No one believes whatever Cassandra predicted. Basically, she sees these horrible images of what was going to happen to Troy and people she know, but everyone just thinks she is crazy. Some of Cassandra's predictions were that Paris will bring the destruction of Troy, Priam bringing Hector's body back from Achilles, the Trojan Horse, and Agamemnon's violent death.
Apollo
Cassandra was not a goddess. she was the most beautiful duaghter of the king and queen of troy. Apollo fell in love with her and gave her the gift to see the future. when she denied his love, he turned in into a curse so that she could still see the future, but none would believe her. she predicted the Trojan horse ploy, but none believed her.
According to Greek myth, Cassandra was a mortal. She was the daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy. The god Apollo fell in love with her and granted her the gift of prophecy. When she did not return his love, since he could not take back the gift, he placed a curse on her so that no one would ever believe her prophecies. In some versions, this drove her mad.
Cassandra was the god Apollo's love. Apollo gave her the gift of prophecy to prove his love. But when she rejected him, Apollo cursed her so that no one would believe what she said. She foretold the fall of Troy and warned about the dangers of the Trojan Horse. But nobody believed her. Later she warned Agamemnon that his wife Clytemnestra was going to kill him. But once again nobody believed her. Clytemnestra killed her husband and Cassandra.
The Trojan Horse
Apollo
Cassandra's GIFT not her WEAKNESS was her curse- she was able to tell the future, however, no one would believe what she said.
Cassandra was not a goddess. she was the most beautiful duaghter of the king and queen of troy. Apollo fell in love with her and gave her the gift to see the future. when she denied his love, he turned in into a curse so that she could still see the future, but none would believe her. she predicted the Trojan horse ploy, but none believed her.
Because Apollo loved Cassandra, he gave her the gift of prophecy. When she refused to return his love, he placed a curse on her so no one believed her prophecies.
To be called a Cassandra is to be called a prophetess.The name means 'Shining upon man'. In Greek mythology, Cassandra was the daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy. Her beauty caused Apollo, God of Knowledge, to grant her the gift of prophecy. However, when she did not return his love, Apollo placed a curse on her so that no one would ever believe her predictions. It was Cassandra who foretold the destruction of Troy.
According to Greek myth, Cassandra was a mortal. She was the daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy. The god Apollo fell in love with her and granted her the gift of prophecy. When she did not return his love, since he could not take back the gift, he placed a curse on her so that no one would ever believe her prophecies. In some versions, this drove her mad.
Cassandra
Cassandra was not a Greek goddess, she was, however, she did have the gift of prophecy given to her by Apollo. She fell out of love with Apollo and in love with someone else, so Apollo gave her the curse of any word that left her lips everyone would think it was a lie. she live in Troy because she was the princess of it.
Cassandra was a Trojan, daughter of King Priam and blessed by the god Apollo with the gift of prophecy, but with the curse of never being believed. Captured by the Greeks after the the fall of Troy, she was taken back to Greece as a trophy by, I think, Agamemnon, and prophesied that he would die an agonising death. He had sacrificed his daughter Iphigenia to get a favourable wind from the Gods to enable the Greek fleet to sail for Troy (initially to recapture the wife of his brother Menelaus - Helen - who had been abducted by the Trojan, Paris) 11 years earlier, and his wife Clytemnestra (who was also Helen's sister) had meantime taken a lover, Aegisthus, and the two of them murdered Agamemnon in his bath on his return. He had not believed Cassandra, however, who went mad. Figuratively, a 'Cassandra' is someone who tells bad news (and is perhaps not believed). I think the name is the same in Spanish. It was also the pen-name of a 'Daily Mirror' (English newspaper) columnist of some repute in the 1940s/50s and perhaps beyond.
In the Trojan War? The Trojan Horse, in which the Greeks hid.
In Greek mythology, Cassandra was the daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy. Her beauty caused Apollo, God of Knowledge, to grant her the gift of prophecy. However, when she did not return his love, Apollo placed a curse on her so that no one would ever believe her predictions. It was Cassandra who foretold the destruction of Troy.
Cassandra was the god Apollo's love. Apollo gave her the gift of prophecy to prove his love. But when she rejected him, Apollo cursed her so that no one would believe what she said. She foretold the fall of Troy and warned about the dangers of the Trojan Horse. But nobody believed her. Later she warned Agamemnon that his wife Clytemnestra was going to kill him. But once again nobody believed her. Clytemnestra killed her husband and Cassandra.