Re: The Greek View on Death
Paul A., on host 130.95.128.6
Tuesday, March 14, 2000, at 22:26:40
Re: The Greek View on Death posted by Speedball on Tuesday, March 14, 2000, at 14:54:26:
> Charon is the [boatman's] name and [usually] is depicted to look like the grim reaper.
Although I'm not sure whether that's something that the Greeks did, or something that more modern people started doing to make him seem more familiar.
> Hades, Zeus, and [Poseidon] drew lots to see who would rule which aspect of the world. > Zeus won and got the sky and the earth, [Poseidon] got second place and chose the seas, > Hades got stuck with the underworld.
Technically, I think, Zeus only got the sky. The earth was considered neutral ground so that the mortals could get on with their everyday lives relatively uninterrupted.
> Aside from the Elisian Feilds (for only the very good) and Tartarus (for those cursed by the gods)
At our university, all the computers run by University Computing Services have names taken from Greek myth. All the undergraduate internet accounts are kept in Tartarus.
> [Elysium] (also the Elysian [Fields]) is identifed with the Island of the blessed and is > sometimes seen as part of the underworld but is also sometimes seen as a seperate place > [entirely]. > It was not so much a place for the good dead, but for those who had positive connections with > the gods. If Zeus liked you, you got in, even if you were a scum bag. Menelaus went to the > Elysian [Fields] [solely] for marrying Helen, which made him Zeus's son in law.
By way of contrast, the hero Orion made one serious goof and wound up in testpatternville.
> Acording to Homer Tartarus is [where] Zeus confined the immortal Titans after he and the > other Olympian [Gods] overthrew them.
Although according to some stories, the Titan who fathered the gods got let into Elysium. I don't know what motives were involved.
> Achillies was dipped the the river Styx as a child, which made him invulnerable ([except] his > heel, which was not invulnerable and led to his death).
In case you're wondering "Why not the heel?", it's because they needed to hold on to something while they were dipping him.
> I hope this helps, Mythology is a [favourite] topic of mine. I got out my copies of 'Bulfinch's > Mythology' and the 'Dictionary of Mythology' to find this info.
Mythology is also a favourite topic of mine, although I tend to rely on my memory when I'm showing off.
My favourite mythologies are Ancient Greek, Ancient Scandinavian, Celtic, and Modern American (also one of Speedball's favourite mythologies, yes?).
Pa"spelling attack"ul
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