Mythology (Hard Version) - Statistics

General Stats
  • This quiz has been taken 5 times
  • The average score is 29 of 78
Answer Stats
Hint Answer % Correct
This figure tossed stars from a bag, forming the Milky Way. Coyote
75%
This figure threw a whetstone into the air, causing nine other slaves to slaughter each other. Odin
75%
This figure's (also the king of Kosala) brother placed his sandals on his throne. Rama
75%
This figure is the only god in his pantheon not associated with a known animal; instead, that hybrid creature is referred to as the sha animal. Set
75%
This playwright was apparently present at the Battle of Marathon, which inspired one of his plays. Aeschylus
50%
This figure captures a leopard Osebo with teeth like knives. Anansi
50%
This figure branded and flayed his uncle, which is what gives the leopard its spots. Anubis
50%
This figure, born near Cythera, is sometimes replaced by the Charity goddess Aglaea. Aphrodite
50%
This figure flayed Marsyas for the audacity to challenge him to a contest. Apollo
50%
This figure followed a cow until it collapsed of exhaustion, where he founded a city. Cadmus
50%
This figure trained with a warrior woman from the Isle of Skye. Cu Chulainn
50%
This figure threw his nephew off a tower for inventing the saw. Daedalus
50%
This figure exchanged armor with Glaucus after finding out Oeneus of Calydon and Bellerophon were friends. Diomedes
50%
In Orphic traditions, this figure's predecessor was dismembered by the Titans before being reborn as this figure. Dionysus
50%
This goddess cries tears of red-gold for her wandering husband. Freya
50%
This figure ripped open his chest to prove a couple were always in his heart. Hanuman
50%
This figure turned Galanthis into a weasel for distracting the childbirth goddess Eileithyia. Hera
50%
This figure was nearly sacrificed by a king in Egypt, but broke the chains. Heracles
50%
This figure was inflicted with sixty diseases and rescued by kurgarra and galatura. Ishtar
50%
This figure's Roman cult celebrated her "Navigium" aspect. Isis
50%
A mother rakes a river for pieces of her son and attempts to revive him with honey in this work. Kalevala
50%
This figure was switched at birth to avoid being killed by Kamsa. Krishna
50%
This figure was caught as a salmon, which is why salmon tails are slender. Loki
50%
In this work, a deity protects a woman from public disrobement by causing her robes to grow longer and longer, becoming endless. Mahabharata
50%
This figure caused the constellations to disappear and reappear before battling a primordial sea goddess. Marduk
50%
This figure stole fire from the fingernails of a goddess. Maui
50%
This figure battles a mortal enemy, sometimes in the form of a cat with a knife called "Mau." Ra
50%
This figure's first wife immolated herself, naming a practice in real life. Shiva
50%
This figure left some of his buttocks in the underworld when he was rescued. Theseus
50%
This figure specifically wades through the Kormt and Ormt rivers each day to reach his seat. Thor
50%
This figure was forced to undergo a sex-change after hitting a pair of mating snakes. Tiresias
50%
This figure guided King Manu as a giant fish. (Sorry, couldn't find a better clue for this) Vishnu
50%
A woman and her husband from this general region invented a game of "badger-in-a-bag." Wales
50%
A ritual to this figure on Mount Lykaion may have involved human sacrifice to a wolf aspect of him. Zeus
50%
This figure was disguised as Pyrrha until discovered by a fellow Achaean. Achilles
25%
This figure's death caused the blooming of anemone flowers. Adonis
25%
This figure was enraged seeing an enemy wearing the belt of a slain youth. Aeneas
25%
This figure was presented with a sword as an apology for a god's earlier rampage. Amaterasu
25%
This figure was tried on the Aeropagus for the killing of Poseidon's son. Ares
25%
This figure quarreled with a god over the slaughter of a boar, which resulted in him being granted the god's personal weapon. Arjuna
25%
This figure went to Nemesis to drive the huntress Aura insane. Artemis
25%
This figure was the more famous parent of the Seven-Against-Thebes member Parthenopaeus. Atalanta
25%
This figure is avenged by a son of Rindr who ages in one day. Baldr
25%
This figure threw Stheneboea into the ocean as revenge for her treachery. Bellerophon
25%
This figure turned Picus, a king of Latium, into a woodpecker for refusing her advances and choosing Pomona instead. Circe
25%
This figure had relations with Iasion, who in some tales was struck by lightning for the act. Demeter
25%
This figure's servant Skirnir traded his magic sword for his wife, which would force him to fight with an antler later. Freyr
25%
This figure's belly burst open after he ate too many modak sweets. Ganesha
25%
This figure wept until a maggot dropped out of a corpse's nose. Gilgamesh
25%
This figure sired a fire-breathing monster named Cacus whom Heracles killed after a cattle raid. Hephaestus
25%
This figure fathers a boy who was merged with the Naiad Salmacis. Hermes
25%
This author described the five ages of man in one work, I suppose. Hesiod
25%
This figure was depicted by the Greeks as a "Lord of Silence," a child with his finger to his lips. Horus
25%
This figure threw his nephew Copil's heart into Lake Texcoco. Huitzilopotchli
25%
This figure kills a massive serpent demon at twilight using a column of sea foam. Indra
25%
The Book of Invasions details how this place was settled my Milesians and Partholon. Ireland
25%
This figure created boiling hot springs to defend against Titus Tatius. Janus
25%
This figure founded Ljubljana and mated with Queen Hypsipyle to produce twin sons. Jason
25%
This figure unintentionally slew his friend Accolon due to the machinations of an enchantress. King Arthur
25%
This figure attempted to poison Theseus, but was stopped when her husband recognized his sword and sandals. Medea
25%
This figure's ploy of madness by sowing his fields with salt was exposed by his son and Palamedes. Odysseus
25%
This figure's head sang as it floated down a river though his body had already been torn apart. Orpheus
25%
This figure's coffin was holding up a palace in Byblos. Osiris
25%
This figure was cursed by Myrtilus after betraying him, beginning the curse on the House of Atreus. Pelops
25%
This figure was the younger of two deities worshipped at a kykeon drinking ritual. Persephone
25%
This figure traded the kingdom of Argos with Megapenthes for the kingdom of Tiryns. Perseus
25%
This figure's stone axes are analogized to Thor's Mjolnir as depicted on the Kvinneby amulet. Perun
25%
This figure crushed the giant Polybotes with a mountain. Poseidon
25%
This figure followed a red ant into a mountain to discover sustenance for mankind. Quetzalcoatl
25%
During this general event, a figure takes nine steps before dying from venom. Ragnarok
25%
This figure killed the shepherd Faustulus in a disagreement with his brother. Romulus
25%
This figure rescues a maiden asleep within a wall of shields. Sigurd
25%
This figure lost his foot fighting a primordial crocodile. Tezcatlipoca
25%
This place was invaded twice by the Epigoni, unsuccessfully the first time and successfully the second time. Thebes
25%
This figure gifted a goddess seven scorpions to defend her and her son. Thoth
25%
This figure was often depicted with googly eyes and fangs in worship. Tlaloc
25%
This figure invented the kantele from the bones of a giant pike fish. Vainamoinen
25%
This "place" has a name derived from a kenning meaning "horse of the hanged" along with a figure associated with that action here. Yggdrasil
25%
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