Only the Cretan Minotaur had.
The Minotaur.
The minotaur, a legendary creature with a man's body and bull's head that prowled a Greek labryinth, probably had a dark brownish head.
I think you mean, "Minotaur"... this was a Greek mythological creature that had the head of a bull on the body and torso of a man.
I think you mean the Minotaur, but it was the other way around (bull's head on a man's body).
Demon comes from the Greek "Daimon" meaning spirit.
The dusky demon or bull-dogger
1.They are from the greek myths2.They are in the greek myth "Theseus and the Minotaur"3.They have a head of a bull and the body of a man4.They dwelt at the center of the Cretan Labyrinth
Ken-Tauros means slay[er] [of] bull[s] in Ancient Greek. The sagittary or archer centaur was a formidable hunter and warrior. The etymology is disputed, however. Kenos means 'empty' as used in English for cenotaph. If you wish to think of the centaur as empty bull, I can't stop you. The Sicilian Greek, Empedocles, apparently wrote of the possibility of the bull-bodied man-faced counterpart of the minotaur. He may have known of the Lamassu bull-sphinx - a Babylonian protective demon.
The Cretan bull was a bull in Greek mythology. It was said to have either fathered the Minotaur, or was the bull that carried Europa away.
"General of the Feet" because he commanded foot soldiers
Ταύρος [tAvros] Actually, the Greek word for bull is Taurus, that's where you get Minotaur -- litterly 'bull of Minos'
Daimon/Daemon