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See also: ancient See also: Greek See also: legend, the twin-sons of See also: Poseidon by Iphimedeia, wife of Aloeus
.
They were celebrated for their extraordinary stature and strength
.
According to See also: Homer (Od. xi
.
305), they made war upon the Olympian gods and endeavoured to See also: pile See also: Pelion upon See also: Ossa in See also: order to See also: storm heaven itself; had they reached the age of manhood, their attempt would have been successful, but See also: Apollo destroyed them before their beards began to grow
.
In the Iliad (v
.
365) See also: Ares is imprisoned by them, but delivered by See also: Hermes
.
See also: Apollodorus says that they succeeded in piling Pelion upon Ossa
.
Another See also: story is that they were presumptuous enough to seek See also: Artemis and See also: Hera in See also: marriage, and that Artemis caused themto slay each other unintentionally on the See also: island of See also: Naxos, where they were afterwards worshipped as heroes
.
In punishment for their offences they were bound back to back with See also: snakes to a pillar in the See also: lower See also: world (See also: Hyginus, Fab
.
28)
.
The Aloidae (here connected with aXc, threshing-floor) represent the See also: spirits of the fertile See also: earth and See also: agriculture, conceived of by the Greeks as engaged in combat with the Olympian gods
.
In contrast to these legends, See also: Pausanias tells us that they were regarded as the first to worship the Muses on Mt
.
Helicon, while Diodorus represents them as See also: historical personages, princes of See also: Thessaly, who defeated the Thracians in Strongyle, i.e
.
Naxos, where they made themselves rulers, and subsequently slew one another in a See also: quarrel
.
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