current khthonic altar!!! i’m in love 🥰

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current khthonic altar!!! i’m in love 🥰
complex day of worship and it’s just begun.
the flowers everywhere are so beautiful and they’re not dying yet. color permeates every sidewalk and every patch of land. still, crisp brown leaves dot the color like a reminder.
there is a small bog forming in the ditch. things both grow and die there. wish dandelions reach towards the sky, shriveled but whole, braving the cold and relishing in today’s outbreak of sunshine.
a dead deer sits on the side of the highway, out of the road but visible enough that tears choked in my throat. someone was kind enough to drag it into the grass so that it may return to the earth. I still don’t know how to feel.
visiting our very small, very old cemetery feels like a gift today. we brought coins and coffee to offer; rags and tools to clean the headstones and scrape the moss from the engravings. what seems like an endless stretch of unplotted land lays behind us, but no one has been buried in this cemetery for decades. most of the graves display the 1800s, and every coin from our last visit remains unmoved.
three children ride their bicycles and tricycles past us as we work. two of them streak out in front, pedaling fearlessly towards construction. mom hangs back with the third, slow and careful on their bike, feet unsteady on the pedals. the child can’t stop themself from looking at us, looking at the cemetery, wonder and curiosity like flames in their eyes. we are old, most of these graves much older, and they are so young and so brightly curious and have so much to learn. so do we. no one else passing by has paid any attention to the two darkly clothed strangers cleaning the cemetery mid-day.
the tree at the center of the cemetery is massive and intimidating and mighty. in a conspicuous display of absolute life, wasps swarm every angle of the tree, spiderwebs create a barrier around it, and in a strikingly out of place smattering, purple flowers run through the grass towards the base of the tree. this tree is undoubtedly much older than these graves, and certainly older than the name of our town. it buzzes with energy all its own.
every single moment, life and death hang on the air. this is no different from an ordinary day, but like my breath in the cold they seem almost tangible.
Hi! I saw your Hades post on how Rick portrayed him and saw you mention that he didn't have children and now I'm just confused. Another blog I follow who also knows her stuff said that one of Hades' epithets was Zeus Khthonios as an explanation that he may be the father of Persephone's children (or at least Melinoe) and there's also this.
I've used this for ages now and other Hellenic blogs have recommended it as well, but if it's not accurate...
Theoi.com is one of my favorite sites, and I use it often. The quotes it has are very accurate, though you could argue against translations used but that’s an individual thing. I personally do recommend against trusting it’s overarching summaries, as they tend to be blends of multiple myths without care for lining them up with their associated beliefs, but in general it’s helpful and can include some fun historical facts! Like this one!
Haides was usually regarded as an infertile god, for a god of the dead should, by his very nature, be incapable of siring children. (Theoi.com)
Even the site itself confirms that Haides is generally viewed as an interfile God. Death cannot beget life. Now, like most things there are those that view it differently, but I’m one who does ascribe to him being an infertile God.
I discussed the individual children of his not being his HERE
Now, this is something some will debate on. Angie (good friend of mine, also HelPol) views Makaria as Haides’ child, but myself and Izzy decided after our analysis of the lines and the context around them that she was only his child in a figurative “child of the Underworld by being a Goddess of the Underworld” fashion. I mention it in the post I linked.
Now I know I cover Haides being called Father in the post, but to reiterate. Haides is not called Father as the one who has a hand in the children’s birth, but as the Husband of Persephone, and as the King of the Underworld. One who is King, is in their own form the “Father” of those in their Kingdom. It’s notable that Zeus is called Father by even Hestia, as a display of this. So the different Gods of the Underworld would be recognized as Haides’ “children”, not in a literal sense but a figurative one.
Zeus Khthonios specifically to me is something based in the fact that... Haides is the King of the Underworld. He rules it completely, he handles the upkeep and care of it and it’s people. He is the “supreme God” of the Underworld. He is literally the Zeus (who rules Olympus and the Gods) but of the Underworld, and it doesn’t have to do with him having literal children.
I hope this helps clarify things anon!
art dedicated to hades
DEMETER APPRECIATION CLUB 👏👏👏 Just because a story about a badass mom saving her kid isn’t as glamorous as the Hades and Persephone romance doesn’t make it any less important. That’s my biggest pet peeve about the Demeter retellings. The text being retold is literally called Homeric Hymn to Demeter Yet someone it’s become “The Hades and Persephone Story” or “myth of the seasons” (Persephone role model anon).
Exactly!! And the absolute irony that the vast majority of mythology retellings are meant to be feminist retellings yet the most feminist myth the ancients ever gave us got the feminism written out of it the more it was retold in the modern age.
People seem to think they are doing something special by giving Persephone a voice and power but if you're silencing and villainizing Demeter in the process isn't that still just misogyny?? Especially when Hades gets a whole ass makeover and somehow becomes the young romantic goth king savior of everyone's dreams. Like all they did was make the myth into a Disney movie.
I am so grateful to my dearest gods Persephone, Hades, and Hermes. despite me feeling super emotionally disconnected and mentally unwell I think their love has finally gotten through my stubborn suffering brain lmao. especially Persephone, my dearest goddess my divine mother. I finally feel her love again. I finally feel Hades again, his quiet and gentle presence. Thank you to Hermes for being such a loving presence as always and being just as stubborn as me in giving me that love despite me always closing myself off lol. just wanted to note this down so I'll see it in the future scrolling through my blog tags! Glory be to the Theoi! Praise Persephone, Hades, and Hermes! ♡
Epithets of Hades
I’ve noticed that there aren’t many posts concerning epithets for Hades, and certainly no comprehensive ones, so I thought I’d make one. This is Hellenism focused, so all will be applied to Hades, even though the Latin ones would traditionally be for Pluto. Latin epithets are marked as (L). I translated some of these into more concise titles that convey their implications, and notes are made as necessary. Sources are at the bottom but are not linked so that this will still show in tags. I hope this helps everyone!
Related to his role as ruler of the underworld:
Hades Chthonius - Hades of the Underworld
Hades Polyxenos/Polydegmon/Polysêmantôr Aidonius - Hades, Ruler/Host of Many
Hades Pasiánax - Hades, the Universal King
Hades Adesius - Hades of the Grave
Hades Zefs Khthonios - Hades, Zeus of the Underworld
Hades Larthy Tytiral (Etrurian) - Hades, Sovereign of Tartarus
Hades Ánax - Hades, the King
Hades Polydegmenos - Hades, He Who Welcomes All
Summanus/Manus/Mantus (L) - Hades, Prince of the Dead
Niger Deus (L) - Hades, the Black God || Hades of the Infernal Regions
“Zeus of the Departed”
“The Other Zeus”
Related to his roles concerning death:
Hades Nekrodegmôn - Hades, Receiver of the Dead
Hades Agesilaos - Hades, Who Calls Man To The Underworld
Hades Nekrôn Sôtêr - Hades, Saviour of the Dead
Hades Hesperos Theos - Hades, God of Death and Darkness (for those who believe he and Thanatos are the same deity)
Related to his role as controller of the earth and its resources:
Hades Ploutos - Hades of Wealth
Hades Khamaizilos Dios - Hades of the Earth (“where he likes to be” is implied)
Hades Theôn Khthonios - Hades, the Terrestrial God
Tellumo (L) - Hades, Who Provides to the Creative (denotes creative power of the earth’s resources)
Tellus (L) - Hades, Who Provides for the Productive (denotes productive power of the earth’s resources)
Altor (L) - Hades, Who Nourishes
Other:
Hades Hagesilaos - Hades, Leader of the People
Hades Eubuleus - Hades of Good Counsel || Hades, the Consoler (supposedly references death as the end of sorrows)
Hades Adámastos - Hades, the Unconquerable
Hades Aidis - Hades, the Unseen
Hades Aïdonefs/Aidoneus - Hades, the Singer || Hades of Nightingales || Hades of Sleep || Hades of Light || Hades of Poets || Hades of a Girl
Hades Amenthes (Egyptian) - Hades, Who Gives and Receives
Hades Axiocersus - Hades the Shorn (he was depicted without hair where this was used)
Hades Clymenus - Hades, the Renowned
Hades Euclius/Eucles - Hades of Good Report/the Famous/of Good Fame
Hades Agetes/Hegates - Hades, the Conductor
Hades Moiragetes - Hades, Guide of the Fates
Hades Orkos/Orcus - Hades of Oaths, Hades, the Avenger of the Perjured
Hades Opheius - Hades, the Blind || Hades of Prophecy (as the blind augers of Messenia we’re dedicated to him)
Euchaites - The Beautiful-haired One
Rusor (L) - Hades, to Whom All Things Return
Salutaris Divus (L) - Hades, Restorer of the Dead
Saturnius (L) - Hades, Son of Kronos
Uragus (L) - Hades of Fire
Urgus (L) - Hades, Who Impels
Operatus (L) - Hades, the Concealed
Februus (L) - Hades, To Whom Purification and Sacrifice Is Offered
Hades, the Good and Prudent (not historical, but reflects how he was seen)
Negative (but everything can be twisted sometimes):
Hades Agesander - Hades, Who Carries All Away (this references the Persephone myth; included because it exists but I’m not sure you’d want to use it)
Hades Clotonius - Hades, the Infernal
Hades Stygius - Hades the Hateful
Feralis Deus (L) - Hades, the Cruel God
Hades Agelastus - Hades of Melancholy Countenance
“Hades, the Tearless”
“Hades, the Implacable and Adamant”
Given by Poets:
The Grisly God (Homer)
Ruthless King (Homer)
Infernal [Zeus] (Vergil, he said Jove)
Stygian [Zeus] (Vergil, same as above)
Sources:
Hellenic Gods (dot Org)
Brown, Robert (1844). “The Religion of Zoroaster Considered In Connection With Archaic Monotheism” (also known as Wikipedia citation)
The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization
Could any of you Hades worshippers, devotees, children of... explain to me how he appears to you? I would love to draw/illustrate him and his symbols when I have time (or taking a break from my other illustrations for school). I've been pouring over images of him on google and nothing quite feels right. There's a few that seem a little promising but not quite. I know the gods show themselves differently to each of us, but I would love to hear your thoughts.