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Ogamain
From Rodovid EN
Revision as of 03:55, 12 August 2008 (edit) Almoustine (Talk | contribs) ← Previous diff |
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<person> | <person> | ||
<sex>m</sex> | <sex>m</sex> | ||
- | <clan>[[Clan:Gaedel]]</clan> | + | <clan>[[Clan:Aseraph]]</clan> |
<name>Agnomain IlTait | <name>Agnomain IlTait | ||
Agnon</name> | Agnon</name> | ||
<parents>32455</parents> | <parents>32455</parents> | ||
- | <children>32457,153468</children> | + | <children>32457,153468,153813</children> |
<ext>Tired of the conflict for the land Agnoman determines to rule the sea. | <ext>Tired of the conflict for the land Agnoman determines to rule the sea. | ||
for 7 years he and his sons rule the waters of the Caspian and all its tributaries North and South, East and West. | for 7 years he and his sons rule the waters of the Caspian and all its tributaries North and South, East and West. |
Revision as of 23:12, 14 August 2008
Lineage | Aseraph |
Sex | Male |
Full name (at birth) | Agnomain IlTait |
Other given names | Agnon |
Parents |
Events
birth: Scythia
child birth: ♂ Nemed IlAgnomain ((Ilbind)) [Sidhe]
child birth: ♂ Allot IlAgni [Sidhe]
death: Caspian Sea
Notes
Tired of the conflict for the land Agnoman determines to rule the sea. for 7 years he and his sons rule the waters of the Caspian and all its tributaries North and South, East and West.
The legendary race of the Hyperboreans are spoken of in the poem of the Epigoni and in Hesiod and occur in traditions connected with the temples of Tempe, Delphi, and Delos. The situation assigned to this sacred nation, as the name indicates, is the remote regions of the North. They were said to dwell beyond Boreas, the mountain wind, which came from the Rhipaean (Caspian) Mountains, from which issued a cold north wind which did not affect the Hyperboreans who were sheltered by the selfsame mountains. (Compare the origin myths of the Scandinavians Audhumla and Ymir) The Hyperboreans were said to lie in an alpine summit valley that rose above the storms, thus they were surrounded by an atmosphere of calm and undisturbed serenity. In consequence of this we find, in later writers, a confusion of this happy land with that of Italy and other western countries, as well as of the Rhipaeans with the Alps and Pyrenees.
Herodotus mentions the Arimaspi, an ancient raiding people, who lived to steal gold from the "kingdom of the Griffin," The Arimaspi lived in a land where the men slept for half a year and the air was filled with feathers. The "Griffin" was known to the Sarmatians, who figured it upon the vase which commemorated the good fortune of their first expedition to Tartessus (Spain), according to Herodotus. This mysterious symbol of an animal acting as guardian over gold, seems to have originated in India and Persia and spread to Greece via Miletus.
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