Kratos (mythology)

Kratos
Personification of Strength
Mural of Kratos at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
AbodeMount Olympus
Genealogy
Parents
SiblingsNike, Bia, and Zelus

In Greek mythology, Kratos (Ancient Greek: Κράτος, lit.'power, strength'[1]) also known as Cratus or Cratos, is the divine personification of strength. He is the son of Pallas and Styx. Kratos and his siblings Nike ('Victory'), Bia ('Force'), and Zelus ('Glory') are all the personification of a specific trait.[2] Kratos is first mentioned alongside his siblings in Hesiod's Theogony. According to Hesiod, Kratos and his siblings dwell with Zeus because their mother Styx came to him first to request a position in his regime, so he honored her and her children with exalted positions. Kratos and his sister Bia are best known for their appearance in the opening scene of Aeschylus' Prometheus Bound. Acting as agents of Zeus, they lead the captive Titan Prometheus on stage. Kratos compels the mild-mannered blacksmith god Hephaestus to chain Prometheus to a rock as punishment for his theft of fire.[3]

Kratos is characterized as brutal and merciless, repeatedly mocking both Hephaestus and Prometheus and advocating for the use of unnecessary violence. He defends Zeus' oppressive rule and predicts that Prometheus will never escape his bonds. In Aeschylus' Libation Bearers, Electra calls upon Kratos, Dike ("Justice"), and Zeus to aid her brother Orestes in avenging the murder of their father Agamemnon. Kratos and Bia appear in a late fifth-century BC red-figure Attic skyphos of the punishment of Ixion, possibly based on a scene from a lost tragedy by Euripides. They also appear in late eighteenth and nineteenth-century Romantic depictions and adaptations of the binding of Prometheus.

  1. ^ For the former translation, see Ruffell 2012, p. 25 and Martin 2016, p. 163. For the latter translation, see Lowe 2009, p. 82 and LSJ, s.v. κράτος.
  2. ^ Gantz, pp. 25–26 (the translations given here are Gantz's); Hesiod, Theogony 383–385; Apollodorus 1.2.4
  3. ^ Gantz, p. 158; Aeschylus (?), Prometheus Bound, 1 ff.

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