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-   -   Now Accepting Semi-Literate-ΔThessaly, Ninth Century B.C. (Open Slots in quest: 5 ) (https://www.menewsha.com/forum/showthread.php?t=159623)

Mayuka 04-26-2010 09:40 PM

Now Accepting Semi-Literate-ΔThessaly, Ninth Century B.C. (Open Slots in quest: 5 )
 
http://www.runninghead.com/images/il...ges/temple.jpg
...Over the oceans of a deep dark blue, across the fields of madness. There sat a girl with a golden harp, awaking a monster from hell...

In the eighth Century B.C. Jason and the Argonauts went on a quest and obtained the golden fleece from a winged ram whose fleece was of gold. The ram had been sired by Poseidon in his primitive ram-form upon a nymph, Theophane, the granddaughter of Helios, the sun-Titan. One century later, long after Jason had left this world, a dark thief stole the Golden fleece. Soon many other valuable items began to disappear. Many brave hero's tried to find this thief and kill him but they either came back not even getting a glimpse of the master mind, or dying in the dark lord's many traps.
It is said that the dark thief reigns in an invisible castle on a floating group of islands, high in the heavens. The one to kill the villain would be a hero and have the love of all the people of the world...But then....One could also keep the stolen goods and use their magical powers to obtain emense wealth and riches and live like a king for eternity. Some say that one of the items stolen gives the holder the ability to live forever...
Poseidon only asks that the golden fleece is returned to the old Oak tree that Jason had taken it from. He helps those who have taken this quest when they are in dire need of it but the god of the sea can only do so much....





About the RPG:

°This land has mythological creatures like 6-headed serpents, Pegasus and unicorns, giant bats, and dragons.
You may choose to be a human, half-god, or Nymph. (NOTE: Nymph's and half-god's don't' have very much magical powers. Just so that they can be compared to humans in this rpg)




Rules:

1. I will play all the god's and major people/things that you come a cross during the quest. And also to keep everyone going in the right direction, and going to certain places, I will play one character to act as a guide for you all.
You may only have one character unless you kill yours. Or if only a couple people decide to join I will let you have multiple characters if you wish.
There are 5 slots total open in the Quest-group, and in the title of the rpg I will post how many are left currently.

2. Don't be too modern with your characters and how they use magic or anything like that because this is based on an ancient Mythological Greek story dating back to the eighth century.

3. I don't like when people power play so I may ask you to revise your posts if I think you went over-board.

4. I also don't like short posts! Don't do it! The only time I don't' mind is if the story gets stuck after awhile (To which I will make things change/happen) or if I know that you can easily post a paragraph or more (and normally do so) but you just can't seem to think of anything to write. (It happens to the best of us!)

5. Please stay active, checking this at least every two days (I understand if it comes time for finals at school or if its the weekend in RL cause I can't always get on Menewsha as much then either). If for some reason you aren't on for awhile, don't start posting like your character has always been there. make up a good reason for why they haven't been talking, fighting, moving, or even there.

6. Of course follow Menewsha's rpg rules.

7. And one of the most important (because it is a pet-peeve of mine!) DO NOT post back and forth a ton between 2 or 3 people if your all on at the the same time! You must give the others 2 days to be able to post too. its ok doing this for a couple posts but you should know when to stop.


Characters:

~Like I posted above, the races you may be are as follows:

° Human

° Half-god (Variations: Half-god/half-human, or, half-Nymph/half-human<-- So you have to be at least half human)

° Nymph
•Oceanids: Greek mythology water nymphs..In Greek and Roman mythology, the Oceanids were the three thousand children of Oceanus and Tethys. Each of the nymphs was the patron of a particular spring, river, lake or pond.

•Napaeae: Nymphs in greek mythology of mountain meadows and glens.. In Greek mythology, the Napaeae (íÜðç, "a wooded dell") were a type of shy but mirthful nymph.

•Oreads: Nymphs of mountains and grottoes..In Greek mythology, Oreads (ὄñïò, "mountain") were a type of nymph that lived in mountains and grottoes. They were associated with Aphrodite.

•Meliae nymphs..In Greek mythology, the Meliae were nymphs of the manna-ash tree. They appeared from the drops of blood spilled when Cronus castrated Uranus.

Cannot Play- but will show up in the rpg:
Dryads are land nymphs associated with forests..Dryads (or "tree spirits") are nymphs associated with Greek mythology and Hinduism, which live near, or in, trees.

Hamadryads are Greek mythological beings that live in trees..Hamadryads are a specific species of dryad, which are a particular type of land nymph associated with trees.

(And of course the animals of the land





If you find my secret text pm me with the


location and what it says and your



character will get a permenent gift!



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Characters

Post your Characters request form's Here:http://www.menewsha.com/forum/commun...post1767137681

Request Form:

-Character-

Name:

Race:

Gender:

Age:

Appearance:

Personality:

Bio:


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The gods, goddess, and Some creatures' Reference:

I'm putting this here so that when they come around in the rpg you may know who they are. Or if your related to one.

Achelous (River god)
Son of Oceanus and Tethys
Serpentlike body and horned head; one of his horns fashioned into the Horn of Plenty

Aether (God of clear skies)
Son of Erebus and Nox

Amphitrite (Sea goddess)
Daughter of Oceanus and Tethys or of Nereus and Doris; wife of Poseidon; mother of Triton

Aphrodite (Goddess of love and sex)
Daughter of Uranus; wife of Hephaestus; sometimes the daughter of Zeus and Dione
Rose from the foam created when the genitals of Uranus were thrown into the sea after his castration by Cronus; similar to the Phoenician Astarte and the Babylonian Ishtar

Apollo (God of light, the sun, archery, agriculture, poetry, medicine, and several other things)
Son of Zeus and Leto; twin brother of Artemis
Founder of cities; giver of laws

Ares (God of war)
Son of Zeus and Hera; twin brother od Eris
Father of the Amazons; one of the twelve great gods

Aristaeus (Protector of flocks)
Son of Apollo and Cyrene
Originated the culture of the olives

Artemis (Goddess of the moon; goddess of the hunt; assists in childbirth; protects the young of animals and humans)
Daughter of Zeus and Leto; twin sister of Apollo
A virgin

Astraea (Goddess of justice)
Daughter of Zeus and Themis

Ate (Goddess of discord and mischief)
Daughter of Zeus; sister of Litai

Athena (Goddess of war; goddess of wisdom; goddess of industry; goddess of the arts; goddess of justice; goddess of skill)
Daughter of Zeus and Metis
Invented chariots and ships

Atlas
(Sentenced to holding up the sky forever for rebelling against Uranus)
Son of Iapetus and Clymene; brother of Menoetius, Prometheus, and Epimetheus
A Titan

Boreas (King of the Winds)
Son of Astraeus and Eos

Calliope
(Muse of eloquence and poetry)
Daughter of Zeus and Mnemosyne; mother of Orpheus

Castor and Polydeuces (Protectors of sailors, appearing as twin lights of St. Elmo's Fire during storms)
Twin sons of Zeus and Leda
Hatched from an egg; Castor mortal; Polydeuces immortal

Chaos
Uranus and Gaea arose from Chaos and gave birth to the Titans
A gaping void which was the first Creation and from which the world of gods and men developed

Charon (Ferryman to conduct the dead across the River Acheron)
Son of Erebus and Nyx

Chloris (Goddess of places shaded by trees, shrubs, and vines)
Wife of Zephyrus

Clio (Muse of history)
Daughter of Zeus and Mnemosyne

Comus (God of revelry, drunkenness, and mirth; in charge of entertaining the gods; presided over festive occasions)
Son of Bacchus and Circe
Winged and clad in white

Cronus
(God of fate; god of agriculture; king of Titans for a time)
Son of Uranus and Gaea (Mother Earth); youngest of twelve Titans
Deposed by Zeus

Cyclopes (Assistants to Hephaestus in Mount Etna)
Sons of Uranus and Gaea
Manufactured thunderbolts for Zeus, the trident for Poseidon, the helmet of invisibility for hades; built many massive and ancient structures

Daphne (Priestess for Mother Earth)
Daughter of the River Peneius
Mountain nymph; unable of loving anyone after being shot by a lead arrow from Cupid

Demeter (Goddess of nature, ruling the fruitfulness of the earth)
Daughter of Cronus and Rhea
Created winter when her daughter Persephone was abducted by Hades

Derceto (Goddess of fertility)
Had the tail of a fish

Dike (Goddess of justice)
Daughter of Temis the Titan

Dionysius
(God of fertility; god of wine; god of vegetation)
Son of Zeus and Semele

Electra (Goddess of the rainbow)
Daughter of Oceanus and Thaumas; mother of Iris

Eos (Goddess of the dawn)
Daughter of Hyperion and Theia; sister of Helios and Selene
Mother of the four winds

Eris (Goddess of strife and discord)
Daughter of Zeus and hera; twin sister of Ares
Companion of Ares

Eros (God of love and sexual prowess; god of power)
Son of Aphrodite and Zeus or Ares or Hermes
Various accounts of his birth

Gaea (Ge) (Mother-Earth; goddess of the earth; goddess of marriage; goddess of death; goddess of the after-life)
Sprang from Chaos; bore Uranus while she slept; mother of Titans,Cyclopes, Furies, giants, and tree nymphs

Glaucus (Sea god)
Could utter prophecies

Graces (Bestowed talent upon mortals)
Daughters of Zeus
Loved all things beautiful; Aglaia the Brilliant, Euphrosyne the Joyful, Thalia the Flowering

Hades (Lord of the underworld)
Son of Cronus and Rhea; brother of Zeus; husband of Persephone
Carried a staff with which he beckoned the dying to the lower world

Harpies (Goddesses of storms)
Aello the Stormswift, Celaeno the Dark; Ocepete the Swiftwing, and Podarge the Swiftfooted

Hecate (Goddess of abundance and eloquence; goddess of the night)
Daughter of Perses
A Titan

Helios (God of the sun; Reporrter of the activities of Earth to the other gods)
Son of Hyperion and Theia; brother of Selene and Eos
Drove a four-horse chariot daily across the sky, and at night ferried eastward by Oceanus

Hephaestus (God of fire; god of volcanoes)
Son of Zeus and Hera; husband of Aphrodite
Artist in metal-making; made thunderbolts for Zeus; lame

Hera (Goddess of marriage; goddess of childbirth)
Daughter of Cronus and Rhea; sister and wife of Zeus
Shrewish and jealous against the mortal children of Zeus

Hermes (Son of Zeus and Maia)
God of travel and protector of travelers, merchants and thieves; god of hunting; god of exploring; god of embassies; messenger of the gods
Hid Apollo's cattle; invented the lyre; carried a caduceus; wore winged sandals and hat

Hesperides (With their watch-dragon, guarded the golden apples that Gaea gave to her a as a wedding gift)
Daughters of Hesperus

Hippolyte (Queen of the Amazons)
Daughter of Ares

Horae (Gatekeepers of heaven)
Music lovers and choreographers; Dike, Eirene, Eumonia

Hyades (Nurses to the young god Dionysus)
Daughters of Atlas and Aethra

Hymenaeus (God of marriage)
Son of Dionysus and Aphrodite

Hyperion
Son of Uranus and Gaea, brother-husband of Theia; father of Eos, Helios, and Selene
Very handsome; a Titan

Hypnos (God of sleep)

Iris (Goddess of the rainbow; messenger of the gods; advisor and guide to mortals)
Daughter of Thaumos and Electra; sister of the Harpies

Leto
Daughter of Coeus and Phoebe; mother of Apollo and Artemis
A Titan

Maia
Daughter of Atlas and Pleione; wife of Zeus; mother of Herakles

Melpomene (Muse of tragedy)
Daughter of Zeus and Mnemosyne

Mnemosyne (Goddess of memory)
Daughter of Uranus; wife of Zeus; mother of the nine Muses

Mneme (Muse of memory)
Sister of Aoida and Melete
One of the three original Muses

Monos (God of pain; god of sarcasm)

Morpheus (God of dreams)
Son of Hypnos

Nemesis (Virgin goddess of law, retribution, and punishment)

Nereus (God of the Mediterranean Sea)
Son of Pontus and Gaea; husband of Doris; father of the Nereids
Could foretell the future; prone to changing shape

Nyx (Goddess of night; goddess of darkness)
Daughter of Chaos

Oceanus (Lord of the water encircling the whole world, eventually only the Atlantic Ocean)
Son of Uranus and Gaea; husband of Tethys
Father of all rivers

Orchus (God of oaths; punishers of perjurers)
Confused with Pluto

Pan (God of shepherds and flocks; god of fertility; god of nature)
Son of Hermes or Hybris and Hybris, or of Callistro or Aether and Oenoe, or of Cronus and Ge
Lower part of the body that of a goat, upper part that of a man; goat horns on his head; invented the flute

Pegasus (Ridden to war by Bellerohon)
Created from sea foam by Poseidon
Winged horse; created springs by striking the earth with his hooves; liked to chase thunderbolts hurled by Zeus; eventually changed to a constellation

Persephone (Goddess of the underworld)
Daughter of Zeus and Demeter; wife of Hades
Allowed to spend spring and summer with her mother and fall and winter with her husband

Plutus (God of wealth)
Son of Iasion and Demeter
Blinded by Zeus

Poseidon (God of the sea and shore, ruling from an undersea palace; god of the islands; god of earthquakes)
Son of Cronus and Rhea; husband of Amphitrite and Halia
Brought up by the Telchines aand Cephira, daughter of Oceanus; can make the earth shake with his trident

Prometheus (Light-bearer)
Son of Iapetus and Clymene
Stole fire from Mount Olympus and gave it to mortals

Rhadamantus (God of justice)
Son of Zeus and Europa
Laid the foundation of the Cretan Code of law; later a judge in the Islands of the Blessed

Rhea (Great Mother goddess in almost all ancient religions)
Daughter of Uranus and Gaea
Gave her son Zeus to her mother to avoid his father from swallowing him as with his other children; Zeus taken to Crete and brought up by three nymphs; Cronus given a stone wrapped in swaddling clothes (which he swallowed) by Rhea, saying it was Zeus; all children and the stone later regurgitated

Selene (Goddess of the moon)
Daughter of Hyperion and Theia; sister of Helios and Eos

Styx (Goddess of oaths)
Daughter of Oceanus and Tethys; wife of Pallas
Lived in a grotto at the entrance of Hades

Thalia (Muse of comedy and pastoral poetry)

Themis (Goddess of law and order)
Daughter of Uranus and Gaea; consort of Zeus; mother of the Horae and the Moirae. A prophetess.

Titans (See specific names)
12 children of Heaven (Uranus) and Earth (Ge or Gaea); males (Coeus, Creus, Cronus, Hyperion, Iapetus, Oceanus); females (Mnemosyne, Phoebe, Rhea, Tethys, Theia, Themis)
Banishment of two other groups of their children (Cyclopes and Hecatoncheires) to Tartarus the start of the Titan War; the other Titans urged by Gaea to attack; Uranus defeated and replaced by Uranus, who canceled the banishment; Cronus attacked and defeated by Zeus and the other Olympians

Triton (God of the sea)
Son of Poseidon and Amphitrite
Had green hair and eyes; had a human torso and the tail of a dolphin; Controlled the action of the waves by blowing a conch horn

Urania (Muse of astronomy)
Daughter of Zeus and Mnemosyne

Uranus (First father of the gods)
Son of his mother-wife, Gaea; father of the Titans, the Cyclopes, the Olympians, and others

Zagreus (God of rebirth; god of immortality)
Son of Zeus and Persephone

Zephyrus (God of the west wind)
Son of Astraeus and Eos; brother of Chloris, Iris, and Podarge; father of Balius, Carpus, and Xanthus

Zeus (God of the heavens and the upper regions of the earth; master of destiny; god of weather; protector of guests; guardian of law; upholder of morality)
Son of Cronus and Rhea; brother of Hestia, Demeter, Hades, Poseidon, and Hera; husband of Metis, Themis, Eurynome, Maia, Hera, Mnemosyne, Demeter, and Letu; father of gods and mortals
Indo-European origin; had 115 mistresses and 140 children; armed with thunder and lightning


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