he or she is a god so they can
to pull out the sun in his golden chariot
Yes. His twin sister, Artemis, is the Greek goddess of the moon. The Roman version of Artemis is Selena.
Apollo drives the sun chariot across the sky every day.
Apollo's weapon was the silver bow and arrow, he also had the sun chariot
Harness his chariot of four horses and drive the sun across the sky. Ancient Greeks believed the sun was one of the wheels of Apollo's chariot.
to pull out the sun in his golden chariot
Apollo was the sun god. He drove around in a flying chariot called the sun chariot. The sun chariot was a form of transportation able to transform into anything he desired.
The sun chariot
Apollo. He rode his chariot of the sun.
Yes. His twin sister, Artemis, is the Greek goddess of the moon. The Roman version of Artemis is Selena.
Apollo drives the sun chariot across the sky every day.
It was Apollo who ode the golden chariot across the sky every morning to usher in the new day!
Harness his chariot of four horses and drive the sun across the sky. Ancient Greeks believed the sun was one of the wheels of Apollo's chariot.
Apollo's weapon was the silver bow and arrow, he also had the sun chariot
No. The Greeks had two sun gods, Apollo, who drew his power from the sun, and Helios, who drove the sun chariot. The Romans downsized to Apollo only.
The chariot of Apollo
The god Apollo was the god of the sun. He traveled in his chariot that pulled the sun across the sky each day.