Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Greek Mythology

Greek Mythology
Greek myths simmer with spicy, titillating scandal because they explain the origins of natural phenomena and also the ways of the world. The adventures from the gods and their mortal counterparts have inspired artists, writers, musicians, and psychoanalysts for hundreds of years. Moreover, Greek mythology is inextricably intertwined using the nation’s religion, history, and literature.
Worship dedicated to prayer and offerings towards the gods. Temples and rites were one's heart of religious practice, and pilgrimages often were come to consult oracles in order to appease angered gods. Foreign deities were welcomed in to the Greek pantheon, canon's of gods, to ensure no god was ignored or offended. There is even an altar towards the unknown god, to help keep the bases covered.
The Greek gods behaved like soap-opera characters who can’t be wiped off the show-the immortal all-stars lacked morals and were slaves to lust, greed, and jealousy. The Greeks knew these divine passions weren't to be trifled with: mythology is filled with ugly types of what happens to mortals who challenge or disrespect gods. The weaver Arachne was converted into a spider because she dared to declare herself more skilled than Athena. Tantalus, after serving the gods human flesh in a feast, was condemned to face in a pool in Hades, forever suffering from hunger and thirst with “tantalizing” water and food just beyond his grasp. When King Minos didn’t make an expected sacrifice to Poseidon, the ocean god struck Minos’s wife, PasiphaĆ«, by having an insatiable lust for any bull. PasiphaĆ« then conceived and bore the Minotaur, a cannibal bull-boy. Although the worship of Greek gods faded using the advent of Christianity, the pantheon’s legacy continues to be visible in Greece plentiful ancient ruins, as well as the myths that survive today.

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