They are not fat nor thin, they are not pretty but nor are they ugly. They are not short or tall either.
One of them is and old lady, the other one a young woman, and the third fate is supposed to be a child.
Hope this helps :)
The three fates of Greek Mythology were referred as Moirai, Parcae, and Sudice.
Depending on the era, there are varying origins for the Moirae, or Fates, in Greek mythology. The earliest origins seem to point to them as the offspring of Nyx (like most of the other personified concepts), or possibly of Chaos or Ananke (Necessity).After the Myceneans pushed Zeus down everyone's throat, it seemed that the Fates became the offspring of Zeus and Themis (Titan of Justice). However, the concept of the Moirae is one of the oldest in Greek mythology.
The three fates are three Gods that decide the fate of everyone. The Gods are disguised as old woman that carry around string in a basket. Every string in the basket is really someone's life. Then, whenever they feel like it, they will cut the string after a long period of time and the person that the string represented would die.
no... they are more like folk tales... Greek Mythology has nothing to do with religion.
Cerberus. be careful when you say hell. what you actually mean is the underworld there was no heaven or hell in greek mythology only mount olympus and the underworld... the underworld was then split into sections that resemble heaven, hell and purgatory.
In Greek mythology Poseidon was the god of the sea.
Norse mythology and Greco-Roman mythology are not equivalent; they did not share concepts like Greeks and Romans did. However, the Norns bear a strong resemblance to the Fates in Greek mythology.The Fates were a trio of goddesses (Clotho, Lachesis and Atropo) who spun a thread for each human life and cut it based on how long they destined that human to live. One sister (Clotho) spun the thread; another measured it (Lachesis) and the third cut it (Atropo).The Norns are a group of gods and goddesses of which three are considered particulary important (Urdr, Verdandi and Skuld) because they tend to the tree that upholds the nine worlds of Norse mythology, Yggdrasil. Other norns are responsible for prophesying the destiny of each individual. The Norse believed in a concept they called wyrd which is essentially similar to the Christian concept of free will, so while the Fates determined the length of a person's life, the Norns likely only prophesied a range of possibilities for a person's future.
They were also called the moirae. See link below! The three Fates or Moerae (the name "Moira" means fate) decided all human destiny. When a child was born, its life was determined by a thread. Clotho, the spinner, spun out the thread of life on her spindle. Lachesis, the apportioner, measured each thread and Atropos, "The inevitable," cut it off with her scissors. Like the related deity Nemesis, the Fates were sometimes believed to be the daughters of Night; they were not part of te Pantheon (the "family" of Greek gods) but were more powerful than any god. Even Zeus, the chief of the Immortals, had to obey the Fates. In early myths the Fates were seen as just fulfilling a duty; however, in later stories and paintings they are often portrayed as malevolent, even taking a pleasure in ruining or cutting short human lives. This probably reflects a growing belief that humans can and should control their own destiny
its the symbol of the Greek God Poseidon the god of the sea (and some say the god of horses too) A trident is like a pitchfork with three points.
Cerberus? Cerberus is a three headed "dog" that guards the gates of the Underworld in Greek mythology. In the words of wikipedia.org;In Greek and Roman mythology, is a multi-headed hound (usually three-headed) which guards the gates of theUnderworld, to prevent those who have crossed the river Styx from ever escaping.
The Greek God of wrestling is the half-god Hercules (Roman Mythology) or Herakles (Greek Mythology). Hercules like to wrestle his guests to exhaustion and then kill them.
Try reading some of the epics, like Homer's Odyssey and the Iliad. Another good book on Greek mythology is Edith Hamilton's Mythology. See 'related links' for a good website on mythology.
Well in greek mythology when you die an you are on the underworld and they pick a punishment like rolling a boulder up a hill or worse.