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Cryptozoology and Mythical Beasts => Cryptozoology and Mythical Beasts => Topic started by: BlackHeart on Sep 27 2009 - 11:33PM

Title: The Lamia
Post by: BlackHeart on Sep 27 2009 - 11:33PM
The Lamia

The ancient Greeks believed that the Lamia was a vampire who stole little children to drink their blood. She was portrayed as a snake-like creature with a female head and breasts. Usually female, but sometimes referred to as a male or a hermaphrodite.

According to legend, she was once a Libyan queen (or princess) who fell in love with Zeus. Zeus' jealous wife Hera deformed her into a monster and murdered their offspring. She also made Lamia unable to close her eyes, so that she couldn't find any rest from the obsessing image of her dead children. When Zeus saw what had be done to Lamia, he felt pity for her and gave his former lover a gift: she could remove her eyes, and then put them on again. This way, though sleepless, she could rest from her misfortune. Lamia envied the other mothers and took her vengeance by stealing their children and devouring them.

In Lamia and other Poems (1820), the English poet John Keats writes about Lamia too. In this version, based on the information he found in Anatomy of Melancholy of the 1600s, Lamia has the ability to change herself into a beautiful young woman. Here she assumes a human form to win a man's love.

Another version of this myth states that Hera killed Lamia's children and that it was her grief that turned her into a monster.
Title: Re: The Lamia
Post by: Ghost1 on Sep 28 2009 - 09:37AM
Well that's cool.... Just go's to show you snakes are evil, the darn things always scare me and make me jump. 
Title: Re: The Lamia
Post by: BlackHeart on Sep 28 2009 - 04:56PM
 :lol6: That's too funny, Ghost. I love snakes. That snake would scare me to death. :lol6: