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Contents
1Kinds
o 1.1Hesiodic Cyclopes
o 1.2Homeric Cyclopes
o 1.3Cyclopean wall-builders
2Principal sources
o 2.1Hesiod
o 2.2Homer
o 2.3Euripides
o 2.4Callimachus
o 2.5Virgil
o 2.6Apollodorus
o 2.7Nonnus
3Transformations of Polyphemus
4Location
5Etymology
6Possible origins
7See also
8Notes
9References
10External links
Kinds[edit]
Three groups of Cyclopes can be distinguished: the Hesiodic, the Homeric and
the wall-builders.[3] In Hesiod's Theogony, the Cyclopes are the three brothers:
Brontes, Steropes, and Arges, sons of Uranus and Gaia, who made for Zeus his
characteristic weapon, the thunderbolt. In Homer's Odyssey, the Cyclopes are an
uncivilized group of shepherds, one of whom, Polyphemus, the son of Poseidon,
is encountered by Odysseus. Cyclopes were also said to have been the builders
of the Cyclopean walls of Mycenae and Tiryns.[4] A scholiast, quoting the fifth-
century BC historian Hellanicus, tells us that, in addition to the Hesiodic Cyclopes
(whom the scholiast describes as "the gods themselves"), and the Homeric
Cyclopes, there was a third group of Cyclopes: the builders of the walls
of Mycenae.[5]
Hesiodic Cyclopes[edit]
"The Forge of the Cyclopes", a Dutch 16th-century print after a painting by Titian