Atlas (mythology)
Atlas is a Titan in Greek mythology. He is the son of Iapetus. He has seven daughters with the Oceanid Pleione. They are called the Pleiades.
After the war between the Olympians and the Titans, Atlas was punished. Zeus forced him to hold the heaven on the western edge of the world. Later, the story about him changed and it was said that he held the whole world on his shoulders. Mostly in modern times, he is shown holding a globe of the world.
Heracles came to Atlas and asked him to for help with one of his Labours. He wanted Atlas to get the "Golden Apples" for him as only an immortal could take them. Atlas agreed, but only if Heracles would hold up the sky. Atlas was pleased to be free from its weight but Heracles tricked him into holding it again.
After Perseus killed Medusa he asked the king Atlas of Mauretania to host him but the latter refused, Perseus in revenge decided to show him the head of Medusa by petrifying him and ran away.
Atlas was turned into a mountain called, "[The] Atlas Mountains."
Atlas (mythology) Media
Atlas and Heracles, metope from the temple of Zeus at Olympia.
- Atlas sculpture on collins street melbourne.jpg
Atlas supports the terrestrial globe on a building in Collins Street, Melbourne, Australia.
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Nautilus Cup. This drinking vessel, for court feasts, depicts Atlas holding the shell on his back. The Walters Art Museum
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Sculpture of Atlas, Praza do Toural, Santiago de Compostela
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Lee Lawrie's colossal bronze Atlas, Rockefeller Center, New York
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Greco-Buddhist (c. AD 100) Atlas, supporting a Buddhist monument, Hadda, Afghanistan
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Atlas inside the Royal Palace, Amsterdam, Netherlands
- FR Carskie Siolo, palac, 2013.08.10, fot. I. Nowicka (7) corr.jpg
Statues of Atlas on the exterior of Catherine Palace in Tsarskoye Selo, Pushkin, Saint Petersburg