释义 |
Examples:three-legged Golden Crow that lives in the sun (in northeast Asian and Chinese mythology)—Pangu (creator of the universe in Chinese mythology)—Asura, malevolent spirits in Indian mythology—Lucifer (Satan's name before his Fall in Jewish and Christian mythology)—Lord of the East, the sun God of Chinese mythology—Horse-Face, one of the two guardians of the underworld in Chinese mythology—Nihonshoki or Chronicles of Japan (c. 720) book of mythology and history—Amun, deity in Egyptian mythology, also spelled Amon, Amoun, Amen, and rarely Imen—Cassandra, daughter of king Priam in Greek mythology—Loki, god of fire and mischievous destroyer in Norse mythology—East Sea (Chinese mythology and ancient geography)—underground palace of ghouls, e.g. Asgard of Scandinavian mythology—the creation (in mythology and Genesis 1-2)—Diana (goddess in Roman mythology)—Pan, faun in Greek mythology, son of Hermes—faun, half-goat half-human creature of Greek mythology—Lei Gong or Duke of Thunder, the God of Thunder in Chinese mythology—Five Dynasties (in different contexts, from mythology through Han and the interregnum between Han and Tang)—shrimp soldiers and crab generals (in mythology or popular fiction, the army of the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea)—a water goblin in Chinese mythology usually depicted as a monkey—Hermes, in Greek mythology, messenger of the Gods—evil dragon in Western mythology, cf Revelations 14:12—Odin (god in Norse mythology)—Freyr (god in Norse mythology)—King Mu, fifth king of Zhou, said have lived to 105 and reigned 976-922 BC or 1001-947 BC, rich in associated mythology—Atlas (Titan in Greek mythology)—Cain (biblical character), a figure of Judeo-Christian-Muslim mythology—in Greek mythology, a monster with 100 eyes, transformed inpeacock's tail—the Absolute or Supreme Ultimate, the source of all things according some interpretations of Chinese mythology—Bia, daughter of Pallas and Styx in Greek mythology, personification of violence—Rhea, wife of Chronos and mother of Zeus in Greek mythology—Hestia, goddess of the hearth in Greek mythology, daughter of Chronos and Rhea—Classic of Mountain and Sea, probably compiled c. 500 BC-200 BC, contains wide range of geography, mythology, witchcraft, popular customs etc—formless mass before creation in Chinese mythology—Venus (mythology, Roman goddess of love)—Ox-Head, one of the two guardians of the underworld in Chinese mythology— |