-
[dramatic music]
-
Athens, Greece.
-
A city alive with commerce and culture.
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It is also a city of faith—
Greek Orthodox faith,
-
part of the great eastern
arm of Christianity.
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[man singing]
-
But there was another world
here once, of which only
-
tantalizing fragments remain.
-
Those who reach back
through time, both above
-
ground and below, are in search
of a world that was equally alive
-
and equally devout:
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The world of the Ancient Greeks.
-
It still speaks to us today through one of
its legacies, Greek mythology.
-
It was populated by many gods and
goddesses, each with certain powers
-
in the world and each
with a story of their own.
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[mysterious music]
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For tens of thousands of years,
predating biblical times,
-
accounts of the gods and their doings were
passed down by storytellers.
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[King Constantine] It is extremely
hard, but one tries to fantasize of
-
what was it like in those days.
-
I think favored stories of gods,
uh, must have been,
-
thinking back, what did a child think
and was impressed about was, how did
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Zeus give birth to Athena
from a headache?
-
Apollo, who was a very wise young man,
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who then developed into being the god
of order, of music, of arts.
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Poseidon, who created storms
when he was angry.
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Athena, who was the protector
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of our capital city and was in favor of peace.
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[narrator] Presiding over all was Zeus,
god of the sky, god of thunder.
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[thunder]
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[Thomas F. Scanlon] Zeus is a sky god
and you're in the domain
-
of Zeus when you're out there in nature.
-
Zeus had some control over whether you
-
had a good day or a bad day
and a good life or a bad life.
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He had two jars on
-
the door sill and there was a jar of good
and a jar of evil, and to each man,
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Zeus would pour out a portion
of good and a portion of evil.
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[narrator] There was Aphrodite and Artemis,
two sides of the same coin.
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Aphrodite, and what
is she the goddess of?
-
Um, she is the goddess of
sexuality—female sexuality.
-
She's the goddess of beauty.
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She's associated with
lots of fertility issues.
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You have Artemis on the other side,
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Artemis who is this chaste, chaste virgin.
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[narrator] And Apollo, who, like all the
gods and goddesses of Ancient Greece,
-
had more than one power.
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[Richard Martin] He is the organizer,
the civilizer, he's the one who
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brings roads to places where
there were never roads before.
-
He's the one who heals,
-
but he also can bring plague.
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And this is something that happens in the
-
case of many Greek gods.
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If they can cause something,
they can also stop it.
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He was a god—I heard
it most brilliantly put—a god of
-
distance, and therefore he would deal with
people not face to face and hand to hand.
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He was better at shooting his bow and
killing people from a very far-off
-
distance, and therefore his loves, perhaps,
are best kept at a distance too.
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[narrator] These gods and goddesses
evolved as the Ancient Greeks sought
-
to find meaning, and perhaps faith,
in an often challenging world.
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[mysterious music]
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Their stories were embellished
and changed over time as
-
different civilizations came into contact
with Ancient Greece.
-
[Christina Sorum] Greece has been
inhabited since about 70,000 BCE, and
-
there were invasions of people from
the Middle East and from the north,
-
and each invasion led to—not another set
of divinities—but further layers of
-
divinity added to the existing divinities.
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So Greek gods are a real amalgam of
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multiple cultures, cultures
of the Middle East mostly.
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[Thomas F. Scanlon] The Greek gods were
of such diversity that they are unlike any—
-
many of the other gods from around the
Mediterranean, because they
-
incorporated elements of a lot of different
peoples around them, and they
-
don't clearly match a lot of the other peoples,
say, in Celtic or Italian religions.
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[narrator] These stories were passed
down through oral tradition, but
-
sometime around 750 BC, they were collected,
organized and written down.
-
Although scholars debate whether one author
or many authors were involved
-
in this effort, the popular belief is that
there was just one—Homer.
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[Thomas F. Scanlon] As far as we know,
the real crystallization of Greek
-
mythology was around the
time of Homer, 750 BC.
-
And with Homer, we find the
-
creation of Greek mythology
and the creation of the gods.
-
Homer gave the Greeks their gods.
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Homer was effectively the closest thing the
Greeks had to a bible.
-
[narrator] In the beginning, Homer tells
us, there was Okeanos, a spirit in
-
the form of a great, circular, endless river
flowing eternally back upon itself.
-
There was another presence too—
Tethys, sometimes called the first mother.
-
When they finally mated, they began the line
of descent, which eventually
-
produced the gods and
goddesses of the Ancient Greeks.
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[peaceful music]
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Some 50 years after Homer,
the poet Hesiod composes
-
the Theogony, in which he too
describes the creation of the gods.
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But according to Hesiod,
the world began differently.
-
First, there was a
-
supernatural presence called Chaos,
by which Hesiod means emptiness,
-
not disorder.
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[Christina Sorum] Once upon a time, there
was Chaos, and after Chaos there
-
was a goddess called Gaia, "earth."
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And Gaia slept with—married, mated—
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Uranus, "heavens."
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[narrator] Uranus, however,
did not want children.
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He felt threatened by
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them and kept them from being born.
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[dramatic music]
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Gaia conspires with Cronus,
one of her unborn children, who
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castrates his father, presumably
from within his mother's womb.
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[dramatic music]
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Uranus' severed genitals fall
into the sea, from which a
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surprising entity emerges:
Aphrodite, goddess of love.
-
These stories make up
-
what is known as Greek mythology, derived
from the Greek word "mythos."
-
It implies something untrue, but for the
Ancient Greeks, these stories were a matter
-
of faith.
-
They helped explain how and
why the world works as it does.
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[Thomas F. Scanlon] Interestingly, love
and war, or violence and sex, are
-
deeply connected in Greek mythology, and not
only in Greek mythology but in
-
a number of mythologies.
-
Why are these two things deeply connected?
-
I think that the ancient peoples, and certainly
the Greeks, felt that deeply passionate
-
feelings were somehow connected in the human
mind and in the human emotions.
-
That is, great desires and great fears or
great hatreds were somehow linked.
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[narrator] In this way, the stories and
characters of Greek mythology had
-
real-life application.
-
[dramatic music]
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Hesiod's creation story goes
on to tell how Cronus frees his
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brothers and sisters from Gaia's womb.
-
These beings would be known as the
-
Titans, born only after their
father has been castrated.
-
The theme of conflict
-
between father and son continues as Cronus
himself now kills his own children.
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[Christina Sorum] Cronus married Rhea.
-
Every time Rhea gave birth, he'd
-
swallow the children.
-
Rhea desperately wanted to
have some children, and so
-
she took one baby, Zeus, when he was born,
and wrapped him up and hid him in
-
a cave in Crete to be raised, and gave Cronus
a stone wrapped up in swaddling
-
clothes that he swallowed, so that he
thought he was swallowing the baby.
-
Well, Zeus grew up, came attacked his father,
and all the children emerged,
-
and those were the beginnings
of the Olympian gods.
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[narrator] Zeus retrieves the rock with
which his mother deceived his father.
-
It can be seen even now at
the sacred shrine of Delphi.
-
There's always a kind
of inherent conflict and tension
-
between fathers and sons.
-
Greece has been, really,
until this century,
-
a subsistence economy, and so if you have a
small farm, the father is in charge of that.
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The son, even the first son, is not going
to get any kind of rights
-
until the father moves on—retires or dies.
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[Christina Sorum] What is
the concern there?
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There's a real concern,
-
obviously, about issues
of succession and power.
-
[narrator] After Zeus rescues his brothers
and sisters from their father,
-
they seize Mount Olympus.
-
From this stronghold, they
battle for control of the
-
world against their father, aunts,
and uncle—all of whom are Titans.
-
Finally, the gods and goddesses
of Olympus prevail.
-
They acknowledge Zeus, who
-
is also god of the sky, as their king.
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But human beings have yet to appear
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on the scene.
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[ominous rumbling and music]
-
The story of creation in Greek
mythology goes on in Hesiod's telling.
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Generations of gods continue
to struggle with one another,
-
all before humanity's arrival in the cosmos.
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I think it says something
very interesting about a
-
culture, whether it considers its formative
moments to be ones of conflict or
-
ones of sort of unified production—
peaceful production.
-
I am overwhelmed each
-
time I study or teach a course that deal with
Greek mythology, how persistent
-
these conflicts are.
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[narrator] After triumphing over the
Titans, the great god Zeus marries
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Metis, a Titan herself, and
therefore his aunt.
-
Eventually, they have a daughter
-
who births fully grown and
armed from his forehead.
-
This is Athena, goddess of warriors.
-
Other gods and goddesses enter the world,
each with different functions.
-
They all have, however, one thing
in common, an attribute which
-
sets them apart from virtually all other
divinities in the ancient world—
-
their images are human.
-
[Richard Martin] If you think of Egyptian
religion, with its gods having
-
animal heads, various animal bodies, or Near
Eastern, Akkadian, Mesopotamian,
-
Hittite religion, where you see divinities
associated with lions and other
-
fierce animals,
-
the Greeks' decision to somehow
represent the gods as
-
being like Greeks is really an innovation.
-
We're not really sure where it
-
came from.
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[Christina Sorum] When you think about
divinity, you're talking about
-
the unknown, and you really can only talk
about the unknown in terms of the known.
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In the Hebrew bible, in Genesis, it says God
came down and he walked
-
in the Garden of Eden in the cool of the evening.
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It's almost impossible to talk
-
about divinities without
doing something like that.
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Xenophanes said if horses
-
could draw, horses would
draw their gods as horses.
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[narrator] In Homer's telling, it is
only after the gods and goddesses
-
take up residence on Mount Olympus that the
story of human beings begins to unfold.
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The Judeo-Christian account
of the world's beginning
-
culminates in God's creation of man, who is
given dominion over all the other
-
creatures on Earth.
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However, the Ancient Greeks believe
the birth of humans is
-
of little importance to the cosmos.
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[Thomas F. Scanlon] Although the Greeks
had a human-centered universe,
-
their view of man was almost as an afterthought.
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He was a smaller creature
-
in the universe, something
certainly lesser than the gods.
-
And therefore,
-
the creation of humans had to take a
second or third place down the line in the
-
Greek world of the cosmos
and the Olympian deities.
-
So why was the creation of
-
man given such a small role in the creation
of the universe?
-
[Richard Martin] It could be that Greeks
just assumed that human beings
-
were always around, that human beings are
in fact so important that there was
-
never a stage when they didn't exist.
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Um, it's still something of a mystery.
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[Greg Thalman] I like to think that
Greek myth reflects a certain understanding
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by the Greeks of humans' place in the world.
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That humans are not the center
-
of things, that there's a whole wealth of
created world into which humans
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have to fit.
-
This is a great contrast with a number of
other cultures and belief systems.
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[15:41 peaceful music]
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[narrator] As with the dawn of the gods,
Greek mythology contains
-
different tellings of the creation of man.
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In none of them are mankind's
-
beginning's auspicious.
-
[Christina Sorum] We lived like ants
in the ground and we couldn't read
-
and we didn't know the seasons and we didn't
know the weather and we couldn't think
-
and we couldn't hear.
-
We were just despicable
worms and worth despising.
-
[narrator] In Homer's version of the
creation of humans, the god
-
Prometheus forms the first man out of mud
and breathes life into him.
-
In Hesiod's telling, Zeus
creates succeeding races of men—
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gold, silver, bronze, and iron.
-
It seems that each race symbolizes different
-
aspects of the human condition.
-
The first race of men is made of gold.
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Their lives are easy, their crops abundant.
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They literally feast with the gods.
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[Christina Sorum] In the beginning,
there was a golden age, and people
-
lived on the Earth and all the crops grew
of their own accord and everybody was
-
good and everybody was just.
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And those people, after
a while, just disappeared.
-
[narrator] The golden race appear to
have lived a perfect existence,
-
seemingly in paradise.
-
And yet this race vanishes
without explanation.
-
In the biblical account of paradise, life's
hardships are seen as a result of
-
Adam and Eve's fall from grace
in the Garden of Eden.
-
For the golden race of men in Greek
mythology, there is no such explanation
-
for their disappearance.
-
The reason for their fate remains a mystery.
-
[Richard Martin] The Greek system, in
which humans and their creation
-
are not really a topic of concern, is so
different from what you find in Genesis,
-
where we have this focus on
the creation of the first man.
-
Of course, in Genesis
-
it's related to the further story, what
happened after the first man and woman
-
disobeyed God.
-
In Greek myth, disobeying the gods is not
such a big deal as it
-
is in Genesis.
-
So doesn't Hesiod have an answer,
or why doesn't Hesiod give an
-
answer to why the golden race came to an end?
-
With the Judeo-Christian myth
of the fall from the
-
Garden of Eden, because that clearly was the
fault of Adam and Eve, and what that
-
means is there is no real, really good
explanation for why the world is
-
so difficult now—why humans
can't have an easy time.
-
[narrator] After the golden race becomes
extinct, Zeus fashions men
-
from silver, but this race is not very evolved.
-
[Christina Sorum] The silver age people
were babies forever, and then they
-
had this short period of maturity, and then
they had a horrible old age.
-
And they disappeared under the Earth.
-
They were more arrogant and did not
-
worship the gods sufficiently.
-
[narrator] Next come men of bronze,
who exterminate themselves through
-
constant warfare.
-
Eventually, the race of men
who live today appears.
-
They are said to be men of iron.
-
[Thomas F. Scanton] So basically, this
story of degeneration has moved
-
to the present age, where actually it shows
a balance in these various views of
-
the important things in life for the Greeks.
-
Namely, your attitudes to the gods
-
and your attitudes towards warfare and fighting
for your city-state and how you
-
can get along or not get along with each other.
-
[narrator] Interestingly, all these
stories account for the creation of
-
only half the human race, man.
-
Woman is created as an
affliction—a punishment—
-
and all because of a trick.
-
[Thomas F. Scanlon] The first woman
was sent to the Earth as a punishment
-
to mankind.
-
This sounds incredibly misogynistic,
and it was an incredibly
-
misogynistic story on the part of Hesiod,
who told this in 700 BC.
-
But the story goes that one of the gods,
Prometheus, tried to trick the master and king of
-
all the cosmos, Zeus.
-
[Christina Sorum] Prometheus is a trickster
god, he's a smart god.
-
"Prometheus" means "forethought."
-
Um, he—he killed a sheep
and he took the sheep
-
and he took all the good, wonderful meat and
he put it inside the disgusting belly,
-
and he took all the bare bones and
he wrapped them up in the beautiful
-
white shining fat, which is of course what
burns in a sacrifice.
-
And he presented these two bundles
to Zeus, and he said, "You pick."
-
[narrator] Zeus knows he is being tricked
by Prometheus, who represents humankind.
-
In retaliation, Zeus punishes
man by taking away fire.
-
[ominous music]
-
Prometheus, in return, steals
the fire back and gives it
-
to humanity.
-
[Thomas F. Scanlon] And by stealing
and giving men this gift of fire, he
-
he was therefore punished indirectly by having
a woman created who was given to
-
human beings.
-
Now, Zeus didn't just sort of give
this evil thing, as he thought,
-
to mankind.
-
He called it a beautiful evil.
-
She's one you can't
do without.
-
She's a kalon kakon
-
in the terms of the Greek—
a "beautiful bad thing."
-
And so Greek myth, Greek poetry,
-
likes to have it both ways.
-
Women are beautiful, women
are something irresistible.
-
At the same time, women make you
work and so they're a bad thing.
-
[Christina Sorum] I do think that,
throughout Greek mythology, you see a
-
repeated emphasis on the
threat that women pose.
-
The threat they pose because of
-
your need for them, the need to have
children, and the very real fear of losing
-
control because of desire.
-
The overwhelming feminine
sexuality threatens men.
-
[narrator] Zeus does not give
just any woman to men.
-
Indeed, he gives men
-
a kalon kakon, a beautiful evil.
-
Her name is Pandora, and she comes with a
-
jar full of evils to let loose in the world.
-
The first woman in Greek
mythology is Pandora, and her story
-
echoes that of Eve and the forbidden fruit
in the Garden of Eden.
-
Given a jar and told not to open it,
Pandora does so anyway, and all the evils
-
of the world are let loose.
-
All sickness, pain, suffering, disease.
-
Too late,
-
she closes the jar leaving
only one thing behind: hope.
-
But what is hope doing
-
in Pandora's jar full of evils?
-
Hope is there as an evil,
which is, I think, fascinating.
-
Hope is an evil because hope allows
you to act with the sense that you
-
can control the future, and in Hesiod,
that is a very dangerous thing to do.
-
You can't control the future.
-
And to be—it's to act under a delusion.
-
[Thomas F. Scanlon] Is hope something
good or something bad?
-
And the Greeks love this kind of dilemma
because hope was—could be good, could be bad.
-
And so it was ambiguously left back in the
jar for humans to use or to avoid.
-
[narrator] Pandora is perhaps the most
prominent, but certainly not the
-
only example of women being a
source of evil in Greek mythology.
-
Some scholars find a deeper meaning for this
disparagement of women, and point
-
to Aphrodite, the goddess of love.
-
[Christina Sorum] If you look at the
myths of Aphrodite, that she was the
-
most beautiful and the most sexually desirable
thing ever, men are afraid of her.
-
She—she sees a man, a human being,
Anchises, on a hill outside of Troy,
-
and she wants to sleep with him.
-
And she goes to him and he says,
"You are too beautiful to be a human.
-
You must be a goddess and I
don't want to sleep with you."
-
And she says, "Oh, no, I'm just a
maiden from the neighborhood."
-
They go to bed together, and and when he
wakes up, she's become her goddess self,
-
and he's terrified.
-
He's terrified he's going to be
emasculated—that he'll lose
-
his strength.
-
[narrator] In contrast, the Ancient
Greeks believed that Athena,
-
the goddess without a sexual
role, is a great force for good.
-
[dramatic music]
-
[Fritz Graf] Athena is the protector.
-
Athena is the warrior divinity who
-
leads the just defense war.
-
She is the city goddess and, in many respects,
-
the most important divinity the Athenians have.
-
And that might be true for many
-
other city, where you have an acropolis
with the temple of Athena on top.
-
[narrator] And thus the world of Greek
gods and goddesses is not merely
-
a collection of colorful stories, but
a window on an ancient civilization,
-
its thoughts and its values.
-
[Richard Martin] The kind of non-linear
thinking that you see in myths,
-
the sort of narratives that leap all around,
that introduce strange creatures,
-
look a lot like dreams.
-
And so the question, I think,
is whether Greek myths are
-
somehow the collective unconsciousness of
Greek civilization at an early period.
-
[narrator] Whether conscious or
unconscious, the gods are very much
-
present in the everyday
lives of ancient Greeks.
-
[Thomas F. Scanlon] In each of the
mountains, in each of the plants,
-
in each of the emotions they felt,
they felt that there was a god in control
-
behind this.
-
[peaceful music]
-
One of this attractive
and unusual things about Greek
-
religion from the beginning is its
responsiveness to environment.
-
There are nymphs, for example,
who inhabit watery places.
-
There are nymphs of the
-
mountains, nymphs of the trees.
-
There's an acknowledgement that
rivers are a kind of religious force.
-
And Greek religion in this way has a certain
-
affiliation with modern ecology—
the recognition that individual places have
-
a value, a kind of numinous
quality, a sacred quality.
-
[Richard F. Scanton] The Greeks had
particular terms for "sacred."
-
In fact,
-
they had several terms for "sacred."
-
One of them is heras.
-
And heras means that
-
it belongs to the gods.
-
In fact, the Greek word
for religion is ta hiera,
-
"the sacred things."
-
[narrator] And so, the stories in Greek
mythology are used to explain an
-
often difficult and random world.
-
[mysterious music]
-
Winter is born when Persephone,
daughter of the goddess Demeter,
-
is kidnapped by the god Hades and
taken to the underworld to be his bride.
-
[Christina Sorum] Demeter was horrendously
upset to have lost her daughter
-
and began searching the world
looking for her daughter.
-
Couldn't find her daughter,
wept, cried, crops didn't grow.
-
Hence, the gods weren't getting sacrifice.
-
So finally, some gods went to Zeus and said,
you know, you've got to
-
get Persephone back, so her mother makes the
crops grow so that we get our
-
sacrifices and all the people don't die.
-
[narrator] Eventually, Persephone is
allowed to return to her mother
-
on one condition.
-
Each year, Persephone must
spend three months with Hades.
-
It is during this time that her mother, Demeter,
goddess of agriculture,
-
is inconsolable.
-
And thus, each year, the fields lie
barren in the cold of winter.
-
And thus, life's larger hardships were explained.
-
Personal difficulties,
-
however, were often explained
by some offense to the gods.
-
Those who offended
-
the gods were punished not by
some earthly authority, but by the
-
gods themselves.
-
[thunder]
-
[Greg Thalmann] There's a Greek word, in fact,
deisidaimonia, which means a fear of the gods
-
or respect for the gods, and this
was a positive thing.
-
Life was felt to be fairly precarious and you
needed to do everything you could to get
-
whatever powers ruled the world
on your side to keep you safe.
-
Many of them
-
lived one drought away from starvation,
and you just didn't mess around with
-
the world like that.
-
One of the things
I love about Greek myth is it never
-
lets people off the hook.
-
It never says, "This happened because
the gods made it happen."
-
It's our fault.
-
If we can just understand why.
-
It's sort of a,
-
I think, a difficult world to exist in.
-
[narrator] In a difficult world, people
often look for a hero, someone
-
to bring deliverance from a life seemingly
filled with adversity.
-
Some believe
-
a child born of a Greek god and an earthly
woman prefigures the appearance of Christ.
-
Was this destined to happen?
-
One of the most famous figures
in Greek mythology may possibly
-
have helped pave the way for a later event
pivotal to human history.
-
Heracles, better known to us as Hercules,
is born because the great god Zeus
-
lusted for a beautiful mortal woman.
-
She, however, is a faithful wife.
-
Zeus takes on the appearance of her
husband and manages to have her.
-
The outrage is compounded
by the fact that Zeus himself is
-
married to one of his sisters, Hera.
-
[Greg Thalman] The notion that
the gods are not always ethical,
-
not always honest, is also one that
makes sense when you think about it.
-
And the Greeks seem to have been
comfortable with it for many centuries.
-
It makes sense
-
because if the god are humans, but
better off somehow—more strong,
-
more powerful, immortal—they never have
to take consequences of anything they do,
-
whereas humans do.
-
The burden of acting ethically,
of thinking about consequences,
-
falls on human beings, not on gods.
-
[narrator] Hera is unable to
vent her anger upon Zeus.
-
[thunder]
-
In a move entirely characteristic
of a Greek god, she turns
-
her wrath on the child born
from her husband's infidelity.
-
Heracles is perhaps
-
the most famous Greek hero, a figure
particularly important in Greek mythology.
-
Even in his infancy, Heracles is a god with
extraordinary strength.
-
Hera sends deadly serpents to his cradle,
-
and Heracles strangles them both.
-
[dramatic music]
-
[Greg Thalman] Many of the Greek heroes
did in fact have one divine
-
parent and one mortal parent.
-
More generally, a hero was a man of more than
-
normal strength who was somehow marked out
for a life of achievement, but also
-
a life of enormous difficulty.
-
Uh, they were very difficult,
uh, to integrate
-
into society precisely because
of their great capacities.
-
[narrator] The vengeful Hera continues
to pursue her husband's
-
illegitimate son throughout his life,
periodically driving him into fits of
-
anger and madness.
-
Deeply regretting the murders
and other crimes he commits
-
during these fits, Heracles undertakes great
tasks of repentance, often the
-
killing of tyrants and monsters.
-
At the end of his life, Heracles
is granted immortality,
-
and taken by his father Zeus to
live with him on Mount Olympus.
-
And thus, the story of Heracles
may have paved the way for
-
the Apostle Paul, who brought word of a new
faith to the Greeks centuries later.
-
[Richard Martin] They had a story of
a son of god, Heracles, who suffered
-
and died and then went through an apotheosis,
himself went up to Olympus,
-
and so the story of another son of God who
suffered and died and went to heaven
-
would not be all that non-familiar.
-
In the same way, the notion that a god could
-
take on human form and look exactly like one
of us, was completely acceptable
-
to a pagan Greek audience.
-
And so early Christianity
proceeded in Greece and struck
-
roots in Greece quite easily.
-
Not quite a Christ figure,
but elements of that, because
-
it was someone—someone who through toil
and suffering and labor and loyalty
-
achieved divinity.
-
[narrator] While Heracles is unique,
he is only one of many heroes who
-
walk among the Greeks.
-
There are Achilles and Ulysses,
great warrior of the Trojan War.
-
And Theseus, whose feats
include killing the dreaded Minotaur,
-
the creature that feasted on
the flesh of Greek youths.
-
[foreboding music]
-
[narrator] But heroes did not have to
be offspring of the gods, nor were
-
they necessarily heroic in today's terms,
risking grave danger for the sake
-
of others.
-
For the ancient Greeks, a hero was
someone who broke the bonds of
-
ordinary life, regardless of the consequences.
-
[Richard Martin] It's not necessary
that a hero be descended from a god or
-
a goddess, it's not necessary that a hero
even do something good in life.
-
And so achievement is more doing something
extraordinary and being recognized
-
for it.
-
Now the extraordinary thing that a
hero could do could even be killing
-
a number of the enemy, or killing
people in his own community,
-
in such a strange fashion that the gods
have to be consulted, so the heroes are
-
dangerous, unusual individuals,
extraordinary but not necessarily
-
extraordinary good.
-
Heroes really are a projection
of what it is to be human on
-
a large scale.
-
They really focus both the great
potential of human beings at
-
their best and also the, uh,
the vulnerabilities of humans.
-
[narrator] Another unlikely hero is
Oedipus, who kills his father and
-
marries his mother.
-
Having fulfilled his terrible
fate, Oedipus then blinds himself
-
and seeks redemption.
-
It is a story for the ages,
speaking to the darker side of
-
feelings between parents
and their children.
-
I think there definitely
was a thread of Greek
-
culture and of Greek mythology which was
interested in the conflict between
-
father and son.
-
Obviously Freud—Sigmund Freud—
saw this and picked up on it
-
in the story of the Oedipus
and the Oedipus Complex.
-
And I think there was a
-
threat of generational conflict that the Greeks
actually feared, but recognized
-
as real at the same time.
-
[narrator] The story of Oedipus and
his parents raises another age-old question:
-
Are the lives of humans preordained?
-
Or do humans have the
-
power to exercise free will?
-
Oedipus is someone who
for no reason ever given has—has
-
this fate that he will kill his father and
marry his mother.
-
When Oedipus has
-
realized that he is not the son of the king
of Corinth as he thought he was,
-
he says I'd count myself as the child of chance.
-
And by chance, he means
-
something very random.
-
Uh, there is no plan.
Uh, by the end of the play,
-
it's turned out that everything he's ever
done has fit into a plan and that, uh,
-
if he is the child of chance, it's chance
in a sense that's closely aligned with fate.
-
[Christina Sorum] He, Oedipus,
the man, made choices.
-
When he learned he
-
was going to kill his father and marry his
mother, he fled his home not
-
knowing he was adopted.
-
Um, and of course meets his father
on the road and kills him and
-
then arrives in the city
and marries his mother.
-
Um, he chose to leave his home.
-
Uh, he did a terrible thing, but he didn't
do it trying to do evil.
-
And fate
-
didn't make him do it.
-
[narrator] The question of a person's
fate versus the role of free will
-
was of such importance to the ancient Greeks
that they personified fate in
-
the form of three goddess.
-
[Richard Martin] When you read the poetry
of Homer, it seems that it goes two ways.
-
On the one hand, the Fates are
a group of three women,
-
Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos.
-
Their names meaning
"the weaver," "the alloter,"
-
and "not turning back."
-
And they weave a thread for each person's
life when that
-
person is born and determine when
that person's life is gonna end.
-
On the other hand,
-
we see in Homer's poetry that fate is
power above the gods.
-
The gods
-
bow to fate in several instances.
-
[Christina Sorum] You can look at the
story of Oedipus and talk about fate.
-
Was he fated to kill his father
and marry his mother?
-
Yes.
-
What does that mean?
-
Does that mean he didn't have any free will?
-
No.
-
It doesn't mean that.
-
It means
-
that's what was going to happen.
-
The Greeks had a complicated
view of how the world worked.
-
On the one hand, the gods controlled a lot
of actions of human beings or
-
had an effect upon it.
-
But yet, the humans also
could control their own
-
individual destinies and
call a lot of the shots.
-
So there's this funny
-
relationship between what the gods control
and what humans control.
-
And you know what?
-
They loved this ambiguity.
-
[narrator] And so the ancient Greeks
came to terms with the fact that
-
there were no guarantees in life.
-
Some of their concerns seem hauntingly
-
familiar today.
-
[Richard Marin] This consciousness that
the Greeks have, that you cannot
-
have too many generations on the Earth at
the same time, is even expressed in a myth,
-
the myth of the beginning of the Trojan War,
which says that the Earth
-
was burdened with too many people and cried
out to Zeus to relieve her buden.
-
And so Zeus invented the Trojan War
to get rid of a lot of people.
-
[dramatic music]
-
[mysterious music]
-
The stories of the gods and
goddesses of ancient Greece
-
are eternal.
-
They still speak to us today.
-
Among the deities were two
groups of lovely sisters who
-
dwelt on Mount Olympus:
-
The Graces and the Muses.
-
The Graces bestowed beauty,
-
charm, and gratitude on the mortal world.
-
The Muses had a profound impact on
-
how generations since have passed the
tales of the gods and the sagas of that
-
long-gone era through oral tradition.
-
[peaceful music]
-
From their lofty plain, they
descended to the Earth teaching
-
history, astronomy, and the arts.
-
[Katerina Zacharia] Each one of the
nine Muses is associated with a
-
particular subject, usually concerning the
arts and sciences.
-
For instance,
-
Cleo, the proclaimer, is the one
that is associated with epic poetry
-
and is the Muse of history.
-
Now the Muses are very
well known because we have
-
words like "museum," the [inaudible] of the
Muses that are in contemporary English
-
and of course Greek.
-
[Christina Sorum] Greek stories are
about those things that people regard
-
as important.
-
They wouldn't have persisted if they weren't.
-
I mean, if stories
-
are going to last and be retold for several
thousand years, there must be
-
something in them that has meaning for the
people who hear them
-
across generations.
-
[narrator] Evidence of the
divine was everywhere.
-
To the Greeks, the gods
-
were as real as the fields they tilled and
the families they raised.
-
[Greg Thalman] The number of little
shrines that would be all around
-
the city, the number of dedications to gods
in big sanctuaries, really does speak
-
to a pretty strong belief in them.
-
Life was felt to be fairly precarious and
-
you needed to do everything you could to get
whatever powers ruled the world
-
on your side to keep safe.
-
[narrator] From cradle to grave and
from season to season, every phase of
-
human life was intertwined with the gods.
-
[narrator] As ever-present as they
were for the ancient Greeks, the
-
same gods were not always
worshiped throughout the land.
-
3,000 years ago, Greece was a patchwork of
independent city-states linked by
-
a common language, culture, and trade.
-
But while the principle deities
such as Zeus, Prometheus,
-
and Demeter were worshiped in all of
the more than 700 different city-states,
-
each town and village laid claim to
its own god.
-
Richard Martin] The landscape
of Greece is just full of gods,
-
gods who might not even be
heard of in the next village.
-
Every little stream,
-
every spring of fresh water—something you
come to appreciate in the dusty Greek
-
climate—has its own divinity.
-
[Thomas F. Scanlon] The hills
divided up village from village
-
and people from people.
-
So each village was encouraged to have its
own favorite gods and
-
its own favorite heroes.
-
And I think that, in terms
of the natural layout of
-
the land, was very important in the formation
of myth and of their religion.
-
[narrator] The gods were many,
as were their functions.
-
Hermes was the protector of flocks and herds
of domesticated animals.
-
Hera was the goddess of
marriage as well as paternity.
-
Eros prevailed over matters of love.
-
Hephaestus was the god of fire and volcanoes.
-
Poseidon ruled over the sea.
-
There was Pan, part human and part goat.
-
He was recognized as the shepherds' god.
-
And there was Artemis, protector
of nature and the young.
-
Artemis is associated
with young, blooming nature,
-
with young animals.
-
But Artemis is also associated with the initiation
of young women.
-
So there's a continuum in Greek thinking between
what happens in the
-
natural world and what happens in what we
would identify as a very different
-
human social sphere.
-
To Greek mythological thinking, these are
all part of the
-
same phenomenon.
-
And that's why Artemis can be the huntress,
the one who is
-
associated with the wild, but also the one
who tames young girls.
-
[narrator] Of all the deities that influenced
human life, Demeter was
-
one of the most important.
-
Celebrated once every five years,
she was the goddess
-
of corn and crops.
-
Greeks looked at
and lived with their landscape for an
-
awfully long time and developed stories by
watching nature and by living with it.
-
And the worship of a kind of Earth-goddess
who protected the Earth and
-
saw to the welfare of the crops and withheld
the crops if people didn't behave themselves,
-
all of that was part of the Greek view of
the cycle of nature.
-
[narrator] The relationship between
man and the divine was not simple.
-
However, theirs was an uneasy alliance.
-
Though the gods were powerful and
-
immortal, they were not
beyond human questioning.
-
The ancient Greeks often
-
criticized the immoral behavior of the gods.
-
They could act in excess.
-
Each one had passions,
-
had made mistakes, but the mortals
had to respect their own boundaries.
-
This is the main difference
between gods and mortals.
-
Gods could do anything
-
they liked, do as they please.
-
Mortals had to refrain from excess.
-
Greek gods and goddesses are facets of
what could become of a deadly passion,
-
what could happen to mortals if they
really step over a boundary.
-
[Richard Martin] Now we might think
of criticizing the gods as a kind of
-
blasphemy, but in fact it reinforces the notion
that the gods do exist.
-
I think what was really being criticized
were other Greeks' attitudes about the gods.
-
Something that's very hard for us to understand
is that the Greeks could play
-
with their notions of gods.
-
[narrator] Superior to the humans over
whom they held sway, the gods were
-
nevertheless subject to the same passions,
failures, and weaknesses of mortals.
-
They knew love, despair, and tragedy.
-
They took on human form and were
-
vulnerable to injury and illness.
-
But unlike people, they healed quickly.
-
Thomas F. Scanlon] Of course, they
weren't just humans.
-
They were different from
humans in many ways.
-
They first of all obviously never died,
-
secondly they had incredible
powers of strength and knowledge.
-
But the reason why they're in human form
is that the Greeks had tremendous pride
-
in the human form.
-
The Greeks had such high value
for the perfection of human
-
intelligence and physicality that they could
not imagine a more perfect form to
-
attribute to the gods.
-
[Greg Thalman] This notion that the
gods are "humans-plus" seems to have
-
answered a very deep need in the Greeks.
-
It's a sort of fantasy of overcoming
-
all the weaknesses that make
us humans what we are.
-
[dramatic music]
-
[narrator] The gods were also subject
to similar laws which governed humanity.
-
Hermes was the guardian of travelers.
-
When he cleared a pathway
-
by killing the hundred-eyed monster called
Argos, he had to stand trial for the deed.
-
[Christina Sorum] Well, he killed.
-
He's a god but he's polluted.
-
And so he had to stand trial.
-
And the way the gods all cast their votes
was by putting a stone at his foot,
-
which made a stone heap,
which is called a "herm."
-
[narrator] Though the gods were not
perfect, they were not powers to
-
be trifled with.
-
[Greg Thalman] What you did need to
do was be careful not to offend the
-
gods, not to set yourself up as the gods' equal,
not to be arrogant in that way,
-
because that was inviting disaster.
-
Not from any other humans, but from the
-
gods themselves.
-
There's the story of Salmoneus,
who had himself driven
-
around on a cart, banging on shields or some
noise-making implement, saying that
-
he was Zeus and trying to imitate Zeus' thunder,
and he was probably dispatching
-
a thunderbolt.
-
[thunder]
-
I think everybody believed
that somebody really
-
powerful had to be in charge of lightning,
and the obvious candidate was Zeus.
-
Zeus was a weather god, primarily.
-
In fact, when it rained,
you said "Zeus is raining."
-
You didn't say "It's raining."
-
And so lightning, this powerful,
-
strange thing that can kill you, obviously
had to be under the control of
-
someone like Zeus.
-
[narrator] In Athens, the people also
worshiped a god with no name,
-
one who was simply referred
to as the "unknown god."
-
[Richard Martin] The shrine to the unknown
god was probably the
-
Athenians' way, in their own
religious system, of covering their bets.
-
Just in case there was a god out there that
they hadn't managed to worship, a god
-
that might do something to them,
-
they had a shrine to the unknown god.
-
[narrator] The Greeks rationalized the
world around them.
-
Philosophy and intellectual
thought flourished,
-
most of all, in Athens.
-
It was here that Athena
-
presided in noble splendor over the people.
-
Goddess of war and patron of the arts,
-
she was honored in the form of a gold
ebony and ivory statue at the Parthenon.
-
It was believed that her symbolic presence
would make the city
-
invincible to attack.
-
Thousands came to pay tribute to her here
in one of the
-
finest buildings ever constructed.
-
But of all the sacred places
in Ancient Greece, few approached
-
the significance of a tree-lined valley of
unsurpassed beauty and strange power.
-
For it was here that the Greeks
came to learn of their future.
-
This is Olympia.
-
2,500 years ago, a
40-foot-high statue stood here.
-
It was made of gold and ivory and was
considered one of the seven wonders
-
of the ancient world.
-
Dedicated to Zeus in celebration
of his omnipotence, this
-
ancient wonder presided over the oldest known
organized sporting event on Earth,
-
the Olympic games.
-
[Richard F. Scanton] Every four years,
the Greeks from all over the Greek
-
world and the islands in Italy would come
to Olympia to celebrate this festival.
-
[narrator] Restricted to only males,
including spectators, naked athletes
-
competed for crown and glory
under a burning sun in five events:
-
the broad jump, discus throwing,
javelin hurling, wrestling, and the
-
200-yard dash.
-
[triumphant music]
-
While the object of the games
was to win, the purpose was to worship.
-
[Richard F. Scanton] According to one
scholar, David Sansone, he believed
-
that the athletic event is an expenditure
of ritual energy for the gods.
-
And in fact, one way of showing this is that
what the athletes did was sweat.
-
And they sweat and they had dirt
on them and they had olive oil on.
-
And after
-
they finished competing, they cleaned off
the scum from their skin using a strigil.
-
And they actually collected the scum from
the athletes, which was
-
thought to have magical properties.
-
And in a sense, they were reaping the
-
product of human energy and having this as
a magical potion that the gods would honor.
-
[narrator] This, then, was Olympia.
-
And to this day around the world,
-
winning an Olympic event remains an
accomplishment beyond comparison.
-
[Constantine] Winner had the
luck to win the Olympic games and
-
come first.
-
My country hadn't had the first place in any
Olympics for over fifty years.
-
All this was very exciting for a young person.
-
You know, the idea that
-
you get on to the podium.
-
Your achievement is honored only by a
-
medal and nothing else.
-
You hear the national anthem
of your country, you see
-
the great flag going up,
these things remain in your mind.
-
And I—I've often
-
said that that is the greatest feeling in
my life, other than getting engaged
-
to my wife.
-
[narrator] Another site central to the
ancient Greeks is Delphi.
-
Mystical and mysterious, Delphi is perhaps
best known as a place where a
-
famous oracle resided.
-
Also known as the Oracle of Apollo,
she provided clues
-
to those who sought insight into the future.
-
[mysterious music]
-
[Richard F. Scanton] The Oracle of Apollo
was a priestess who was named
-
the "Pythia," people would come from all over
the known world to seek the advice
-
of this priestess for important questions—
-
often affairs of state,
political questions and direction.
-
[narrator] Unfortunately, the oracle spoke
in a language no one could understand.
-
Her pronouncements on the future
had to be translated by a prophet,
-
but even then her prophecies were
often obscure.
-
There's one famous
ambiguous answer in which
-
a great king asks the oracle,
"Should I go to war?"
-
And the oracle says, "If you go
-
to war, you will destroy a great kingdom."
-
And so the guy goes to war, and
-
of course his kingdom is
the great one destroyed.
-
He should've read that the right way.
-
The oracle always gives you a
kind of question in return—a puzzle,
-
an enigma—that you have to answer.
-
[Christina Sorum] Humans are born,
and they grow up, and they make a
-
choice to do this and to do that.
-
At any point in their life, they could go
-
to Delphi, and hear an oracle, like,
"Beware of the sea because it will kill you."
-
And you spend your whole life avoiding the
sea so that you won't get killed.
-
Then one day, you're in an aquarium and a
tank bursts and you drown in the
-
seawater in this salt-water aquarium, or
something more sensible than that.
-
Did fate make that happen?
-
No.
-
It's just the god knew the
future and could say
-
that it was going to happen.
-
[peaceful music]
-
[narrator] Delphi was also the place
where the son of Zeus presided.
-
His name was Apollo.
-
In addition to presiding over Delphi,
Apollo had other responsibilities.
-
He was the god associated
with sexuality and love.
-
Ironically,
-
Apollo himself was never
known to be a great lover.
-
[Christina Sorum] Apollo is beautiful.
-
He's the most beautiful male,
-
as Aphrodite is the most beautiful female.
-
He is the best athlete, he is a
-
beautiful singer, he is strong and a marvelous
archer, he's your perfect
-
human being—your perfect male.
-
And he has this sad, sad life.
-
He falls in love
-
over and over and over and
none of the women want him.
-
And he attempted to rape girls
at certain occasions in his life.
-
He's really a god, I think, of distance and
rationality more than a god of love.
-
[narrator] Perhaps the most tragic
of Apollo's romantic escapades was
-
his love for Cassandra,
daughter of the king of Troy.
-
As Greek mythology would have it,
-
Apollo and Cassandra's tragic affair
would directly impact the course
-
of history.
-
[Christina Sorum] He falls in love
with Cassandra, who is a princess in
-
Troy, and he says, you know, "I'll give you
the gift of prophecy if you will
-
sleep with me."
-
And she says "Okay" and he does, and
then he—she rejects him, and he makes
-
it so no one will ever believe
any of her prophecies.
-
[narrator] And thus, according to
Homer, a seemingly insignificant
-
lovers' squabble later played a major role
in one of the classic battles of the
-
ancient world: the Trojan War.
-
The Greek stories
of Homer told of a glorious day
-
in which all the Greeks actually
did one thing together.
-
They did an expedition,
-
and they fought the Trojans.
-
[narrator] According to Homer, the
conflict begins when Paris, son of
-
the king of Troy, kidnaps the
beautiful daughter of a Greek king.
-
Furious at the abduction,
-
the king and his brother unite
all the leaders of the Greek world
-
to join in an attack on Troy.
-
[1:01:38 dramatic music]
-
For ten long years, they
lay siege to the city, but to no avail.
-
Troy is a fortress—all but impenetrable.
-
And then, a Greek general named
-
Odysseus comes forward with
a plan that will echo through history.
-
He suggests that the Greeks
build an enormous wooden horse
-
and pretend to leave Troy, as if the
great horse were a parting tribute.
-
But Helen, the Greek princess,
who has now fallen in love
-
with her captor, knows her people
well and suspects a trick.
-
Helen, who went
and imitated the voices of many
-
wives of the companions of the Greeks, and
walked around the Trojan horse,
-
hoping that some of them might hear the
voices of their wives and really cry out.
-
Odysseus was the one that restrained
his companions from revealing themselves.
-
[indistinct yelling]
-
[narrator] And so tragedy awaits the
unsuspecting Trojans.
-
The horse is brought inside the walled city.
-
But they have one more
chance when Cassandra,
-
the Trojan woman who spurned the god
Apollo's advances, also tries to warn
-
her fellow citizens.
-
Another warning came from
Cassandra, the Trojan princess.
-
She had been given the gift of prophecy by
Apollo in exchange for
-
sleeping with him.
-
But in the end, she refused.
-
So Apollo made sure that
-
nobody would believe in her prophecies.
-
[narrator] And thus the god Apollo
gets his revenge on Cassandra,
-
the mortal who spurred him.
-
It is unfortunate for the citizens of Troy.
-
After much feasting and celebrating,
the Trojans fall asleep.
-
Late at night, under cover of darkness,
-
the Greek armies return.
-
Within the walled city of Troy, Odysseus and
-
his men slip quietly out of the wooden horse's
belly and unlock the city gates.
-
The Greeks storm through
the now-open gates and lay waste
-
to the city.
-
[intense music and battle sounds]
-
But revenge does not a
better lover make.
-
Apollo would remain
-
a failure in affairs of the heart.
-
In stark contrast to Apollo
and the area of romance
-
is the other god who presided
over Delphi: Dionysus.
-
Dionysus, on the other hand,
is a guy you'd expect to
-
have a lot of luck with the ladies.
-
He's a god who is a god of the vines,
-
he's a god of wine, he's a god of
vegetation, he's a god of the sea.
-
So he's a god
-
who has been described as a god
of the fluid element—a god of fluidity.
-
And I think that's an excellent description,
because he's a god who can induce madness
-
on the individual.
-
Your mind can turn to a fluid
mush if you're under the
-
influence of Dionysus, whether it's
through drink or through some
-
religious ecstasy.
-
[Katerina Zacharia] Strong
emotion is Dionysus.
-
Formal expression is Apollo.
-
Of course, that idea, which is as well known
as the division between
-
classical and romantic, is no longer valid.
-
Yet, the idea of relating Apollo and
-
Dionysus was one that was
quite pertinent in antiquity.
-
During the three winter months
-
at Delphi that Apollo was absent,
Dionysus replaced him.
-
Dionysus is
-
the god of civic disorder, but also the god
of imperial democracy, whereas Apollo
-
is the god of civic order.
-
[narrator] And thus, as is so often
the case with the gods of ancient Greece,
-
there is a moral to the story.
-
In this case, the lesson lies in the
-
very contrast between Apollo and Dionysus.
-
Dionysus is a god who—
who is worshiped by women
-
and is worshiped in the countryside,
and leads women out of their homes,
-
away from their looms, into the tops of
mountains where they dance all night
-
and carry torches, and, men
thought, drank a lot.
-
We think about Apollo as a god
-
of reason, as a god of order.
-
On his temple at Delphi,
there are all these things.
-
It says "nothing too much"—medan
agan, moderation in all things.
-
[1:06:50 narrator] While the gods loved to
battle and ruled over earth and sky,
-
beneath the fertile folds and sun-drenched
landscape of ancient Greece lay
-
another domain—
a dark and foreboding place.
-
When the Greeks of ancient
times died, they were either
-
buried or cremated.
-
Beyond death lay the underworld,
a type of shadow existence
-
where there was no conscious afterlife.
-
No one went to heaven.
-
That was the exclusive
domain of the gods.
-
After death, we
have a soul, according to the
-
Greeks, which is called psykhe, which goes
fluttering off like a shadow of smoke
-
into the underworld.
-
Now, when you get to the underworld,
this place is called "Hades."
-
Or it's sometimes called "the House
of Hades," because Hades is the
-
god of the underworld.
-
And there's a journey that
the soul has to take.
-
[narrator] The journey was
across the fabled River Styx,
-
or "River of Hatred," with a man named
Charon to ferry the soul over.
-
You have to pay Charon
your obols or two obols
-
to get across the river, and that's why
these coins were put in the mouths of
-
the corpse upon death.
-
When you got there, the first
thing you meet is Cerberus,
-
this three-headed guard dog, at
the door to the underworld.
-
You went by—because you were a
dead man, you were allowed in.
-
But if you tried to get in
-
as a live man, you were
eaten alive by this thing.
-
[intense music]
-
[narrator] In Homer's telling, Hades
is a grim and dreadful place.
-
It is so bleak, no temple
for Hades exists anywhere.
-
The underworld is described
-
as a place where human spirits
suffer an eternity of empty dreams.
-
[Katerina Zacharia] Hades is terrible
and inexorable, but he is not the
-
punisher of souls like Satan in Christianity.
-
Psykhe in Greek means "breath,"
-
It comes from a verb
psykhein, which is "to breathe."
-
Now one—when someone
-
dies, he no longer breathes.
-
Psykhe has really been translated as "soul."
-
Now, psykhes in the underworld
have no consciousness.
-
[narrator] There are two
levels to the underworld.
-
The first,
-
called Erebus, is where the human
soul passes immediately after death.
-
The second is a deeper and more
terrible place called Tartarus.
-
Those unrepentant and violent souls
who have offended the gods are
-
banished to dreaded Tartarus.
-
[eerie music]
-
One of the most famous
characters who was put into
-
Tartarus was a fellow named Tantalus,
and Tantalus was made to stand
-
in a river with a fruit tree over his head,
and he was eternally thirsty and eternally
-
hungry because whenever he reached to
drink out of the river, the water would flow
-
through his hands and he couldn't get
it to his mouth, and when he reached
-
for the fruit of the tree over his head,
it would always move just out of reach.
-
And so he was eternally "tantalized,"
as we have the word from it now.
-
narrator] Thus the gods of their
stories gave meaning to the different
-
cycles of life and even the
possibility of an afterlife.
-
They also helped the Greeks establish
a morality and a body of ethics.
-
In ancient Greece, one of the
most advanced civilizations
-
of its time, these stories eventually inspired
the birth of a new art form—
-
the theater.
-
Later, playwrights such as
Euripides, Sophocles, and Aristophanes
-
dramatized them, allowing the epic tales to
come alive for people throughout
-
the centuries.
-
[Greg Thalmann] The relation of
literature to myth and religious belief
-
among the Greeks is
a very complicated one.
-
You have to remember
-
that for them, literature—poetry,
especially—was not the preserve of an
-
educated elite.
-
It was not even originally,
uh, meant to be read.
-
It was publicly performed.
-
It was accessible to everyone.
-
Richard Martin] They had various
kinds of performances, they had oral
-
poetry, choral dancing, drama, but they
would never think of it as something
-
like one category.
-
Especially, they would never
think of reading this material.
-
You had it performed, and therefore
it's much more deeply embedded in
-
the local culture.
-
It's not something that only a
few people do—read these works.
-
It's something that
everybody hears and sees.
-
[narrator] Some of the early authors
crafted their plays and their poetry
-
around themes which
were critical of the gods—
-
something which later
-
philosophers vehemently condemned.
-
Plato's criticism of traditional
literature and of the
-
stories in them was that the gods
essentially didn't act like gods.
-
I think Plato especially was very uncomfortable
with that, because of his own notion
-
of what a god ought to be.
-
You can see some of the
same critique in Euripides—
-
in his tragedies, his sense that, you know,
gods shouldn't really act the way
-
that a lot of the myths he's treating
dramatically show them.
-
Certainly, when you look at a
drama like the Ion, in which
-
Apollo is represented as a rapist, you
begin to question the value of a god
-
like that.
-
[narrator] Some philosophers believe
that redemption is the moral
-
of the story.
-
By the end of the play, the woman
who is raped becomes the
-
mother of Apollo's son, Ion.
-
He goes on to become the
leader of the city-state of Athens.
-
Many of the plays reflected
the more tempestuous side
-
of human nature in the conduct of the gods.
-
Sexuality and affairs of the heart
-
were controlled by Aphrodite, the goddess
of beauty, love and fertility.
-
Just like Apollo, Aphrodite
lived a turbulent life.
-
Aphrodite was connected
with warfare through her
-
union, her affair, with
Ares, the god of war.
-
And they were two famous lovers.
-
Aphrodite wasn't actually married to Ares—
she was married to Hephaestus
-
or Vulcan, the god of the forge.
-
But she had this flaming affair with Ares,
-
the war god.
-
And the question is, why are
these two always getting together?
-
It's the fury of their mutual passions,
which made them two gods that were
-
beyond the control of all the other gods.
-
And as the saying goes, you know,
-
that every lover is a soldier on a campaign.
-
[narrator] Thus, early Greek writings
conveyed life's everyday lessons.
-
And yet, some of the works reflected a
blatantly sexist attitude towards women.
-
One example is the story of Hippolytus.
-
He despised women,
he despised female sexuality,
-
he was chaste, chaste, pure.
-
We'd send him to a psychiatrist, but—
pure, pure as the snow.
-
His stepmother's nurse, handmaid,
went to Hippolytus and told
-
Hippolytus that his stepmother
was in love with him.
-
Hippolytus was appalled.
-
He was horrified.
-
When Greek men got
together at the drinking parties at
-
the symposia, we know that they told stories,
that they produced poetry,
-
which made fun of women.
-
In early Greek culture, women
were seen as consumers
-
of men's effort.
-
The man had to farm, the woman
simply consumed the efforts—
-
stayed at home, cooked, and
was always on the man's back.
-
And it's a strong misogynistic string in
Greek literature all the way through
-
the 5th and the 4th century.
-
[narrator] And so, Greek dramas and
comedies unfolded in amphitheaters
-
throughout the land, with all-male casts
playing the roles of gods as well
-
as goddesses, mortal men, as well as women.
-
But the Greeks were not
the only ones absorbed by stories
-
of deities and heroes.
-
Others were watching too.
-
Far to the west, across
the Mediterranean, a great new
-
empire was being born.
-
[dramatic music]
-
The Greek gods and goddesses,
like classical Greece itself,
-
would know the ravages of time and change.
-
As functioning deities,
they would eventually slip into
-
the mists of history.
-
And yet, they have not
completely disappeared.
-
Even though they're
not part of our religion, we still
-
need these stories.
-
They're wonderful, rich,
richly suggestive tales about
-
how the world works and
what we are as human beings.
-
Generation after generation
-
of modern students love—they're
fascinated by these myths.
-
And I think that springs from something we
all have in us, which is a desire to make
-
stories, a need to understand the
world by making stories about it.
-
[narrator] Greek mythology has
transcended the centuries coming
-
down to us not only from the great poets
and playwrights, but through the
-
conduits of many other cultures.
-
One of the first was Rome, far to the west.
-
It absorbed much of what Greece had to offer.
-
[Richard Martin] The Romans
discovered Greek religion, really,
-
in the third century BC, and began to make
a bigger deal of it than it had been before.
-
We know that there had been cultural
contact for a long time, but there
-
was a kind of prestige of the Greeks that
the Romans felt they didn't have.
-
And so they took over, really, the Olympian
system, and aligned their own local gods
-
with more recognizable,
high-status Greek gods.
-
[narrator] In adopting the gods of
the Greeks, the Romans imbued the
-
pantheon of deities with
distinctly Roman characteristics.
-
The first priority
-
was to assign them Roman names.
-
Zeus became Jupiter
in their terms.
-
Ares became Mars.
-
Athena became Minerva.
-
When I say became, I mean that
they had these gods
-
existing already—Minerva, Mars, Jupiter—
but they now aligned them in a new way
-
that said, "Yes, we're part of a continuum
of culture with the higher-status Greeks."
-
[narrator] Other gods adopted by the
Romans include Hera, who became
-
known as Juno.
-
Poseidon was renamed Neptune.
-
Hades reemerged as Pluto.
-
Aphrodite would forever be immortalized as
the goddess Venus.
-
And so,
-
the Greek pantheon, to a large
extent, became the Roman pantheon.
-
As mighty Rome developed
into an empire, it eventually
-
occupied a little-known dusty corner of the
Middle East called Judea.
-
Here, the Hebrews clustered
around their capital city,
-
Jerusalem—where a new
religion was being born.
-
Following the crucifixion of Christ,
-
word rapidly spread of his teachings.
-
Even Christianity found
-
connections in Greek
and Roman philosophies,
-
particularly through the Apostle Paul.
-
We know that Paul was
educated in Greco-Roman terms.
-
He quotes Euripides at least
several times in his epistles.
-
Later on, notions
-
that had developed in Platonism, especially,
became crucial in the ways in which
-
early Christians tried to make their religion
more understandable to highly
-
educated class in the Greco-Roman world.
-
In the Orthodox Church even today,
the Greek Christian church,
-
you still see some of the
mysticism that you can identify in
-
the works of Plato in the 4th century BC.
-
[narrator] The Christian belief that
Jesus was the son of God, yet born
-
of a mortal woman, also resonated
with the early Greeks.
-
[Richard Martin] Because Greek religion
was completely comfortable
-
with the notion of gods interacting with
human women, I think it helped in
-
the spread of Christianity, in an early
period, that a narrative like that was
-
at its core.
-
And so we'll never know cause
and effect, and I certainly don't
-
want to attribute early Christianity wholly
to the Greeks, but it helped that
-
the groundwork was laid.
-
[narrator] Despite the enormous cast
of divinities that ruled over
-
the Greeks just a few centuries before Christ
was born, a new idea sprang
-
up among the people—the notion of
the existence of only one true god.
-
The Greek world shifted
towards monotheism,
-
I would say sometime around the 400s
and 300s BC, with the advent of philosophy.
-
And philosophers like Plato and Aristotle
who were skeptical of
-
the Greek religion—the way it was written
in mythology—but they did believe in
-
some supreme force.
-
Some supreme all-good,
all-knowing kind of power.
-
[narrator] This movement toward
monotheism in ancient Greece did not
-
go unnoticed by the Apostle Paul.
-
One day in Athens, Paul
found himself addressing Greek
-
citizens from atop the Areopagus,
a hill that was a meeting place for a
-
council of noblemen.
-
[woman narrator] "But Paul, standing
in the midst of the Areopagus, said:
-
'Ye men of Athens, I perceive that in
all things you are too superstitious.
-
For passing by and seeing
your idols, I've found an altar
-
also on which was written:
"To the unknown god."
-
What therefore you worship without
knowing it—that I preach to you.
-
God who made the world and
-
all things therein and hath made of one all
mankind to dwell upon the whole
-
face of the Earth."
Acts 17:22.
-
[narrator] One of the most potent
forces that shape Greek thinking
-
was an awareness of sin.
-
But 2,000 years ago, the concept
of sin meant something
-
very different than the beliefs
held by the early Christians.
-
The Greek word
for "sin," the closest one, is a word
-
that means "to miss the mark,"
"to err," "to go wrong."
-
Now, what does that
-
mean to sin, if you go too high, it means that
you're stepping beyond human limitations.
-
If you go too low, it means that you're not
living up to your fulfillment.
-
And so, for the Greeks, a sin was
really not fulfilling who you are.
-
[narrator] Though separated from us
by untold millennia, the great
-
pageantry of gods, goddesses, and heroes,
of Muses, Fates, and Graces,
-
of soaring accomplishments and bitter
defeats, is as significant today as it was
-
to the ancient Greeks.
-
[Constantine] The interesting
thing about the Greeks at that
-
period who venerated these gods, that they
gave to the gods the attitude also
-
of human beings.
-
There was the fighting, there was
the jealousy, there was the adultery,
-
there was the happiness, there was
the truth, there was the peace,
-
there were all the different things that were
going on in everyday life of the human beings.
-
It was all associated with the gods.
-
And I think that that is
-
part of the reason why these things
have survived all these centuries in
-
the minds of people, and identified in the
way the Greeks think even today.
-
[Greg Thalmann] Greek myth is a whole
body of narratives.
-
Say something very complicated about
the world, um, they—they speak to a kind of
-
optimism and a kind of
pessimism at the same time.
-
[Richard Martin] Greek myth as a whole
really does tell us, through a lot
-
of exemplary stories, a lot of different
things about the nature of reality and
-
the nature of life:
-
What's important.
-
What we ought to care about.
-
[Thomas F. Scanton] One of the major
lessons is that, to read any of
-
these stories, which are timeless treatments
of big human questions of
-
personal morality versus the morality of the
state and laws that are imposed,
-
and how do you negotiate these very
difficult questions of the best behavior as
-
a citizen in this state?
-
Those are addressed by Greek
myths and by Greek legends.
-
And you are left with this feeling that we
don't know, really, what these
-
gods are or who they are, but, you know,
we know there's some force out there.
-
There's some huge force that's controlling
our lives, and that we have to keep
-
an open mind to what that force is doing.
-
That's why the Greeks can speak
-
across 3,000 years of history and tell us
some questions, if not the answers,
-
to some of the most perturbing
eternal questions in the world.
-
[narrator] There was
another world here once.
-
And the gods and goddesses and people
who lived here still haunt the landscape.
-
[birds chirping]
-
Their stories still travel
across time.
-
As long as people
-
seek a deeper understanding of themselves
and their world, ancient Greece lives on.
-
[woman narrator] "All ye are
the gods of this great place.
-
Grant to me that I be made beautiful in my
soul within, and grant that all my external
-
possessions be in peaceful harmony
with my inner man, with myself."
-
Plato.