 
 
Daedalus was a highly respected and talented Athenian artisan 
descendent from the royal family of Cecrops, the mythical first king of Athens. 
He was known for his skill as an architect, sculpture, and inventor, and he produced 
many famous works. Despite his self-confidence, Daedalus once committed a crime 
of envy against Talus, his nephew and apprentice. Talus, who seemed destined to 
become as great an artisan as his uncle Daedalus, was inspired one day to invent 
the saw after having seen the way a snake used its jaws. Daedalus, momentarily 
stricken with jealousy, threw Talus off of the Acropolis. For this crime, Daedalus 
was exiled to Crete and placed in the service of King Minos, where he eventually 
had a son, Icarus, with the beautiful Naucrate, a mistress-slave of the King.
Minos called on Daedalus to build the famous Labyrinth in 
	order to imprison the dreaded Minotaur. The Minotaur was a monster with the 
	head of a bull and the body of a man. He was the son of Pasiphae, the wife 
	of Minos, and a bull that Poseidon had sent to Minos as a gift. Minos was 
	shamed by the birth of this horrible creature and resolved to imprison the 
	Minotaur in the Labyrinth where it fed on humans, which were taken as "tribute" 
	by Minos and sacrificed to the Minotaur in memory of his fallen son Androgenos.
	
 Theseus, 
	the heroic King of Athens, volunteered himself to be sent to the Minotaur 
	in the hopes of killing the beast and ending the "human tribute" that his 
	city was forced to pay Minos. When Theseus arrived to Crete, Ariadne, Minos's 
	daughter, fell in love with him and wished to help him survive the Minotaur. 
	Daedalus revealed the mystery of the Labyrinth to Ariadne who in turn advised 
	Theseus, thus enabling him to slay the Minotaur and escape from the Labyrinth. 
	When Minos found out what Daedalus had done he was so enraged that he imprisoned 
	Daedalus & Icarus in the Labyrinth themselves.
Theseus, 
	the heroic King of Athens, volunteered himself to be sent to the Minotaur 
	in the hopes of killing the beast and ending the "human tribute" that his 
	city was forced to pay Minos. When Theseus arrived to Crete, Ariadne, Minos's 
	daughter, fell in love with him and wished to help him survive the Minotaur. 
	Daedalus revealed the mystery of the Labyrinth to Ariadne who in turn advised 
	Theseus, thus enabling him to slay the Minotaur and escape from the Labyrinth. 
	When Minos found out what Daedalus had done he was so enraged that he imprisoned 
	Daedalus & Icarus in the Labyrinth themselves.
Daedalus conceived to escape from the Labyrinth with Icarus 
	from Crete by constructing wings and then flying to safety. He built the wings 
	from feathers and wax, and before the two set off he warned Icarus not to 
	fly too low lest his wings touch the waves and get wet, and not too high lest 
	the sun melt the wax. But the young Icarus, overwhelmed by the thrill of flying, 
	did not heed his father's warning, and flew too close to the sun whereupon 
	the wax in his wings melted and he fell into the sea. Daedalus escaped to 
	Sicily and Icarus' body was carried ashore by the current to an island then 
	without a name. Heracles came across the body and recognized it, giving it 
	burial where today there still stands a small rock promontory jutting out 
	into the Aegean Sea, and naming the island and the sea around it after the 
	fallen Icarus.  View the Ikaros & Daedalus Art Gallery