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Hint
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Answer
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This figure's death caused the blooming of anemone flowers.
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Adonis
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This playwright was apparently present at the Battle of Marathon, which inspired one of his plays.
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Aeschylus
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This figure's stone axes are analogized to Thor's Mjolnir as depicted on the Kvinneby amulet.
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Perun
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This figure was switched at birth to avoid being killed by Kamsa.
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Krishna
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This figure was disguised as Pyrrha until discovered by a fellow Achaean.
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Achilles
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This figure lost his foot fighting a primordial crocodile.
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Tezcatlipoca
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This figure invented the kantele from the bones of a giant pike fish.
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Vainamoinen
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This figure threw his nephew off a tower for inventing the saw.
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Daedalus
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In Orphic traditions, this figure's predecessor was dismembered by the Titans before being reborn as this figure.
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Dionysus
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This figure turned Galanthis into a weasel for distracting the childbirth goddess Eileithyia.
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Hera
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This figure created boiling hot springs to defend against Titus Tatius.
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Janus
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This figure had relations with Iasion, who in some tales was struck by lightning for the act.
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Demeter
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This place was invaded twice by the Epigoni, unsuccessfully the first time and successfully the second time.
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Thebes
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This figure fathers a boy who was merged with the Naiad Salmacis.
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Hermes
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This figure's first wife immolated herself, naming a practice in real life.
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Shiva
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This figure was tried on the Aeropagus for the killing of Poseidon's son.
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Ares
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This figure was enraged seeing an enemy wearing the belt of a slain youth.
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Aeneas
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This figure quarreled with a god over the slaughter of a boar, which resulted in him being granted the god's personal weapon.
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Arjuna
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This figure tossed stars from a bag, forming the Milky Way.
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Coyote
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This goddess cries tears of red-gold for her wandering husband.
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Freya
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This figure's servant Skirnir traded his magic sword for his wife, which would force him to fight with an antler later.
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Freyr
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This figure followed a red ant into a mountain to discover sustenance for mankind.
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Quetzalcoatl
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This figure was the more famous parent of the Seven-Against-Thebes member Parthenopaeus.
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Atalanta
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This figure followed a cow until it collapsed of exhaustion, where he founded a city.
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Cadmus
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This figure wept until a maggot dropped out of a corpse's nose.
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Gilgamesh
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This figure was inflicted with sixty diseases and rescued by kurgarra and galatura.
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Ishtar
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This figure was depicted by the Greeks as a "Lord of Silence," a child with his finger to his lips.
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Horus
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This figure specifically wades through the Kormt and Ormt rivers each day to reach his seat.
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Thor
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This figure threw a whetstone into the air, causing nine other slaves to slaughter each other.
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Odin
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This figure flayed Marsyas for the audacity to challenge him to a contest.
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Apollo
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This figure, born near Cythera, is sometimes replaced by the Charity goddess Aglaea.
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Aphrodite
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This figure's ploy of madness by sowing his fields with salt was exposed by his son and Palamedes.
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Odysseus
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This figure sired a fire-breathing monster named Cacus whom Heracles killed after a cattle raid.
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Hephaestus
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This figure's belly burst open after he ate too many modak sweets.
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Ganesha
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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.
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Set
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This figure crushed the giant Polybotes with a mountain.
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Poseidon
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This figure gifted a goddess seven scorpions to defend her and her son.
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Thoth
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This figure unintentionally slew his friend Accolon due to the machinations of an enchantress.
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King Arthur
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During this general event, a figure takes nine steps before dying from venom.
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Ragnarok
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