When you die you go to Hades, which is the underworld/afterlife and not hell as some people believe. Dead bodies were buried with coins on their eyes to pay the ferryman Charon with, so that he would carry them across the River Styx to Hades. Cerberus the 3 headed dog guards the entrance to the underworld along with some other challenges for the living who try to enter. When the dead arrive they go to the plain of judgement, where the bad people are sent to the fields of punishment or Tartarus, the deep pit, to pay for their bad deeds, or given individual punishments if their crimes warrant it. The good go to the Elysian fields an equivalent of heaven, and everyone else goes to the Fields of Asphodel, which is basically limbo. Heros can choose to be reincarnated rather than go to Elysium, and if they live 3 good lives and earn Elysium all 3 times they can go to the Isle of Heros where the greatest Heros of mythology go.
You went to nothingness, unless you could afford to belong to a cult which promised an afterlife. Another way was to be a great hero, so that people talked about and remembered you, and you lived on in their memories.
Persephone, as Queen of the Underworld, was a deity of death, to draw her attention was to invite death as the Greeks thought it.
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The Ancient Greeks prayed to Hades because they believed that if he saw that they worshipped him, he would pay them great respect when they died and their souls traveled to the Underworld.
AnswerThe Ancient Greeks made plays, operas and modern films to worship their gods.They made plays, poetry, and sporting games. The Greeks invented the Olympics.
Greek mythology attemped to explain everything that the ancient Greeks couldn't understand. Remember that ancient Greeks didn't know the things we know today. Some examples are: Death Love Birth Good and evil Creation Sicknesses The stars Life ... And more
he dident accept it
In "The Pardoner's Tale" the old man's attitude toward death is said to be ironic. The irony is that he is cheerful toward the idea of death, which is the opposite of what one would expect.
The attitude that the old man has toward death is ironic for a couple of reasons. One of these ironies is that the man wishes he had more time in his life.
Attitude Toward Death, The Teaching of Tecumseh
Both poems suggest a form of life after death that should not be feared
The word "curious" best describes Emily Dickinson's attitude toward death. She often reflected on it in her poetry, exploring its mysteries and implications with an inquisitive and introspective approach.
the primary capital panishment was exile.
Persephone, as Queen of the Underworld, was a deity of death, to draw her attention was to invite death as the Greeks thought it.
Whitman sees death as a renewing the earth, while Dickinson views death as spiritual rebirth.
Whitman sees death as a return to earth, but Dickinson views death as leading to a spiritual afterlife.
Greeks were incredibly interested in fate. Greeks were interested in fate because they did not believe in life after death.
The fundamental attitude of Hayes and other republican administrators toward labor agitation was to send all of the laborers to the death camps.