Most Powerful Greek Gods (Ranked)

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Could the god of the Underworld beat the  god that can shake the Earth to its core?   Would the God of war stand a  chance against the goddess of war?   All will be revealed in today’s introduction  to the great Greek masters of the universe.  20. Morpheus, the god of dreams. Ok, so when it comes to outright power, we’re  sure some of you are going to disagree with us   today on a few matters. Nonetheless, it’s  not as if the Greek gods were always busy   having celebrity deathmatches. When it comes  to who was boss, there’s room for debate.  For instance, who was more powerful, old  Morpheus who could get into your dreams and   control them – that’s not a bad power if you want  to mess with someone’s head. Or, was his father,   Hypnos, more powerful, since he was the  sleep god, albeit a gentle kind of god? We guess Hynos wins. We mean, this God tricked  Zeus not once but twice. He put the King of the   gods to sleep for god’s sake. That’s some  accomplishment. His mother was also Nyx,   and as you’ll see soon, she frightened everyone,  including Zeus, who was reluctant to go near   her. On top of this, Hypnos' tricks  affected the outcome of the Trojan War.  So, with this in mind, his son Morpheus  might not have been as powerful. Still,   he didn’t just make people dream about their  teeth falling out or milking blue cows. He was   important because he sent messages from other  gods into people’s heads via their dreams.   If you’ve seen the movie Inception,  you’ll know this is a pretty good trick.  We like Morpheus. He was a good god.  We’re not so sure about this next god.  19. Tartarus, the God of the abyss. The underworld was a busy place and  we’ll come back to it again today,   but we’ll start with talking about a place  below the underworld called Tartarus,   which is the name for a god and also a place.  Tartarus is actually one of humanity's first   depictions of a kind of hell, a dark and gloomy  place where you certainly don’t want to end up.  Some of the titans were sent there, and the wicked  could find themselves condemned down there, too.   In ancient Hebrew texts, Tartarus also pops up.  It was the place where fallen angels ended up.  If you want to know where the place is, just  look to Zeus, because he once said it was “as   far beneath Hades as heaven is above the earth.” To give you an example of how badass Tartarus was,   just look at his son, a magnificent monster  if ever there was one. That was Typhon. Typhon was a winged serpent who wreaked  havoc in the heavens and once almost knocked   Zeus off the top spot in one of the  great battles in Greek mythology.   Zeus had his hands full, but he knocked  Typhon flat on his winged back after   blasting thunderbolts at him. Typhon went  on to have a few monsters of his own,   so we can say that this family line was trouble.  And it all started with the big man, Tartarus.  Ok, so who else was so damn powerful that he  could rustle up thunderbolts for Zeus to fire?  18. Hephaestus, the god of the forge.  When we tell you that we’re putting  a blacksmith next on the list we’ll   forgive you for wondering why the hell  he gets to go above Tartarus. As we said,   this is no regular contest, and also, he wasn’t  just a regular horse-shoe-making kind of guy.  He was the son of Zeus, and by god, did he have  some great powers. It was Hephaestus who fashioned   the weapons that the gods used, and we mean a  lot of them. He was basically the equivalent of   all the world’s militaries meshed into one. He sat  in his palace on Olympus coming up with new ideas   as to how to make the best weapons, which included  Hermes' winged helmet, and Achilles' amazing armor   (pity about the back of his ankle). As we said, he  could make thunderbolts, too, but in most stories,   it was the Cyclopes who first made them for Zeus. On top of that, he created the first human   woman in Pandora. You might have  heard about her box. She opened   that and released all the evils in the world. So, yes, this guy was no regular blacksmith.   There are different accounts, though, as to  what happened to him. None of them are really   very good. One of them consists of his own  mother, Hera, throwing him out of the heavens   because he was lame, physically lame. Another  account had Zeus throwing him down to Earth   after Hephaestus tried to help his mom after  Zeus came on a bit strong with her. Zeus was   renowned for his wayward actions with women. The good news is that Hephaestus's exile didn’t   last, and he eventually got back up to Olympus.  Another interesting part of his story is that he   once had a relationship with the goddess  of love and lust and beauty, Aphrodite. As could be expected with this goddess, she  cheated on him numerous times with mortal men and   also a god named, Ares, who we will feature soon. Now for the strongman of the gods.  17. Atlas, a very strong dude. There were the gods and there were the titans,  and the titans were in fact gods, but they were   there before the classical Greek gods we are  mostly talking about today. The titans fought   with the classical gods over a period of ten years  after which the gods won. The battle, or a series   of battles, was called the Titanomachy.  Many of the titans were then banished to   that place you’ve already heard about, Tartarus.  That’s the short version of the story atleast.  Atlas was one tough titan. He was also the brother  of Prometheus, the titan that stole the fire from   the gods and gave it to us humans so we  could basically kick off civilization.   You have him to thank for this video today. Atlas wasn’t the most powerful titan by any means,   but he was incredibly strong. That’s why he gets  a mention here. In fact, when that war was lost   instead of being sent down to hell, he was forced  to carry the celestial spheres on his back for   eternity. Now that’s a lot of weight to carry. This next God is just cool, maybe the coolest   god of them all. 16.  Hermes, the herald of the gods. If the gods wanted news,   and news was very important, they could rely  on Hermes as a messenger to get it to them,   hence he was the herald god. He’s also been called  the god of nature, farmers, travelers, merchants,   human heralds, sailors, and even thieves. On  top of that, he was said to be “the god of the   road between the Under and the Upper world.” He was a complicated god and there are many   stories about him. One of those stories includes  him stealing some cattle from the mighty god   Apollo, who we will also talk about later. Hermes,  then just a kid, hid the cattle in a cave, and he   turned the hooves of the animals into winged shoes  that could take him any place at incredible speed.  Apollo, of course, was less than pleased  when he caught Hermes out. He took the boy   to Zeus to face the music and all Zeus did was  laugh. He thought Hermes had been pretty smart   and so didn’t punish him at all. Hermes kept  those magic shoes, so he could easily move   between Olympus, Hades, Tartarus, and Atlantis. When news needed to get somewhere, he was the   man to send it, and that included delivering  messages from Earth to the heavens. He was   kind of like media and social media in the godly  realm, and as you know, media and social media   are pretty powerful tools. He was tricky, too,  just like any media magnate is today, sometimes   using his trickery down on Earth, such as when  he got behind the Greeks in the Trojan war.  As for his love interests, you won’t be surprised  to hear that he had the hots for Aphrodite   – didn’t everyone! She rebuffed his advances  at first, so Hermes went to Zeus for some help.   Zeus sent an eagle to steal Aphrodite’s  sandal and it ended up in the hands of Hermes.  To cut a long story short, she went in search  of the missing shoe and the outcome was some   lovemaking and a later child named Hermaphroditus.  It’s a cool story, but in other tales,   Hermes certainly showed his dark side to  women. This next god was perhaps a bit nicer.  15. Artemis, goddess of hunting, nature, and chastity. Artemis was the daughter of  Zeus, the twin sister of Apollo,   and she became the patron goddess of girls  and all young females. She was also a kind of   protector to women during childbirth, which let’s  face it, was very important back in those days.  When she was just a kid you could say that she was  pretty spoiled, being the daughter of the big man.   One story says that when she was just three  years old, Zeus had a chat with her and   asked her what kind of things she wanted in  her life. Part of her reply went like this:  “Pray give me eternal virginity; as many names as  my brother Apollo; a bow and arrow like his; the   office of bringing light; a saffron hunting  tunic with a red hem reaching to my knees;   sixty young ocean nymphs, all of  the same age, as my maids of honor.”  She also asked for a bunch of rivers  and all the mountains in the world.   She then added, I’ll take some cities,  too, but I’ll let you decide which ones.  She was given that bow, a silver one made by the  cyclopes. If you don’t know who those guys were,   they were one-eyed giants who were  more than capable blacksmiths. With that great bow, Artemis became the goddess  of the wild hunt, which again, was a big deal back   then. She helped the Trojans in the Trojan war,  being mentioned in the Iliad as the “the archer   goddess” and the “goddess of the loud hunt.” She’s also notable for killing the giant   hunter named Orion, after he either tried to force  himself on her or possibly one of her followers.   As you know, Orion ended up becoming a  star constellation. This goddess was so   special that humans in real life built  a massive temple for her which took a   hundred years to finish and became one of  the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. 14. Nike, the goddess of speed, strength, and victory. Long before she came before the words Air Jordan,  Nike was one hell of a goddess. During that   ten-year fight with the titans we told you about,  she was one of the first to give her support to   Zeus. For that, she got to sit next to him on a  throne. This girl was all about winning, and Zeus   knew to keep her close. The Roman version of her  was Victoria, from where we get the word victory.  Her story is a bit complicated since over the  years she’s been talked about as if she was the   goddess Athena, but it seems at some point  she became her own goddess. Details are a   bit scant as to what she exactly did besides  making people win, but one text states she   “will not live apart from Zeus, nor go  except where the god goes before them,   but they sit forever beside heavy-booming Zeus.” It’s said that when Typhon was giving Zeus   a really hard time close to  the end of the Titanomachy,   it was her who told him many of the gods had  already given up and if Zeus wasn’t careful   all the Gods could kiss goodbye to Olympus. She  then told him to get those thunderbolts ready.  So, whether you were a god fighting or a mortal  fighting, you really wanted the loyal Nike on   your side. It’s not exactly clear what unique  powers she had, but you definitely needed this   goddess on your side in times of war. You also needed this next God.  13. Demeter, goddess of grain and agriculture. This is also a bit complicated, but  we will try to condense it. In short,   a god we’ll talk about soon named Chronos  had a bunch of kids. They were Chiron,   Demeter, Hades, Hera, Hestia, Poseidon,  and Zeus. Chronos ruled over everything,   and things weren’t too bad in those days,  hence his rule was called the Golden Age.  Still, he was told a prophecy that his  sons would end up taking over one day.   Not one to ignore a prophecy, Chronos thought that  it was better to swallow his children rather than   bring them up. He did that, but things backfired. Part of this backfiring was Chronos having to   throw up his kids, one of them being Demeter. She became exceptionally powerful because she was   the giver of food or grain. She was the goddess  of the harvest. Without food, there’s no life,   so Demeter had a lot of respect from mortals.  One story says it was her who brought poppies   to the world, and those things were certainly  useful once humans had sucked out the opium   pulp and fed it to an injured or sick person. It’s also said she spent a lot of time down   in the underworld, and that could represent the  end of harvests and the beginning of the winter.   The reason she was down in the underworld would  take a long time to explain, but in short, it   was because her daughter Persephone was stuck down  there. Persephone’s father was Demeter’s brother,   Zeus. The gods were very, very incestual. When Demeter popped back up from the   underworld every year, hey presto, she made  food plentiful again. It seems she didn’t   get too involved with the seedier side of  Godly life, although it’s said she once lay   with a mortal guy in a field, and then out of  anger Zeus zapped the guy with a thunderbolt.  There’s also a darker part of the tale in that  her brother Poseidon once turned himself into a   stallion and in that guise made her pregnant. Now for everyone’s favorite god.  12. Dionysus, god of all things pleasurable and crazy. Ok, so that isn’t his official title. He was  the God of a lot of things, including the grape   harvest, wine, i.e. getting loaded, as well as  fruits and orchards. But he had a dark side,   just as recklessly drinking booze has a dark  side, because he was also the god of lots of   forms of insanity. He was the god of religious  ecstasy, which can also be a double-edged   sword at times in regards to going mad. The Greeks had something called the Dionysian   Mysteries. These were rituals where folks got  off their heads on wine and perhaps psychoactive   drugs. Historians aren’t too sure what drugs,  but perhaps during those rituals people tripped,   and they found a kind of religious ecstasy.  They were released for a few hours from their   normal selves, just as what happens when  people do certain spiritual ceremonies   involving psychoactive substances. So, if you wanted to really feel elevated   from the drudgery of everyday life, Dionysus was  the guy. His back story is cool, too. He was the   son of Zeus, but Zeus as usual had been cheating  on his wife, Hera. She got jealous and the upshot   was the mortal woman with Zeus’s kid getting  blasted with thunderbolts. Zeus saved Dionysus   by storing him in his thigh until he got older. Soon we’ll talk about the god that has been said   to be the opposite of Dionysus, Apollo, but  first, let’s talk about a very scary goddess.  11. Nyx, goddess of the night. We guess you’ve already figured out that the  philandering Zeus didn’t take crap from anyone.   Sure, he had a few close calls when it came to  fighting, but he was one tough son of a gun.   Guess what, though, there was one  god he was scared of. That was Nyx.  She was the mother of Hypnos, but she was  also credited with being the mother of death,   deceit, doom, destruction, and  darkness. How’s that for a family tree!  Not that much was actually written about her, but  the Greeks said she was so damn attractive and so   unbelievably powerful that the mighty Zeus wanted  nothing to do with her. For that reason, we could   even put her in the top spot in this show. Still,  we don’t think she earned that place because   there just aren’t enough stories about her. There is one cool story in which Hera asked   Hypnos to put Zeus to sleep. Zeus was mad as a  hatter and was about to cast Hypnos into the sea,   but Hypnos ran to his mom for protection. Yep,  Zeus chickened out. He wanted no part of Nyx.   So yeah, she could have been higher on  this list. As could this next goddess.  10. Gaia, goddess of Earth and life. This one is tricky, too, when it comes to  comparing power, because Gaia, like Nyx,   wasn’t one of the Olympian gods but one of  the primordial gods. First, there was Chaos,   and Chaos gave birth to the Earth (Gaia), death,  love, and sex (Eros), the sky (Uranus). Gaia   and Uranus gave birth to the titans, and in  turn, the titans gave birth to the Olympians.  Stephen Hawking would probably disagree with  this creation story, but let’s face it, it’s a   much better narrative than the big bang theory. Since the titans gave birth to the Olympians,   we can say Gaia kicked off everything. She  also advised Zeus so he could beat the titans,   but on the other hand, it was  her who gave birth to Typhon.  It’s hard to really speak of her power, but seeing  as she basically started everything, and we mean   EVERYTHING, she can’t not be on this list. Now for Apollo, the god the German philosopher   Friedrich Nietzsche said was the  opposite of the beloved Dionysus. 9. Apollo, the god of law and order,   music, art, and poetry. He was also the God of  healing and diseases. If Dionysus was the God   of recklessness and pleasure, Apollo was kind  of the God of restraint and reasonableness.   He had the ability to bring plagues, but he  also had the ability to bring healing to people.  He helped young folks get older and age with good  health. He protected them, just as he protected   the crops in the fields. If evil ever reared its  ugly head, Apollo was the God to turn to. In that   regard, Dionysus might have been cool as hell and  good for a bit of self-development, but Apollo was   the stability that everyone needs in their lives. As for cool stories, we like the one that   has Apollo fighting the python. The python was a kind of dragon-type   thing that guarded the gate of the Oracle  of Delphi. An oracle, if you didn’t know,   could counsel you and tell you about the future.  Anyway, Gaia was the mother of the python and   Apollo knew from birth that he had to kill it. Zeus’s wife Hera had sent the python to kill   Apollo’s mom while he was still in her womb. The  legend has it that Apollo was still an infant when   he slew the python. Gaia was less than pleased  and asked for Apollo to be sent to Tartarus,   but instead, Zeus just sent him into exile  for a while and said purify yourself kid.  There is a lot more we could say about Apollo,  but we’ll leave it there. He was a top God,   no doubt about it. As was this next deity. 8.  Aphrodite, goddess of lust, passion,  procreation, prostitutes, sex, and beauty. You could have all the power in the world,  but still be a feeble loser in the face of   impossible beauty. You could be as strong as  Atlas, as wise as Zeus, as fast as Hermes,   and still be manipulated by a woman whose  charms you can’t resist. For this reason,   Aphrodite was one very powerful goddess. She has a pretty brutal back story, too.   Someone we’ll soon talk about, Chronos,  castrated his father. The outcome was   quite a lot of blood and the missing testicles  being thrown into the sea. The bloody froth in   the sea is what formed Aphrodite. She represents the sex drive,   and it’s that drive that is the reason why  we all exist. We are here to procreate,   in the fundamental sense anyway. That’s why some  scholars have said she was behind all the wars.   The Trojan War was partly down to her. But as we said, she was the goddess of   procreation, so she was responsible for death  and also life. She was what made men love. She   could also drive mortals, and Gods, insane  with desire. She drove lots of folks crazy,   including the good-looking mortal, Adonis. So, like Nyx, there’s an argument that   Aphrodite was as powerful as any God. She proved  that, too. Anyone who didn’t do what she said   or for some reason was not concerned with her  beauty, often ended up being cursed by her and   suffering a terrible fate. Zeus actually once got  angry at her, saying something along the lines of,   “Hey, your specialty is love, not war,  what the hell do you think you’re up to?”   She did her own thing, that’s for sure. But now we’ll talk about a couple of goddesses   who could probably have given  Aphrodite a run for her money.  7. Athena, goddess of war and wisdom.  Her father was Zeus, and she had no mother. That  kind of thing could happen in Greek mythology.   She apparently grew out of Zeus’s forehead. She was also behind a lot of heroes,   being the goddess of heroism. Did you ever  watch those old movies, Clash of the Titans   and Jason and the Argonauts? They were  based on the legends of Perseus and Jason,   monster-killing men who embodied heroism. In  Homer’s great book, The Odyssey, Athena is the   goddess that counsels the hero Odysseus. She was also one of the three goddesses   behind the Trojan War with Aphrodite and  Hera. For this reason, it’s hard to say who   was the most powerful of these goddesses.  They were all pretty tough, to be honest.  She might have been a war goddess, but her kind of  war was just, and she fought her wars with great   wisdom. Remember that all those heroes she was  behind had to use not just brawn but the brain.   Her brother, Ares, was quite the opposite. He  was more about outright violence and bloodshed.   In terms of power, we can’t really separate  them, either. That’s why he’s next on the list.  6. Ares, god of war. If Athena said in war, to win this we must  strategize, take our time, and the least   amount of blood will be spilled in our victory,  Ares might have said: if you are courageous and   fearless and fight like a lunatic you might just  win this, even if you’re the last man standing.  That’s why the Greeks said Ares was more  in tune with the savage. For this reason,   he was often mocked in Greek mythology for being a  bit of a jock, a reckless god who always tried to   settle things with his fists. He once slept with  Aphrodite as she cheated on the great toolmaker   Hephaestus, so Hephaestus wrapped them both in  a net and make them both look pretty stupid.  This is what Ares's father,  Zeus, once said to him:  “Do not sit beside me and  whine, you double-faced liar.  To me you are the most hateful  of all gods who hold Olympus.  Forever quarreling is dear to  your heart, wars, and battles.  And yet I will not long endure  to see you in pain, since  you are my child, and it was to  me that your mother bore you.  But were you born of some other  god and proved so ruinous.”  Was this savage more powerful than his sister? We  think not. They can share the same place on the   list. We’d love to tell you that in the real world  the Athenas are more prominent than the Ares,   but we’d be lying. Brute strength  has outdone wisdom many, many times.  5. Hera,   goddess of marriage, family,  women, and childbirth. Hera was the sister and wife of  Zeus, so even if you doubt her power,   she was married to arguably the most fearsome god  of them all – but we’ll come to that matter soon.  As the stories go, she fell in love with her  brother at a young age, but Zeus wasn’t exactly   a faithful sort of guy and we’re not sure the  Greek gods had anything close to a prenuptial.   Zeus cheated on her time and again, with other  gods and with mortals. His offspring was pretty   impressive, to say the least. But this made Hera  very jealous, and also very vindictive towards   the people Zeus got it on with. To be fair to  them, turning Zeus down was never an easy option.  Hera herself was far from kind at times. When her  stepson, the hero Heracles, was still in the womb   she sent witches to prevent the birth. That didn’t  work out, so she sent serpents to kill the baby,   but Heracles made short work of them. He  strangled them and then played with their   dead bodies as if they were toys. He’s only  not on this list because his mom was a mortal,   but suffice to say, Heracles was a  handful when it came to scrapping.  Hera doesn’t come across as  being the most powerful of gods,   but you sure wouldn’t want to get on the  wrong side of her. She was very cunning,   and if she plotted against you, it was trouble. Now let’s talk about her very tough father.  4. Chronos, leader of the titans. We’ve mentioned this chap a bunch of times  already because he plays a very important   part in Greek mythology. Before Zeus  ruled the roost, Chronos was in charge.  Chronos was jealous of his father, the god of the  sky, Uranus. His mom was Gaia. It’s a long story,   but what you need to know is that Gaia told  Chronos and his brothers to attack Uranus.   Only Chronos did, and he did it with a sickle,   castrating him. From the blood and  ooze, Aphrodite and others were formed.  Uranus was understandably a bit peeved  by this and so he called his sons titans.   Chronos then married his sister, Rhea, and  the two ruled the heavens and Earth together.   But as you know, he was told that one day  he’d be overthrown by his own kids, so,   he did what anyone would do and swallowed them. When Rhea had her last kid, Zeus, Chronos said,   “Alright, hand him over, it’s swallowing time.”  Rhea wasn’t keen on this idea and instead handed   him a stone covered in swaddling. It  seems Chronos, as powerful as he was,   was also a bit stupid because he fell for that  and swallowed the stone thinking it was the baby.  Zeus grew up in a cave and when he got a  bit older, he gave something to Chronus   to make him throw up. Out came Zeus’s  brothers and sisters one by one. In time,   his brother, Poseidon, got his trident, and  his brother, Hades, got his helmet of darkness.   Zeus got his thunderbolts. It was time to fight. As you know, Chronos lost the war. He may   also have been castrated by Zeus, but that’s  debatable. He did get sent to Tartarus.  But Chronos still deserves to be in this place.  He ruled over everything for a time and that   ten-year war was no walk in the park for Zeus  and the others. Still, he lost, so let’s move on.  3. Poseidon, god of the sea, storms, and earthquakes. The ancient Greeks knew very well that the  one thing that could shatter everyone’s life   was the Earth itself. When it quaked, it  destroyed, and it was Poseidon that could   shake the Earth. He also ruled the seas,  which the Greeks also feared, especially   when Poseidon decided it was storm time. You can’t really get any more powerful   than that. He was also the god of horses and  created the great winged horse named Pegasus.   Still, we should mention that when he once went to  battle with Athena, he lost, so we’ll forgive you   for telling us we’re wrong here. However, being  an earth-shaker is just such a good superpower.  Like Zeus, Poseidon had more kids than he could  count, many of them monsters and savages. That   was probably a genetic thing because catch  Poseidon on the wrong day, and he could be   a complete psychopath. Annoy him, and you could  forget your ship ever getting to its destination.   Then again, the way the Greek gods acted they were  all a bit mentally unhinged by today’s standards.  All in all, Poseidon could pretty much  destroy the land and make the water deadly,   so we are leaving him at number  three. As for two, here goes.  2. Hades, god of the underworld. If you’re going to give credit to the devil for  having a fair bit of power, you have to give   credit to Hades, too, since they both ruled over  the underworld. Still, bear in mind that the Greek   underworld wasn’t hell; that was Tartarus. When that war with the titans was over,   Zeus got the sky, Poseidon got the sea, and Hades  got what’s down below. In fact, sometimes he was   referred to as the Zeus of the underworld.  This makes all three of them very powerful.  Hades wasn’t a bad god even though we tend  to think of the underworld as a bad place,   but he was feared because he took no crap  from anyone. Once you went down to see him,   you weren’t getting back,  not usually. For this reason,   the Greeks were incredibly scared of Hades  and didn’t even like to mention his name.  If anyone tried to cheat death, they would feel  Hades’s wrath, and by god, no one wanted that.   Sisyphus tried it, and he ended up having to  push a ball of rock up a slope for eternity. That’s why we now called futile things Sisyphean,  a hard, never-ending task like moderating Twitter.  Hades could be one powerful dude if he wanted  to be. It was written that if he felt like it,   he could split the Earth in half. If you don’t  believe us, here is some ancient text about him:  “Hades splitting open the Earth to reach  Persephone crashed towers and shook   towns to their foundation. It amazed Hephaestus  and frightened the Cyclops. It shocked Athena,   Artemis, and Persephone and frightened  Aphrodite. It frightened the sky and caused   the stars to move out of their courses.” Seriously, would anyone mess with that?   All we are going to say now is that if for some  reason Hades, Poseidon, and Zeus got in a fight   there would be nothing left except chaos. Why  then, do we have Zeus in the number one spot?  1. Zeus, the king of the gods and the sky. There’s actually some ancient  Roman poetry that has Zeus saying,   “‘My Zeus rank is no greater than  Hades. I hold court in the sky;   another rules the sea and one the void.” Humans and the Gods were all scared of Hades   and were happy about the fact he spent his time  down below. Zeus understood his power, but Zeus   at the end of the day just had more influence on  the goings-on in the world and in the heavens.  Still, Zeus was hardly a moral character, sleeping  around with just about everyone and anything,   and sometimes coming down too hard on people.  You could argue that Hades was a better God,   but at the end of the day, Zeus was pretty just  at times, and he was supremely intelligent. If   things really went to hell, you could rely on Zeus  to sort things out. Hades and Poseidon meanwhile   might sit back and just let things happen. As we said, the Greeks did fear this kind of   fight. If those three fell out it would mean the  end of everything. But an all-out fight wouldn’t   happen, because Zeus would know better. He was  the king for a reason. His rulership was contested   from time to time by other Gods, but Zeus remained  on the throne. Poseidon had some run-ins with him,   but in one text he admitted, “I’d wish none of us  to quarrel with Zeus, the mightiest of us by far.”  Now you need to watch “Was Jesus Actually  Resurrected.” Or, have a look at…
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Channel: The Infographics Show
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Length: 25min 24sec (1524 seconds)
Published: Wed Jul 27 2022
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