There were quite a few types of giants in Greek mythology (including our last boy the cyclops), but
There were quite a few types of giants in Greek mythology (including our last boy the cyclops), but the gigantes were the most famous and exemplative of their kin. They even lend their name to the word giant. Originally the “gigant” didn’t relate to size but rather their origin: they were earth-born. Gaia (or Ge/Gi) birthed them straight from the ground. Gigantes erupted from the surface like reverse meteors intent on storming Olympus. Their kind had no women. Instead they came into the world fully formed and armed. Of course, they failed. They were killed by the gods and sealed beneath islands or into volcanoes. From their ashes came a race of humans just as violent, the Thracians. Or so the Greeks said. Volcanic activities were usually associated with the gigantes like the Phlegraean Fields in Italy. The earliest of their depictions have them as being spear-wielding men. Normal men, for the most part. Some, like Homer’s Odyssey, claim that they were in some way more brutish or bestial than human beings and their gods, as the Laestrygonian giants were “looking not like men but like the lawless Gigantes.” To reflect this, they were sometimes given less advanced armaments like animal furs and rocks. The last big change to the gigantes were their distinctive snake feet. As said before, the giants were born directly from the earth, like the Athenian Kekrops and spartoi. Snakes (and dragons) too were thought to be born directly from the Earth, so giving them snake for feet was a sort of visual metaphor for their birth that inevitably lost its meaning and simply became a trait of theirs. Once Christianity became the dominant religion of Greece, the gigantes did not leave. Instead they changed enemies. After all, this is just one god, it’s bound to be easier than fighting all the rest! Right? …right?This gigant is of the older type. Based on the standards of his brothers he is a veteran for surviving two charges on Olympus. To show he’s not just human, his skin is closer to stone with scars showing up like cracks. If you were to touch him, his hair would be like fiberglass and his entire body hot to the touch, for molten rock flows in his veins in the place of blood. His dinged up armor is inspired by Peter Connolly’s The Legends of Odysseus for the Bronze-Age aesthetic. His shield also used to have a snake on it for his mama, but it got blown asunder by a thunderbolt. He had to skin an entire cow for a replacement. And… I tried. I tried to make the snake-legs work, but I simply couldn’t. Perhaps one day when I am strong enough. -- source link
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