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The Gods of Olympus: A History

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The Olympians are the most colorful characters of Greek civilization. Even in antiquity, they were said to be cruel, oversexed, mad or just plain silly. Yet for all their foibles & flaws, they proved to be survivors, far outlasting classical Greece itself. In Egypt, the Olympians claimed to have given birth to pharaohs; in Rome, they led respectable citizens into orgiastic rituals of drink & sex. Under Christianity & Islam they survived as demons, allegories & planets. In the Renaissance, they reemerged as ambassadors of a new, secular belief in humanity. Their geographic range, too, has been astounding. In their exile, the gods of Olympus have traveled east to the walls of cave temples in China, west to colonize the Americas. They snuck into Italian cathedrals, haunted Nietzsche & visited Borges' restless dreams. In an original history, Graziosi offers the 1st account to trace the wanderings of these protean deities thru the millennia. Drawing on a wide range of literary & archeological sources, The Gods of Olympus opens a window on the ancient world & its lasting influence.
Preface: Simonides Was Wise
Introduction: A Family Portrait
Part I. Birth: Archaic Greece
Part II. Dialogue: Classical Athens
Part III. Travel: Hellenistic Egypt
Part IV. Translation: the Roman Empire
Part V. Disguise: Christianity &Islam
Part VI. Born again: the Renaissance
Epilogue: A Marble Head
Appendix: The Twelve Gods
List of Illustrations
Notes & Further Reading
Acknowledgments
Index

290 pages, Hardcover

First published November 1, 2013

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About the author

Barbara Graziosi

15 books14 followers
Arts and Humanities director of Durham’s Institute of Advanced Study and Professor of Classics and Ancient History.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 64 reviews
Profile Image for Pam.
709 reviews143 followers
August 24, 2023
A good refresher on the gods of Olympus, particularly as a survey of how they were viewed in different times and places. The author covers the gods from antiquity to the Renaissance and briefly beyond into the present. Their persistence has been remarkable even if they are no longer worshipped.

Graziosi uses primarily the 12 gods and goddesses portrayed on what is known as the Elgin Marbles residing in the British Museum. The other name for the Elgin Marbles is the Parthenon frieze from its first location in the 5th century BCE. It is usually interesting to listen to the author’s story of how the gods looked, we’re portrayed in art, literature, drama and philosophy from the times they were worshipped through their transfer to other countries by conquerors such as Alexander the Great or by admiring cultural figures such as the Ptolemies of Egypt and the Roman elite. In crossing cultures you hear of additions and changes. Many good illustrations are included that help develop Graziosi’s points including an art work showing the gods dressed like crusaders in armor. In the European Middle Ages and Renaissance the gods were no longer worshipped but continued to influence through their status in art and education. Graziosi discusses all, if anything maybe too much as it could be overwhelmingly academic at times. I think it was best as a timeline for appreciation of Greek culture, not as a survey of the individual gods.
Profile Image for Daniel Chaikin.
593 reviews71 followers
December 11, 2015
This was fun, but was a little less than what I was hoping. Graziosi traces the history of the Greek gods from their origins within the Greek cultural area through their evolution in time, merging with various Roman, Egyptian and Near Eastern gods, falling out of their religious context then being reinvented anew.

One of the interesting insights was how the Greek pantheon served as cultural unifying force, establishing norms across the Greek world and essentially establishing what was Greek. It was also interesting to see how gods were force-molded in such strange ways, such as how the Romans combined their very important god Mars into the minor and rather pathetic Greek God Ares.

What was missing, I felt, was a good sense of who these gods were in the religious and mythological context. She not only doesn't bring them alive, but doesn't really even spend much time on them. She walks through the Elgin marbles and gives a short bit on each of the twelve gods there, which I did find of interest. But she pretty much leaves off the biographies at that and moves on to their evolution.

side note - this is the first book for my Homer theme, one of my planned themes for 2016.
Profile Image for Lauren.
52 reviews2 followers
March 15, 2014
This book claims to be about the Olympian gods from "antiquity to the renaissance" and this is in my opinion a bit misleading.

Graziosi devotes four parts of her six-part book to the ancient world. In fairness her observations are insightful and clearly illustrated with good examples. Graziosi clearly knows her stuff when it comes to the ancient world. And that for me is this books fundamental problem. The author should have stopped at the rise of Christianity. From this point onwards (admittedly only two parts) she struggles to convincingly make her arguments. Her observations become much more superficial and her evidence is tenuous at best.

Rather than a history of the role of the Olympian gods, this is a very competent introduction to their role in the ancient world with a few general comments about their place in a Christian Europe to finish up. Readers looking for an insight into the reception of classical mythology in the renaissance would be better looking to other writers in reception studies.

That is not to say however that there is not some value for general readers interested in the role of myth. Coming to the subject with no prior knowledge this book would be a gentle introduction to a fascinating subject. More experienced readers will find nothing new it has to be said.
Profile Image for Shaun.
Author 4 books225 followers
July 21, 2014
I enjoyed this though I think it helps that I went in with absolutely no expectations.

Prior to reading this, I was familiar with the Olympian gods and the mythology surrounding them, and this was a nice review.

I've also done some reading on the Greek and Roman empires, and this provided a nice summary of the role religion and the Olympian gods played in these cultures as well as how these cultures shaped and reshaped the gods.

The second half of the book deals with the preservation and evolution of the myths (primarily through art and literature) as monotheism emerges and slowly replaces the gods of Olympus.

Not sure there is anything new here, but for me the book pulled together a lot of reading I have done on individual subjects, which was a plus. The book was also well organized, which I appreciated.



Profile Image for Iset.
665 reviews605 followers
January 17, 2019

This book is a rather unconventional biography of the ancient Greek gods. Rather than examining ancient Greek cultic practise, which is merely one section of the book, it examines how the Olympians have been thought about and considered by a range of societies over a much wider span of time, up to and including the Renaissance era. It is far less about the layout of temples and the exact rituals that went on, than how people thought about the gods and how they were reconceptualised. Newcomers to the subject may be surprised to learn that classical Greeks debated whether ‘the gods made me do it’ was a viable excuse for evil-doers – if it wasn’t acceptable in their courts, why was it an acceptable explanation for Helen of Troy in their myths? This ties into a whole shift in thought about being responsible for one’s own actions rather than feeling compelled by some outside force upon which blame can be laid. And in the Hellenistic era, Greeks even dabbled with the idea that all anthropomorphic gods had at one time been monarchs, and that the only true gods were the natural forces which had never been anthropomorphised – albeit this idea was encouraged by one monarch in order to discourage another’s divine aspirations. An unusual and fascinating biography of the Olympians.

8 out of 10
Profile Image for Nicky.
4,138 reviews1,112 followers
December 1, 2017
For me, there weren’t many surprises here in Barbara Graziosi’s analysis of the Greek pantheon and their afterlife. I already knew how they translated into the Roman world (thank you, Mrs Wilson, for many fascinating lessons in classics!) and I had some idea of how they translated into the medieval and Renaissance world as well (I believe thanks there must go to Richard Wilson, Martin Coyle and Rob Gossedge – I can’t untangle in my mind quite who was responsible for this, but I blame my degree all the same).

Nonetheless, it’s a good survey of the Greek pantheon and the enormous influence they had on religious thought and, in the end, literature. I could wish for a bit on modern paganism, since I have friends who have revived the worship of the Olympians, but that’s probably a little much to ask.

It’s an enjoyable read, though not a particularly enlightening one, for me.

Reviewed for The Bibliophibian.
Profile Image for B. Rule.
942 reviews61 followers
March 31, 2025
This is more of a "Survey of Western Civ Humanities" than a detailed history of the Olympic gods, but it's not bad if that's what you're after. I was hoping for more on the specific attributes of the pantheon and tracing how those changed over time. There's very little of that. In fact, "biographical" sketches of each figure occupy, at most, a handful of pages and one very abbreviated appendix. I probably wouldn't have picked it up if I realized that. However, it would be a good introduction for young people seeking to understand the evolution of attitudes towards classical Greco-Roman culture. Graziosi is broadly sympathetic to the Renaissance gloss on the gods as emblematic of the power of human imagination. I didn't regret reading it but it's pitched more at the level of my kids than the level of detail I'm seeking. Give it to the adolescent who loved Percy Jackson and wants to know a little more about why people are still reading about these figures thousands of years later.
Profile Image for Erik Graff.
5,169 reviews1,455 followers
November 4, 2014
Barbara Graziosi (Classics, Durham University) has written what she calls a “history” of the Olympians, defining them by a depiction of the twelve on the Parthenon frieze. The list includes Zeus (Latin, Jupiter), Hera (Juno), Ares (Mars), Demeter (Ceres), Dionysos (Bacchus), Hermes (Mercury), Hephaistos (Vulcan), Poseidon (Neptune), Apollo (Apollo), Artemis (Diana) and Aphrodite (Venus). Her treatment of them is periodized, chapters surveying archaic Greece, classical Athens, Hellenistic Egypt, imperial Rome, Christianity and Islam, and the Renaissance. In fact, however, The Gods of Olympus is not quite so neat, the Pantheon serving more as a symbol for classical culture. Her actual discussion ranges more widely than the rubrics suggest. This book is more about archetypes and symbols, their appropriations and re appropriations, than it is about history.
As regards origins, Graziosi depends almost entirely on Homer and Hesiod. Similarly, her treatment of Hellenic beliefs is almost entirely based on literary and artistic evidences. This is not a book about theogony, about the hypothetical origins of religion, nor is it about cultic or ritual beliefs and practices in the Greek-speaking world. Rather, it is about the idea of Greek religion, of classical culture, as retrospectively reconstructed through the ages—an ideal which, like the gods, never actually existed.
Indeed, in her discussion of the classical Athenian paradigm, Graziosi gives substantial attention to how, even then, the gods and goddesses were contested, criticized, even denied. Such critiques ranged in character. Some of the Presocratics proposed various kinds of scientific naturalism as alternatives to supernatural explanation. Xenophanes treated the gods and goddesses as human projections. Herodotus related them to the deities of other lands, thereby relativizing them. Theogenes allegorized them. Socrates purportedly propounded an alien theology. Protagoras admitted agnosticism. Meanwhile, comics and tragedians played loosely, often quite irreverently, with traditional beliefs.
The treatment of Hellenisticism begins with the conquests of Alexander of Macedon, describing the processes of syncretism, adaptation and globalization which were to profoundly influence, then be extended by, Rome. Conversely, Egypt and the East introduced astronomical factors as well as the belief that living men could themselves, like Alexander, become divine.
Roman religion, ancestor and state oriented, was radically changed by the Greek—a transformation particularly well described in this text. The “Romans did not originally recognize a preeminent group of twelve gods.” That was “itself a foreign import.” So, too, few of the Olympians had “viable Roman counterparts” and Apollo had none. Still, an amalgamation occurred, political and intellectual, old Roman gods and rites coexisting with the more lively and poetically fruitful imports from Greece and further afield.
While monotheism was prefigured in Hebrew and pagan henotheisms, it only became hegemonic under mature Christianity and Islam. While this spelled a retreat of the gods, it did not destroy them. Instead, they became the demons--sometimes, covertly, the saints or angels--of the new faiths. They abided also as powerful symbols, in astronomy, in astrology, in alchemy and in the arts.
It is in her handling of the Renaissance that Graziosi becomes enthusiastic, as evinced by her meaty portrayal of Petrarch. Here, of course, the Olympians have been almost entirely shorn of their supernatural power, but not of their glamor, of their symbolic richness and relevance to the new, and apparently perdurant, humanism.
Profile Image for James Miller.
292 reviews9 followers
August 9, 2014
Unlike Burkett's study, Greek Religion this eschews detailed and dry study of each individual god in favour for a fascinating study of the ways in which the gods have been received and used by successive generations and cultures and the problems all have had with them: be they worried Greeks, traditionalist Romans, or monotheistic Christians. I finished wanting to go back to the Homeric Hymns and read some Petrarch: always a good sign.
Profile Image for Ana.
Author 5 books34 followers
April 2, 2022
What are the Olympians, where did they come from, and why do they endure even today? This is a really good overview of the Greek pantheon, its legacy, and how the gods became embedded in modern European history. It’s absolutely meant as a broad overview as opposed to a thorough Walter Burkert-esque examination, so expect a lighter reading experience on the whole. It pairs well with additional research on the gods while providing a concise timeline for their changes and how they were received, so I would absolutely recommend this as an introduction for readers that have a basic working knowledge of Greek and Roman history — while cautioning that it’s a beginning, not an ending, to the subject.

What I find most interesting about this book isn’t the historical timeline, but the overarching thesis running through Graziosi’s work: That the gods adapt to the times. Sometimes villains, sometimes political symbols, sometimes allegories, and sometimes, yes, just gods, it’s clear the Olympians withstood the ages because they met the needs of the people across a given time. A really stunning paradoxical example: Early institutional Christianity demonized the gods, effectively granting them power in the tail end of antiquity by turning them into antagonists. The gods find ways to survive, not necessarily thrive.

Graziosi provides plenty of considerations why the Olympians remain with us. But in the end, it’s ultimately left up to the reader to conclude whether it’s because they provide endearing “fictions and fantasies,” carry a spark of divinity that can’t quite be denied, or maybe a bit of both. It’s a heartfelt and sincere close to a book that implies there’s something truly special about these gods.
Profile Image for Derek.
1,843 reviews141 followers
March 1, 2025
This was a terrific book that provides a framework to examine almost the whole of Mediterranean history, from Aryan pre-history right up until the Renaissance. The book is short but dense and taught me something new on nearly every page about Greek mythology, different historical eras, and religion in general. The author incorporates a range of traditional as well as relatively obscure sources, but certainly has a lot to say about Homer, Greek tragedies, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Virgil, Ovid, Petrarch, et cetera and so on. I especially loved the chapter that dealt with the evolutions of Greek gods in the Hellenistic era, but chapters touching on the Romans, Judaism, and the Arabs were wonderful too. Very well-written and well-researched and powerfully analytical.
Profile Image for Josh.
32 reviews3 followers
January 9, 2018
Very pleasant writing style. More narrative than textbook. Plenty of footnotes and references. A great, condensed overview of the main Greek gods from the earliest Cycladic culture through Classical Greece, then through the adoption by Rome and the rise of Christianity, all the way up to modernity.
Profile Image for Tim Atkinson.
Author 26 books20 followers
July 11, 2018
This is a book I feel I should’ve enjoyed a lot more than I did. It’s got everything I like: classical mythology, history, theology, art, culture, literature. But although well-written and wearing its author’s learning lightly, it never seems to get going. It doesn’t help that it’s a short book, ironically. It never really gets under the skin of any of the many areas it covers, leaving one oddly unfulfilled. I feel the concept deserves better, and I wonder how much of a compromise this is between Graziosi's initial pitch and the publisher's subsequent demands. Or perhaps it was written at their (the publisher's) behest, and Graziosi is dancing to their tune? Either way, it falls between two very different stools - a fact even betrayed by the books' footnotes (yes, it's nothing if not scholarly) which unhelpfully appear section by section rather than chapter by chapter, making quick referencing while reading unnecessarily frustrating.
998 reviews5 followers
March 1, 2025
Whatever else I expected from Barbara Graziosi’s book on the Olympian Gods, it was not a scholarly and well-researched volume on the history of the Gods. She writes with an easy, graceful style that renders her book entertaining even to non-historians and non-classicists, unfamiliar with both Greek and Roman literary tradition.

The main thesis seems to be, “How did a pack of murderous, man-hating women, women-loving men, shape-shifting, pathological sadists, drunken, perverted and misshapen monsters survive till the present day and probably well into the future?”

And Graziosi's answer is very Darwinian: they adapted, took on different names, assumed the culture of the land they were in, and accepted the offerings of incense or human flesh or flowers. They lived up to people's expectations of them, whether as Isis or Cybele or Thoth, and further afield as far as India, as some of the old Vedic deities.

The Olympians sneaked into people's consciousness even when the great monotheistic religions of Christianity and Islam forbade the worship or the identification of God or Christ with any of the Olympians; but by this time it was already too late for such prohibition. Under the growing rise of literacy, and the books available to read, they crept through fable, art and literature. Even Dante, a devout Catholic, “could ask Apollo for inspiration at the beginning of his Paradiso, treating him as the Holy Spirit. He even referred to Jesus Christ as “the highest Jupiter,” ‘il sommo Giove’.”

Although Christian doctrine sternly forbade the worship of the pagan deities, Graziosi points out that had it not been for mediaeval monks painstakingly transcribing Greek and Roman texts, including Homer, we would today not even be aware of the Olympians.

Or astrologers, who cured illness as well as forecasting the future, deciding whether Jupiter or Saturn was in the ascendant over the afflicted body part, and prescribing accordingly. The horoscope of every king was cast at birth, using the names of the twelve Olympian gods - Jupiter, Apollo, Mercury, and the rest.

Renaissance artists painted their lovely Venuses, but not necessarily from a religious fervour - just the sight of pretty and naked women were sure to get the artists large commissions. So the Olympians knew the value of money as well as any mortal! And the book is generously sprinkled with photographs, of which my favourite has to be the “Jupiter in the guise of a monk on the bell tower of Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence (late 1330s).”

And today? Certainly their commonest presence is to be in the science of astronomy, but there are other fields too: “The Olympian gods, in any case, found other ways of infiltrating the Muslim world. If science was what mattered, then it was through science they would make their presence felt. Besides medicine, Arabic scholars were assiduous students of mathematics, astronomy, and astrology. Indeed, they regarded all those enterprises as connected, because the stars and planets were thought to have a direct influence on the human body.”

An invigorating new way of reappraising the wicked old Greek Gods!

Profile Image for Matt.
437 reviews13 followers
March 19, 2019
This is a smart, fun book that covers over two millennia of material about the ancient Greek gods. The prose is very readable and often broken up by helpful images that illustrate something being discussed. Ranging from the earliest texts of the Mycenaeans to modern authors like Borges, Graziosi is at her best when situated in the earlier Greek material. The chapters on later receptions of the gods in the Middle Ages and Renaissance are easier to read than slogging through Seznec's Survival of the Pagan Gods, but lack the depth and masterful touch that G. demonstrates in the earlier chapters. Surprisingly, there isn't much on Greek tragedy, but perhaps this isn't really a surprise, since tragedy is more about men than gods.

I'm assigning this as a textbook to give students in my Mythology class a basic outline and rough historical narrative to follow. There is a decent amount of plot summary in here, but I see that as a good thing. This book is a good bouncing off point to get into the texts themselves. If you are planning on reading this book alone, you might end up wishing for more in the way of direct engagement with the texts, e.g. in the chapter on Petrarch she mentions 3 major passages about the gods in P.'s Africa, but never quotes any of them. The endnotes give helpful citations to enable you to consult the texts directly and each chapter has a thorough list of suggested further readings.
Profile Image for Levi Petro.
41 reviews1 follower
February 6, 2025
This book is fine, it’s a cool approach to Greek Mythology, using this sort of allegory of the Greek gods as actual beings progressing through the ages, masquerading as different forms to stay in the forefront of human philosophy, religion, and morality.

She is a very biased author. She clearly does not approve of Christianity’s impact to paganism and paints a very distorted image of Christian theology and history. She is an expert on Greek divinity, but has a very skewed and kind of sheltered understanding of Christianity.

I think the same could be said about her views on Islam, I feel she doesn’t really give appropriate treatment to the theological reflections contained in that chapter either. By no means am I an expert on this though.

Also just casually in the background is this desire to promote certain “modern” ideologies, such as free sexuality and homosexuality. She interprets everything the Church does as backwater and ignorant without even attempting to understand the moral objections that Christianity presents. There was lots of casual hints about homosexuality, but strangely zero mention of homosexual exploitation that occurred during the Greek and Roman empires. It’s a very ironically “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy to presenting sexual morality in the time of Greek and Roman time periods.

It’s always refreshing to get secular perspectives on religion though, I think she does a good job of portraying the beauty and culture of Greek religion, but otherwise she presents a limited caricature of all other world religions… this is of course to be expected in secular thought.
Profile Image for Pieter.
388 reviews66 followers
May 12, 2017
Verwacht geen uitgebreid overzicht van mythes gelinkt aan de Griekse goden. Het is eerder een beschrijving doorheen de eeuwen van de culturele, politieke en godsdienstige impact van de inwoners van de Olympus. Ook al in de tijd van de antieke Grieken kwam het geloof onder druk te staan door filosofen zoals Xenophanes en Socrates (die van een gebrek voor de goden werd beschuldigd) en de Atheense democratie die de aandacht naar het wereldse verplaatste. Onder Alexander de Grote gingen de Griekse goden op hellenistische wereldreis, in Rome kregen ze een Italiaanse jasje aan. Zeus werd Jupiter, Hera Juno,... De oorlogsgod Mars kreeg wel meer aanzien dan zijn Griekse tegenhanger Ares.

Onder het jonge christendom woedde een theologische en culturele oorlog die in dit tranendal werd beslecht. Constantijn gaf het christendom aanzien, maar omringde zich in Byzantium wel met heidense godenbeelden. Erna zouden de Griekse goden nog op cultureel vlak blijven opduiken in schilderijen (Botticelli), gebouwen, beeldhouwwerken,... De nukkige, bonte familie van de Olympus mag dan wel op godsdienstig vlak nog weinig gelovigen tellen, cultureel blijft ze op vandaag inspireren.
Profile Image for Carlos.
2,704 reviews78 followers
February 26, 2022
This was an interesting look at the evolution of the Greek pantheon throughout the centuries. Graziosi follows their evolution from how the ancient Greeks themselves understood them, and the debate surrounding their significance, to their transformation into allegories during the Middle Ages, their rebirth during the Renaissance and their return to bawdy and earthy beings after the Romantic period. She highlights the ever present protean nature which allowed their exportation by Alexander the Great to the many peoples in his empire as well as the Romans in theirs. Perhaps most surprising was the path they took during the height of the Middle Ages when their presence had to be accommodated in both Christian and Muslim cultures. Definitely an interesting read for anyone who has wondered how these gods managed to keep their hold in our collective imaginations.
79 reviews1 follower
December 1, 2023
Quite a lot of filler but very interesting and good primer on the topic nonetheless.

It’s very interesting to read about what are essentially the “base” deities in Western civilization and how they evolved through time. The depictions and stories of these gods changed a lot, but what they meant to people and how they were perceived throughout wider culture was interesting to read about.

It was especially interesting to read about the instances where even Christian religious leaders, down to the pope, have used Olympian gods as a way to get across a narrative or hook people’s attention. The way the Olympian gods just keep on finding their way into our language and culture is a rabbit trail with no end.
Profile Image for Aaron Carpenter.
163 reviews11 followers
June 23, 2018
At some point you've got to ask, "What WAS Homer talking about? Where did this pantheon come from?" Christianity has its historical points of origin, but the ancient mythologies? What did the ancients - Greeks, especially - think they were worshipping? How does this shed light on man's inherent spiritual orientation? (How does this set a backdrop for the New Testament?)

With respectful treatment of all faiths, Graziosi comes as close as perhaps is possible to answering most of these question. Thorough, engaging, interesting at every turn, and easily read - I really enjoyed this book and found it immensely helpful as I continue my journey through the classics.
Profile Image for Kara.
Author 27 books95 followers
February 12, 2025

Graziosi examines the Greek gods, not just when they begin to appear in the record and how they were worshipped - but what happened to them after.

Graziosi makes an excellent case that nothing ever really ends or disappears - it just gets translated, transformed, repurposed, and she shows here what happened to the Greek gods from the early Christian era to the 20th century in this fascinating look at World History through the eyes of the gods who have seen it all from the earliest writings to today.
Profile Image for Sarah -  All The Book Blog Names Are Taken.
2,418 reviews98 followers
September 4, 2017
While it wasn't exactly as I expected, I still enjoyed this one. I had anticipated an in-depth look at/discussion of each of the gods and goddesses and their evolution over time. Instead it looked at the gods and goddesses collectively, which worked out fine in the end. The book was strongest at the beginning, but overall I enjoyed it. I would've liked to have seen some color photos, particularly when discussing some of the artwork of the Renaissance.
93 reviews4 followers
May 28, 2019
While I did enjoy this book, I didn't find the style to be very engaging. It had everything I wanted as far as the fact/history of the Olympian Gods and chronicled their history well, but the author's writing style wasn't really for me.

If you are interested in learning about Greek/Roman mythology I would recommend this book as it does tell a pretty complete story of how they came to be and how they evolved in the minds of people over the centuries.
85 reviews
July 23, 2017
I read this after Tim Whitmarsh's Battling the Gods (BtG) which covers much of the same material in the first half of this book in a more rigorous and informed fashion, although this has some interesting anecdotes missing from BtG. The second half of this book deals with medieval and later ideas about the Greek gods where it is much better.
Profile Image for Heather.
285 reviews8 followers
October 26, 2017
A fantastic read. Traces the history of the Olympic gods from their inception through Roman assimilation as well as Egyptian and Babylonian influencing all the way to modern times. Great pacing and flow, and never really got dry, which was wonderful. I wish it was a bit longer so it could go more into depth, but that's just my personal preference.
Profile Image for Rowena Abdul Razak.
68 reviews3 followers
July 14, 2018
Really well written and witty history of how the gods of Olympus have remained immortal. Too little focus on the post-renaissance period but otherwise, a good overview of how the gods have changed their appearance through the ages, been manipulated for political and religious reasons but somehow maintained their divinity and sense of permanence. Good read.
Profile Image for Margaret.
Author 20 books104 followers
October 12, 2017
Excellent book tracing the Olympians from their earliest known beginnings in Greece, through their aassimulation in Rome, through the Renaissance, and onwards.

Interesting and absorbing.

Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Dearna (Words of the Roses).
264 reviews26 followers
November 17, 2017
3.5

I really enjoyed this book! I loved seeing the ways in which the Greek Gods’ presence has continued through the ages. Just goes to show the empires don’t destroy their the culture of those it conquers but rather adapts it for its on purpose.
Profile Image for Pedro Martins Barata.
2 reviews
June 3, 2018
Nice historical overview

Thoroughly researched, the book provides an excellent introduction to the history of the Gods from their creation bu Homer and others, up until the XXth century. Very enjoyable reading.
Profile Image for Kerry.
1,738 reviews76 followers
August 20, 2018
A nice companion to any survey study of the classics. More analysis than history, the book builds upon knowledge readers might already know and digs deeper and looks more critically at certain aspects of the development of mythology and how these ideas were transmitted and affected Western culture.
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