This three headed Mythical Beast guards the entrance to the underworld.
Cerberus
This Greek God embodies the physical valor necessary for success in war but can also personify sheer brutality and bloodlust
Ares
the goddess of wild animals, the hunt, vegetation, chastity and childbirth
Artemis
This Greek Hero was the greatest warrior of the army of Agamemnon in the Trojan War. Though thought to be invincible, his main weakness was his heel
Achilles
This notable figure was a king of Phrygia, known for his foolishness and greed. He was cursed by the gods to turn everything he touched into gold
King Midas
Whenever a hero would behead this mythical beast, they found that as soon as one head was cut off, two more heads would emerge from the fresh wound.
The Hydra
This God was the youngest of the six original gods born from the titans, being the only child to not be consumed by Cronus in a vain attempt to save himself from prophecy
Zeus
This Goddess was born from the foam of the sea caused by Cronus castrating his father Uranus and throwing his genitals into the water.
Aphrodite
This Greek hero had to complete twelve labors to pay for killing one of his own children by accident
Hercules
This figure, known as the first women in Greek Mythology, carried a jar containing all manner of misery and evil. She afterward opened the jar, from which the evils flew out over the earth.
Pandora
This Mythical beast was placed in the center of a Labyrinth on the command of King Minos of Crete.
The Minotaur
Aside from his more commonly known affiliations, this Greek God is also known as the god of horses
Poseidon
This goddess transformed Arachne into the first spider after Arachne boasted that she was a better weaver than the goddess herself.
Athena
This Greek Hero is most well known for slaying Medusa
Perseus
This notable figure was the son of the inventor Daedalus who perished by flying too near the Sun with waxen wings.
Icarus
This Mythological Creature was a monstrous fire-breathing hybrid creature, composed of a lion, with the head of a goat protruding from its back, and a tail that might end with a snake's head
Chimera
This Greek God, husband to the Goddess Aphrodite, was cast from Olympus by Zeus for attempting to rescue his mother from Zeus' advances
Hephaestus
This Greek Goddess was forced to go back and forth from the underworld as a result of eating pomegranate seeds. Her annual return to the earth in spring was marked by the flowering of the meadows and the sudden growth of the new grain. Her return to the underworld in winter, conversely, saw the dying down of plants and the halting of growth.
Persephone
This Greek hero was leader of the Argonauts, whose quest for the Golden Fleece featured in Greek literature
Jason
This notable figure fell in love with his own reflection in the waters of a spring and was so lost in the reflection that he drowned
Narcissus
Formally a priest to the goddess Athena, this mythical beast was cursed to transform into a hideous beast shortly after being raped by the God Poseidon in one of Athena's temples
Medusa
Despite modern representations of depicting him as evil, This Greek God was actually more altruistically inclined in mythology. He was portrayed as passive and never portrayed negatively and his role was often maintaining relative balance.
Hades
In order to trick Hera into a vulnerable position for Zeus to rape her, Zeus transformed himself in this animal to gain her trust
Peacock
This Greek hero is most known for Slaying the Minotaur
Theseus
Zeus had this notable figure nailed to a mountain and sent an eagle to eat his immortal liver, which constantly replenished itself, after they stole fire from heaven and bestowed it upon mortals
Prometheus