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48 pages 1 hour read

Hesiod

Theogony

HesiodFiction | Poem | Adult

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Further Reading & Resources

Related Poems

"Pythian 1" by Pindar (c. 518-438 BCE)

Pindar was a Greek lyric poet of the Archaic Period. He is best known for his victory odes, celebratory pieces composed for winners of Panhellenic athletic competitions like the Olympic Games. Pythian 1 shows clear influence from Hesiod’s Theogony; especially worthy of review are Lines 13-35, where Pindar thanks Zeus for imprisoning the monstrous Typhus (Typhoid in the Theogony).

"Hymn to Zeus" by Cleanthes (third century BCE)

The Stoic philosopher Cleanthes wrote The Hymn to Zeus in the third century BCE. Like the Theogony, it resembles a traditional cultic hymn in its full-throated celebration of Zeus without being a proper hymn. It is primarily interested in Zeus in personal terms as the ruler of the cosmos and, therefore, as a sort of divine father for humankind.

"Works and Days" by Hesiod (c. 750-650 BCE)

Works and Days is Hesiod’s other major work besides the Theogony. Unlike the Theogony, it is a didactic poem: It is meant to teach the reader about various practical truths, including agriculture and sailing. That being said, like the Theogony, Works and Days encourages a just, non-violent lifestyle in a fully-integrated community, the polis.

Further Literary Resources

"Theogony" by Hesiod. Edited by Martin Litchfield West (1966)

While this Oxford University Press critical edition with notes by renowned classicist Martin Litchfield West focuses on Hesiod’s Greek text, it is an invaluable and voluminous commentary on the poem for English readers too.

G. Patrick Edwards explains how specifics of Hesiod’s linguistic style—particularly his dialect and use of formulae—suggest that, like Homer, Hesiod composed his poetry orally.

“Hesiod” by Gregory Nagy in Ancient Writers. Edited by T. J. Luce (1982)

Gregory Nagy provides a broad overview of Hesiod’s life and works in an oft-used text for scholarly research. The book’s full title is Ancient Writers: Greece and Rome. It begins around Homer’s time and finishes with Caesar’s time period. This is the first volume of a multivolume work.

Listen to Poem

A formal reading of the Greek opening of the Theogony, this video recreates how a Greek audience would have consumed Hesiod’s works. The narrator pays special attention to accurate pronunciation of the Greek and adherence to Hesiod’s epic meter, dactylic hexameter. Even for those with no background in Greek, this reading is a useful resource for hearing the sonorous musicality of the original text.

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