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  2. Talos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talos

    In Greek mythology, Talos, also spelled Talus (/ ˈ t eɪ l ɒ s /; [1] Greek: Τάλως, Tálōs) or Talon (/ ˈ t eɪ l ɒ n, ən /; Greek: Τάλων, Tálōn), was a man of bronze who protected Crete from pirates and invaders. Despite the popular idea that he was a giant, no ancient source states this explicitly.

  3. Talos (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talos_(mythology)

    This Talos is considered by some scholars to be the same as the Talos who guarded Crete. [3] [4] Talos, son of Daedalus' sister Perdix. Daedalus seeing that his disciple Talos was more gifted than himself, killed him. [7] Talos, a soldier in the army of Turnus, the man who opposed Aeneas in Italy. He was killed by Aeneas. [8]

  4. Cretan Chronicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cretan_Chronicles

    Cretan Chronicles is a trilogy of single-player role-playing fantasy gamebooks written by John Butterfield, David Honigmann and Philip Parker, and illustrated by Dan Woods. . The Cretan Chronicles were published by Puffin between 1985 and 1986 under the Adventure Gamebooks banner, which also covered the more popular Fighting Fantasy and the related Sorcery! series, as well as the one-off ...

  5. Daedalus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daedalus

    Daedalus had two sons: Icarus [12] and Iapyx, [13] along with a nephew named either Talos, Calos, or Perdix. [14] The Athenians rewrote the Cretan-born Daedalus as an Athenian himself, the grandson of the ancient king Erechtheus [15] who only fled to Crete after killing his nephew. [16]

  6. Rhadamanthus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhadamanthus

    The Suda, a Byzantine encyclopedia from the tenth-century CE, adds to this that Talos and Rhadamanthus introduced homosexuality to Crete. [ 6 ] Other sources (e.g. Plutarch , Theseus 20) credit Rhadamanthys rather than Dionysus as the husband of Ariadne , and the father of Oenopion , Staphylus and Thoas .

  7. Ichor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichor

    In Ancient Crete, tradition told of Talos, a giant man of bronze.When Cretan mythology was appropriated by the Greeks, they imagined him more like the Colossus of Rhodes.He possessed a single vein running with ichor that was stoppered by a nail in his back.

  8. Argonauts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argonauts

    Pulling the plug on Talos as Medea stands by with her magic box (Attic red-figure column-krater, 450-400 BC) Putting to sea from there, they were hindered from touching at Crete by Talos. Some say that he was a man of the Brazen Race, others that he was given to Minos by Hephaestus; he was a brazen man, but some say that he was a bull.

  9. History of Crete - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Crete

    The Bull-Leaping Fresco from Knossos showing bull-leaping, c. 1450 BC; probably, the dark skinned figure is a man and the two light skinned figures are women. The history of Crete goes back to the 7th millennium BC, preceding the ancient Minoan civilization by more than four millennia.