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  1. A mortal princess and Zeus ’s lover. Io comes across Prometheus as he is chained to the mountain. Io has been transformed into a cow by Zeus and turned out by Hera, Zeus’s jealous wife, to wander the world aimlessly while being relentlessly pursued by a biting gadfly. Io is an example of Zeus’s power and ability to confine and imprison ...

  2. The following conversation between them reveals first, the prophesy of Zeus's downfall, which would profit both Prometheus and Io, and then the prophesy that Io's descendant will free Prometheus. In other ways, too, Prometheus and Io are bound together by fate. The former is a victim of Zeus's hatred, while the latter is a victim of his love.

  3. According to Prometheus, after Io arrives at “Thesprotian Zeus ’s shrine of prophecy,” she will meet Dodona “on her lofty ridge.” “Thou shalt be Zeus’s fabled bride one day,” Dodona will say, and Io will “smile” and be “flattered.” Still plagued by the gadfly, Io will move along the coast to “the great gulf of Rhea,” where a storm will force her to change direction.

  4. Introduction. “Prometheus Bound” (Gr: “Prometheus Desmotes” ) is a tragedy often attributed to the ancient Greek playwright Aeschylus although it is now usually considered to be almost certainly the work of another (unknown) hand, perhaps as late as 415 BCE. It is based on the myth of Prometheus, the Titan who was punished by the god ...

  5. The play concerns the god Prometheus, who in defiance of Zeus (Jupiter) has saved humanity with his gift of fire. For this act Zeus has ordered that he be chained to a remote crag. Despite his seeming isolation, Prometheus is visited by the ancient god Oceanus, by a chorus of Oceanus’s daughters, by the “cow-headed” Io (another victim of ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Prometheus Bound (Ancient Greek: Προμηθεὺς Δεσμώτης, romanized:Promētheús Desmṓtēs) is an ancient Greek tragedy traditionally attributed to Aeschylus and thought to have been composed sometime between 479 BC and the terminus ante quem of 424 BC. [ 1 ][ 2 ] The tragedy is based on the myth of Prometheus, a Titan who defies ...

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  8. Prometheus knows he will suffer for “ten generations, then another three,” until the mighty descendant of Io, a mortal princess and Zeus’s lover, is eventually born and frees him. Many others are also forced to live in misery in Aeschylus’s play, but it nonetheless shows that where there is great suffering, there is often great compassion as well.

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