Khronos God Of Time. [2] Cronus was usually depicted with a harpe, scythe, or sickle,
[2] Cronus was usually depicted with a harpe, scythe, or sickle, which was the instrument he used to castrate and depose Uranus, his father. A Cronus, in ancient Greek religion, male deity who was worshipped by the pre-Hellenic population of Greece but was probably not widely worshipped by the Greeks themselves; he was later identified with the Roman god Saturn. Both were ancient, both mysterious, and over time, they merged into a single shadow: the devourer of his children, the old man with the hourglass, the god of time who consumes all. Its carriage spins once every 4 seconds, 15 times faster than the norm. As the dust settled, the god of time lay defeated—his hourglass pendant cracked, the power inside leaking like sand through fingers. And suddenly time stands still. He was sometimes also mistakenly identified with Chronos, the god of time. Time Before the GodsThe poet Hesiod developed one of the first theogonies (about 700 BCE), the story of how the gods came into being. Diana straightened, chest rising and falling, her sword still humming. In his highly speculative reconstruction of Mithraic cosmogony, Franz Cumont positioned Aion as Unlimited Time (sometimes represented as Saeculum, Cronus, or Saturn) as the god who emerged from primordial Chaos, and who in turn generated Heaven and Earth.
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