he died of cancer King Tut broke his leg by falling off a horse drawn chariot
In the play by Euripides, Medea does not die. She rides off on a dragon-pulled chariot as Jason curses her.
Demeter was the great Olympian Greek goddess of agriculture; she had charge of both the harvest and theforemost of the Mystery Cults which promised its intiates the path to a blessed afterlife.
After Achilles drags Hector's corpse behind his chariot, Hecuba, Hector's mother, is devastated and mourns the loss of her son. She pleads with Achilles to return Hector's body for a proper burial, expressing her grief and desperation. Hecuba's sorrow highlights the deep emotional impact of war and the personal tragedies that accompany it, emphasizing the themes of loss and honor in the narrative. Ultimately, her anguish reflects the broader suffering experienced by families caught in the conflict.
His fav cousin Achilles was getting all depressed over this girl so he quit the battle coming up. Patroclus went dressed as him so Hector became confused and killed him so Achilles got all mad at the world and dragged Hector's dead body around his palace walls off his chariot. :) Goood Tiiimes
In Greek mythology, when Phaethon drove the chariot of the sun, he lost control and the sun chariot veered off course, scorching the earth. This event led to a great catastrophe, resulting in the creation of deserts and Ethiopian people, as well as threatening the entire world with destruction until Zeus intervened by striking Phaethon down with a thunderbolt.
Apollo's son, Phaethon, lost control of the sun chariot and veered off course, causing chaos and destruction on Earth. The gods had to intervene to prevent further disaster by striking Phaethon down with a lightning bolt.
Phaethon was a young son of Helios and Klymene who begged his father to let him drive the chariot of the sun. The Sun-god reluctantly conceded to the boy's wishes and handed him the reigns. However, the inexperienced Phaethon quickly lost control of the immortal steeds, and the sun-chariot veered out of control setting the earth aflame, scorching the plains of Africa to desert. Zeus was appalled by the destruction and struck the boy from the chariot with a thunderbolt, hurling his flaming body into the waters of the river Eridanos.
Phaethon was a young son of Helios and Klymene who begged his father to let him drive the chariot of the sun. The Sun-god reluctantly conceded to the boy's wishes and handed him the reigns. However, the inexperienced Phaethon quickly lost control of the immortal steeds, and the sun-chariot veered out of control setting the earth aflame, scorching the plains of Africa to desert. Zeus was appalled by the destruction and struck the boy from the chariot with a thunderbolt, hurling his flaming body into the waters of the river Eridanos.
he fell off his chariot while hunting
Anything greater than 2 amps when it is turned on. Almost any current at all when it is turned off (it still takes a small current in the milliamp range when turned off). This is why it will charge faster if you turn it off when charging.
Although they were not as bad as gladiators, Chariot races were extremely violent. For example, if they were knocked off, they could be trampled to death by the horses.
No, the iPod will not charge if it is off. The iPod must be on for it to charge.
no, but from what i heard, he fell off a horse driven chariot
It will charge faster if the primary ignition is off and the switch is flipped off, but it does not have to be completely off to charge.
(in the US) He could be charged with ABDUCTION.
It takes shorter time for it to charge when it is on. Trust me! I have an apple laptop, and whenever I have it on, it charges like, super fast. Well not SUPER fast, but fast. So keep your computer on when you charge it. (As long as it's an apple)! ;P