The external conflict between the cattle of the sun god and Odysseus' men is that they were strictly warned not to even touch one of them. They belonged to Helios, the sun god, and he loved them very much. They all promised not to touch any of the cattle, however, provisions ran short and hunger swept over all of them and they began to starve. While Odysseus was on the other side of the island, sleeping, his men slaughtered a cow, made their offerings, and feasted. This enraged Helios and so he requested to zeus that they be punished. Zeus accepted the request and sunk their ship, which killed everyone except Odysseus. He then swims to Calypso's island and there, another story begins.
In "The Cattle of the Sun God" in Homer's "The Odyssey," the external conflict arises when Odysseus and his men land on the island of Thrinacia, home to Helios, the sun god, and they are warned not to harm his sacred cattle. Despite the warning, Odysseus's men slaughter the cattle for food, resulting in Helios demanding Zeus to punish them. As a resolution, Zeus sends a thunderbolt to destroy Odysseus's ship, killing his crew and leaving Odysseus alone to continue his journey home.
The external conflict in the story Cattle of the Sun God is desire. The resolution to the story is that everyone, except for Odysseus, eats the cattle and they all die.
The external conflict in "The Odyssey" involving Calypso, Lotus Eaters, Cyclops, Circe, Sirens, Scylla and Charybdis, and the cattle of the sun god primarily revolves around Odysseus trying to return home while facing various obstacles and temptations. The resolution comes when Odysseus completes his journey, triumphing over these challenges with the help of his intelligence, courage, and the support of the gods, ultimately reuniting with his family in Ithaca.
it was Verminus, god of cattle worms
The Cattle of the Sun God was a story from the Odyssey where Odysseus's men get in trouble because the eat the Cattle that happen to be sacred to Helios, the Ancient Greek God of the sun.
sacred cattle of the Greek sun god ~Helios
The sun god in Greek mythology, Helios, had sacred cattle. If someone killed and ate the meat of the cattle, they would be cursed.
The sun god's cattle.
Pushan
To not kill any cattle
Helios
I guess you mean what is the cattle of the sun IN the Odyssey. It was the cattle of the sun god. It was cattle sacred to Helios, the sun god. Odysseus's' sailors hinted down this cattle while they were stranded on an island. Helios demanded that Zeus punish the men for the sacrilege. They were shipwrecked. Everyone died except for Odysseus,
the sun god Apollo
The cattle of Helios do not breed. The cattle are immortal, handsome, wide-browed, and curved-horned. They are directly owned by the god Helios.