Achilles was supposed to be invulnerable.
The greatest Greek hero in the Trojan War. He was the son of Peleus and Thetis.son of peleus and thetis, the latter of whom dipped him in the styx by his ankle therefore making all of him bar his Achilles tendon invulnerable
Initially, Hercules was required to complete ten labors, not twelve. King Eurystheus decided Hercules' first task would be to bring him the skin of an invulnerable lion which terrorized the hills around Nemea.
There is no Greek hero that is covered in invisible amour except for his heel. You are thinking of Achilles, who was dipped in the river Styx when he was a baby. That made him invulnerable except for his heel, where is mom held him by when she dipped him into the river. He played a huge part in the Trojan War, until Apollo guided Paris' arrow and it landed right in Achilles' heel.
No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.No, Diomedes was a Greek hero associated with the Trojan war.
Oedipus is a Greek hero.
The greek hero, Odysseus.
hero is from the Greek, in Greek mythology he was a demigod, Hero is male and Heroine is female
Zeus was not a Greek Hero, but was the King of the Greek Gods. He father was the Titan, Cronus.
No
hero
Achilles' heel originates from Greek mythology, specifically from the tale of Achilles, a hero of the Trojan War. According to legend, Achilles' mother, Thetis, dipped him in the River Styx to make him invulnerable, but she held him by his heel, leaving that part of his body vulnerable. This became a metaphor for a critical weakness in someone who is otherwise strong or invulnerable. The term is now commonly used to refer to a person's singular vulnerability or weakness.
The tendon that is named after a Greek hero is the Achilles tendon.