The mythology concerning Dione is not consistent across the existing sources.
Homer In Book V of the
Iliad, during the last year of the
Trojan War,
Aphrodite attempts to save her son
Aeneas from the rampaging Greek
hero Diomedes as she had previously saved her favorite
Paris from his duel with
Menelaus in Book III. Enraged, Diomedes chases her and drives his spear into her hand between the wrist and palm. Escorted by
Iris to
Ares, she borrows his horses and returns to
Olympus. Dione consoles her with other examples of gods wounded by mortals – Ares bound by the
Aloadae and
Hera and
Hades shot by
Heracles – and notes that Diomedes is risking his life by fighting against the gods. In fact, Diomedes subsequently fought both Apollo and Ares but lived to an old age; his wife
Aegialia, however, took other lovers and never permitted him to return home to
Argos after the war. Dione then heals her wounds and Zeus, while admonishing her to leave the battlefield, calls her daughter.
Homeric hymn to Apollo Dione is named first among the "chiefest of goddesses" to appear on Delos when she had heard of Leto's painful and prolonged labor. Alongside her were
Rhea,
Ichnaea,
Themis, and
Amphitrite; as well as "the other deathless goddesses," save for Hera, who was responsible for the prolonged labor. It has been suggested that by "chiefest of goddesses," titanesses were meant, and that these were an alternate list of them.
Hesiod Dione is not mentioned in
Hesiod's treatment of the
Titans, although the name does appear in the
Theogony among his list of
Oceanids, the daughters of
Oceanus and
Tethys, and according to Hesiod, Aphrodite was born from the foam created by the severed genitals of
Uranus, when they were thrown into the sea by
Cronus, after he castrated Uranus.
Pseudo-Apollodorus The mythographer
Apollodorus (first or second century AD) includes Dione among the Titans and makes her the child of
Gaia and
Uranus. He makes her the mother of Aphrodite by Zeus but clearly describes Dione as one of the god's adulterous partners and not his wife.
Hyginus The Genealogy or Preface of
Gaius Julius Hyginus's
Fabulae, lists Dione among the children of
Terra (Earth) and
Aether.
Hesychius The 5th-century grammarian
Hesychius of Alexandria described Dione as the mother of
Bacchus in her entry from his
Alphabetical Collection of All Words. This is separately supported by one of the
scholiasts on
Pindar. == See also ==