Mythology In Literature

At the moment, this article deals primarily with the mythology of Greece and Rome and its influence on Western literature. As Christianity swept through Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire, the religion that empire had sustained slowly devolved into myth. However, the works produced during the height of the Roman empire, such as Ovid's Metamorphoses and Virgil's Aeneid continued to be read, and eventually provided a context for later writers to reference in contemporary writings. The Roman gods served as a useful counterpoint to the Christian God, and the pantheon of Olympians came to represent either different facets of God, the Virgin Mary, as a means of allegory, or to contrast the political situation with a heavenly one. It is important to realize that for many years, until the 16th and 17th centuries, the works of Homer were largely unknown, and therefore unstudied, and unreferenced.

List of works that reference mythology

See also: Greek mythology, Roman mythology, epic poem, mythology in art

 

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george i of greece
stardust (spacecraft)
white backed vulture
may ball
wild
woodstock 1999
list of portmanteaux
anapaest
genesis (spacecraft)
self adjoint operator
lamos of the laestrygonians
telepylos
glise de la madeleine
iamb
secret affair
spondee
amphibrach
imperial war museum
calypso (moon)
bert williams
edward of westminster
gorsafawddacha'idraigodanheddogleddollnpenrhynareurdraethceredigion
dildo, newfoundland and labrador
software metric
the haydn quartet
orientability
london, midland and scottish railway
grnet
gustave caillebotte
lenz's law
sex in advertising
madras (cloth)
america's promise
certified public accountant
joseph henry
one foot in the north
life magazine
lost cause
advanced packaging tool
mci communications
dpkg
twelfth apostle
graven image
pyrrhic