Moros - Wikipedia In Greek mythology, Moros ˈmɔːrɒs (Ancient Greek: Μόρος, romanized: Móros, lit 'Doom'[1]) or Morus ˈmɔːrəs is the personified spirit of impending doom, [2] who drives mortals to their deadly fate
Moros – The Greek God of Impending Doom Because of this, Moros is seen as a representation of death and suffering He is also often considered the spirit of depression because of his close relationship with doom and misfortune
Moros - Greek Mythology Moros was a primordial deity in Greek mythology, and the personification of impending doom, driving mortals to their deadly fate He was one of the offspring of Nyx (the night), who had conceived him without male intervention, and brother of the Moirai (the Fates)
MOROS OLETHROS - Greek God or Spirit of Doom Moros was the ancient Greek personified spirit (daimon) of doom--the force which drove man towards his fated death Moros' siblings Thanatos and Ker presided over the physical aspects of death--Ker was the bringer of violent death and deadly illness, while Thanatos represented a more gentle passing
Moros - Hades Wiki Moros is the personification of doom, bad luck, and inevitability A grim and rustic incarnation, he is the son of Nyx and is seemingly the only one out of his kin to maintain some connection or priviness to the designs of his older sisters, The Fates, due to his use of a large needle-like sword
Moros: The Greek God of Doom and the Power of Fate Moros is the Greek personification of doom — the force that completes destiny rather than shaping it He is a child of Nyx (Night), born without a father, symbolizing the self-born nature of inevitability