In
Greek mythology, Leda (Λήδα) was daughter of the
Aetolian king
Thestius, and wife of the king
Tyndareus, of
Sparta. Her myth gave rise to the popular motif in Renaissance and later art of
Leda and the Swan. She was the mother of
Helen of Troy,
Clytemnestra, and
Castor and Pollux. Leda was admired by
Zeus, who raped her in the guise of a
swan. As a swan, Zeus fell into her arms for protection from a pursuing eagle. Their consummation, on the same night as Leda lay with her husband Tyndareus, resulted in two eggs from which hatched
Helen—later known as the beautiful Helen Of Troy,
Clytemnestra, and
Castor and Pollux (also known as the
Dioscuri—also spelled Kastor and Polydeuces). Which children are the progeny of Tyndareus, the mortal king, and which are of Zeus, and are thus half-immortal, is not consistent among accounts, nor is which child hatched from which egg. The split is almost always half mortal, half divine, although the pairings do not always reflect the children's heritage pairings. Castor and Polydeuces are sometimes both mortal, sometimes both divine. One consistent point is that if only one of them is immortal, it is Polydeuces.
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