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Encyclopedia > Typhus (monster)

Typhon (Typhaon, Typhoeus, Typhus), in Greek mythology, was the final son of Gaia, this time with Tartarus, the offspring of the Earth and the cavernous void beneath:

But when Zeus had driven the Titans from heaven,
huge Earth bare her youngest child Typhoeus of the love of
Tartarus, by the aid of golden Aphrodite. —Hesiod, Theogony 820ff.

The Homeric Hymn to Apollo makes the monster Typhaon at Delphi a son of archaic Hera in her Minoan form, produced out of herself, like a monstrous version of Hephaestus, and whelped in a cave in Cilicia and confined there in the land of the Arimi (Iliad, ii. 783). It was in Cilicia that Zeus battled with the ancient monster and overcame him. It was not an easy battle: Typhon temporarily overcame Zeus, cut the sinews from him and left him in the "leather sack," the korukos that is the etymological origin of the korukion atron, the Korykian or Corycian Cave.


The inveterate enemy of the Olympian gods is described as a vast grisly monster with a hundred heads and a hundred serpents issuing from his thighs, who was conquered and cast into Tartarus by Zeus. or confined beneath Mount Etna (Pindar, Pythian Ode i.19 - 20; Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound 370) where "his bed scratches and goads the whole length of his back stretched out against it," or in other volcanic regions, where he is the cause of eruptions.


Typhon is thus the chthonic figuration of volcanic forces, as Hephaestus (Roman Vulcan) is their Olympian manifestation. Amongst his children by Echidna are Cerberus, the serpent-like Lernaean hydra, and the Chimaera.


Typhon is also the father of hot dangerous winds (Greek "typhein" to smoke), which were extended by the Persians and Arabs to include the cyclonic storms of the Indian Ocean, hence English typhoon.


Later Hellenistic writers identified Typhon with the Egyptian Set.


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