Posted: Fri Mar 25, 2005 11:34 pm
I wish...Reilune wrote:Ha, hahaha.... "The trouble with fairy tales is, there's always some truth in 'em."Darkmoon wrote:Other such magical creatures =not real...superstition and fairly tales
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I wish...Reilune wrote:Ha, hahaha.... "The trouble with fairy tales is, there's always some truth in 'em."Darkmoon wrote:Other such magical creatures =not real...superstition and fairly tales
I'll be ready for it!!Reilune wrote:"I thought you were going back to Europa not Europe." If anyone can figure out where that's from I'll let Figarou bonk me on the noggin with a duckie.![]()
Vilkacis wrote: Dragons - I think so, or at least they did. There're just too many accounts of separate cultures coming up with the same story. But I have doubts as to whether they could fly or had wings. Chances are they didn't breathe fire either. I imagine that the stories have become highly exaggerated over time.
Chimera - Nope.
You're also forgetting those people who have had the misfortune to stand in line at the DMV for over 10 hours.Vilkacis wrote:
Zombies - Not of the undead, brain-feasting, constantly decaying type. That's just silly. Even Frankenstein was really pushing things. I think the closest thing we have to zombies are people who die and are resucitated. After a certain amount of time, the flesh just deteriorates too much for it to be possible.
-- Vilkacis
As you mentioned, the East Asians had stories about dragons. The Chinese held dragons in great respect and associated them with prosperity and rivers. The Vietnamese have tales and legends of winged, fire-spitting dragons (and that they are descendents of the Dragon King). The Japanese and Korean dragons were very similar to the Chinese dragon (apparently, the number of toes is significant). India has legends of dragons associated with water and weather. Indonesian dragons are associated with earth more than water.Shadowblaze wrote:And as for cultures... as I recall, the east asians had dragons.. who else did?
Ugh! I'd be ready to tear someone's arms off and eat their brains too, if I had to wait that long.Apokryltaros wrote:You're also forgetting those people who have had the misfortune to stand in line at the DMV for over 10 hours.
That would be the monster Cetus, whose corpse became the constellation "Cetus," also.Vilkacis wrote: Dragons were feared around the time of Columbus; it was common belief that there were dragons in the ocean. There's a story (I haven't read it) of Perseus and the Dragon of Poseidon.
-- Vilkacis
I couldn't say, really. I'll do some research later when I have time... But I do think there were some from Africa as well.Shadowblaze wrote:I hope you know that the dragon myth probably oriningted around east asia, went into inddia, indonesia, and the surriouning areas... and was probably carried to europe with traders. besides, it orgiginated in east asia, right? ARe there any caes of american( N and S) dragon myths?
Pixies well...I'm just going by what it says in my books, if I'm wrong don't blame me. Alot of people will say that pixies are a kind of faerie but according to this they aren't. Faeries and pixies were never my speciality. Can't say I know any either. (well there was that one but I've never seen the guy since)Apokryltaros wrote:Also, where does it say that pixies do not have wings?
Furthermore, aren't pixies a kind of fae?
Eh...I can't keep everyone straight. My memory is awful so...yeah. I have a heck of a time keeping track of the ones I can actually remember the names of.Apokryltaros wrote:Quetzalcoatl is not from South America, he's from Mexico. Quetzalcoatl was the legendary priest-king of the Toltecs who was later deified by the Aztecs, and the feathered serpent was Quetzalcoatl's totem-beast, actually, a combination of the quetzal trogon, and of the serpent, combining the best of land, water, and air.
The Rainbow Serpent did more than just bring rain for the Australian Aborigines, he is credited with creating the World.
As for the fire-breathing cobra protector, I think you're thinking of the Egyptian cobra goddess Buto, patron of Lower Egypt. She and the vulture goddess Nekhbet made the uraeus of the Pharoah, and protected him, as he was the sovereign of Egypt.