Greek Gods
Across
- 1. In works of art, she is often shown carrying her bow and arrows, surrounded by her hounds.(Diana)
- 4. The legend of her birth is told in Hesiod's Theogony.(Venus)
- 7. Although she sometimes struck down those who showed arrogance or disrespect.(Minerva)
- 8. During the Renaissance, he was featured as a character in Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida.
- 9. However, she was not embraced by medieval or Renaissance artists the way many other Greek and Roman gods and goddesses were.(Ceres)
- 11. Her story is recognized well enough that she is mentioned in passing in many works, including the Ernest Hemingway novel The Sun Also Rises.(Kirke)
- 12. He is later mentioned in works of the Greek playwright Euripides and the Roman poet Ovid.(Bachuss)
Down
- 1. Because of his famous beauty and rather tragic love affairs with goddesses.
- 2. He first appears in Greek literature in the Iliad, Homer's epic, or long, grand-scale poem about the Trojan War.(Phoebus)
- 3. One of the most famous images is Gustave Doré's engraved illustration for Dante's Divine Comedy.
- 5. Although her story was widely known among the ancient Greeks, it was the subject of relatively few existing works of art and literature.
- 6. He was also a popular subject of ancient Roman authors such as Ovid and Seneca.
- 7. He also appears as a motorcycle-riding tough guy in Rick Riordan's 2005 The Lightning Thief.(Mars)
- 10. One of the most famous images of Saturn is Francisco Goya's grisly painting Saturn Devouring One of His Children.(Saturn)