Arges was killed by Hermes while he guarded Io for Hera
Apollo killed at least one of the
Cyclopes to retribution for Zeus killing his son
Aesculapius.
Hecatoncheires
Hecatoncheires means "hundred handed". They were gigantic and had
fifty heads and one
hundred arms each of great strength. There were three of them:
Briareus also called Aegaeon, Cottus, and Gyges also called Gyes.
They were born to Gaea and
Uranus. Their mutual hatered of Uranus
caused him to force the Hecatoncheires back into Gaea's womb. This
parcipatated Gaea's rebellion against Uranus.
When Cronus
came to power he imprisoned the Cyclopes in
Tartarus. The were released by
Zeus and fought with him against the
Titans. They were able to hurl huge
boulders as many as a hundred at a time against their opponents.
One of them, Briareus, served as Zeus's bodygaurd.
Giants
The Giants were generated from Uranus
blood resulting from his castration by Cronus.
They became powerful enough to try to unseat
Zeus and the
Olympians early in their rule.
When the gods won they imprisoned the Giants in
Tartarus.
Ash Tree Nymphs
The Ash Tree Nymphs were generated from Uranus
blood resulting from his castration by Cronus.
Typhoeus
Typhoeus, was a fire breathing dragon with a hundred heads that never rest.
It was birthed by Gaea as a last
ditch effort to keep the Olympians
from defeating her children the Titans.
It came close to succeeding, setting most of the gods to flight and
capturing Zeus.
Hermes was able to free Zeus.
Zeus was then able to dispatch Typhoeus with his lighting bolts.
Typhoeus is buried under Mount Etna in Sicily.
Cerberus
Cerberus is the three headed dog with a dragon tail which guards
the entrance to the underworld.
Allowing the dead to enter but, never leave. Fetching Cerberus was the
last labor of Heracles.
Sirens
The Sirens are sisters who lure sailors to their death.
The song of the Sirens is irrestable but, the they reside beyound
unpassable reefs which destroy the sailors boat when they try to reach
the Sirens. Among those tempted were Jason
on the Argo and
Odysseus.