Ladon (Mythology)
Dragon, Hesperides, Heracles, Jason, Argonauts, Phorcys, Echidna (mythology), Gaia (mythology)
978-613-8-36056-8
6138360567
80
2013-01-04
34.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Ladon was the serpent-like dragon that twined and twisted around the tree in the Garden of the Hesperides and guarded the golden apples. He was overcome by Heracles. Fifteen long years later, Jason and the Argonauts passed by on their chthonic return journey from Colchis and heard the lament of "shining" Aigle, one of the three Hesperides, and viewed the still-twitching Ladon. Ladon was given several parentages, each of which placed him at an archaic level in Greek myth: the offspring of "Ceto, joined in heated passion with Phorcys" or of Typhon, who was himself serpent-like from the waist down, and Echidna or of Gaia herself, or in her Olympian manifestation, Hera: "The Dragon which guarded the golden apples was the brother of the Nemean lion" asserted Ptolemy Hephaestion. In one version, Heracles did not kill Ladon.
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