CITAZIONE (Kitt @ 15/3/2007, 16:40)
un interessante pensiero dal Comatorium (
senza alcuna pretesa di ufficialità) anche collegato allo show segreto del 2 aprile:
CITAZIONE
as many of us already know, TMV is playing a myspace secret show at the troubador under the name deimos.
Deimos was the son of ares (greek god of war) and represented panic or dread. He had a brother named phobos, the god of fear.
These two also happen to be the two moons of mars. I kinda got the hint that the 4th lp might be a double disk, kinda like what RHCP and frusc did with stadium arcadium. One disk will be Deimos and the other will be Phobos.
I also believe that the 'gift' that omar found for cedric might have been some sort of sculpture of deimos (thats why they had the greek statues on the backdrop of many of the shows). The two disks will tell the story of deimos and phobos as they were always summoned together.
e ritorna il trip sulla mitologia,
con i mars mi accade spesso,
faccio le stesse cose che facevo a 13 anni
cerco divinità ...
ok wikipedia come here !
Phobos:
CITAZIONE
Phobos (mythology)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Phobos (Ancient Greek Φόβος, "Fear") is the personification of fear and horror in Greek mythology. He is the son of Ares and Aphrodite. He, his brother Deimos, and the goddess Enyo accompany Ares into battle, along with his father's attendants, Trembling, Panic and other abstractions. His Roman equivalent was Timor.
Asaph Hall, who discovered the moons of Mars, named one Phobos.
In his poem Shield of Herakles, the Greek poet Hesiod offers the following description of Phobos:
In the centre [of the Shield of Herakles] was Phobos (Fear) worked in adamant, unspeakable, staring backwards with eyes that glowed with fire. His mouth was full of teeth in a white row, fearful and daunting, and upon his grim brow hovered frightful Eris (Strife) who arrays the throng of men ...
Upon the shield Proioxis (Pursuit) and Palioxis (Flight) were wrought, and Homados (Tumult), and Phobos (Panic), and Androktasie (Slaughter). Eris (Strife) also, and Kydoimos (Uproar) were hurrying about, and deadly Ker (Fate).
–Shield of Heracles 139f
Plutarch reports that Alexander the Great offered sacrifices to the god Phobos on the eve (September 29, 331 BC/BCE) of the Battle of Gaugamela. Mary Renault believes this was part of Alexander's psychological warfare campaign against Darius III, who had proven himself to be indeed most timorous: At their previous encounter in the Battle of Issus, Darius had fled with such haste that he left behind his mother, his wife, his children, and many treasures. From the field of Gaugamela also, Darius fled with great speed. Alexander's tactic of praying to Phobos (presumably asking him to fill Darius with fear) would seem to have been successful.
Deimos:
CITAZIONE
In Greek mythology, Deimos Δεῖμος ("dread") was the personification of dread. He was the son of Ares and Aphrodite. He, his brother Phobos, and the goddess Enyo accompanied Ares into battle, as well as his father's attendants, Trembling and Panic. His Roman equivalent was Formido or Metus. Asaph Hall, who discovered the moons of Mars, named one Deimos, and the other Phobos.
figura di scarso valore mitologico ,
però è anche un personaggio dei fumetti:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deimos_%28comics%29le informazioni su internet
su Phobos e Deimos però sono al 98 %
astronomiche e quindi parlano dei satelliti di Marte,
e non dei suoi figli
bella tematica comunque ,
se è questa... è una bella idea,
facilmente sfruttabile .