Julia is 155 cm tall, weighs 45 kg, and is wearing a size XS hoodie
Did You Know:
Aurora is also the wife of Perun, the Slavic god of thunder. In this role, Aurora veils her face with a long mantle and rides into battle with her husband. When Aurora lowers the veil, she can protect her favored warriors. Interestingly, in Serbian tales, Aurora is not the wife of the Slavic Perun, but instead the moon (Myesyats).
What other tasks did Aurora have to face? There is a tale in which two or three sisters guard a deity, which is sometimes unnamed and referred to as a dog or a bear, and at times is called Simargl. Whatever it is, the deity is chained to the North Star (Polaris) in the constellation of Ursa Minor and desires… to consume the entire celestial constellation. If it escapes, the end of the world will occur. Researchers of ancient myths believe that Simargl was borrowed from the Byzantine Simurgh.
Another interesting fact concerns the three aspects of Aurora. Experts note that Auroras exemplify a common feature in many different mythologies: the phenomenon of three sisters. The three beings, most often women, represent aspects of time - past, present, future, or the three phases of age, or even life itself.
Examples of the three sisters can be found in many legends. In Greek mythology, for instance, there are three Gorgons and three Harpies. Both the Hittites and the Greeks had versions of the three Fates, whose counterpart in the Roman Empire were the Fates. There are also Irish tales of Morrigan and British tales featuring the three forms of Guinevere, Brigit, or the three aspects of the goddess Coventina. Perhaps the three-formed Aurora is yet another borrowing or a variant of a much older deity, or even the same, but adapted to its times.
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