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Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World

Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World
Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World
Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World

Tragic stories from mythology around the world: The major Gods and Goddesses come to mind when we think of mythology. But mythology encompasses a lot more than that. It also contains a few remarkable tales, but not all of them truly feature the gods and goddesses. Some of them feature people and perhaps even monsters. Additionally, not all of the tales are amusing. There are numerous tragic stories included in it. Here are 11 most tragic tales from different mythologies:

The Three Sisters of Fate – Greek Mythology

Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World - The Three Sisters of Fate – Greek Mythology
Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World – The Three Sisters of Fate – Greek Mythology

Greek mythology gave rise to the three goddesses of fate known as the Moirae. Atropos, Lachesis, and Clotho. The three sisters weave the fate of both humans and gods. Both God and people are powerless to change or contest their choices or actions. The youngest, Clotho, is the one who spins the thread of life. She is the source of all life, its very beginning, and her thread is spun at the time of a person’s birth.

Lachesis, the second sister, decides what will happen to each person. The “λαγχάνω” term comes from the Greek language which signifies to select from a variety. In that sense, it is understandable to believe that one’s destiny has been predetermined from a large variety of possibilities. It is believed that Lachesis uses her rod to measure the length and character of the thread of life. Atropos, the unturning, is the final sister of fate. As the one who cuts the thread of life, Atropos chooses the manner in which each person will pass away.

Death of Shravan Kumar – Hindu Mythology

Death of Shravan Kumar - Hindu Mythology
Tragic stories from mythology around the world – Death of Shravan Kumar – Hindu Mythology

Death of Shravan Kumar put the first stone for Exile of Lord Ram. Shravan Kumar is mostly known for his filial piety towards his blind parents. He wanted to carry his parents to four most sacred places of Hindu pilgrimage. However, during his journey when his parents got thirsty, he went to get some water from the near by lake. When he went to the lake and started collecting water at the same time Prince Dasharatha was hunting in the forest. As soon as Dasharatha heard the sound in the lake, he thought it as an animal and shot a shabd bhedi baan (Arrow shot towards the sound). This is how Sharavan kumar died in this tragic story.

Odin loses an eye – Norse Mythology

Odin loses an eye – Norse Mythology
Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World – Odin loses an eye – Norse Mythology

Odin performed seidr, a sort of sorcery that was viewed as unmanly. He had a specific preoccupation with information hoarding, so he dispatched his raven slaves, Thought and Memory, into the world to provide him with news. Norse tales describe Odin’s search for the universe’s mysteries. Odin sacrificed one eye to drink from a mystical well in order to acquire a glimpse of the future, but in doing so, he discovered his own inevitable doom.

Even worse, though, lay ahead. He had to pierce himself with a spear and had to hang himself from a tree for 9 days and nights in order to learn the meaning of the runes, a mystical writing system that might grant its possessor enormous power. In remembrance of this deed, offerings to Odin were executed in a similar manner, including the execution of a few monarchs whose subjects had grown weary of their failures.

Medusa Turns into a Monster – Greek Mythology

Medusa Turns into a Monster – Greek Mythology
Medusa Turns into a Monster – Greek Mythology

The feared creature Medusa is renowned for having snakes for hair. If you gazed into her eyes, she would just turn you into stone. When Perseus killed her, she perished. She wasn’t always a monster, though. She was just a young, lovely girl whom Athena cursed into a monster. Most people think that the goddess committed this crime because she was envious of the young girl’s appearance and her admirers.

A world made by murder – Norse Mythology

Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World - A world made by murder – Norse Mythology
Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World – A world made by murder – Norse Mythology

The Norse believed that the entire universe originated from an empty, gaping chasm dividing worlds made of ice and fire. This chasm was only partially populated by a mysterious, hermaphrodite being named Ymir, who served as the parent of the race of the jotuns, chaotic supernatural beings who would later become the Norse gods’ adversaries. After a while, another being called Buri appeared, and his descendants, Vili, Ve, and Odin, made the decision to make the earth and populate it with life. The Norse deities, unlike the Judeo-Christian representation of God, could make matter from nothing, so Odin and his siblings did the only thing that made sense, they killed Ymir and created the globe and the sky out of his body and skull. Ymir’s blood was turned into the ocean, his teeth and bones into mountains and rocks, and his brains into clouds.

The three brothers gained enormous power via their act of sacrifice, and they then used that power to create life and intelligence for humans. The concept that the Norsemen lived in a cosmos where only death was possible undoubtedly had an impact on their viewpoint, which frequently portrayed the world as an unforgiving and cruel place.

Prometheus was punished – Greek Mythology

Prometheus was punished – Greek Mythology
Prometheus was punished – Greek Mythology

The existence of Prometheus, who is regarded as a god, coincides with that of the Titans. He is not formally recognized as one of the principal Titan gods. His father was an Oceanid, or a member of the sea nymphs, and his mother was a Titan Goddess named Clymene. The element of fire was bestowed upon humanity by Prometheus. Zeus, the ruler of the Olympian gods, condemned him for his action, though. He trapped Prometheus and chained him to a rock on a peak where eagles regularly came to eat his liver. Eventually, his imprisonment was lifted from him.

Domaldi the King – Norse Mythology

Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World - Domaldi the King – Norse Mythology
Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World – Domaldi the King – Norse Mythology

When Domaldi’s two older half-brothers killed their stepfather Visbur, Domaldi was cursed by his stepmother with a life of misfortune. During Domaldi’s rule, there was hunger and plague, proving that this curse was not in vain. The Swedish chiefs sacrificed cattle during the first year of the famine, and the following year, when the crop was still appalling, they offered up humans. On the third year, the chieftains unwillingly agreed they had to offer Domaldi because they believed the fortune of the land was linked to the luck of the monarch.

Golden Touch of King Midas – Greek Mythology

Golden Touch of King Midas – Greek Mythology
Golden Touch of King Midas – Greek Mythology

A satyr by the name of Silenus was one of Dionysius’ partygoers who was spared by King Midas. Dionysius rewarded King Midas by granting him a desire. He made the choice to convert everything he touches into gold. When the wish came true, he was first delighted because he could significantly enhance his riches simply by touching something. But as he discovered he could no longer experience the same joy in life as he had in the past, this euphoria changed to sorrow. He was unable to touch people, feel the meals he consumes, or even continue to sense the surroundings in a similar way. The favor had turned sour.

Adventures of Hadding – Norse Mythology

The mythical Danish king Hadding was given to a jotun household as a foster child. He successfully reclaimed his father’s kingdom while being led by Odin, and he also had considerable success in battles with other local rulers. However, what goes up needs to come down too, and Hadding terminated his life as he faced old age and the passing of companions by hanging himself in a field of holy trees as an offering to his protector, Odin.

Hera envies Hercules – Greek Mythology

Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World - Hera envies Hercules – Greek Mythology
Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World – Hera envies Hercules – Greek Mythology

It was well known that Zeus frequently cheated on his spouse, Hera. He occasionally fathered offspring with either of his mistresses. Hera was never content with this and frequently took revenge on the mistress and occasionally the kids. One of Zeus’s lovers had a child, and that child was Hercules. It is believed that Hera was particularly displeased with Hercules because Zeus adored Hercules’ mother, Alcmene. She tried hard to make Hercules’ life as difficult as possible. Hercules even committed murders of his children and wife when he was driven insane by her.

The Death of Icarus – Greek Mythology

Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World - The Death of Icarus – Greek Mythology
Tragic Stories From Mythology Around The World – The Death of Icarus – Greek Mythology

Icarus was a human with well-known parents. Deadalus, his father was a renowned inventor who also created the mythical labyrinth that imprisoned the Minotaur. His mother, Naucrate, a female slave who belonged to King Minos. Icarus created a set of wings that allowed him to soar into the sky and beyond because he was confident that he could fly. Since he actually flew too high, his story is tragic. When he got close to the sun, the heat dissolved the wax keeping his wings together, and he crashed to his death.

Also Read: Short Classics which are Less than 250 Pages


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