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  2. Aesop's Mission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aesop's_Mission

    Aesop's Mission is a spoken-word parlour game involving deduction. It is best played by a group where some of those present are unfamiliar with the game. In the traditional version of the game, a player familiar with the rules takes on the role of Aesop, and secretly chooses a letter of the alphabet. Other players assume the role of a predatory ...

  3. Night in Paradise (1946 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night_in_Paradise_(1946_film)

    In 560 BC King Croesus of Lydia incurs the wrath of the sorceress Queen Attossa he had promised to marry, when he chooses the beautiful Delarai of Persia instead. Attossa, in disembodied form, mocks Croesus nearly to the point of madness, so he seeks a solution from the fortune-teller Aesop, who is very young and handsome, but believes that people only receive wisdom with age, arrived from the ...

  4. Aesop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aesop

    The Aesop Romance claims that he wrote them down and deposited them in the library of Croesus; Herodotus calls Aesop a "writer of fables" and Aristophanes speaks of "reading" Aesop, [16] but that might simply have been a compilation of fables ascribed to him. [17] Various Classical authors name Aesop as the originator of fables.

  5. The Bird in Borrowed Feathers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bird_in_Borrowed_Feathers

    The Bird in Borrowed Feathers is a fable of Classical Greek origin usually ascribed to Aesop. It has existed in numerous different versions between that time and the Middle Ages, going by various titles and generally involving members of the corvid family. The lesson to be learned from it has also varied, depending on the context in which it ...

  6. Croesus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croesus

    Croesus was born in 620 BC to the king Alyattes of Lydia and one of his queens, a Carian noblewoman whose name is still unknown. Croesus had at least one full sister, Aryenis, as well as a half-brother named Pantaleon, born from a Ionian wife of Alyattes. [8] [9]

  7. List of oracular statements from Delphi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_oracular...

    Delphi was declared the winner. Croesus then asked if he should make war on the Persians and if he should take to himself any allied force. The oracles to whom he sent this question included those at Delphi and Thebes. Both oracles gave the same response, that if Croesus made war on the Persians, he would destroy a mighty empire.

  8. Samuel Croxall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Croxall

    Samuel Croxall was born in 1688 or 1689 at Walton on Thames, where his father (also called Samuel) was vicar and baptized on 4 february 1689 at the same town. [2] He was educated at Eton and at St John's College, Cambridge, where he took his B.A. in 1711 and entered holy orders. [3]

  9. The Crow and the Snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crow_and_the_Snake

    It was the Adagia (1508), the proverb collection of Erasmus, that brought the fables to the notice of Renaissance Europe. He recorded the Greek proverb Κόραξ τὸν ὄφιν (translated as corvus serpentem [rapuit]), commenting that it came from Aesop's fable, as well as citing the Greek poem in which it figures and giving a translation. [5]