Gaia and Uranus bore the three Hecatoncheires — Cottus, Briareos, and Gyges — hundred-handed giants whom Uranus imprisoned in the earth. Zeus later freed them to fight in the Titanomachy.
Thetis summoned the Hecatoncheires (Briareus) to free Zeus when Hera, Athena, and Poseidon conspired to bind him in chains, saving his throne on Olympus.
The Hecatoncheires fought as crucial allies of the Olympians during the Titanomachy, their hundred arms hurling volleys of boulders that overwhelmed the Titans and secured Zeus's victory.
Zeus freed the Hecatoncheires from Tartarus during the Titanomachy. Their hurling of massive boulders broke the Titan lines and secured victory for the Olympians.
After the Titanomachy, the Hecatoncheires were appointed by Zeus to guard Coeus and the other imprisoned Titans in Tartarus, ensuring they could never escape.
The Hecatoncheires — Cottus, Briareus, and Gyges — serve as wardens of Tartarus, guarding the bronze walls that imprison the Titans. Zeus appointed them after freeing them from their own imprisonment.
The Hecatoncheires stand as eternal guards over the imprisoned Titans in Tartarus, ensuring the defeated elder gods can never escape their confinement beneath the earth.
The Hecatoncheires guard the gates of Tartarus within the Underworld, keeping the imprisoned Titans confined after the Titanomachy.
Kronos imprisoned the Hecatoncheires in Tartarus, fearing their hundred-armed might. Zeus later freed them, and they bombarded the Titans with boulders during the Titanomachy.
The Hecatoncheires, freed from Tartarus by Zeus, turned the tide of the Titanomachy by hurling hundred mountains at once against the Titans' position on Mount Othrys.
Uranus imprisoned the Hecatoncheires within the earth at birth, fearing their hundred-handed monstrous form. His cruelty toward these children was among the acts that drove Gaia to plot his castration.
The Cyclopes and Hecatoncheires were siblings, both children of Gaia and Uranus, imprisoned together in Tartarus. Zeus freed both races to fight the Titans in the Titanomachy.
The Hecatoncheires turned the tide of the Titanomachy by hurling hundreds of boulders at the Titan positions on Mount Othrys, overwhelming the defenders in the final assault.
The Hecatoncheires were freed by Zeus from Tartarus to fight in the Titanomachy. Their barrage of three hundred boulders at a time overwhelmed the Titans, and they became the eternal guards of Tartarus after the war.
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