As Halirrhothios, son of Poseidon and a nymphe named Eurtye, was trying to rape
Ares Kills A God's Son
This enraged the God of war, so he came down upon Halirrhothius with his spear and killed him. Poseidon demanded justice for his son, and accused Ares of being a murder.
An outraged Poseidon demanded that Ares be put on trial for the murder of his son, to which Zeus agreed. The first ever Olympian murder trial took place on the Areopagus Hill in Athens. Zeus, as the god of honor and justice, was the Chief Justice, while the other ten Olympians served as members of the jury.
Once he got home, Idomeneus' son rushed out to meet and embrace him. Owing to the promise he made to Poseidon, Idomeneus had no choice but to sacrifice his son. When the other gods discovered what Idomeneus had done they became angry and visited a plague on Idomeneus' city, Crete.
In Greek mythology, nobody could kill Ares because he was immortal.
Why did Zeus hate Ares? His insatiable thirst for violence and bloodshed made him feared by mortal beings and despised by his fellow deities. Zeus, his father, wasn't particularly fond of him either.
Ares appears to be siding with Hera and is against his father, Zeus, showing his preference towards his mother and possible dislike of his father and his actions.
In Greek mythology, Zeus is not killed at all. Zeus is king of the Greek gods and goddesses, a role he takes on after defeating his own father.
Zeus killed Kronos and saved his siblings. At first the relationship between the Olympians and Titans were relatively amicable, but eventually the Titanomachy, the war against the Titans, broke out, in which the Titans were finally subdued and punished.
Sarpedon, in Greek legend, son of Zeus, the king of the gods, and Laodameia, the daughter of Bellerophon; he was a Lycian prince and a hero in the Trojan War. As recounted in Homer's Iliad, Book XVI, Sarpedon fought with distinction on the side of the Trojans but was slain by the Greek warrior Patroclus.
Poseidon warned Kratos that Olympus' destruction meant the world's destruction. The Ghost of Sparta did not react and told him to prepare for his own death, Kratos proceeded to brutally beat on the sea god, before finally finishing Poseidon by gouging out his uncle's eyes with his thumbs and snapping his neck.
So, when Poseidon raped Medusa she became pregnant. When her head was chopped off by Perseus, her children came to be.
Ares was born millennia ago to Zeus, King of the Old Gods, as one of the latter's many godly children. At an indeterminate point, he witnessed the creation of humanity by his father Zeus. Ares despised the human race that Zeus created, so he began corrupting them with war, blood-thirst, and violence.
Poseidon's favorite demigod son, Percy Jackson, was noted to be nearly the spitting image of his father, with the same black hair, sea-green eyes, and brooding look.
Odysseus Has a Run-In With the Cyclops Monster
During Odysseus' journey home, he is said to have blinded Polyphemus, the Cyclos monster who just happened to be Poseidon's son.
Later Kronos threw up the children that he ate and then there was a 10 year war against Cronus and the other Titans. The gods eventually won and overthrew the Titans. Zeus then cut up his father Cronus and threw him into the pit of Tartarus. His Roman equivalent is Saturn.
Kronos generally did not have temples of his own. Eventually, Zeus forgave his father and allowed Kronus to be king of the Elysian Islands, an area of the Underworld.
Kronos was the most powerful Titan ever. He was as powerful as any of his sons (Zeus, Poseidon and Hades).
Deianeira, realizing that Iole was a dangerous rival, sent Heracles a garment smeared with the blood of Nessus. The blood proved to be a powerful poison, and Heracles died.
Thor then kills Zeus using Zeus' own thunderbolt, which (frankly) feels like a bit of an overreaction. Yes, Zeus had him handcuffed, but killing him? Well, Zeus' death doesn't need to weigh on Thor's conscious because it turns out that Zeus somehow survived.
The Greek poet Hesiod related two principal legends concerning Prometheus. The first is that Zeus, the chief god, who had been tricked by Prometheus into accepting the bones and fat of sacrifice instead of the meat, hid fire from mortals. Prometheus, however, stole it and returned it to Earth once again.
Ares and Athena: The Ultimate Sibling Rivalry
This has a lot to do with Athena being perceived as superior. As such, the two siblings were bitter rivals and were always in constant competition.
Hades, Greek Aïdes (“the Unseen”), also called Pluto or Pluton (“the Wealthy One” or “the Giver of Wealth”), in ancient Greek religion, god of the underworld. Hades was a son of the Titans Cronus and Rhea, and brother of the deities Zeus, Poseidon, Demeter, Hera, and Hestia.
He is greatly feared and hated by almost everyone in Greece, including his own family. The ancient Greeks believed that Ares was responsible for all the bloodshed and violence in the world, and they saw him as a dangerous force to be avoided at all costs.