Tityos attempts to rape Leto and is stopped by Apollo and Artemis on an Attic red-figure amphora from Vulci, c. 510–520 BCE, by the Phintias Painter. Louvre, Paris.

Tityos or Tityus (Ancient Greek: Τιτυός, romanized: Tituós) is a giant from Greek mythology. The son of Zeus and the mortal Elara, Tityos tried to rape the goddess Leto, a former lover of Zeus and the mother of the twin gods Artemis and Apollo. The twins rescued their mother and punished Tityos with eternal torture in the Underworld.

Family

Tityos was the son of the mortal princess Elara and the god Zeus.[1] He had a daughter named Europa who coupled with Poseidon and gave birth to Euphemus, one of the Argonauts.

Tityos' family tree
ElaraZeus
Tityos
EuropaPoseidon
Euphemus

Mythology

Zeus slept with Elara, but afterwards he hid her from his wife, Hera, by placing her deep beneath the earth, afraid of Hera's reaction.[2] Tityos grew so large that he split his mother's womb, and he was carried to term by Gaia, the Earth. Once grown, Tityos attempted to rape Leto at the behest of Hera. He was slain by Leto's protective children Artemis and Apollo.[3] In some accounts, Tityus was instead slain by the thunderbolt of his father Zeus.[4] As punishment, he was stretched out in Tartarus and tortured by two vultures who fed on his liver, which grew back every night.[4] This punishment is comparable to that of the Titan Prometheus.

Jane Ellen Harrison noted that "to the orthodox worshiper of the Olympians he was the vilest of criminals; as such Homer knew him":

Michelangelo, The Punishment of Tityus, c. 1532

In the early first century, when the geographer Strabo visited Panopeus,[6] he was reminded by the local people that it was the abode of Tityos and recalled the fact that the Phaeacians had carried Rhadamanthus in their boats to visit Tityos, according to Homer.[7] There on Euboea at the time of Strabo they were still showing a "cave called Elarion from Elara who was mother to Tityos, and a hero-shrine of Tityos, and some kind of honours are mentioned which are paid him."[8] It is clear that the local hero-cult had been superseded by the cult of the Olympian gods, an Olympian father provided, and the hero demonized. A comparable giant chthonic pre-Olympian of a Titan-like order is Orion.

The poet Lucretius, in De rerum natura (Book III, lines 978–998), provides a demythologized Tityos who is "the prototypical anguished lover," eternally punished not in the underworld, but here and now, by a plague not of vultures but of cupids.[9]

Virgil briefly depicts Tityos' torments in Book VI of his Aeneid.[10] Hamilton (1993) suggests that Virgil's description of Tityos' agony and unrest contains a "verbal echo" of the lovesick Dido's unrest in Book IV,[11] indicating that Virgil's Tityos, while "remythologized," remains indebted to Lucretius's.[11]

Virgil is the first to depict Tityos tormented by a single vulture instead of Homer's two, "perhaps due to contamination with the story of Prometheus."[12] Among Roman writers, Horace[13] and Claudian[14] follow Virgil in depicting a singular vulture; Ovid and Seneca vary from work to work; Propertius[15] and Statius[16][17] depict more than one vulture.[12]

The traveler Pausanias (2nd century A.D.) reports seeing a painting by Polygnotus at Delphi that depicts Tityos among other figures being tormented in Hades for sacrilege: "Tityos too is in the picture; he is no longer being punished, but has been reduced to nothing by continuous torture, an indistinct and mutilated phantom."[18]