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The Death of Echidna. Despite her fearsome nature and lineage, Echidna's end came not in battle but in her sleep. She was killed by Argus Panoptes, a giant with a hundred eyes, marking the end of the "mother of monsters" in Greek mythology.
Echidna, monster of Greek mythology, half woman, half serpent. Her parents were either the sea deities Phorcys and Ceto (according to Hesiod’s Theogony) or Tartarus and Gaia (in the account of the mythographer Apollodorus); in Hesiod, Tartarus and Gaia are the parents of Echidna’s husband, Typhon.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Sep 22, 2024 · Echidna embodies the duality of creation and destruction. While she gives birth to monstrous beings, she also represents the primal forces of nature that are both life-giving and deadly. This duality is a recurrent theme in myth, reminding us that creation often comes with inherent risks.
If exposed to her miasma for too long, the people in her presence would die. It is worth mentioning that, while he somehow did not receive that side effect, Subaru did note her presence felt as dangerous or more so than the White Whale or the Sin Archbishop of Sloth.
Echidna was perhaps associated with the monster killed by Apollo at Delphi. Though that monster is usually said to be the male serpent Python, in the oldest account of this story, the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, the god kills a nameless she-serpent , subsequently called Delphyne, who had been Typhon's foster-mother. [66]
According to Hesiod, Echidna did not age nor could she die a natural death “all her days.” Despite this, her immortality is not to be mistaken for invincibility. The goddess Hera recognized the danger Echidna posed to unsuspecting travelers and sent the hundred-eyed giant Argus Panoptes to kill her.
Mar 22, 2023 · Echidna was a primeval female monster, usually represented as a woman from the waist up and a snake from the waist down. She was said to have been the mother of some of the most fearsome monsters of Greek myth, including Cerberus, the Chimera, and the Hydra.