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What is Scylla?

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Anonymous

11y ago
Updated: 6/25/2024

Great Detailing, but you missed two thing: Scylla does NOT have a cat's tail, and she does NOT have more than six wolf heads on her waist. Her heads are six ugly woman faces with a body of a dragon, her waist has 4 wolves on her waists, and has a lizard tail. She is also 328 ft. wide.

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Wiki User

11y ago

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Who and what is scylla?

who is scylla


Did Heracles kill Scylla?

No, Heracles did not kill Scylla. In Greek mythology, Scylla was a sea monster who terrorized sailors, and she was ultimately transformed into her monstrous form due to a curse. Heracles encountered Scylla during his adventures, but he did not defeat her; instead, he faced other challenges, such as the monster Charybdis nearby. The story of Scylla primarily involves her interactions with Odysseus in the "Odyssey."


Who killed Scylla?

In Greek mythology, Scylla was not killed but rather transformed into a rock by the sorceress Circe. Scylla was turned into a monster with multiple heads and she dwelled in a narrow strait where she attacked passing ships.


Why did Circe turn Scylla into a monster?

Circe turned Scylla into a monster out of jealousy and vengeance. In Homer's "Odyssey," Scylla, a beautiful nymph, attracted the attention of the sea god Glaucus, who was in love with her. When Scylla rejected Glaucus's advances, he sought Circe's help to win her over, but instead, Circe fell in love with him. In retaliation for Scylla's rejection and to punish her, Circe transformed her into a hideous sea monster, forever cursed to terrorize sailors.


How did Scylla become a monster?

Scylla grew up a beautiful maiden nymph, the daughter of Phorcys and Ceto. One day while she walked along the water's edge a man turned sea-god, Glaucus, spotted her. He lusted after her, but, in she did not return that love. A jealous Circe, who was in love with Glaucus herself, got pissed and used herbs to magically poison the water and transform poor Scylla. She was human to the waist, but below that were biting snapping dogs. She had become a monster. She sat on the Italian side of the straits of Messina gobbling up anything that came within her reach. In The Odyssey, Odysseus manages to avoid Charybdis (see above), but loses six men to Scylla. Scylla probably explained a partially submerged rock that ships foundered on. There is also a human named Scylla, in case you came here by mistake. Scylla means "She who rends". The painting is of Scylla and Circe, by John Melhuish Strudwick.