- In
ancient Roman myth and literature, Mors is the
personification of
death equivalent to the Gr**** Thanatos.[citation needed] The
Latin noun for "death...
- in
Latin as Thanatus, but his
counterpart in
Roman mythology is Mors or
Letum.[citation needed] The Gr**** poet
Hesiod established in his
Theogony that...
-
evening ✓ ✓ ✓
Hybris Petulantia Wantonness ✓
Hypnos Somnus Sleep ✓ ✓ Ker
Letum Destiny ✓ ✓ The
Keres Tenebrae Violent Death ✓ ✓ The
Moirai Parcae Fates...
- "
Letum"
began to
destroy humanity.
Magic soldiers called Junei fought them, and
defeated them. Later, Vird II, King of Balmondia,
releases the
Letum again...
- he
becomes the
father of
Fatum (Fate),
Senectus (Old Age), Mors (Death),
Letum (Destruction),
Continentia (Strife),
Somnus (Sleep), the
Somnia (Dreams)...
-
mythology Cerberus, Dea Tacita, Dis Pater, Egestes, Fames,
Inferi Di, Larenta,
Letum, Libitina, Mors, Orcus, Pluto, Proserpina,
Viduus Romanian mythology Diavolu...
- as Anthesteria, the
Keres were
driven away.
Their Roman equivalents were
Letum (“death”) or the
Tenebrae (“shadows”). Hunger, pestilence, madness, nightmare...
- valor. The
clothing of the men
consists of two
types of
sleeveless shirts (
letum) and with
black and
white stripe (pomo) made from
thick cotton cloth, striped...
-
either the myth of the
killing of
Argos as an
etymology of the word Argi-
letum (death of Argos),
which looks to be
purely fantastic, or that of
place located...
-
Pelasgus (Gr****)
Hunahpu and
Xbalanque (Maya) Hypnos/Somnus and Thanatos/Mors,
Letum (Gr****) - (Roman)
Lakshmana and
Shatrughna (Hindu) Lava and
Kusha (Hindu)...