Revealing the menacing history of these terrifying statues!

Greek mythology is full of terrible monsters. Although it is difficult to choose the worst or most terrible of the Greek monsters, Typhon and Echidna are strong contenders.

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Echidna is a hybrid creature in Greco-Roman mythology, a huge half-woman and half-snake. She was a terrible snake from the waist down, despite being a tall, charming and beautiful woman. In other words, Hesiod’s ‘impossible monster’, Echidna, is a magnificent creature and the mother of a pantheon of violent spirits who, among many other horrible spirits, personified dark powers.

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These forces were generated during the early days of the deadly war of the gods. Some of these animals survived the wars and continue to terrorize and harm people. Echidna was a descendant of the primordial gods Gaia and Tartarus (or Chrysaor and Callirhoe), and never aged. With her brother and husband Typhoon, she was the proud mother of many terrifying children.

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She represented the degradation, deterioration and disease of the earth. Cerberus (Kerberos), the two-headed hound Orthos, who guarded the flocks of Geryon and was killed by Heracles, the goat/lion/snake chimera, the Nemean lion, the sphinx, and the eagle that ate the liver of Prometheus were among they.

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Another amazing and terrifying son of his was the Griffon Vulture, a gigantic bird from Greco-Roman mythology, and most likely Ladon, the watchful many-headed dragon-like serpent that guarded the sacred garden, the Golden Apples of the Hesperides. According to Pindar (Pindar), an ancient Greek lyric poet of

Thebes, who lived between 518 and 438 BC. C., Echidna bit the light from her mother’s womb. She lived in a grotto near Scythia, and surfaced regularly, revealing only her human parts to seduce human men. It would instantly embrace and swallow its victims after capturing them in its serpentine coils.

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Echidna, according to another legend, was immortal. According to Hesiod (‘he who utters the voice’, an ancient Greek poet who prospered around 700 BC), Zeus left her on Earth after the defeat of the Titans so that she and her progeny could eventually fight against the heroes.

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Most myths and legends about Echidna focus on her famous and terrifying monstrous offspring.

As told in the Iliad, the king of Lycia ordered the hero Bellerophon to kill the Chimera. The truth is that the king wanted to kill Bellerophon instead of Chimera, but the hero, whom the gods miraculously protected, managed to kill Echidna’s monster child, Chimera, whom Bellerophon shot with an arrow.

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