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  2. Cupid – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/cupid

    Overview. Cupid (or Amor) was the Roman name for Eros, the god of love. He was the son of Venus, goddess of beauty and sexual desire, and was usually represented as a winged boy or even a baby wielding a bow and arrow. Because Cupid could make any person or god fall madly in love, he came to be seen as a powerful being.

  3. Yue Lao - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/yue-lao

    Yue Lao has historically been a very popular deity and young romantics still commonly pray to him today. He is considered to be something of a “Chinese cupid.”. After praying to Yue Lao, it is common for worshipers to wear a thin, red string around their wrist to signify their wish.

  4. Aengus – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/aengus

    Aengus may have been a form of Maponos, a Britano-Gaullish god of youth known in Wales as Mabon ap Modron. He also resembled the Greco-Roman Eros (more commonly known as Cupid) in both his youth and association with love. In both his poetry and ability to woo women, Aengus shared similarities with the Greek Apollo and Norse Odr. The name Aengus ...

  5. Mars - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/mars

    Venus, Mars, and Cupid (c. 1630) by Peter Paul Rubens. Family portraits of Mars, Venus, and Cupid were common in western art. The painting depicts a younger, leaner, and clean-shaven Mars, an incarnation frequently used for romantic portrayals. Dulwich Picture Gallery, London, UK. Google Arts and Culture Public Domain

  6. Echo – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/echo

    Fresco showing Echo and Narcissus, with a small winged Cupid at the bottom center, from Pompeii (ca. 60–79 CE) National Archaeological Museum, Naples / egisto sani CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 Family. Ancient sources did not say much about Echo’s parentage. She was usually represented as a nymph, suggesting that her parents were immortals.

  7. Apollo – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/apollo

    Cupid and Apollo with a Lyre by Paolo Farinati (ca. 1568). Metropolitan Museum of Art Public Domain. The punishment for challenging Apollo could also be much more severe. This was the case for the satyr Marsyas, who one day found the aulos, a kind of flute that had been made and discarded by Athena. He learned the instrument well and eventually ...

  8. Dione – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/dione

    Dione was a mysterious goddess of the Greek pantheon. Though she only plays a minor role in surviving sources on Greek mytholog y, there is evidence that she was originally far more important. She may have even been the first wife and queen of Zeus, the king of the gods. Dione herself was either a Titan —a daughter of Uranus (“Sky”) and ...

  9. Neptune – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/neptune

    Neptune was the Roman god of waters and seas, who controlled winds and storms. Also known as Neptunus Equester, he was recognized as a god of horses and horsemanship, as well as patron of horse racing, a popular form of entertainment for the ancient Romans. In terms of his characteristics and mythology, Neptune was an exact copy of the Greek ...

  10. Vulcan – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/vulcan

    The master of metallurgy and handicraft, Vulcan was the Roman god of fire and forge, as well as the patron of artisans and smiths. Known as the ugliest of the gods, Vulcan suffered from lameness in one leg due to an injury he sustained as a child. The patron of craftsmen was exceedingly crafty himself and used his guile to marry Venus, the ...

  11. Eos - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/eos

    Eos, daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia, was the goddess of the dawn. Each day, she rose from the Ocean and rode her chariot across the sky, dispersing the shadows of the night. This cleared the way for her brother Helios, the god of the sun, who followed her in his blinding chariot. When Eos and Helios had both completed their journeys ...