Adrianne's wire.
Using a ball of string to follow after he killed the minitaor
Ariadne gave a string to Theseus to guide his way into the labyrinth
The idea came from Daedalus, but it was Ariadne, one of the daughters of Minos, that gave the string to Theseus and instructed him on its use.
No, that was Ariadne (air-ee-add-knee).
Theseus used a ball of thread/string to find his way out. This was given to him by the princess Ariadne.
In Greek mythology, the person who used the navigation string (Ariadne's thread) to find his way out of the labyrinth after defeating the Minotaur was Theseus.
A string that led through the Labyrinth.
Using a ball of string to follow after he killed the minitaor
Her name was Ariadne.
He tied a ball of string to the door, and unrolled it as he wen on.
Ariadne gave a string to Theseus to guide his way into the labyrinth
The problem is that Percy and his friends have to stop Luke and his warriors from taking Adriane's string that will lead through the labyrinth .
A ball of string. You tied it at the start of the labyrinth and unrolled along your path so you could always find your way back. Clever, right?
So he would find his way in the labyrinth of the Minotaur.
Why yes, there was a 'maze' in Greek mythology legends. It was called the 'Labyrinth'.The Labyrinth was made by Daedalus, an expert designer, with his talented son Icarus.Daedalus was ordered to create the labyrinth by King Minos of Crete. Minos needed somewhere to keep the monster called the Minotaur.Often, King Minor would send law breakers into the labyrinth as a punishment, knowing the minotaur would completely destroy them!Eventually, Thesues managed to kill minotaur, with the useful navigation technique of using a piece of string.
Ariadne, goddess of weaving, led a string through the labyrinth that Theseus followed back out.
By using a string that you tie at the beginning of the labyrinth.