Not sure if this is what you are looking for or not but . . . a discus which caused Hyacinth's death, which was thrown by Apollo himself. From Hayacinthos' blood sprang the Hyacinth flower which bears his name.
Apollo is not named after any flowers in myth.
Hyacinth
narcissus
Hyacinthus, who was loved by both Apollo and Zephyros; when Apollo threw the disk, it was Zephyros who caused it to kill the boy. Apollo then transformed the dying youth into a larkspur flower (hyakinthos in Greek) which he inscribed with the wail of mourning "AI, AI."
it is a flower and it is a beautiful name for a girl NOT for a boy
it depends. If it is a girl you should name is Athena and if its a boy you should name it Apollo!
Merlin Archimedes Galileo Jesus God Allah Lancelot Zeus Stephen Poseidon Apollo (But not if his middle or last name is Creed, then that just means he gets killed by a Russian)
For a boy: Hercules. For a girl: Loulouthie (Flower).
A boy.
No, Apollo and Artemis are the children of Zeus and Leto.
rajiv kela
His name was Eric Smith. The boy he beat, killed and sodomized was only four years old...and he claims it was because he was bullied. The four year olds name was Derrick Robie.
Its a boy and I'm proud
There are many legends about Apollo. But one of my favourites is the story of Hyacinthus. Hyacinthus was a golden boy who was loved by two gods. Apollo and Zephyrus, the god of the west wind. The two were constantly jealous if Hyacinthus spent time with the other. One day Hyacinthus was playing discus with Apollo, and Zephyrus grew jealous. So, when Apollo threw the discus, Zephyrus sent a great gust of wind that blew the discus off course. Back in those days, the disucs' were made of bronze and were very sharp. The discus went hurtling towards Hyacinthus and buried itself in his chest. Apollo ran to him and wept, but no matter how hard he tried, he could not bring him back to life. Apollo transformed Hyacinthus into a flower, that blooms in early spring, and dies in summer, as if killed by the sun and then blooms in spring once again. And that's how the Hyacinth flower came to be.
Shravan Kumar