cosmichedgehog wrote: I've always found this a useful reference site: THE ENCYCLOPEDIA MYTHIC
It divides the type of mythology by continient to make finding info a little easier... and it also includes a beastiary.
I've done some reading on Egyptian mythology.... but I don't know a lot details. I'm interested in creation myths, and the Eyyptain one has some unque elements to it. I've also started read Norse mythology recently.... thanks to the time a spent at Wally's site - I realized that i had never had much exposure to it.
I love that site! I usually use it on one of my "monthly addictions" or "weekly addictions"!
do guys now the story of Jason and the Argonauts by Appolonius off Rhodes
A fact is a simple statement that everyone believes. It is innocent, unless found guilty. A hypothesis is a novel suggestion that no one wants to believe. It is guilty, until found effective. Edward Teller (1908 - 2003)
Yes, it is the fable concerning the golden fleece. The fable "THE ARGONAUTICA" by Apollonius Rhodius can be found at http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/Argonautica . But I find that to be difficult to read. I personally like the less detailed, but easier to read, version in Bullfinch's Mythology. You can find that at http://www.bulfinch.org/fables/bull17.html . By searching for Jason or Argonauts in the above Encyclopedia Mythica, you can also get even less detailed versions (as well as links to the other 2 I listed).
well you know I've read it in latin, I can tell u it's hard
but the hardest book ever to read in Latin has to be the Aeneis by Publius Vergilius Maro.
A fact is a simple statement that everyone believes. It is innocent, unless found guilty. A hypothesis is a novel suggestion that no one wants to believe. It is guilty, until found effective. Edward Teller (1908 - 2003)
Capt.Rutlinger wrote: well you know I've read it in latin, I can tell u it's hard
but the hardest book ever to read in Latin has to be the Aeneis by Publius Vergilius Maro.
Just like reading any other foreign language... learn the language and you will be able to read it. There is no magic trick to make a person instantaneously able to read it... Capt.R has probably taken several years of it in school
it's basically what all scientific names are in, although a fair number are people's name or words from other languages romanicised... ie made similar to latin... but I can read a minimal amount of it from a combination of speaking Spanish and my history teacher four years ago drilling us on slides he had taken of Roman artifact (and actual Roman artifacts I have seen in England and in Italy)
Back more on topic... I just remembered Medea had a propensity to cut people into small pieces...