关于宙斯(Zeus)

我想了解一些关于宙斯的评论,英文的更好.谢谢.20分表示一下心意.

宙斯(Zeus):希腊神话中的主神,第三任神王;克洛诺斯和瑞亚之子,掌管天界;以贪花好色著称,奥林匹斯的许多神邸和许多希腊英雄都是他和不同女人生下的子女。他以雷电为武器,维持着天地间的秩序,公牛和鹰是他的标志。他的兄弟波塞冬和哈帝斯分别掌管海洋和地狱;女神赫拉是宙斯的妻子。

宙斯

众所周知,宙斯是众神之王,是奥林匹斯山的统治者。

宙斯是克洛诺斯之子。克洛诺斯是时间的创力和破坏力的结合体,他的父母是天神乌拉诺斯和地神盖亚,他的妻子是掌管岁月流逝的女神瑞亚。瑞亚生了许多子女,但每个孩子一出生就被克洛诺斯吃掉。当瑞亚生下宙斯时,她决心保护这个小生命。她用布裹住一块石头慌称这是新生的婴儿,克洛诺斯将石头一口吞下肚里。于是,宙斯躲过一劫,他被送到克洛诺斯的姐姐宁芙女神那里抚养。

宙斯长大成人后知道了自己的身世,决心救出自己的同胞兄弟。他娶智慧女神墨迪斯为妻,听从妻子的计谋,引诱父亲克洛诺斯服下了催吐药,克洛诺斯服药后不断呕吐,把他腹中的子女们都吐了出来。他们是波塞冬、哈迪斯、赫斯提亚、德墨忒尔。为了酬谢他们的兄弟宙斯,他们同意把最具威力的武器雷电赠给他。

宙斯对其父的暴政极为反感,他联络众兄弟对其父辈进行里一场战争。宙斯为了尽快取胜听取了兄弟普罗米修斯的建议,放出了囚禁在地下的独眼巨人和百臂巨灵,这两个怪物有着非凡的力量,宙斯和他的兄弟们终于取得了胜利。他们的父亲和许多泰坦神被送进了地狱的最底层。伟大的胜利之后到了决定谁来作王,宙斯和他的兄弟们都互不相让,眼看他们之间又要开战,这时普罗米修斯提出用拈阄来决定。结果,宙斯做了天上的王,波塞冬做了海里的王,哈迪斯做了地狱的王。

宙斯坐镇奥林匹斯山,拥有无上的权利和力量,他是正义的引导者,他对人类的统治公正不偏。他的劝告不易理解,他的决定不可改变,他的意愿是审慎的,正确无误的智慧的意愿。

宙斯既是众神之王也是人类之王,所以人们往往描绘他坐在精致的宝座上。肃穆的头部表现出驾御风暴的力量,同时也显示控制星空的魅力。

宙斯的象征物是雄鹰、橡树和山峰;他最爱的祭品是母山羊和牛角涂成金色的白色公牛。

宙斯的七位妻子与主要外遇

姓名 与宙斯的关系 儿女

智慧女神墨提斯(Metis) 堂、表姐:第一位 雅典娜

正义女神忒弥斯(Themis) 姑、姨妈:第二位 时序三女神

海洋女神欧律诺墨(Eurynome) 堂、表姐:第三位 美惠三女神

丰产、农林女神德墨忒尔(Demeter) 二姐:第四位 泊尔塞福涅

记忆女神摩涅莫绪涅(Mnemosyne) 姑、姨妈:第五位 九缪斯女神

暗夜女神勒托(Leto) 堂、表姐:第六位 阿尔忒密斯与阿波罗

天后赫拉(Hera) 三姐:第七位妻 阿瑞斯、赫准斯托斯、狄斯科尔狄娅和赫伯

风雨女神女神迈亚 外遇 神使 赫尔墨斯

忒拜公主 塞墨涅 外遇 酒神 狄俄尼索斯

阿尔戈斯公主 达娜亚 外遇 大英雄 提林斯王 佩尔修斯

阿尔戈斯公主 阿尔克墨涅 外遇 大英雄 赫拉克勒斯

河神阿索波斯之女 安提俄佩 外遇 忒拜王 安菲翁

河神阿索波斯之女 埃吉娜 外遇 沃诺斯王 冥界判官 埃阿科斯

腓尼基公主 欧罗巴 外遇 冥界判官拉达曼提斯 克里特王 冥界判官弥诺斯

斯巴达王后 勒达 外遇 英雄 波吕杜提斯 绝色美女 海伦

河神伊那科斯之女赫拉女祭司 伊俄 外遇 埃及王 埃帕福斯

吕基亚公主 外遇 吕基亚王

宙斯是古希腊神话中的第三代神王,众神与世人之父,奥林匹斯神族之首。宙斯有众多子女。第一个妻子智慧女神墨提斯(Metis)生雅典娜;第二个妻子正义女神忒弥斯(Themis)生三序女神荷莱(Hours)与第七个妻子天后赫拉(Hera)生战神阿瑞斯、工匠神赫菲斯托斯、生产女神狄斯科尔狄娅、青春女神赫伯。与第六个妻子暗夜女神勒托(Leto)生阿波罗和阿尔忒弥斯,与风雨女神迈娅(Maia)生赫尔墨斯,与第四位妻子丰产、农林女神德墨忒尔(Demeter)生泊尔塞福涅,与第三位妻子欧律诺墨(Eurynome)生美惠三女神(The Graces),与第五位妻子记忆女神漠涅摩叙涅(Mnemosyne)生九缪斯女神(The Muses)。宙斯同凡间女子塞墨勒生酒神狄奥尼索斯。宙斯与忒拜王安菲特律翁之妻阿尔克墨涅生赫拉克勒斯,与阿尔戈斯王阿克里西奥斯之女达那埃生佩尔修斯;与勒达生海伦、卡斯托尔和波吕杜克斯,等等。
宙斯的武器

宙斯的武器是“雷霆”和埃癸斯(有时候会叫做“宙斯之盾”,Shield of Zeus)。宙斯的雷霆是由独眼巨人(Cyclops)打造的,连众神也会为其力量震慑,埃癸斯是由赫菲斯托斯打造的,虽然是由山羊皮造成,但它充满着魔法,连宙斯的雷霆也对它丝毫无损。

宙斯在罗马神话中又被叫做朱庇特
开放分类:
传说、人物、希腊神话

参考资料:http://zhidao.baidu.com/question/1913018.html

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第1个回答  2006-10-14
第2个回答  2006-10-19
Zeus, the youngest son of Cronus and Rhea, he was the supreme ruler of Mount Olympus and of the Pantheon of gods who resided there. Being the supreme ruler he upheld law, justice and morals, and this made him the spiritual leader of both gods and men. Zeus was a celestial god, and originally worshiped as a weather god by the Greek tribes. These people came southward from the Balkans circa 2100 BCE. He has always been associated as being a weather god, as his main attribute is the thunderbolt, he controlled thunder, lightning and rain. Theocritus wrote circa 265 BCE: "sometimes Zeus is clear, sometimes he rains". He is also known to have caused thunderstorms. In Homer's epic poem the Iliad he sent thunderstorms against his enemies. The name Zeus is related to the Greek word dios, meaning "bright". His other attributes as well as lightning were the scepter, the eagle and his aegis (this was the goat-skin of Amaltheia).

Before the abolition of monarchies, Zeus was protector of the king and his family. Once the age of Greek kings faded into democracy he became chief judge and peacemaker, but most importantly civic god. He brought peace in place of violence and Hesiod (circa 700 BCE) describes Zeus as "the lord of justice". Zeus was also known as "Kosmetas" (orderer), "Soter" (savior), "Polieos" (overseer of the polis, city) and "Eleutherios" (guarantor of political freedoms). His duties in this role were to maintain the laws, protect suppliants, to summon festivals and to give prophecies (his oldest and most famous oracle was at Dodona, in Epirus, northwestern Greece). As the supreme deity Zeus oversaw the conduct of civilized life. But the "father of gods and men" as Homer calls him, has many mythological tales.

His most famous was told by Hesiod in his Theogony, of how Zeus usurped the kingdom of the immortals from his father. This mythological tale of Zeus' struggle against the Titans (Titanomachy) had been caused by Cronus, after he had been warned that one of his children would depose him. Cronus knowing the consequences, as he had overthrown his father Uranus. To prevent this from happening Cronus swallowed his newborn children Hestia, Demeter, Hera, Hades and Poseidon, but his wife Rhea (who was also his sister) and Gaia her mother, wrapped a stone in swaddling clothes in place of the infant Zeus. Cronus thinking it was the newborn baby swallowed the stone. Meanwhile Rhea had her baby taken to Crete, and there, in a cave on Mount Dicte, the divine goat Amaltheia suckled and raised the infant Zeus.

When Zeus had grown into a young man he returned to his fathers domain, and with the help of Gaia, compelled Cronus to regurgitate the five children he had previously swallowed (in some versions Zeus received help from Metis who gave Cronus an emetic potion, which made him vomit up Zeus' brothers and sisters). However, Zeus led the revolt against his father and the dynasty of the Titans, defeated and then banished them. Once Zeus had control, he and his brothers divided the universe between them: Zeus gaining the heavens, Poseidon the sea and Hades the underworld. Zeus had to defend his heavenly kingdom. The three separate assaults were from the offspring of Gaia: they were the Gigantes, Typhon (Zeus fought them with his thunder-bolt and aegis) and the twin brothers who were called the Aloadae. The latter tried to gain access to the heavens by stacking Mount Ossa on top of Mount Olympus, and Mount Pelion on top of Mount Ossa, but the twins still failed in their attempt to overthrow Zeus. As he did with the Titans, Zeus banished them all to "Tartarus", which is the lowest region on earth, lower than the underworld.

According to legend, Metis, the goddess of prudence, was the first love of Zeus. At first she tried in vain to escape his advances, but in the end succumbed to his endeavor, and from their union Athena was conceived. Gaia warned Zeus that Metis would bear a daughter, whose son would overthrow him. On hearing this Zeus swallowed Metis, the reason for this was to continue to carry the child through to the birth himself. Hera (his wife and sister) was outraged and very jealous of her husband's affair, also of his ability to give birth without female participation. To spite Zeus she gave birth to Hephaestus parthenogenetically (without being fertilized) and it was Hephaestus who, when the time came, split open the head of Zeus, from which Athena emerged fully armed.

Zeus had many offspring; his wife Hera bore him Ares, Hephaestus, Hebe and Eileithyia, but Zeus had numerous liaisons with both goddesses and mortals. He either raped them, or used devious means to seduce the unsuspecting maidens. His union with Leto (meaning the hidden one) brought forth the twins Apollo and Artemis. Once again Hera showed her jealousy by forcing Leto to roam the earth in search of a place to give birth, as Hera had stopped her from gaining shelter on terra-firma or at sea. The only place she could go was to the isle of Delos in the middle of the Aegean, the reason being that Delos was, as legend states, a floating island.

Besides deities, he also fathered many mortals. In some of his human liaisons Zeus used devious disguises. When he seduced the Spartan queen Leda, he transformed himself into a beautiful swan, and from the egg which Leda produced, two sets of twins were born: Castor and Polydeuces and Clytemnestra and Helen of Troy. He visited princess Danae as a shower of gold, and from this union the hero Perseus was born. He abducted the Phoenician princess Europa, disguised as a bull, then carried her on his back to the island of Crete where she bore three sons: Minos, Rhadamanthys and Sarpedon. Zeus also took as a lover the Trojan prince Ganymede. He was abducted by an eagle sent by Zeus (some legends believe it was Zeus disguised as an eagle). The prince was taken to Mount Olympus, where he became Zeus' cup-bearer. Zeus also used his charm and unprecedented power to seduce those he wanted, so when Zeus promised Semele that he would reveal himself in all his splendor, in order to seduce her, the union produced Dionysus, but she was destroyed when Zeus appeared as thunder and lightening. Themis, the goddess of justice bore the three Horae, goddesses of the seasons to Zeus, and also the three Moirae, known as these Fates. When Zeus had an affair with Mnemosyne, he coupled with her for nine consecutive nights, which produced nine daughters, who became known as the Muses. They entertained their father and the other gods as a celestial choir on Mount Olympus. They became deities of intellectual pursuits. Also the three Charites or Graces were born from Zeus and Eurynome. From all his children Zeus gave man all he needed to live life in an ordered and moral way.

Zeus had many Temples and festivals in his honor, the most famous of his sanctuaries being Olympia, the magnificent "Temple of Zeus", which held the gold and ivory statue of the enthroned Zeus, sculpted by Phidias and hailed as one of the "Seven Wonders of the Ancient World". Also the Olympic Games were held in his honor. The Nemean Games, which were held every two years, were to honor Zeus. There were numerous festivals throughout Greece: in Athens they celebrated the marriage of Zeus and Hera with the Theogamia (or Gamelia). The celebrations were many: in all, Zeus had more than 150 epithets, each one being celebrated in his honor.

In art, Zeus was usually portrayed as bearded, middle aged but with a youthful figure. He would look very regal and imposing. Artists always tried to reproduce the power of Zeus in their work, usually by giving him a pose as he is about to throw his bolt of lightening. There are many statues of Zeus, but without doubt the Artemisium Zeus is the most magnificent. It was previously thought to be Poseidon, and can be seen in the Athens National Archaeological Museum

参考资料:http://www.pantheon.org/articles/z/zeus.html

本回答被提问者采纳
第3个回答  2006-10-15
抛甩炸雷的宙斯 克洛诺斯之子 众神之父
建议可以参考荷马的<<伊利亚特>>.
第4个回答  2006-10-14
no
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