Table of Contents
What was important to Apollo?
Apollo was a major Greek god associated with the bow, music, and divination. The epitome of youth and beauty, source of life and healing, patron of the arts, and as bright and powerful as the sun itself, Apollo was, arguably, the most loved of all the gods.
What were Apollo’s sacred items?
Apollo’s symbols were the lyre, the tripod, the laurel tree and the navel stone. His plants were the myrtle and the laurel tree. Apollo’s sacred animals were the wolf, the raven and the lizard.
What gifts did Apollo give?
Apollo gave some mortals the gift of prophecy, or the ability to see the future.
How was Apollo Worshipped?
Apollo may have been first worshiped by primitive shepherds as a god of pastures and flocks, but it was as a god of light, Phoebus or Phoebus Apollo, that he was most widely known. After the 5th cent. In Roman religion, Apollo was worshiped in various forms, most significantly as a god of healing and of prophecy.
What are special skills did Apollo have?
What special powers and skills did he have? Like all the Olympian gods, Apollo was an immortal and powerful god. He had many special powers including the ability to see into the future and power over light. He could also heal people or bring illness and disease. When in battle, Apollo was deadly with the bow and arrow.
What did Apollo give to people?
Apollo was the Greek god of prophecy, healing and music. During the Trojan War he helped Paris obtain revenge on the hero Achilles by helping Paris slay Achilles with an arrow. Apollo was the Greek god of music, and was often seen playing the lyre. He did not invent the lyre. He was given the lyre by Hermes .
What were Apollo’s special powers?
Apollo’s powers include superhuman strength, flight, and near invulnerability (the character has been shown entering a lava flow to deactivate a volcano, and walking on the surface of the sun). His eyes are constructed to concentrate solar energy into laser-like blasts.
What weapons did Apollo have?
Apollo’s weapon was the bow, which shot powerful darts of sunlight to either heal or slay. These were not exactly thunderbolts, but rather projectile light-forms of similar character. His bow had the power to spread plague and pestilence, like the one that erupted in the Greek camp during the siege of Troy.