as punishment for bragging about her and her daughter.
Cassiopeia, along with her husband Cepheus and daughter Andromeda, was placed in the sky as punishment for boasting of her beauty.
Zeus, the god of the sky and thunder, was known as the king of the Greek gods.
in greek mythology the sky is blue because the Greeks beileve that afrodity the greek goddess of beutty spilt her prettios blue perfume on the clouds and it slid right off and stained the sky
The ancient Greeks referred to the planets as "wanderers" (which is the literal meaning of "planet", in fact) as a result of what they directly observed in the sky. The planets appeared to their observation to wander -- or, travel -- across the sky each night, and on varying paths during the course of each year.
The ancient Greeks believed that every day, Apollo, the god of the sun, would ride a chariot a across the sky, pulling the sun behind him.
Cassiopeia, along with her husband Cepheus and daughter Andromeda, was placed in the sky as punishment for boasting of her beauty.
The imaginations of the ancient Greeks who told stories about a queen sitting on her throne; the "Chair of Cassiopeia". Constellations have no existence except in our minds.
In Greek myth this was done by Athena; she was placed in the northern sky, near Perseus and Cassiopeia; the constellation Andromeda, so known since antiquity, is named after her.
Cassiopeia is a constellation in the northern sky, named after the vain queen in Greek mythology.
cassiopeia
Cassiopeia, the queen. (constellation)
Cassiopeia
Zeus❌❌
Zeus❌❌
Queen Cassiopeia
because the stars are moving and changing positions in the sky
It is placed in the sky because there is not enough room for it on Earth!