Similarities Between Julius Caesar And Icarus

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Mythology (Greco-Roman)
1. Icarus and Daedalus
Daedalus built a maze called the Labyrinth for King Minos that no one could escape because he wanted a place where he could imprison the mythical monster, Minotaur. The king also used this place to imprison his enemies, where he was sure they would be killed by Minotaur. However, when Daedalus betrays the king and is imprisoned in the Labyrinth with his son, Icarus, Daedalus is determined to find a way out, though it cannot be by foot or by sea. He then creates wings using branches of osier and connecting them with wax. Daedalus teaches his son how to fly, making sure to tell him not to fly too high (the sun would melt the wings) or too low (the sea would dampen his wings). Daedalus and Icarus manage to escape the Labyrinth and Icarus listens to his father’s advice for a while, but then gets too excited and begins flying all the way up to the sun and then back down to the sea, melting his wings, ultimately causing himself to drown in the sea, now called The Icarian Sea. 2. Theseus and the Minotaur …show more content…

King Minos was embarrassed of the Minotaur, so he hid him in the Labyrinth. One year, Theseus decided he would be the one to finally kill the Minotaur, but King Minos knew that even if Theseus killed the Minotaur, he would not be able to escape the Labyrinth. Before he left, Theseus met King Minos’s daughter, Princess Ariadne, who instantly fell in love with him and decided to help him escape the Labyrinth. She gave Theseus a thread and told him to unravel it as he went into the Labyrinth, so he would be able to find his way out after he killed the Minotaur. Theseus managed to kill the Minotaur and then followed Princess Ariadne’s advice and was able to escape the Labyrinth and return to Athens and be with Princess

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