Greek mythology
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- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Antioxidant, Anti-Obesity, Nutritional and Other Beneficial Effects of Different Chili Pepper: A Review
- World History Encyclopedia - Sisyphus
- Swarthmore College Computer Society - The Myth of Sisyphus
- Ancient Origins - Sisyphus
- Greek Legends and Myths - Sisyphus in Greek Mythology
- Mythopedia - Sisyphus
- Greek Gods and Goddessess - Sisyphus
- Mythology.net - Sisyphus
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- Sisyphus - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
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External Websites
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Antioxidant, Anti-Obesity, Nutritional and Other Beneficial Effects of Different Chili Pepper: A Review
- World History Encyclopedia - Sisyphus
- Swarthmore College Computer Society - The Myth of Sisyphus
- Ancient Origins - Sisyphus
- Greek Legends and Myths - Sisyphus in Greek Mythology
- Mythopedia - Sisyphus
- Greek Gods and Goddessess - Sisyphus
- Mythology.net - Sisyphus
Britannica Websites
Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.
- Sisyphus - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
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Top Questions
Who is Sisyphus?
Who is Sisyphus?
Sisyphus is a figure in Homer’s Iliad and other works of Greek mythology. He is reputed to be the founder of the Isthmian Games and is a trickster who receives eternal punishment for trying to cheat Death.
How does Sisyphus cheat Death?
How does Sisyphus cheat Death?
Post-Homeric legend claims that when Death comes for Sisyphus, Sisyphus cheats him by capturing him. Death escapes, however, and ensnares Sisyphus, though not before Sisyphus has told his wife not to bury his body or perform traditional funeral sacrifices. Consequently, he is allowed to return from the underworld, supposedly to punish his wife for her omission. He then lives a full life before dying, a second time, in his old age.
Why is Sisyphus punished?
Why is Sisyphus punished?
The attempts of Sisyphus to trick Death, including his capture of Death and his return from the underworld, result in his punishment by Zeus.
How is Sisyphus punished?
How is Sisyphus punished?
Sisyphus is punished in the underworld by the god Zeus, who forces him to roll a boulder up a hill for eternity. Every time he nears the top of the hill, the boulder rolls back down.
What does “Sisyphean” mean?
What does “Sisyphean” mean?
The term Sisyphean describes a task that is impossible to complete. It refers to the punishment that Sisyphus receives in the underworld, where he is forced to roll a boulder up a hill repeatedly for eternity.
Sisyphus, In Homer’s Iliad, Book VI, Sisyphus, living at Ephyre (later Corinth), was the son of Aeolus (eponymous ancestor of the Aeolians) and the father of Glaucus. In post-Homeric times he was called the father of Odysseus through his seduction of Anticleia. Both men were characterized as cunning. Sisyphus was the reputed founder of the Isthmian Games, a festival of athletic and musical competitions in honour of the sea god Poseidon.
Later legend related that when Death came to fetch him, Sisyphus chained Death up so that no one died. Finally, Ares came to aid Death, and Sisyphus had to submit. In the meantime, Sisyphus had told his wife, Merope, not to perform the usual sacrifices and to leave his body unburied. Thus, when he reached the underworld, he was permitted to return to punish her for the omission. Once back at home, Sisyphus continued to live to a ripe old age before dying a second time.
Britannica QuizFrom Athena to Zeus: Basics of Greek MythologySisyphus was, in fact, like Autolycus and Prometheus, a widely popular figure of folklore—the trickster, or master thief. Clearly, he is everlastingly punished in Hades as the penalty for cheating Death, but why he is set to roll a great stone incessantly is a puzzle to which no convincing answer has yet been given. It appears to belong with other Greek imaginings of the world of the dead as the scene of fruitless labours.
The figure of Sisyphus inspired an existentialist classic, Albert Camus’s Myth of Sisyphus: Essay on the Absurd (1942).
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Alicja Zelazko.