Is Hades Hades or Death?

Hades (also known as hades, hades, English: Hades/Greek:? δη? ) is the brother of Zeus, the king of gods, Poseidon, the sea king, and Demeter. It is one of the four creation gods. His Roman name is Pluto, a dwarf planet other than the eight planets. He is the eldest son of Cronus and Rhea, the second generation gods. After defeating his father, Cronus, he and his younger brothers drew lots to distribute the world, and he was drawn to the underworld, thus becoming the Lord of the underworld, namely Pluto. He is the ruler of hell and the dead, judging the dead and punishing them.

Death is Ta Natus.

In ancient people's imagination, sleep and death are twin brothers. Hesiod believes that they are all children at night, and they all live in the underworld. They came to the ground from hades and quietly approached people in the world. Sleep is a gentle and friendly god, and death is cruel, which is mainly the further assumption of sleep and death by later poets and artists. In addition, people completely separate death from sleep in an unfriendly way, or they imagine the cruel god of death as a goddess with a very horrible appearance, that is, kern (originally just the soul of the deceased); Or imagine Apollo and Artemis in heaven, Pluto and Persephone in hades as death. The Romans also introduced an Etruscan personified death, which they called Orcus, and imagined as a fully armed soldier, killing human beings. All these death, whether in worship or in the art world, have no far-reaching significance. The art world tries to alleviate the terrible image of death, which makes Ta Natus (death) and his brother Hypnos (sleep) more and more similar.