Jason, knowing that he was the rightful king, told Pelias that and Pelias said, "To take my throne, which you shall, you must go on a quest to find the Golden Fleece." Jason happily accepted the quest.
It's about the quest undertaken by Jason and the Argonauts to get the Golden Fleece out of Colchis (modern day Georgia) and take it back to Iolcus in Greece.
He and his Argonauts recovered the Golden Fleece from Colchis and brought it back to king Pelias in the city of Iolcus (with a lot of help from Medea, a Colchian princess who had fallen in love with Jason).
Medea was not a Goddess. Apollo the sun god was one of her ancestors, making her only partly divine. Medea was however a priestess of the Goddess Hecate (the goddess of magic and witch craft).
Since the Ancient Greek times.
Jason, knowing that he was the rightful king, told Pelias that and Pelias said, "To take my throne, which you shall, you must go on a quest to find the Golden Fleece." Jason happily accepted the quest.
The only Golden Fleece I know of is the fleece of the winged ram, Chrysomallos. Jason and the Argonauts set out on a quest for the Golden Fleece in one of the mythalogical stories. Jason was the rightful king of Iolcus, but had been overthrown by his half brother, Pelias, years before. Upon returning to claim his thrown Jason was issued a challenge... Pelias tells Jason that in order to take his thrown Jason must go on a quest to find the Golden Fleece... which Jason did along with his fellow Argonauts in Argo...thier ship. As far as the English Translation of the Golden Fleece...the fleece is the woolen hair of a goat, or ram. In this instance the fleece stands for royal power, wealth and power.
The Greek myths do not take place in our chronology.
It's about the quest undertaken by Jason and the Argonauts to get the Golden Fleece out of Colchis (modern day Georgia) and take it back to Iolcus in Greece.
A winged ram whose fleece was of gold had been sired by Poseidon in his primitive ram-form upon a nymph, Theophane, the granddaughter of Helios.
He and his Argonauts recovered the Golden Fleece from Colchis and brought it back to king Pelias in the city of Iolcus (with a lot of help from Medea, a Colchian princess who had fallen in love with Jason).
hell yes! I'll take five!
ive read the books twice but i actually cant remember...sorry
Medea was not a Goddess. Apollo the sun god was one of her ancestors, making her only partly divine. Medea was however a priestess of the Goddess Hecate (the goddess of magic and witch craft).
in space on a ship
A sheep needs the fleece to protect it from cold, wet weather, mainly in the early spring and winter. In summer, the fleece is sheared off and sold for wool. It is done in summer as the weather is usually warm, and the sheep can then be dipped to kill off any ticks that would normally be unreachable through a thick fleece. If the shearing is not done, natural shedding of the fleece will take place, but the fleece and the income from the sales of the fleece, would be lost to the farmer. Sometimes, the market for a fleece is so poor that it is not worth the bother of shearing. In which case, the sheep may be allowed to be shed their fleece naturally, then the dipping can take place.
Medea's story took place in Colchis were she was born. She lived with Jason after they took the the Golden Fleece at Iolcus, Corinth and Atherns. Her story became a tragedy by Euripides. The most dramatic point was when she murdered her two children by sword in order to receive revenge on Jason for his treason. He left her in order to marry the daughter of the King of Corinth.