Gaia

Gaia
by Ron Leadbetter
Gaia,
known as Earth
or Mother Earth (the Greek common noun for "land"
is ge or ga).
She
was an early earth goddess and it is written that Gaia
was born from Chaos, the great void of emptiness within
the universe, and with her came Eros.
She
gave birth to Pontus (the Sea) and Uranus (the Sky). This
was achieved parthenogenetically (without male intervention).
Other
versions say that Gaia had as siblings Tartarus (the lowest
part of the earth, below Hades
itself) and Eros, and without a mate, gave birth to Uranus
(Sky), Ourea (Mountains) and Pontus (Sea).
Gaia
took as her husband Uranus, who was also her son, and
their offspring included the Titans, six sons and six
daughters. She gave birth to the Cyclopes
and to three monsters that became known as the "Hecatonchires".
The spirits of punishment known as the Erinyes were also
offspring of Gaia and Uranus.
The
Gigantes, finally, were conceived after Uranus had been
castrated by his son Cronus,
and his blood fell to earth from the open wound. To protect
her children from her husband, (the Cyclopes and the Hecatoncheires,
as he was fearful of their great strength), Gaia hid them
all within herself.
One
version says that Uranus was aghast at the sight of his
offspring so he hid them away in Tartarus, which are the
bowels of the earth. Gaia herself found her offspring
uncomfortable and at times painful, when the discomfort
became to much to bear she asked her youngest son Cronus
to help her. She asked him to castrate Uranus, thus severing
the union between the Earth and Sky, and also to prevent
more monstrous offspring. To help Cronus achieve his goal
Gaia produced an adamantine sickle to serve as the weapon.
Cronus hid until Uranus came to lay with Gaia and as Uranus
drew near, Cronus struck with the sickle, cutting the
genitalia from Uranus. Blood fell from the severed genitals
and came in contact with the earth and from that union
was born the Erinyes (Furies), the Giants and the Meliae
(Nymphs of the manna ash trees).
After
the separation of the Earth from the Sky, Gaia gave birth
to other offspring, these being fathered by Pontus. Their
names were the sea-god Nereus, Thaumas, Phorcys, Ceto
and Eurybia.
In
other versions Gaia had offspring to her brother Tartarus;
they were Echidna and Typhon, the later being an enemy
of Zeus. Apollo killed Typhon
when he took control of the oracle at Delphi, which Gaia
originally provided, and then the "Sibyl" sang the oracle
in Gaia's shrine.
It was Gaia who saved Zeus from being swallowed by Cronus,
after Zeus had been born, Gaia helped Rhea
to wrap a stone in swaddling clothes, this was to trick
Cronus in to thinking it was Zeus, because Cronus had
been informed that one of his children would depose him,
and so to get rid of his children he had swallowed them,
Gaia's trick worked and Zeus was then taken to Crete.
Gaia
being the primordial element from which all the gods originated
was worshiped throughout Greece, but later she went into
decline and was supplanted by other gods.
In
Roman mythology she was known as Tellus or Terra.