Aglaia

deity sky Greek single tradition · 4

Aglaia is one of the three Charites (Graces) in Greek mythology, daughter of Euanthe and Zeus. She is part of a triad of goddesses associated with charm, beauty, and grace.

↻ synthesized from 4 sources

When

First attested
800 BCE
Attested period
-800 – 2020
Historical notes
One of the three Charites in Greek mythology, attested in classical sources.

Relationships

consort of
Hephaestus
child of
Euanthe, Zeus, Asclepius

Expand to full subgraph →

Sources

Source passages

“Euanthe, mother of the Charites: Aglaia, Euphrosyne and Thalia by Zeus.”

#28246 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5

“Eucleia, Euthenia, Eupheme, and Philophrosyne were, according to the fifth-century AD Greek Neoplatonist philosopher Proclus, the four daughters of Hephaestus and Aglaia”

#28289 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5

“He has a crush on Aphrodite at first and gives her beautiful roses, but later in the series he wins the heart of another beautiful goddess girl named Aglaia, who is deeply in love with Hephaestus.”

#43248 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“He had five older sisters, Iaso, Hygieia, Panacea, Aceso, and Aglaia.”

#44888 · extracted by openai/gpt-oss-20b:free