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So, this story so happens to be one of my favorites. The story this references is "true" meaning that the story itself is one of the Greek Myths associated with Zeus and gruesome deeds, but the names here and relationships are all wrong as far as I can tell. The king, Lycaon -- who became the 'first werewolf' (though no record of his changing back and forth exists, I think, though his name may be the basis for the word "Lycanthrope" not sure. Anyway, the reason Zeus gets so pissed off (which, in this version seems oddly out of sorts for someone as powerful and level-headed as The King of The Gods, he did't get called that just because he was hot under the collar, he's noble, and smart.) is that the dish served up to him at this dinner was his own son, Arcas, who was cut into pieces, roasted over a fire and served to Zeus who had come to visit the boy's mother, Callisto, a Nymph. Lycaon did this to test Zeus' Omniscience, and ... if you ask me, thats a total boner move, I mean, what if you're wrong? So, then Zeus, of course, figures this out and flips the eff out, and brings his son back from the dead, puts him back together, and then hauls off and Wolfs down Old Lycaon. I mean, turns him into a wolf. Hera also gets pissed off that Zeus had a kid with Callisto, turns her into a bear, and the constellation Böotes is said to represent Arcas / Arcturas and his Mother, Callisto, the Bear both of whom were placed there because Zeus took pity upon them, both of them being hounded by people who hated them for their association with Zeus. Arcas goes hunting in the woods one day, when he becomes King, after his grandfather, .... you know ... gets turned into a wolf. The whole region of Arcadia is named after him as the former King, and he, himself was a real historical figure who has lineage and all kinds of historical accounts of his goodness and good deeds as a King. Its part of many people's basis for believing that there is at least a possibility that the Greek Gods were real beings, not 'myths', and personally i think it is a story that ought to be remembered correctly and respected, for it shows Zeus' goodness, and his ability to actually right wrongs, and his decisiveness, not wish-washy in the face of possible deceit. He just whoomp! wolves the guy, like "Oh, Hades no, you di'nt." RobbertMacGreighgor (talk) 09:27, 25 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]