The myth of Zeus' test - Iseult Gillespie

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  • Опубліковано 12 вер 2022
  • Dig into the myth of Baucis and Philemon, a couple who unknowingly showed the gods hospitality after their neighbors refused.
    --
    It was dark when two mysterious, shrouded figures appeared in a hillside village. The strangers knocked on every door in town, asking for food and shelter. But, again and again, they were turned away. Soon, there was just one door left: that of a small, thatched shack. Would the owners help the visitors - or spurn them? Iseult Gillespie shares the myth of Baucis and Philemon.
    Lesson by Iseult Gillespie, directed by Vitalii Nebelskyi, and action creative agency.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,4 тис.

  • @FallenEpic
    @FallenEpic Рік тому +11141

    I genuinely love how nearly every culture and religion and mythology is like "You should be kind to strangers with seemingly nothing, they might be the divine in disguise."

    • @cowgirl5155
      @cowgirl5155 Рік тому +881

      I remember that also made me a bit sad as a kid, because I wondered "do people really need to believe they could be dealing with a higher power in order to just be nicer to others?"
      Personally, I like trying to keep an eye out for stories with big floods in them.

    • @njt2347
      @njt2347 Рік тому +189

      And yet so few people actually treat strangers with nothing to offer them with kindness.

    • @deshmkh5014
      @deshmkh5014 Рік тому +90

      its like a dhar mann video like you wont get a reward if you help strangers you should help them just cause you can out of no desire for recognition

    • @nidohime6233
      @nidohime6233 Рік тому +55

      Is their way to teach people how not to be assholes.

    • @athendity2567
      @athendity2567 Рік тому +77

      In the past there weren’t as much criminals with malicious intentions as today (take illegal organ harvesting for example), unlike now where “stranger danger” is the first lesson taught to children during socialising.

  • @joaobello7179
    @joaobello7179 Рік тому +7793

    I thought they were gonna ask to bring their friends back... but still is a beautiful myth

    • @ahmadhasan7033
      @ahmadhasan7033 Рік тому +97

      ikr

    • @joshuataylor3550
      @joshuataylor3550 Рік тому +46

      Just like Noah's myth

    • @KarmaKraftttt
      @KarmaKraftttt Рік тому

      @@joshuataylor3550
      Relax kid no need to be defensive for your cringe atheist religion

    • @sdjkwoo
      @sdjkwoo Рік тому +3

      @@KarmaKraftttt Don't blame him, he evolved from monkeys

    • @scoopityboop
      @scoopityboop Рік тому +252

      Well Ancient Greece has had several myths detailing death as something final so that was out of the question

  • @hellod4787
    @hellod4787 Рік тому +9044

    -opens house to strangers
    -strangers floods village and turns their house into a palace
    -becomes trees and are never separated
    What a time to be alive.

    • @HeWhoProclaims
      @HeWhoProclaims Рік тому +55

      LoL Thankfully it's metaphorical. But true.

    • @Yuvgup
      @Yuvgup Рік тому +68

      No matter what time you live in. These will come to you as stories only. That’s the beauty of mythology. Everyone hears but none experiences

    • @I.____.....__...__
      @I.____.....__...__ Рік тому +54

      * Strangers turn their home into a temple for themselves, a place to worship the gods. 😒

    • @Geniusignotus
      @Geniusignotus Рік тому +12

      I remember reading the Roman version of the same myth back in my adolescence so instead of Zeus and Hermes, the two strangers were Jupiter and Mercury
      It shares a lot of similarities to the Biblical stories of Noah and Lot

    • @AsterMaken
      @AsterMaken Рік тому +17

      -refuses to elaborate
      -leaves

  • @SirPembertonS.Crevalius
    @SirPembertonS.Crevalius Рік тому +6104

    While I don't approve of the god's actions, the story of the two being kind to passerbys and loving each other dearly to the very end was incredibly heartwarming.

    • @zyntkalla6761
      @zyntkalla6761 Рік тому +351

      I find the gods are like children. If they don't get what they want they have a tantrum and make everyone else suffer. I think they have big egos and they are like children when things don't go their way.

    • @raisul_raj
      @raisul_raj Рік тому +54

      No approvements required actually 🤣

    • @normalchannel2185
      @normalchannel2185 Рік тому +1

      @@zyntkalla6761 yep. the greek/olympus gods are not gods, but childish tyrants

    • @Omkar.Gawade
      @Omkar.Gawade Рік тому +97

      @Here Comes Salvation not necessary. Just because they have power doesn't mean they're better. Unless you attach all the 'kind, loving, wise, all powerful, all knowing' and other adjectives that religions traditionally attach to their gods. However those adjectives are entirely unnecessary in defining gods.
      Some other unnecessary presumptions:
      A being more powerful than us =\= god.
      God =\= a being powerful than us.

    • @whynot07
      @whynot07 Рік тому +23

      I think you confuse gods with rulers, governers, politicians etc.

  • @iamgreatalwaysgreat8209
    @iamgreatalwaysgreat8209 Рік тому +1919

    3:50 A classic Zeus punishment , letting everyone die , even children ignoring their all past good deeds, just because once they didnt helped 2 shady men.

    • @andreascovano7742
      @andreascovano7742 Рік тому +172

      to be fair, ignoring Xenia was a very serious taboo, like the worst. And it was taboo for this very reason. In those days, it was believed that the gods walked among men, so you better be careful on who you anger. Especially strangers.

    • @nathansmiddy732
      @nathansmiddy732 Рік тому +338

      @@andreascovano7742 tfw you had a rough few days so you decide to go to bed early and end up missing the two strangers seeking shelter then wake up to Hades processing your paperwork

    • @andreascovano7742
      @andreascovano7742 Рік тому +35

      @@nathansmiddy732 presumably they knocked

    • @nathansmiddy732
      @nathansmiddy732 Рік тому

      @@andreascovano7742 As you've barely begun to slip into the world of dreams, your well-deserved rest welcoming your tired body in warm embrace, you hear a knock at the door--a loud one. Weary from the hectic days preceding this moment, you recall the five times your needy neighbors Titus and Cassius boisterously called upon you for minor tasks they could have easily handled themselves. By Zeus, you told them that you were headed to bed early today! Surely they could avail you respite for a night. They should know better than anyone that the work you do can wait for tomorrow morning. The knocking soon relents and you hear a murmur and the shuffling of feet away from your door. Rest is yours at last. As you drift off into your well-earned dream of a gentle ride down a calm river, you swear you can even hear the gentle flowing of water. Ahh, sleep.

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому +16

      What good deeds? You can't just assume that the others were automatically neighborly to each other.

  • @xdrago5602
    @xdrago5602 Рік тому +4926

    So Zeus and Hermes decided to be quirky one day, went walking around in extremely shady hoods asking for citizens to take massive risks. Then being somehow shocked and angered by the citizens not wanting to be robbed and possibly killed and proceed to murder all of them. Wheres Kratos when you need him

    • @Saulgoodmane
      @Saulgoodmane Рік тому

      You fail to realize this is a myth taking place in a different time in a different culture, the gods were testing people for this very reason. Had they been accepted at the first house they went maybe the whole town would have been blessed but because they weren’t accepted until the very end they realized no one in that town was worth saving except for the last couple

    • @paytonyoder6937
      @paytonyoder6937 Рік тому +111

      I know right

    • @user-vv4gz7lq1e
      @user-vv4gz7lq1e Рік тому +495

      It's a little more reasonable when you consider that providing hospitality to strangers was one of the central tenants of Greek culture

    • @cicatrixnictophilii
      @cicatrixnictophilii Рік тому +317

      you're thinking everything too literal and not symbolical or philosophical. Xenia means hospitality to strangers even zeus was often called Xenios, which proves hospitality was in the very center of the Greek ideology. Zeus and Hermes were not in the story to terrorize the civilians but they rather represent justice. Gods were often used to explain natural phenomena, to keep people in order in a lawless era and to provide support in hard times, much like today. And yes in that old days, you were expected to open your house to strangers and provide food and shelter, which doesn't mean leaving them alone in your house while you went to sleep. It means provide food, inquire them where they came from and what is their purpose. Metaphorical stories like these made people of every intellectual level to conceive these concepts

    • @andco53
      @andco53 Рік тому +49

      Non-existent in the actual myths, that's where Kratos is

  • @AasthaBhansali
    @AasthaBhansali Рік тому +4335

    Destroying the whole village because they were scared to help random strangers (who could very well be robbers)? Harsh. But the love of the couple made me teary eyed 🥲

    • @royaltyempire4103
      @royaltyempire4103 Рік тому +154

      thats the greek pantheon for you

    • @magouliana32
      @magouliana32 Рік тому +225

      The story is metaphorical, the villagers inhumanity and lack of hospitality to their fellow humans in need is what eventually destroyed them all.
      Zeus symbolizes the universal idea-entity of Justice among other things.

    • @Cora.T
      @Cora.T Рік тому +204

      You can say a lot about the Greeks, from slavery, lack of women's rights, to war etc, but atleats they didn't pretend their gods were benevolent

    • @GThe-su9kl
      @GThe-su9kl Рік тому +36

      I mean, they *did* rob them of their neighbors.

    • @Aarav.B
      @Aarav.B Рік тому +59

      @@Cora.T Honestly, the people who created the pantheon are quite smart. It's like poetry, the fear of the world and nature embodied in the gods. At the same time, keeping the population fearful and right.

  • @Grabacr-pl3wy
    @Grabacr-pl3wy Рік тому +179

    “Be kind to strangers 😊”
    5:50 “ZEUS HAS A LONG HISTORY OF DISPENSING BRUTAL PUNISHMENTS!”

  • @Sid-mj1qf
    @Sid-mj1qf Рік тому +1854

    At 3:54 , when the whole village is flooded, you can see the couple's goose is swimming in it. This wraps the whole story and gives ending to the character.
    This shows how much Ted-Ed gives importance to animation to such minute aspects. Good job Ted-Ed👏

    • @jk-gb4et
      @jk-gb4et Рік тому +8

      character to the ending?

    • @Sid-mj1qf
      @Sid-mj1qf Рік тому +20

      @@jk-gb4et I'm saying about the character "goose"

    • @jk-gb4et
      @jk-gb4et Рік тому +1

      @@Sid-mj1qf oh ok

    • @albatros386
      @albatros386 Рік тому +37

      yeah I was not able to move on without knowing the goose's fate in this story!

    • @__Qt
      @__Qt Рік тому +18

      I thought the couple would ask the gods to bring them their goose back 😭

  • @centurionquincy3899
    @centurionquincy3899 Рік тому +305

    It’s amazing how even a story about loving couples like these still boil down to:
    “So There ends up another temple of the gods”
    I feel like Zeus just wanted an excuse to make a new temple

    • @orngefsh
      @orngefsh 6 місяців тому +1

      fr fr

    • @Account.for.Comment
      @Account.for.Comment 4 місяці тому +1

      Knowing that it came from Ovid, that's probably his intention. Zeus and Hermes are like the Caesars, giving unreasonable demand and punishment to citizens, made a few poor people much richer, and made temple honor of their name. Classic Ovid.

  • @pfft5275
    @pfft5275 Рік тому +85

    Such a calm and quiet narration, like this could be something you show to a kid just before bed. The voice becomes a whisper, the soft music settles to its conclusion -- then "ZEUS HAS A LONG HISTORY OF DISPENSING BRUTAL PUNISHMENTS--"

  • @yanivrubin4166
    @yanivrubin4166 Рік тому +339

    Let me point out that hospitality was one of *the most* importent tennets of ancent greek culture. Many of the legends revolve around that fact, such as kings protecting people who fled to them just because it's importent to be a good host, even with the gods chasing them

    • @SCP_Wandsman13_13
      @SCP_Wandsman13_13 11 місяців тому +1

      That is a great point

    • @Buttercup697
      @Buttercup697 4 місяці тому

      It still exists… φιλοξενία 💙🍷🇬🇷🧿

  • @germanjimenez5336
    @germanjimenez5336 Рік тому +396

    You can tell a story as a sequence of events, but when you add such lovely details as the one where their skin is becoming a tree, it becomes art and emotions. That is when this changed from a tale to a work of art!

  • @micahbush5397
    @micahbush5397 Рік тому +424

    Fun fact: This myth is referenced in the New Testament. In Acts 14, after witnessing Paul and Barnabas heal a man who had been lame since birth, the people of Lystra concluded that they were Hermes and Zeus come in human form and tried to offer sacrifices to them. The fate of the inhospitable townspeople was no doubt on their minds.

    • @X23Ninja
      @X23Ninja Рік тому +49

      Thanks for pointing this out I noticed this as well. They thought Paul was Hermes and Barnabus was Zeus which funny because one would expect Paul to be mistaken for Zeus not Barnabus due to Paul being such a important Apostle. However it actually makes sense because Hermes was the messenger and spokesman of the Gods and Paul was trained in Roman Rhetoric.

    • @isaiah3872
      @isaiah3872 Рік тому +5

      That's why Hermes sounded so familiar

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому +31

      Yeah, specifically, they thought Paul was Hermes because he was doing most of the talking, which Hermes was said to do on Zeus' behalf even when both were present. Of course, when Paul and Barnabas heard about what they were doing; they were dismayed, tore their robes (which then was a way of expressing dismay) and ran out before them; telling them that they were ordinary people like them and that they've come to preach to them that they should turn away from their in-vain worship of lifeless gods and to the one true living God.
      This isn't the only instance in the Bible of people of a city paying heed to a human messenger of God because they appeared in a way that was both extraordinary and seemed to tie into their beliefs. Now, this requires some background context. Jonah was regurgitated on to the land by a whale, a huge creature from the sea. The Ninevites had some sort of fish god that was important to their culture; so with word that he had been vomited up by a whale (great fish), they knew he must be a divinely sent messenger.
      I think these instances are what C. S. Lewis, being Christian Apologist, was thinking about when he said that he believes that pagan religion could be a preparation for Christianity, not to say that he was advocating purposefully using it that way. This is just my observation, anyway.

    • @JDazell
      @JDazell Рік тому +7

      ACTUAL FACT: this myth of from the Baucis and Philemon story in the Metamorphosis by the Roman writer Ovid which is a couple of centuries prior to Paul's contribution to the New Testament.

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому +14

      @@JDazell There's nothing you said that contradicts what Micah Bush said. You both are implying that this story existed before Paul and Barnabas came to Lystra.

  • @ZOCCOK
    @ZOCCOK Рік тому +712

    One of the most heart warming stories I've ever heard.
    The retelling of the story along with the simple yet beautiful animation has resulted in one of the best videos of Ted-Ed till date ❤️

    • @Lamiishere
      @Lamiishere Рік тому +10

      Cringe Af

    • @ghostderazgriz
      @ghostderazgriz Рік тому +56

      Super heart warming. The best part was when Zues killed all their neighbors in a violent flood where they definitely were torn limb from limb by the ripping tides or drowned, trapped in their own homes.
      There were probably women and children, little babies, orphans, soldiers, homeless.
      Very heart warming.

    • @ZOCCOK
      @ZOCCOK Рік тому +10

      @@ghostderazgriz That's my favorite part too ❤️❤️❤️

    • @swoyambhattarai1011
      @swoyambhattarai1011 Рік тому +12

      goodthing for yall in this
      -zeus didnt bone another women
      - no etarnal punishment

    • @andaction.agency
      @andaction.agency Рік тому +4

      We appreciate your kind words regarding the animation; we had a great time making it.❤

  • @therickprincess
    @therickprincess Рік тому +415

    i used to be obsessed with greek mythology and remember all these stories by heart. now i barely remember their names, how far i've evolved from her.

    • @ultracapitalistutopia3550
      @ultracapitalistutopia3550 Рік тому +22

      Strictly speaking this story came straight from Ovid's Metamorphoses.

    • @puneetmishra4726
      @puneetmishra4726 Рік тому +5

      @@ultracapitalistutopia3550 Well that explains why gods are such tyrants here ;)

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому +8

      @@puneetmishra4726 Actually, Ovid describes the people of the village as wicked; and yes, that IS saying something considering his mindset.

    • @kamu747
      @kamu747 Рік тому +2

      Me too. As a teenager I knew a whole catalogue of these mythologies to the detail, along with king Arthur tales, but now in middle age, they are ruins in my mind, but if you were to retell the tale I'd know the generalities of the tales.
      As we grow and age other concerns and informstions take priority in our minds.

  • @adityaagarwal3010
    @adityaagarwal3010 Рік тому +58

    Then one of Zeus's calm and reasonable sons returned. He brought the destruction of Olympus.

    • @andco53
      @andco53 Рік тому +3

      I don't remember that myth

    • @Tanaysaxena
      @Tanaysaxena Рік тому +7

      He then asked zeus that what will he do?as he could no longer hide behind the skirts of athena

    • @xxx_jim_the_reaper_xxx
      @xxx_jim_the_reaper_xxx Рік тому +8

      @@andco53
      _"The hands of death could not defeat me. The Sisters of Fate could not hold me. And YOU! Will not see the end of this day!_
      *_I WILL HAVE MY REVENGE!!!_*

  • @puncifikator3870
    @puncifikator3870 Рік тому +39

    I love how this myth came about as to explain why two trees grew into eachother next to a temple

  • @starcherry6814
    @starcherry6814 Рік тому +49

    Zeus drowned all their friends and family but gave them a big house 🤣

    • @isaiah3872
      @isaiah3872 Рік тому +11

      You win some, you lose some 🥴

    • @FedJimSmith
      @FedJimSmith Рік тому +1

      *Non-Virtuous friends and family

    • @roncangarden8952
      @roncangarden8952 Рік тому +1

      @@FedJimSmith What? for wanting to line one's own tummy, our most basic needs? self-preservation is not non-virtuous.

  • @timr3621
    @timr3621 Рік тому +146

    Awesome story! It's an archetypal story, which is why it's so good.
    Baucis and Philemon sacrificed what little they had to the highest principle, to Zeus, the highest of all gods - making it the ultimate sacrifice. Whereas all who didn't make this sacrifice got swallowed by chaos, washed away by the flood that was sent by the gods. Baucis and Philemon are full of love, i.e. selflessness. Notice how they didn't request anything grand like a marble tempel - and for that very reason, the received one. All they wanted was each other, and that they already had. Turning into trees is obviously a symbol for eternal transformation, as the tree is the underlying, unchanging structure, sheding and regrowing its leaves forever.

  • @NickvonZ
    @NickvonZ Рік тому +73

    Moral of the story:
    Invite dark strangers into your house.
    At night.

    • @irrelevant_noob
      @irrelevant_noob Рік тому +3

      Well as long as they come seeking food and shelter... Does it really need to be in a storm too? ^^

  • @sandrosliske
    @sandrosliske Рік тому +22

    This was horrifying. I know treating guests with hospitality was a huge deal back then but damn Zeus. And that poor old couple having there friends and home taken away like that only to have true body horror happen upon you and your loved one to be your final moments.

  • @carla.n.5078
    @carla.n.5078 Рік тому +87

    These old myths and stories usually holds a lesson in them. In this, kindness and hospitality gave way for a loving couple to receive the blessing of their gods and a good end for their life well lived.
    Warms the heart, truly.

    • @xuklysc
      @xuklysc Рік тому +8

      I wouldn't really say that having my home transformed into a temple that I will have to care for is a reward, honestly

    • @jestfullgremblim8002
      @jestfullgremblim8002 Рік тому +1

      @@xuklysc hahaha but i still would call "surviving" a reward hahaha

    • @yashwardhansingh4787
      @yashwardhansingh4787 Рік тому

      @@jestfullgremblim8002 that's a absolutely scummy thing to say

  • @yell09999
    @yell09999 Рік тому +57

    For those who are wondering "the goose that guard there house" yes goose can be a guard dog if you don't have a dog that is goose are loyal and very territorial.

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому

      @@danjoredd Isn't it more like pecking?

    • @Ashebrethafe
      @Ashebrethafe Рік тому +1

      I've read that the ancient Romans used geese to guard their city gates at night, and that the title they used for these geese is the origin of the word "money".

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому +1

      @@danjoredd I mean, neither is pleasant. I was mostly going by how ducks eat, which is mostly pecking at it. Seriously, NEVER feed a duck with your bare hands. I've done it before; it's not at all pleasant.

    • @omarsalem1219
      @omarsalem1219 Рік тому

      Wait seriously?

    • @cooldude-mi9wz
      @cooldude-mi9wz Рік тому

      @@videogollumer no, They actually have teeth.

  • @mrherobrine_15
    @mrherobrine_15 Рік тому +49

    The sus test… no I would not pass

  • @herosflute
    @herosflute Рік тому +43

    well, I live in Rio, Brazil, so no, I would definetly NOT pass the test by letting two shady strangers into my home

  • @andaction.agency
    @andaction.agency Рік тому +53

    Dear TED-Ed team, thank you for amazing cooperation on this project! We enjoyed it a loooot ❤❤❤❤

  • @kittyaya3425
    @kittyaya3425 Місяць тому +10

    So nobody taught the gods what stranger danger is?

    • @landofmythology
      @landofmythology Місяць тому

      How many children do you think Zeus has? You can come to the channel and take part in the survey.

  • @Sid-mj1qf
    @Sid-mj1qf Рік тому +17

    Can we all agree that old Baucis and Philemon are adorable and so cute in animation, I just want to pinch their cheeks.

  • @dhavalpatel156
    @dhavalpatel156 Рік тому +51

    I'm sobbing that was adorable 😭😭😭😭

  • @joditiarsutrisno5556
    @joditiarsutrisno5556 Рік тому +84

    Hermes : "Dad, do you think it is more kind to just give these couple some golds instead of turning them into tree also without killing their neighbors?"
    Zeus : " Nah "

    • @J040PL7
      @J040PL7 Рік тому +2

      They asked for it.

    • @amberwerwolfschool8927
      @amberwerwolfschool8927 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@J040PL7they didn't ask for their neighbors to get killed and they wanted to die together not me turned into trees

    • @kuvampuri8299
      @kuvampuri8299 11 місяців тому +1

      FACE ME FATHER

    • @MirrorOfEmotions
      @MirrorOfEmotions 8 місяців тому

      In an alternative timeline with a happy end:
      Hestia who overheard the conversation: Don't kill them!😢
      Zeus: Hrmpf.
      Hestia: 😢
      Zeus: ....
      Hestia: 😢
      Zeus: Ngh, fine. Not this time.
      Hestia: 😊

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- Рік тому +25

    Odin has the same myth of randomly wandering the world and seeking refuge from those that would offer to invite them as a guest. The Olympic games was sort of dedicated to Zeus and this act of xenia, which is why rival coutries, warring states and any nation must take an oath to not bring arms, or any hostility while visiting as a guest during the games.

  • @matthewcheung7888
    @matthewcheung7888 Рік тому +12

    "Honey, let's not open the door. Those people might be thieves or escaped convicts."
    "What a perfectly sound and reasonable decision. Surely nothing terrible will come from this."

    • @Oznerock
      @Oznerock 9 місяців тому

      Rarely. Those sorts would rather be brigands on the roads, where they can't easily be taken over by an angry mob in the morning... Vigilante justice was alive and well back then, and most had weapons. You may kill the father, but even the mother may kill you in return. Or worse, wake up the other villagers.

  • @icantthinkofaname8139
    @icantthinkofaname8139 Рік тому +9

    “There stood an oak and a linden tree, their branches intertwined for eternity. *ZEUS HAS A HISTORY OF GIVING OUT AWFUL PUNISHMENTS*”

  • @devilmaylaugh2
    @devilmaylaugh2 Рік тому +10

    When I read Zeus's test, I had a way scarier theory in mind. 💀

  • @hanibanani2281
    @hanibanani2281 Рік тому +7

    Hermes and zeus: please let us in
    Citizens: no
    Hermes and zeus: you have chosen death

  • @komaliwings7209
    @komaliwings7209 Рік тому +7

    The animation on this was amazing. The trees growing into hearts at the beginning and the goose riding down the lake after the flooding were fantastic touches.

    • @andaction.agency
      @andaction.agency Рік тому +1

      Thank you for your nice comment about animation, we really enjoyed the creation process❤

  • @ronitgoswami1160
    @ronitgoswami1160 Рік тому +123

    For those who are saying, it was wrong at Gods' part to flood the town, story is metaphorical conveying that those who don't help other needy humans can themselves fall in such situation where Zeus stands for universal Justice. Everyone is afraid of strangers, but through such stories you might help the needy ones thinking that they might be divine in disguise.

    • @agrajyadav2951
      @agrajyadav2951 Рік тому

      And get robbed

    • @Vortexiiixii
      @Vortexiiixii Рік тому +8

      There's a 50/50 chance I invited a murderer to my house even with or without the shaddy hood. Although I like to take my chances, and gamble my life.

  • @noeldenever
    @noeldenever Рік тому +5

    Such a captivating narration, coupled with lovely animation. Thank you for this treat, Ted-Ed ❤️

  • @yuma.reiixx
    @yuma.reiixx Рік тому +7

    This is very heartwarming 💗 I have to admit, I shed several tears

  • @niveditajha1134
    @niveditajha1134 Рік тому +60

    This was a beautiful story ❤️🥺 gorgeous animation and spell binding narration. Thank you Ted-Ed ❤️❤️❤️

    • @andaction.agency
      @andaction.agency Рік тому

      Thank you for nice comment about animation, we enjoyed the creation process a lot ❤

    • @smokingbobs1344
      @smokingbobs1344 Рік тому +1

      @@andaction.agency You made this? Wonderful work. Especially the "waviness" in the art style - for instance on the flowing grass - really sold the story as the ancient myth it is.

    • @andaction.agency
      @andaction.agency Рік тому

      @@smokingbobs1344 yeees :) thank you very much ❤❤

  • @BenjaminISmith
    @BenjaminISmith Рік тому +80

    Gotta love the gods. Teaching lessons of hospitality and grace by genociding all who slightly inconvenience them. Praising people for their generosity as they drink all their wine just to go back home where there's magic chalices of infinite wine. Where's Kratos?

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому +5

      Probably just now leaving the village after they shunned him as a guest too, so he can resume his hunt for the bullyish god/daemon/personification that he's named after.

    • @rainbowruler6453
      @rainbowruler6453 Рік тому +9

      Not that much different than the Christian God who flooded the entire earth

    • @BenjaminISmith
      @BenjaminISmith Рік тому +5

      @@rainbowruler6453 Not at all different. The God of Abraham, Issac, and Jacob is described in all different ways. Most of the time he isn't a space-less time-less force. Most of the time the people writing about him seem to think he's a guy who lives in the sky with magical powers exactly like Zeus

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому

      @@BenjaminISmith Those people need to read the Bible again.

    • @BenjaminISmith
      @BenjaminISmith Рік тому +1

      @@videogollumer You mean Moses, Solomon, and Isaiah? I mean who can we trust to write on god?

  • @marimelbello2066
    @marimelbello2066 Рік тому +3

    Such a beautiful story! It’s quite nice to be reminded that there are still some people who truly love each other.

    • @andaction.agency
      @andaction.agency Рік тому

      Thank you for your nice comment about animation, we really enjoyed the creation process❤

  • @bt5294
    @bt5294 Рік тому +7

    Those trees are relationship goals

  • @sergiorodriguezbailon6677
    @sergiorodriguezbailon6677 Рік тому +14

    It's always bugged me the gods testing if people is worthy.
    Now, the music was awesome, I thought I was going to cry.

    • @X23Ninja
      @X23Ninja Рік тому +4

      There is actually a point of Testing people because you dont truly know your own character unless you actually go through that situation even if you believe otherwise. Ive known many women for example who said they would NEVER have an abortion but as soon as they have a unplanned pregnancy they are on the phone to the abortion clinic. Testing reveals true character

    • @nidohime6233
      @nidohime6233 Рік тому

      That's because there are fables meant to teach people how to behave and act in society. In this case the moral is to be a good host to your guests.

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому

      @@X23Ninja Amen!

  • @erondeka
    @erondeka Рік тому +10

    I love how i listened to the whole video and only later did i realise that the entire video is a beautiful poem. Seriously watch it again and just observe and enjoy

  • @englishwinglish3123
    @englishwinglish3123 Рік тому +2

    The animation and the narration scripts are beautifully entwined together. The storytelling is remarkable.

  • @homyce
    @homyce Рік тому +1

    OMG such a beautiful video that made this dull day of mine much brighter and sweeter. Thank you!

  • @briantaylor9285
    @briantaylor9285 Рік тому +4

    Beautiful story, and rather terrifying, to be honest.
    That "Oh, f__k..." moment when the wine jug never ran out." 👀

  • @jennieliao6200
    @jennieliao6200 Рік тому +14

    Beautiful animation as always,well done!Love it

    • @andaction.agency
      @andaction.agency Рік тому

      Thank you for nice comment about animation, we enjoyed the creation process a lot ❤

  • @__Liza__
    @__Liza__ Рік тому +2

    This was my favourite myth as a child, very nice narration!

  • @hoangdaniel4433
    @hoangdaniel4433 Рік тому

    this has to be by far my most favorite myth, its just so beautiful

  • @canned_can_chan4590
    @canned_can_chan4590 Рік тому +9

    We have a similar legend in java, indonesia called rawa pening. The villagers were more hostile tho. And the granny who helped didnt get her house back, but she did get a warning to flee the village with a tiny boat

    • @valentinmitterbauer4196
      @valentinmitterbauer4196 Рік тому +1

      In the austrian alps there are countless sagas about inhospitality towards a stranger. A famous one goes like this: A farm up in the mountains sent away an old stranger who wanted food and a bed, although they had more than enough food, so much in fact that they bathed in milk and did similar wasteful things. As soon as the old man was gone an enormous storm covered the entire farm, cattle and people in ice and today from this particular mountain runs a glacier, the only one in the region.

    • @canned_can_chan4590
      @canned_can_chan4590 Рік тому +1

      @@valentinmitterbauer4196 seems like hospitality is a very important thing in many cultures huh. so important that we have many legends surrounding it

  • @alexsdarkclubband
    @alexsdarkclubband Рік тому +5

    This was so beautiful, thank you for this amazing story and animation ❤️

    • @andaction.agency
      @andaction.agency Рік тому

      Thank you for nice comment about animation, we enjoyed the creation process a lot ❤

  • @shiny2575
    @shiny2575 Рік тому +2

    I've read about this myth before! It's one of my favorites, and although it's simplified to be shortened into this video it still retains most of the useful information

  • @janderrickfernandez3993
    @janderrickfernandez3993 Рік тому

    This does put a tear in my eye.

  • @Ari-hc1vr
    @Ari-hc1vr Рік тому +27

    I didn't expect it, but I honestly burst into tears at the end. Something about it just struck a chord with me

    • @petravotroubkova1916
      @petravotroubkova1916 Рік тому

      It was my favorite Greek myth as a child and I always cried at the end 😁 just the two sweet old people asking for nothing just each other forever and their wish coming true...

  • @greenredblue
    @greenredblue Рік тому +34

    While I wholeheartedly approve of the _intended_ lesson, I can't help but notice that what really comes across seems to be "If you're kind to the powerful, they'll spare your life when they destroy your friends, family, and possessions to build monuments to themselves."

    • @Atylonisus
      @Atylonisus Рік тому +9

      That's always the problems with Gods.
      They use their position of power to trifle with those under them, and then place the blame squarely on mortals like "hey we wouldn't have had to do these malicious acts of our own free will if you just passed our arbitrary tests".
      Somehow Gods are all powerful except when it comes to taking responsibility. No, that's the fault of the beings with literally no powers.
      By the way, pay my protection fees-- I mean, worship my temples, and nobody has to get hurt... Again.

    • @Azurath100
      @Azurath100 Рік тому

      @@Atylonisus you forgot ..... Again, I "promise".

    • @kappadarwin9476
      @kappadarwin9476 Рік тому +3

      I view it as "Don't judge people if you haven't met them." the people in that village judged the strangers on first impression alone. Meaning if the strangers showed up covered in precious stones or high quality cloth the people of the village would have most likely welcomed them with open arms and then expect a reward. But the old couple did not judge them nor did they ask for anything selfish.

    • @Karak-_-
      @Karak-_- Рік тому +1

      Well, that's an iterpretation Ovid, would probably agree.
      But there is also interpretation of gods as alegorical forces of nature.
      Zeus & Hermes did not paraded their status, but disguised as poor beggars. The people here refused to help those in need, and in return, no one helped when they needed.

    • @GabrielAKAFinn
      @GabrielAKAFinn Рік тому

      American brainrot

  • @adrien5568
    @adrien5568 Рік тому +2

    I had never heard of this myth before. I really enjoyed it!

  • @callmethecommentcountess9329
    @callmethecommentcountess9329 6 місяців тому

    Thank you for telling me this amazing story

  • @scotto9016
    @scotto9016 Рік тому +8

    Short answer, probably not. Long answer, cuz I’m hot, he’d impregnate me with the next demigod. Then I die to hera’s rage.

  • @blu_creations
    @blu_creations Рік тому +12

    They are the sweetest couple ever, the love no one else could share

  • @Warrior1Spartan
    @Warrior1Spartan Рік тому +1

    Makes me think of the song "The Christmas Guest". Amazing.

  • @Alley0ops
    @Alley0ops Рік тому

    Beautifully told and excellent narration

  • @gregiep
    @gregiep Рік тому +3

    Two weeks earlier, the couple up the road was also visited by two strangers in the night asking for food and shelter. They too seemed a bit unusual, but the couple took them in. They got robbed and murdered. Too bad.

    • @gregiep
      @gregiep Рік тому +1

      Obviously, I’m not saying don’t be kind to strangers or those in need, kindness is unquestionably a good thing. However, you can show kindness without making yourself vulnerable and trusting your safety to the whims of strangers.

    • @irrelevant_noob
      @irrelevant_noob Рік тому

      Clearly, they had so much wealth to worry about... ^^

  • @saikrishnathiwakarrk
    @saikrishnathiwakarrk Рік тому +7

    Zeus being zeus ,gave them a temple to pray to them, imagine kratos opening the door 😂😂😂

  • @V123cav
    @V123cav Рік тому

    This guy is my favourite animation voice, so pleased every time I hear him :)

  • @asprywrites6327
    @asprywrites6327 Рік тому

    That was absolutely beautiful. Thank you.

  • @ilgeorgioahp543
    @ilgeorgioahp543 Рік тому +6

    A miastake I noticed is that you said they had shown "xenia". It is actually "filoxenia" or φιλοξενία. Xenos means stranger while filo means friendship or love. Filoxenia means hospitality towards a stanger. Great video by the way.

  • @jacobshore5115
    @jacobshore5115 Рік тому +4

    For some reason, this reminds me of the Two Trees of Valinor in the Silmarillion, Laurelin (the Gold Tree) and Telperion (the Silver Tree).

  • @mag5807
    @mag5807 7 місяців тому

    I did not expect to cry with this video yet here I am

  • @AnNguyenpilgrim
    @AnNguyenpilgrim Рік тому +2

    the narrator's voice is so good that I almost cried at the end of the story.

  • @nromk
    @nromk Рік тому +7

    I don't know if anyone in the modern era could pass such a test, we lock our doors and have all kinds of weapons we see each other as threats when we are in reality one, the modern era has taken that away from us.

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому +1

      Indeed, it's a lack of trust that divides us, both from each other and from God. Many haves fear that the have-nots wish to assault and steal from them, so they withdraw from them; and many have-nots fear that the haves won't be willing to give them what they need just by asking them and would turn them down, so they take it by force. Not all are like that, but there's enough out there for just about anyone to expect it.

    • @Mr_Jester980
      @Mr_Jester980 Рік тому +4

      It's because of those willing to use one's kindness for their selfish gain that the seed of distrust was sowed in the first place. I've heard many stories about how the victims got taken advantage of by those acting like homeless people, the disabled, etc., and how it's from their action that caused many people to not willing to help the real ones.

  • @ymaculateadhiambo5136
    @ymaculateadhiambo5136 Рік тому +6

    Brought a year to my eye. It’s a beautiful story beautifully told

  • @Perspectiveside
    @Perspectiveside Рік тому +2

    Greek mythology can be so brutal but at the same time, so beautiful.

  • @holymolymacaroni7503
    @holymolymacaroni7503 Рік тому

    The narrator's voice is perfect with the animation perfectly showing the love betweent the couple, i love it so much

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    @kabirushehu0019 Рік тому +6

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  • @dylatron4533
    @dylatron4533 Рік тому +28

    Wait… I know this is heartwarming at all, but does that mean that out of everyone in the entire village only one family could survive?

    • @pustota7254
      @pustota7254 Рік тому

      Yes

    • @Oznerock
      @Oznerock 9 місяців тому

      ​@@pustota7254Not if multiple people offered. They *rejected* the two. That's different from not having a chance to accept.

  • @jameswong7046
    @jameswong7046 Рік тому

    This story is so sweet is almost made me cry.

  • @kyleoliver5783
    @kyleoliver5783 Рік тому

    This was a beautiful story for the couple.

  • @manar_6536
    @manar_6536 Рік тому +3

    this story telling is astonishing, I couldn’t help but shed tears at the end.

  • @dominicballinger6536
    @dominicballinger6536 Рік тому +14

    I know a criticism with this is that "who would let a stranger into their home like that?", but I think it's a very important part of Greek culture. At least, that's what I got from reading The Odyssey. Hospitality for those who could not help themselves, or just in general, is a recurring theme that is present pretty much the entire way through. After all, the kindness you can show someone through hospitality can mean the world to them!

    • @Oznerock
      @Oznerock 9 місяців тому

      Exactly! Their culture placed a heavy emphasis on it because travelers spread news, and helped trade. They were essential to ancient society, so people were taught to be hospitable... And to punish severely those who abuse that hospitality.

  • @qualia8047
    @qualia8047 Рік тому

    This made me cry.

  • @archiethejanitor6779
    @archiethejanitor6779 Рік тому

    i shed a tear. they remind me of parents.

  • @Axolotl-Zero
    @Axolotl-Zero Рік тому +6

    Philemon is such a unique name that no one I’ve met has that name except me. Hearing my name in this video is so weird.

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому +2

      Did you know that Philemon is the name of a book in the New Testament of the Bible? It's only one chapter with twenty-five verses, but it was written as an epistle, a letter, by Paul the Apostle and Timothy to their friend, Philemon, a church leader in Colossae.

  • @joyl7842
    @joyl7842 Рік тому +3

    These days it's probably a bad idea. Lots of criminals talk their way into people's homes in order to steal money and valuables. Most of the time it's elderly people who are victims of this practice.

  • @uuuuuaaaaaaah3637
    @uuuuuaaaaaaah3637 Рік тому

    Almost cried, really beautiful

  • @amrutjyotishinde341
    @amrutjyotishinde341 Рік тому

    One of the most heartwarming and blissful love story...!!!🤩😍🥰

  • @Surgery7
    @Surgery7 Рік тому +3

    They didn't ask for their homies back,😐attitude changed mad quick.

    • @wolfsbanealphas617
      @wolfsbanealphas617 Рік тому

      Zeus would probably be outraged that they ask for the people that offended them back then punish the couple. Plus they is questioning his judgment a god

  • @kingmunch7252
    @kingmunch7252 Рік тому +4

    Ted Ed, you guys got to do on a story about badang, a southeast asian myth. It has such an interesting story. Would love to see your creative interpretation of the myth. Thank you very much for these stories.

  • @Hj4a
    @Hj4a Рік тому

    Made me cry.

  • @goaticusmaximus9067
    @goaticusmaximus9067 Рік тому

    You couldn’t of found a better voice for this bittersweet story

  • @Lizzie-ve7kt
    @Lizzie-ve7kt Рік тому +5

    This narrator is amazing, this entire short video was incredibly cinematic and is far better than a majority of the children’s movies and tv shows in recent years. Would love for this narrator and the animators to work on a full-length feature film.

  • @aoi_18
    @aoi_18 Рік тому +3

    Zeus and Hermes seem to have forgotten that a temple without worshippers is as good as no temple. The stories will remain, but piety won't.

    • @videogollumer
      @videogollumer Рік тому

      Ever heard of a pilgrimage?

    • @aoi_18
      @aoi_18 Рік тому

      @@videogollumer valid point, but in the context of this story everyone in the vicinity is dead and the old couple eventually turn into trees, so a pilgrimage would hardly be possible unless some lucky traveller comes along and spreads the word. A god is only as powerful as the number of faithful they have.

  • @TheBalkanJoker
    @TheBalkanJoker 11 місяців тому

    The end was genuinely heart warming

  • @waftsofpetrichor
    @waftsofpetrichor Рік тому +1

    The show, don’t tell technique is masterfully applied.

  • @88Grimmjow
    @88Grimmjow Рік тому +4

    "it was dark when two mysterious shrouded figures appeard on the hillside village to take a boy named Deimos, that is when it all began"

  • @professordreamer8479
    @professordreamer8479 Рік тому +3

    TED_ED can you do a video explaining Autocracy and leaders of countries who rule autocratically.

  • @prettycheep
    @prettycheep Рік тому

    the couple loving each other so much the real highlight

  • @alexisbouligand1335
    @alexisbouligand1335 Рік тому

    Incredible story telling.