This is a list of notable offspring of a deity with a mortal, in
mythology and modern fiction. Such entities are sometimes referred to as
demigods, although the term "demigod" can also refer to a minor deity, or great mortal hero with god-like valour and skills, who sometimes attains divine status after death.[1]
Aeneas: Trojan hero, son of Aphrodite, goddess of love and Prince Anchises. He fled to Italy and became the ancestor of Romulus and Remus, founders of Rome.
Amphion: son of Zeus and
Antiope, and twin brother of Zethus.
Arcas: son of Zeus and
Callisto, a nymph and minor goddess associated with Aphrodite.
Aristaeus: son of Apollo and Cyrene, a Thessalian princess. He was a shepherd who was made a god after inventing skills such as cheese-making and bee-keeping.[4]
Asclepius: son of Apollo and Coronis, who achieved divine status after death. He became such a great healer, that he could bring back the dead. Zeus killed him for this, but raised him from the dead as the god of healing and medicine.
Augeas: son of Helios, king of Elis. Heracles had to clean his stables as one of his famed twelve labours.[5]
Autolycus: son of
Hermes. He was a famous thief and ancestor of Odysseus who was also Heracles' wrestling teacher.[6]
Bellerophon: according to Homer's Iliad, son of Glaucus and Eurymede of Corinth. According to Apollodorus and Hesiod's catalogues by Hyginus, he was a son of the sea god Poseidon by Eurymede.
Calais: son of Boreas (the Greek god of the cold north wind and the bringer of winter) and Oreithyia, daughter of King Erechtheus of Athens. His brother was Zethes, and they are collectively known as
Boreads.[7]
Heracles: son of Zeus (king of the gods) and Alcmene, a mortal woman.
Helen of Sparta, also known as Helen of Troy: According to older sources, daughter of king Tyndareus and Leda,[12] but Homer also calls her daughter of Zeus and Leda. Wife of Menelaus, the king of Sparta.
Iasion: son of Zeus and Electra (one of the seven daughters of Atlas and Pleione). He was the brother of Dardanus.
Ion: son of
Apollo and
Creusa of Athens. Creusa abandoned Ion when he was just a child, so he was raised by a priestess of
Delphi. They eventually reunited many years later.
Memnon: son of Tithonus and Eos, a Titan goddess of the dawn.
Minos: son of Zeus and
Europa, and king of
Crete. He commissioned
Daedalus to build him the
Labyrinth, where he hid the Minotaur, a bull-man creature born from the union of his wife
Pasiphae and a bull.[13]
Narcissus: son of the river-god
Cephissus and Liriope. A Boeotian hero who scorned many of his lovers, including Echo. Cursed by Nemesis, he ended up falling in love with his own reflection.[14]
Neleus: son of Poseidon and Tyro and king of Pylos. He was the twin brother of
Pelias, who played a key role in the story of the
Argonauts. He and most of his sons were killed by
Heracles, leaving only
one survivor.[15]
Orion: son of Poseidon (the sea god) and Euryale, a Cretan princess. Along with Hippolytus, he is one of the only male hunters who followed Artemis.
Pasiphae: daughter of
Helios. She was a powerful sorceress who married
King Minos of
Crete. Due to a curse from Aphrodite, she fell in love with the Cretan Bull. Her union with the bull produced the
Minotaur.[16]
Pelias: son of Poseidon and Tyro and king of Iolcus. He was the twin brother of
Neleus, and played a key role in the story of the
Argonauts. He challenged his nephew
Jason to sail to
Colchis and bring back the legendary
Golden Fleece. His daughters were tricked into killing him by Jason's wife
Medea.[17]
Polydeuces, also known by his Roman name of Pollux: one of the Dioscuri and twin brother of Castor. He was son of Zeus and the mortal Leda while his twin had a mortal father, king Tyndareus (Leda's husband).
Telegonus: son of the minor goddess
Circe and
Odysseus. He accidentally killed his father with a lance tipped with the venom of a stingray. He married his father's wife
Penelope.[21]
Theseus: son of Poseidon (the sea god) and Aethra, the wife of king Aegeus.
Zethes: son of Boreas (the Greek god of the cold north wind and the bringer of winter) and Oreithyia, daughter of King Erechtheus of Athens. His brother was Calais, and they are collectively known as
Boreads.
Zethus: son of Zeus and Antiope, twin brother of Amphion, co-founder of Thebes.
Egyptian mythology
Imhotep: son of
Thoth. One of the greatest builders in Ancient Egypt.
Apis: bull, son of
Ptah. He became god of virility after his death and merged with
Osiris, god of
Underworld.
Petesuchos: sacred crocodile. Considered as son of
Sobek or his incarnation.
Roman mythology
Bacchus: son of Jupiter and Semele, a mortal. The Roman god of agriculture, wine and fertility, and their equivalent of the Greek god
Dionysus, the name Bacchus being another name used by the Romans for Dionysus.
Ntikuma and his brothers: son of
Anansi, spider god of
Akan traditions. The wisest of Anansi's sons. He is often victims of his father's tricks. Sons of Anansi are composed of Nankonhwea, Afudohwedohwe, Tikelenkelen, See Trouble, Road Builder, River Drinker, Skinner, Stone Thrower and Cushion/Ground Pillow and a girl, Anansewa.
Nyikang and his brothers, Duwat and Moi, and sisters, Nyadway, Ariemker and Bunyung: children of king Okwa and Nyikaya, a crocodile goddess, that their father had taken while she was by the river.
Nyikang become the first king of
Shilluk kingdom.
Ryan'gombe: traditional hero from
Urundi and
Rwanda, he was son of Babinga, chief of evil spirits, and a human who could change shape and turn into a lioness.
Sudika-mbambi: son of a mortal and the daughter of Sun and Moon. Sudika-Mbambi was the most important hero of the
Mbundu people. Helped by Kabungunlu, his twin brother, he traveled to Underworld and fought against monsters and
King of Underworld himself. When he died, he becomes god of thunder and justice.
Mayari: daughter of the Tagalog god
Bathala and a mortal woman. Goddess of the moon and revolution, ruler of the world at nighttime.[22][23]
Tala: daughter of the Tagalog god
Bathala and a mortal woman. Goddess of the stars.[22]
Hanan: daughter of the Tagalog god
Bathala and a mortal woman. Goddess of morning.[22]
Apo Anno: son of a Kankanaey goddess and a mortal.[24]
Laon: Hiligaynon demigod slayer of Mount Kanlaon's mad dragon.[25]
Oryol: daughter of the Bicolano god Asuang and a mortal. Half-snake demigoddess who brought peace to the land.[26]
Labaw Dongon: son of the Suludnon goddess Alunsina (or Laun Sina) and the mortal Datu Paubari.[27]
Humadapnon: son of the Suludnon goddess Alunsina (or Laun Sina) and the mortal Datu Paubari.[27]
Dumalapdap: son of the Suludnon goddess Alunsina (or Laun Sina) and the mortal Datu Paubari.[27]
Ovug: son of the
Ifugao god Dumagid and the mortal Dugai. Cut in half, his first reanimation is in the skyworld, causing lightning and sharp thunder, while the second reanimation in the earthworld causes low thunder.[28]
Takyayen: son of the Tinguian goddess Gagayoma and the mortal Apolinatu.[29]
Rain: in the
Mortal Kombat fighting game franchise by
NetherRealm Studios Rain is a royal demigod Son of Argus from the realm of Edenia, whose desire for power leads to him aligning with the franchise's villains
Maui: In the
Disney movie
Moana, he is the son of man raised by the gods.
Tsugumi and Datara's child: In the
Nintendo DS video game Inuyasha: Secret of the Divine Jewel, she is the demigod daughter of Tsugumi and Datara. After Tsugumi
killed her child from the hands of Gorai and the demon mask have been put on her husband as she sealed him by using the Lightning Sealing Arrow during the interruption of Tsugumi's and Datara's wedding ceremony in 1000 AD, it reincarnated to American girl named Janis.
^Philippine Folk Literature: The Myths, Damiana L. Eugenio, UP Press 1993
^Three Tales From Bicol, Perla S. Intia, New Day Publishers, 1982
^
abcHinilawod: Adventures of Humadapnon, chanted by Hugan-an and recorded by F. Landa Jocano, Metro Manila: 2000, Punlad Research House,
ISBN9716220103