A Mythological Family of Monsters

By | December 14, 2018

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Typhon, God of War/image from God of War Wiki - Fandom

Greek mythology is filled tales of heroes and monsters. The heroes are often demigods who go on quests to protect or avenge their mortal families. These quests usually involve slaying monsters. But what they never stop to think about is whether the monsters have families too. As it turns out, they do have a family – one big not-so-happy family.


The “father of all monsters” in Greek mythology was Typhon, sometimes called Typhoeus. The last son of Gaea and Tartarus, he was a fire-breathing dragon with a hundred heads. He was born after the Olympians had defeated the Titans because Gaea wanted revenge against Zeus for imprisoning her children. During their first battle, Typhon ripped out Zeus’s tendons, though they were eventually retrieved and returned to him by Hermes. Typhon was ultimately defeated by Zeus’s lightning bolts and imprisoned beneath Mount Etna. But not before he could marry Echidna and sire many of the most famous monsters of Greek mythology.

Echidna, the “mother of all monsters” was half woman, half snake. Like Typhon, she was a child of Gaia and Tartarus, though her genealogy varies by author. She lived in a cave and would prey upon anyone unfortunate enough to pass by it. She was eventually killed in her sleep by Argus Panoptes. 

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Cerberus, Kingdom Hearts 2/image from destinyislands.com

The oldest child of Typhon and Echidna was a two-headed dog named Orthus, who guarded the cattle of a giant named Geryon. During his trials, the demigod Heracles was asked to take Geryon’s cattle as his tenth labor. In the process, Heracles killed both Orthus and Geryon.

The next child, and one of the more well-known monsters of mythology was Cerberus, also known as the “hound of Hades.” A multi-headed dog, he was charged with guarding the gates of the Underworld. He is usually depicting as having three heads, but some accounts claim he had as many as a hundred. Like his brother, Cerberus also came up against Heracles, who was to bring the beast up from the Underworld as his twelfth and final labor. Heracles managed to strangle him until he passed out and then used adamant chains to drag him before Eurystheus. Afterward, Cerberus was returned to the Underworld. Cerberus was defeated again when Orpheus came to the Underworld to seek his lover Eurydice who had died. Rather than fighting, Orpheus used music to charm Cerberus into submission. When Aeneas visited the Underworld, he was also able to get past the dog, but he did so by feeding him a drugged honey-cake which put Cerberus to sleep.