War and punishment Atlas and his brother
Menoetius sided with the Titans in their war against the
Olympians, the
Titanomachy. When the Titans were defeated, many of them (including Menoetius) were confined to
Tartarus, but
Zeus condemned Atlas to stand at the western edge of the earth and hold up the sky on his shoulders. Thus, he was
Atlas Telamon, "enduring Atlas", and became a doublet of
Coeus, the embodiment of the celestial axis around which the heavens revolve. A common misconception today is that Atlas was forced to hold the Earth on his shoulders, but Classical art shows Atlas holding the
celestial spheres, not the
terrestrial globe; the solidity of the marble globe borne by the
Farnese Atlas may have aided the conflation, reinforced in the 16th century by the developing usage of
atlas to describe a corpus of
terrestrial maps.
Encounter with Perseus The Greek poet
Polyidus tells a tale of Atlas, then a shepherd, encountering
Perseus who
turned him to stone. Ovid later gives a more detailed account of the incident, combining it with the myth of Heracles. In this account Atlas is not only a shepherd but also a king of
Mauretania. According to Ovid, Perseus arrives in Atlas's Kingdom and asks for shelter, declaring he is a son of Zeus. Atlas, fearful of a prophecy that warned of a son of Zeus stealing his golden apples from his orchard, refuses Perseus hospitality.
Encounter with Heracles One of the
Twelve Labours of the hero
Heracles was to fetch some of the golden apples that grow in
Hera's garden, tended by Atlas's reputed daughters, the
Hesperides (which were also called the Atlantides), and guarded by the dragon
Ladon. Heracles went to Atlas and offered to hold up the heavens while Atlas got the apples from his daughters. Upon his return with the apples, however, Atlas attempted to trick Heracles into carrying the sky permanently by offering to deliver the apples himself, as anyone who purposely took the burden must carry it forever, or until someone else took it away. Heracles, suspecting Atlas did not intend to return, pretended to agree to Atlas's offer, asking only that Atlas take the sky again for a few minutes so Heracles could rearrange his cloak as padding on his shoulders. When Atlas set down the apples and took the heavens upon his shoulders again, Heracles took the apples and ran away. In some versions, Heracles instead built the two great
Pillars of Hercules to hold the sky away from the earth, liberating Atlas much as he liberated
Prometheus. ==Other mythological characters named Atlas==