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Legend has it that Orpheus, the son of the sun god Apollo, was a master of playing the harp, and as soon as he played the harp, he would cause the rivers to stop flowing, and the Lyrid meteor shower.
Even the barking lion has become tame and cute. He has a beautiful and kind wife, and the two of them live a carefree life. But the good times didn't last long, and one day, when she went to the countryside with the fairy, she was unfortunately bitten to death by a poisonous snake.
When the husband found out about this, he was in pain. He missed his deceased wife so much that he finally went to the underground underworld to find his wife. He pleaded with Hades, the king of Hades, to bring his wife back to earth.
Of course, Hades would not agree to this, so Orpheus had to take out the tree harp and play the sad song of missing his dead wife, and finally moved the king of Hades. Hades granted his request, but with the proviso that he would never look back at his wife before returning to earth. Orpheus happily accepted the agreement and immediately took his wife back.
On the way, when he was only one step away from returning to the ground, his husband couldn't hear the voice of his wife behind him, so he looked back in a hurry. At this moment, I heard a miserable scream from my wife and went back to Hades. Afterwards, Orphes went mad from grief and eventually threw himself into the river and died.
Later, the great god Zeus found this lyre, and in order to commemorate the two, he sent this harp to the sky, which is the constellation Lyra.
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The man's name is Elufis.
The woman's name is Yulishi.
The only Saint Seiya in Saint Seiya who surpasses **Saint Seiya.
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Euluffis and Ullis, lyre.
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Relationships between characters in Greek mythology? In the genealogy, everything begins with the god of chaos, and the Greek mythological characters are all descendants of the god of chaos. 1. The first generation of gods:
Kaos, the god of chaos, who gave birth to Gaia, the mother of the earth, Tartarus, the god of the abyss, Erepos, the god of darkness, Niks, the goddess of the night, and Eros, the goddess of love. 2. Gaia in the first generation of gods gave birth to Ouranos in the sky, Pontus in the sea, and Uria in the mountains. Erepos and Nix gave birth to Ethel, the god of space, Hemora, the god of day, and Charon, the god of the River Styx.
3. Ouranos, the god of the heavenly firmament, and Gaia, the goddess of the earth, gave birth to the second generation of gods, the god Titans, namely: the god of the river, Koos, the god of darkness, the sun god Hyperion, the father of Prometheus, Iapetus, and the god of the heavens, Kronos; Tia, the goddess of light, Rhea, the goddess of time, Temis, the goddess of water, Monemosine, the goddess of memory, Forber, the goddess of the moon, and Thetis, the goddess of the sea. 4. After Kronos and Rhea in the second generation of gods married and became the king and gods of the second generation of gods, they gave birth to the third generation, which are:
Hestia, the goddess of fire, Dymer, the goddess of agriculture and forestry, Hera, the goddess of jealousy and family, Hades, Poseidon, the god of the sea, and Zeus, the god of the sky. Is there anything else you don't understand?
There are no angels in Greek mythology, angels are oracles in Catholicism that appeared in Rome. The winged image in Greece, I remember, was a symbol of victory.
1. Zeus (King of the Gods): The youngest son born to Kronus and Rhea. His father was unusually violent, and when Zeus grew up, he united his siblings to fight against his father in a fierce fight. >>>More
Zeus's father, Satu, well.
1. Eric Thous.
During his reign as king of Athens, he was forced to engage in a brutal war with the city of Eleusis, which at that time was supported by Imarad, the son of the king of the Celescians, Omolpers. >>>More
The epistemic value of Greek mythology:
1. Greek mythology is the result of the original consciousness activities of the ancient Greeks, which artistically summarizes the ancient Greeks' understanding of nature and society, expresses their righteous indignation at social injustice, concentrates their experience and ideals, and is full of optimism; >>>More