{"id":21994,"date":"2022-06-13T11:24:51","date_gmt":"2022-06-13T11:24:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ancient-literature.com\/?p=21994"},"modified":"2022-06-16T14:16:27","modified_gmt":"2022-06-16T14:16:27","slug":"protogenoi","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ancient-literature.com\/protogenoi\/","title":{"rendered":"Protogenoi: The Greek Deities That Existed Before Creation Began"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"Protogenoi\"The protogenoi are the primordial gods<\/strong> that existed before the Titans and the Olympians. These gods were actively involved in the creation of the cosmos but were not worshipped.<\/p>\n

Furthermore, they were also not given human qualities and therefore their physical characteristics were not really known. Instead, these deities symbolized abstract concepts and geographic locations. To know more about these first-generation gods in Greek mythology<\/strong>, continue reading.<\/p>\n

The Eleven Protogenoi According to Hesiod<\/h2>\n

Hesiod was a Greek poet and the first to compile the list of the primordial deities<\/strong> in his work called the Theogony<\/em>. According to Hesiod, the first primordial deity was Chaos, the formless and shapeless state that preceded creation. Right after Chaos came Gaia, followed by Tartarus, Eros, Erebus, Hemera, and Nyx. These gods then produced the Titans and the Cyclopes who in turn gave rise to the Olympians led by Zeus.<\/p>\n

Orpheus’ work, came after Hesiod’s list and was even believed to be un-Greek due to its dualism. Meanwhile, Hesiod’s work is the standard accepted Greek mythology<\/strong> of how the universe came into being.<\/p>\n

According to the Greek poet Orpheus, Phanes was the first primordial deity followed by Chaos. Phanes was responsible for the order of the universe before it descended into chaos. Phanes was famously known to be the deity of goodness and light.<\/p>\n

Chaos<\/h3>\n

Chaos was a god which personified the gap between heaven and the earth and the fog<\/strong> that surrounded the earth. Later, Chaos mothered the Night and Darkness and later became a grandmother to Aither, and Hemera. The word ‘Chaos’ means a wide gap or chasm and sometimes represents the endless pit of eternal darkness that existed before creation.<\/p>\n

Gaia<\/h3>\n

After Chaos came Gaia who served as the symbol of the earth<\/strong> and the mother of all the gods, Gaia became the foundation of all existence and the goddess of all land animals.<\/p>\n