Ophiotaurus

In Greek mythology, the Ophiotaurus, male, (Greek: Οφιόταυρος) was a creature that was part bull and part serpent.

Etymology

Taurus means bull. Ophio means serpent.

Mythology

Its sole reference is found in Ovid's Fasti (3.793 ff), where the creature's entrails (insides) were said to grant the power to defeat the gods to whoever burned them. The hybrid was slain by an ally of the Titans during the Titanomachy, but the entrails were retrieved by an eagle sent by Zeus before they could be burned. The creature emerged from Chaos with Gaia and Ouranos.

  • The Ophiotaurus reappears in the third book in the "Percy Jackson & the Olympians" (http://rickriordan.com/series/percy-jackson-and-the-olympians/) series, The Titan's Curse. Percy Jackson saves it at five o'clock in the morning, when he was warned by his favorite pegasus, Blackjack. He first thinks it is a female and names it "Bessie". The Ophiotaurus thinks that Percy is his protector. Later, the creature is brought to Olympus via a magic water bubble and is put under the care of Percy's father, Poseidon, the Greek sea god. The Ophiotaurus was the creature that Artemis tried to kill before the Titans got a hold of it. The legend goes that if someone slays the creature and burns the entrails (insides) in a fire, then they have the power to overthrow the gods. It reappears in The Battle of the Labyrinth and The Last Olympian, but as a small part in Percy's life. Later on the series, it turned out that Bessie was actually male. Percy Jackson told that Bessie seemed that he didn't care. This is a reference to Rick Riordan's son Haley Riordan. When the year Haley born, Rick said he never knew that Haley was the most popular as a girl's name.

References


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