Faun
Kings - Beings
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Great Monarchs
The kings can move, in addition to their weapons and other upgrades, a retinue of up to 7 characters (that have to do with their history or mythology: as relatives, allies, friends, etc.).
Note: To be established in the cities of the adversary, it is necessary the presence of a king.
Card 395
Battle Area:
- Water = 05
- Earth = 35
- Heaven = 00
Attack and Defense
- Wisdom = 30
- Dexterity and Strength = 20
- Powers = 05
- Fire = 00
Game
Rules
Recurses
Characters
Faun
Kings - Beings
Faunus (in Latin: Faunus, lit. "favorable" or also Fatuus, "destiny" or "prophet") is the exclusive name of the Roman religion, from where it originated, as a king of Lazio who was transmuted into god, then it has undergone several modifications, syncretism with beings of the Greek religion or even of the Roman own, causing great confusion between varied myths, now so mixed with the original myth that many do not distinguish them differences (as, for example, between creatures called fauns - in Rome - and the satyrs, Greeks).
Fauno, mythical king of Lazio, deified by the Romans, often confused with Pan, with Silvano and / or with Lupércio (as god, he was immortal); Fauns (in the plural, although it can be used in the singular, when individuated the being) - creatures that, like the Greek satyrs, had a body half human, half goat, and that would be descendants of king Faun. (They were demigods and therefore mortal); or Faunus, a sailor who, having fallen in love with Sappho, obtained from Aphrodite beauty and seduction in order that she might conquer the poetess.
Biography
The early image of Faun in Roman mythology concerns the third king of Italy (Lazio), and that according to Virgil, in the Aeneid, he would have received the Trojan Evander, when he settled on the Palatine Hill; Fauno would be the son of Pico, who was in turn the son of Saturn. He thus had the divine condition by his forefather avoengo. Now Hacquard says Fauno would be Jupiter's son with Circe, while Murray points to versions of which would be the son of Mars.
According to Murray, it would have been a king who, by virtue of the goods made to his people, civilizing them and introducing agriculture into the country, was elevated to the deity after his death, being worshiped as representative of the woods and fields, under the name Fátuo (in Latin: Fatuus, lit. "Destination, Fatality"). Now Hacquard is said to have deified the king because he created the laws and invented the flute. For this author, Luperco was his other name, being an agricultural god who guaranteed the fertility of the cattle and their protection, especially against the wolves, and that he was pleased to stay next to the sources and to walk in the hills and forests.
NUC Cards ® 2019
Reasoning and strategy.
An advanced game of underground strategy in generation.