-
Classical Mythology 45
-
Lesson1.1
-
Quiz1.1
-
Quiz1.2
-
Quiz1.3
-
Lesson1.2
-
Lesson1.3
-
Lesson1.4
-
Lesson1.5
-
Lesson1.6
-
Lesson1.7
-
Lesson1.8
-
Lesson1.9
-
Lesson1.10
-
Lesson1.11
-
Lesson1.12
-
Lesson1.13
-
Lesson1.14
-
Lesson1.15
-
Lesson1.16
-
Lesson1.17
-
Lesson1.18
-
Lesson1.19
-
Lesson1.20
-
Lesson1.21
-
Lesson1.22
-
Lesson1.23
-
Lesson1.24
-
Lesson1.25
-
Lesson1.26
-
Lesson1.27
-
Lesson1.28
-
Lesson1.29
-
Lesson1.30
-
Lesson1.31
-
Lesson1.32
-
Lesson1.33
-
Lesson1.34
-
Lesson1.35
-
Lesson1.36
-
Lesson1.37
-
Lesson1.38
-
Lesson1.39
-
Lesson1.40
-
Lesson1.41
-
Lesson1.42
-
-
Classical Literature - Course Guide 2
-
Classical Drama 9
-
Lesson3.1
-
Lesson3.2
-
Lesson3.3
-
Lesson3.4
-
Lesson3.5
-
Lesson3.6
-
Lesson3.7
-
Lesson3.8
-
Lesson3.9
-
-
Classical Literature - Antigone 5
-
Lesson4.1
-
Lesson4.2
-
Lesson4.3
-
Lesson4.4
-
Lesson4.5
-
-
Classical Literature - Medea 4
A study of Euripides' tragedy, Medea. A play performed in Athens, based upon the myth of Medea, Jason and the Argonauts and the aftermath of the quest for the Golden Fleece.
-
Lesson5.1
-
Lesson5.2
-
Lesson5.3
-
Lesson5.4
-
-
Classical Literature - Aeneid 6
-
Lesson6.1
-
Lesson6.2
-
Lesson6.3
-
Lesson6.4
-
Lesson6.5
-
Lesson6.6
-
-
Life in Classical Greece - Power and Freedom 1
-
Lesson7.1
-
-
Life in the Roman World - Power and Freedom videos 1
-
Lesson8.1
-
-
Life in the Roman World - Religion & Belief - Introduction 11
-
Lesson9.1
-
Lesson9.2
-
Lesson9.3
-
Lesson9.4
-
Lesson9.5
-
Lesson9.6
-
Lesson9.7
-
Lesson9.8
-
Lesson9.9
-
Lesson9.10
-
Lesson9.11
-
-
Life in the Roman World - State Religion 8
-
Lesson10.1
-
Lesson10.2
-
Lesson10.3
-
Lesson10.4
-
Lesson10.5
-
Lesson10.6
-
Lesson10.7
-
Lesson10.8
-
-
Life in the Roman World - Domestic Religion 5
-
Lesson11.1
-
Lesson11.2
-
Lesson11.3
-
Lesson11.4
-
Lesson11.5
-
-
Life in the Roman World - Mystery Religions 6
-
Lesson12.1
-
Lesson12.2
-
Lesson12.3
-
Lesson12.4
-
Lesson12.5
-
Lesson12.6
-
-
Life in the Roman World - Religious tolerance in the Roman world 3
-
Lesson13.1
-
Lesson13.2
-
Lesson13.3
-
-
Life in the Roman World - Philosophical attitudes to religious beliefs 3
-
Lesson14.1
-
Lesson14.2
-
Lesson14.3
-
-
Life in Classical Greece - Religion & Belief - Introduction 21
-
Lesson15.1
-
Lesson15.2
-
Lesson15.3
-
Lesson15.4
-
Lesson15.5
-
Lesson15.6
-
Lesson15.7
-
Lesson15.8
-
Lesson15.9
-
Lesson15.10
-
Lesson15.11
-
Lesson15.12
-
Lesson15.13
-
Lesson15.14
-
Lesson15.15
-
Lesson15.16
-
Lesson15.17
-
Lesson15.18
-
Lesson15.19
-
Lesson15.20
-
Lesson15.21
-
-
Life in Classical Greece - State Religion 23
-
Lesson16.1
-
Lesson16.2
-
Lesson16.3
-
Lesson16.4
-
Lesson16.5
-
Lesson16.6
-
Lesson16.7
-
Lesson16.8
-
Lesson16.9
-
Lesson16.10
-
Lesson16.11
-
Lesson16.12
-
Lesson16.13
-
Lesson16.14
-
Lesson16.15
-
Lesson16.16
-
Lesson16.17
-
Lesson16.18
-
Lesson16.19
-
Lesson16.20
-
Lesson16.21
-
Lesson16.22
-
Lesson16.23
-
-
Life in Classical Greece - Mystery Religions 7
-
Lesson17.1
-
Lesson17.2
-
Lesson17.3
-
Lesson17.4
-
Lesson17.5
-
Lesson17.6
-
Lesson17.7
-
-
Life in Classical Greece - Domestic Religion 17
-
Lesson18.1
-
Lesson18.2
-
Lesson18.3
-
Lesson18.4
-
Lesson18.5
-
Lesson18.6
-
Lesson18.7
-
Lesson18.8
-
Lesson18.9
-
Lesson18.10
-
Lesson18.11
-
Lesson18.12
-
Lesson18.13
-
Lesson18.14
-
Lesson18.15
-
Lesson18.16
-
Lesson18.17
-
-
Life in Classical Greece - Gender Roles within Religious Worship 11
-
Lesson19.1
-
Lesson19.2
-
Lesson19.3
-
Lesson19.4
-
Lesson19.5
-
Lesson19.6
-
Lesson19.7
-
Lesson19.8
-
Lesson19.9
-
Lesson19.10
-
Lesson19.11
-
-
Greek and Roman Views on the After-Life section 1 8
Treatment of the dead
-
Lesson20.1
-
Lesson20.2
-
Lesson20.3
-
Lesson20.4
-
Lesson20.5
-
Lesson20.6
-
Lesson20.7
-
Lesson20.8
-
-
Greek and Roman Views on the After-Life section 2 13
The mythological Underworld and the attitude of philosophers to the Underworld
-
Lesson21.1
-
Lesson21.2
-
Lesson21.3
-
Lesson21.4
-
Lesson21.5
-
Lesson21.6
-
Lesson21.7
-
Lesson21.8
-
Lesson21.9
-
Lesson21.10
-
Lesson21.11
-
Lesson21.12
-
Lesson21.13
-
-
Life in Classical Greece - Death and the Afterlife 11
-
Lesson22.1
-
Lesson22.2
-
Lesson22.3
-
Lesson22.4
-
Lesson22.5
-
Lesson22.6
-
Lesson22.7
-
Lesson22.8
-
Lesson22.9
-
Lesson22.10
-
Lesson22.11
-
-
Life in Classical Greece - Challengers of traditional beliefs 3
-
Lesson23.1
-
Lesson23.2
-
Lesson23.3
-
Athens – the Main Gods
Olympian Family
Zeus | king or father of the gods |
Hera | queen of the gods |
Poseidon | god of the sea |
Demeter | goddess of crops |
Hestia | goddess of the home |
Aphrodite | goddess of love |
Athena | patron goddess of Athens, goddess of wisdom |
Apollo | god of the sun and prophecy |
Artemis | goddess of the moon |
Hermes | messenger of the gods |
Hephaestus | god of fire |
Ares | god of war |
Dionysus | god of wine, drama |
Hades | god of the Underworld |
The Greeks worshipped all these gods and many other lesser gods, not because their gods cared for them, or they were just or moral, but because they were powerful and dangerous if ignored.