Brontes

Beings - Cyclops

 

 Card 093

Battle Area:

  1. Water = 05
  2. Earth = 35
  3. Heaven = 00

Attack and Defense

  1. Wisdom = 30
  2. Dexterity and Strength = 45
  3. Powers = 05

  4. Fire = 20

 

 Game

Rules

Recurses

Characters

 

Brontes

Beings - Cyclops

 

Brontes (thunder) in Greek: Βρόντης), in Greek mythology, was a Cyclops, son of Gaia and Uranus. Brontes hated his parents, his Cyclopes brothers, and his fellow hecatônquiros of Tartarus. They all participated in Titanomachy, helping Zeus.

The first, Brontes, Estérope or Astérope and Arges, whose names remember respectively thunder, lightning and lightning, are the urns. Chained by their father, they were, at Gaia's request, released by Cronus, but for a short time.

 


History

 

Arges, Brontes and Estéropes are considered the earliest Cyclopes, descending from Uranus and Gaia. Legend has it that when they were born and because of their enormous powers, their father Uranus, Lord of the heavens, locked them in the interior of the Earth with his brothers, the hecatonquiros, giants of a hundred arms and fifty heads. Gaia, enraged at having her sons imprisoned in Tartarus, urges them to support the war waged by five of the six titans, also their children with Uranus, to take the throne of their father who then ruled the sky. The titans vanquish, but the Cyclops are sent back into the abyss of Tartarus.

Sometimes Zeus, like his brothers Poseidon and Hades, freed the Cyclops with the intention of having them as allies in the war against Kronos and the Titans. The Cyclops, as good smiths, forged magical and powerful weapons for Zeus and his brethren: Zeus had received lightning and lightning, Poseidon, a trident capable of causing terrible storms, and Hades, the Helm of Terror, which gave him invisibility.

Later, when the Cyclops were already considered ministers of Zeus and their permanent blacksmiths, the great god perceived a threat in the doctor Asclépio, son of the god Apollo. Asclepius, through much study, managed to raise the dead. So that this did not have any impact on world order, Zeus decided to exterminate him. Disturbed and offended by the wrath of Zeus over his son, Apollo decided to kill the Cyclops who made their rays. There are indications that it was not the Cyclops who died at the hands of Apollo, but their children.

 

 

 

 


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