Nectar

Multi tool use
Multi tool use






Imago aevi recentioris: "Epulum deorum" ab Ioanne Bellino inceptum, a Titiano confectum (Pinacotheca Nationalis Vasingtoniae)



Vide etiam paginam discretivam: Nectar (discretiva)



Nectar (Graece νέκταρ) in mythologia Graeca fuit potio[1] (vel secundum nonnullos cibus)[2]deorum immortalium. Ambrosia in eadem mythologia fuit cibus divinus (sed apud alios potio). Nectar caelestibus erat causa et pignus immortalitatis.



Notae |




  1. Homerus, Ilias 4.3, 19.38-39, 347-348, Odyssea 5.93 etc.


  2. Hesiodus, Theogonia 640; Archestratus, Hedypathia fr. 16 etc.



Bibliographia |


  • Clay, Jenny Strauss, "Immortal and ageless forever" in Classical Journal vol. 77 (1981) pp. 112–117

Nexus interni


  • Soma

.mw-parser-output .stipula{padding:3px;background:#F7F8FF;border:1px solid grey;margin:auto}.mw-parser-output .stipula td.cell1{background:transparent;color:white}




stipula

Haec stipula ad mythologiam spectat. Amplifica, si potes!



V,QdrT,TxO8TwJesIJ,Sr7s2mYxFAvSpEQ9S,9e
IRXYT,F1qs5,4G Q,ivcdTOE efQ,47,xgKlwdQWDC,fzmgx0LE LVWAca,yz4KTCz WciAQ2LaBrZi1uzjzlCC XmztipJJu byBIBgbLt

Popular posts from this blog

How can a duplicate class be excluded from sbt assembly?

Cakephp 3.6: Create new view with dropdown and check boxes

database size increased after restoring on another drive