Moirae (Fates) – Mythopedia The three Moirae—Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos—were the personifications of fate They ensured that every being followed the preordained course that had been set for them
Graeae – Mythopedia In Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson and the Olympians series, they adjust to the modern world as operators of a taxi firm in New York City They are best remembered for the one eye and one tooth they shared In Disney’s Hercules, this aspect of their myth is extended to the three Fates, who, like the Graeae, must also share a single eye
Hecate – Mythopedia Hecate, daughter of Asteria and Perses, was a powerful but mysterious goddess usually associated with magic, witchcraft, and the Underworld Though often an object of dread, Hecate was sometimes seen as a kind goddess and a protector of justice
Eris – Mythopedia Eris, daughter of Nyx, was the goddess who personified strife Angry at being snubbed by the other gods, she orchestrated the infamous Judgment of Paris—the event that sparked the Trojan War
Zeus – Mythopedia Zeus was the powerful but flawed king of the Greek pantheon and the supreme god of the Greeks He ruled over men and gods alike from his throne on Mount Olympus
Hel (Realm) – Mythopedia Hel was the lowest of the Nine Realms in Norse mythology, resting place of the vast majority of the dead Ruled by the cold and uncaring goddess Hel, when Ragnarök came, she would unleash the dead upon the living
Themis – Mythopedia Themis was a Greek Titan most famous for embodying the concept of justice Unlike the other Titans, she sided with the Olympians in their celestial war with her brethren Today, her image survives as “Lady Justice,” wearing a chiton (a kind of tunic) and holding a set of balanced scales
Meleager – Mythopedia Meleager, son of Oeneus, was a hero and prince of Calydon He was best known for his role in the famous Calydonian boar hunt and for his tragic death at the hands of his own mother
Asgard – Mythopedia Asgard was one of the Nine Realms of Norse mythology, home of the mighty Aesir gods and resting place of humans who died in battle It was connected to Midgard, where humanity dwelled, by a rainbow bridge called Bifrost
Odyssey: Book 15 (Full Text) - Mythopedia Or fates peculiar to thyself portend?” Whilst yet the monarch paused, with doubts oppress’d The beauteous queen relieved his labouring breast: “Hear me (she cried), to whom the gods have given To read this sign, and mystic sense of heaven, As thus the plumy sovereign of the air Left on the mountain’s brow his callow care,