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===''[[The Battle of the Labyrinth]] ''=== |
===''[[The Battle of the Labyrinth]] ''=== |
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During a great part of the book, [[Luke Castellan]] tried to find Ariadne's string to travel through the Labyrinth with the Titan Army. He eventually found the string, but lost it after [[Kampe]]'s death. |
During a great part of the book, [[Luke Castellan]] tried to find Ariadne's string to travel through the Labyrinth with the Titan Army. He eventually found the string, but lost it after [[Kampe]]'s death. |
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While helping Percy figure out the best way to navigate through the Labyrinth, [[Hephaestus]] mentions that Ariadne didn't possess even a drop of godly blood. This is ironic considering that her parents were both demigods. However, Hephaestus may have been trying to emphasize Ariadne's clear sight to Percy, as that was his point. |
While helping Percy figure out the best way to navigate through the Labyrinth, [[Hephaestus]] mentions that Ariadne didn't possess even a drop of godly blood. This is ironic considering that her parents were both demigods. However, Hephaestus may have been trying to emphasize Ariadne's clear sight to Percy, as that was his point. |
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Revision as of 22:06, 17 January 2020
Ariadne was a princess of Crete, daughter of King Minos and Queen Pasiphaë. She is known for helping the hero Theseus find his way through the Labyrinth. Ariadne is the wife of god Dionysus, who made her immortal. She is the Greak goddess of Labyrinths and Paths.
History
Early life
Ariadne was one of four daughters born to Minos, king of Crete, and his wife, the sorceress Pasiphaë. Though loving towards his children, her father was especially cruel with his subjects, best demonstrated in his requiring Athens to send seven youths and seven maidens to Crete as tribute to be eaten by a horrifying monster called the Minotaur.
Adventure at the Labyrinth
Theseus, son of Poseidon and prince of Athens, vowed to put an end to this tribute, resolving to go to Crete and slay the Minotaur. To that end, he took the place of one of the seven youths chosen to go to Crete. When he and the other tributes arrived, Ariadne saw Theseus and immediately fell in love with him. Desperately wanting him to live, she approached Theseus and offered to help him in his quest, though in exchange, he would take her with him back to Athens and marry her.
Theseus agreed to do marry Ariadne if she would help him, so she gave him a sword and a ball of magic yarn to help him find his way through the Labyrinth. After those methods failed him, Ariadne used her ability to see through the Mist to guide Theseus through the maze safely, enabling him to slay the Minotaur. Once he had done so, he, Ariadne, and the other tributes hurried to their ship and sailed away.
Abandonment in Naxos
After they were out to sea, Theseus grew bored of Ariadne. It is unknown why or what caused this: maybe he didn't like her at all and resented her for making him take her away as his wife, even though he owed it to her and she threw everything away to save him and his friends. They stopped at the island of Naxos and Theseus had an idea: he would simply left her and go home to Athens without her. The night when they were sleeping, Theseus woke up the crew, but didn't wake Ariadne. He let her sleep while he and the others set sail without her.
Ariadne awoke alone. She looked around and ran along the beach, calling for Theseus until she saw the sail on the horizon and figured out that he had left her there. She collapsed on the ground and sobbed. Angry and heartbroken, Ariadne cursed Theseus and pleaded to the gods to make him forget to change the sails from black to white. They answered her pleads, as Theseus' stepfather, Aegeus, believed that his son was dead, threw himself into the sea and drowned.
Marriage to Dionysus
A young god Dionysus was the guardian of the island of Nexos and came upon Ariadne while she was weeping. He listened her story and comforted her, becoming determined to make the poor girl happy again. Over time, Dionysus healed Ariadne's broken heart and the two married. He even took her wedding diadem and set it in the heavens as the constellation Corona. All their children were appearently demigods by their father and legacies by Ariadne.
Ariadne remained faithful to Dionysus until her death. After she died, he descended into the Underworld and brought her back to life. Dionysus then brought Ariadne up to Mount Olympus, where Zeus made her immortal at his son's request.
Percy Jackson and the Olympians
The Titan's Curse
Dionysus despises heroes because of what a 'hero' (Theseus, Percy Jackson's half-brother) did to his wife. He later tells Ariadne's story to Percy when he catches the demigod riding Blackjack and trying to go on the quest with Zoë, Thalia, Bianca, and Grover. Dionysus then decides to let Percy go on the journey he wanted, hoping that he will get himself killed because he won't have to worry about him then.
Ariadne appears briefly at the end of The Titan's Curse, walking arm-in-arm with her husband on Olympus. Percy notices she is a beautiful woman and that was the first time he had ever seen Dionysus happy.
The Battle of the Labyrinth
During a great part of the book, Luke Castellan tried to find Ariadne's string to travel through the Labyrinth with the Titan Army. He eventually found the string, but lost it after Kampe's death.
While helping Percy figure out the best way to navigate through the Labyrinth, Hephaestus mentions that Ariadne didn't possess even a drop of godly blood. This is ironic considering that her parents were both demigods. However, Hephaestus may have been trying to emphasize Ariadne's clear sight to Percy, as that was his point.
Personality
Ariadne is very helpful, passionate but emotional, willing to throw away everything for love. She was the daughter of a king, would presumably marry a king, and could have whatever she wanted, but she threw it all away for save and marry a man. When the man who she loved abandoned her, she cursed him for betraying her. She remained faithful to her husband, even after many centuries.
Appearance
Ariadne is a very beautiful woman with light skin. In some myths, she has long, curly black hair, light skin, and green eyes. In others, she had wavy light brown hair, and brown eyes. Her beauty was enough to have snared Dionysus' heart.
Abilities
- Lavýrinthoskinesis: As the goddess of Labyrinths, Ariadne has absolute control and divine authority over Labyrinths, being able to navigate through a labyrinth with little problem.
- Mystiokinesis (possibly): Since her mother is a powerful sorceress, Ariadne might be able to use magic, which she could have used to make a magic ball of string and curse Theseus' return to Athens.
- Weaving: Ariadne made a ball of string to use to navigate the Labyrinth. Some even say her skill is even greater than Athena's.
- Clear Sight (formerly): Ariadne was one of the few mortals with the ability to see through the Mist. Her ability was stronger even compared to demigods, to the point that she could navigate through the Labyrinth and foresee its various traps.
Trivia
- It might have been that Ariadne possessed clear sight because she was a Legacy through both of her parents.
- It is unknown what made Theseus "dump" her, or if it was just a misunderstanding, or an accident as there are many different versions of the myth. Considering the way Dionysus tells the story, however, it is most likely that Theseus simply abandoned her on the island, though a deity's word can be misleading.
- Some say Theseus was told by Dionysus himself that Ariadne was to be left on Naxos and be his wife. In this version, Theseus was so grief-stricken at losing Ariadne that he forgot to raise the white sails.
- Others state that Theseus abandoned her because she was already wedded to Dionysus.