17th, 2001 • Jimmy Joe
Erysichthon

Erysichthon

Erysichthon (Ἐρυσίχθων) was the son of Triopas. Erysichthon was the father of Mestra (Μήστρα), a girl who would later marry Autolycus and become the mother of Anticleia . He was a rich and impious man who cut down a tree from a sacred grove. By cu...

March 17th, 2001 • Jimmy Joe
Pentheus

Pentheus

Here is another myth which would like to tell in full. Here is the tale of the clash between two cousins. One of them was a powerful ruler, and the other was divine. The tragedy of Pentheus (Πενθεύς) also coincided with rise of Dionysus, the young...

March 17th, 2001 • Jimmy Joe
House of Pelops

House of Pelops

Children of Pelops House of Atreus Children of Pelops The family tree of Pelops displays his descendants, such as Agamemnon, Menelaus and Orestes. Several of his daughters were married into Perseus' family, so also see the House of Perseus . You w...

July 28th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe

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