Seajato
Name: Seajato
Class: Headhunter
Identity: Cerberus
Weapon: simlar to her sister Moyo but expect it has three instead of one
Gender: female
Appearance: looks like Moyo
Abilities: uses traps can also turn herself little. (meaning she can
turn herself into a 15 year old (this isn't really much of a abilitie
she is still the same.) and also Martial arts simlar of that of both
of her sisters Moyo and Vigil
Noble Phantasm: elemental whillmill- Seajato will spin her chains in a
whillmill type fanshion and it shots a beam that are made of the three
elements fire, ice and ligthing
Class: B
Type: Anti-Unit
STR: Speed
Weak: Strength
Master: Earisha
History of the Identity: In Greek mythology, Cerberus or Kerberos
(Greek ????????, Kerberos, demon of the pit), was the hound of Hades—a
monstrous three-headed dog (sometimes said to have 50 or 100 heads)
with a snake for a tail and innumerable snake heads on his back.
He guarded the gate to Hades (the Greek underworld) and ensured that
the dead could not leave and the living could not enter. His brother
was Orthrus. He is the offspring of Echidna and Typhon.
He was overcome several times:
* Heracles' final labour was to capture Cerberus, which he did by
treating it with the first kindness it had ever received.
* Orpheus used his musical skills to lull Cerberus to sleep.
* Hermes put him to sleep with water from the river Lethe.
* In Roman mythology, Aeneas lulled Cerberus to sleep with drugged
honeycakes.
* In a later Roman tale, Psyche also lulled Cerberus to sleep with
drugged honeycakes.
Cerberus has become an archetype for a protector, particularly the
protector of a gate, door or boundary (as opposed to a personal
protector). In this guise Cerberus features widely in fiction and
cultural works from the Middle Ages (in Dante's Divine Comedy, in
Canto VI of Inferno (third circle)) to the modern time (J. K.
Rowling's Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, in the character
of Fluffy) and a number of modern security and warfare-related
artifacts named after it.
Heracles' capturing of Cerberus
Heracles' final labour was to capture Cerberus. After having been set
the task, Heracles went to Eleusis to be initiated into the Eleusinian
Mysteries so that he could learn how to enter and exit the underworld
alive, and in passing absolve himself for killing centaurs. He found
the entrance to the underworld at Tanaerum, and Athena and Hermes
helped him to traverse the entrance in each direction. He passed
Charon thanks to Hermes' insistence, and his own heavy and fierce
frowning.
Whilst in the underworld, Heracles freed Theseus but the earth shook
when he attempted to liberate Pirithous, so he had to leave him
behind. They had been imprisoned by Hades, by magically binding them
to a bench, because they had attempted to kidnap Persephone. The magic
was so strong that when Heracles pulled Theseus free, part of Theseus'
thighs remained on the bench, explaining why his descendants had
notably lean thighs.
In some versions, Heracles merely asks Hades for permission to take
Cerberus, to which Hades agrees as long as Heracles does not harm the
hound, though in other versions Heracles shot Hades with an arrow. In
some versions, Heracles wrestles the dog into submission and drags it
out of Hades, passing through the cavern Acherusia, but in other
versions, Heracles treats the vicious dog with the first kindness it
has seen, and easily walks out with it. When he returned with Cerberus
to the palace of his uncle Euristheus, the man who had assigned the
task to Heracles, Euristheus was so affraid of the fearsome beast that
he jumped into a big jar in order to hide.
Theories of origin
The constellation of Pisces was not always associated with two fish.
The original sky fish was Piscis Austrinus. It was to represent the
underworld. So the ecliptic cuts through the bond. The western one has
mostly escaped, but is still bound, whereas the eastern one appears to
still be bound to the ecliptic and heading downwards.
That Theseus is named as the person Heracles released from being bound
in the underworld marks an awareness that myths surrounding Theseus
connect him to the queen of the Amazons, and that he thus had to
appear in the following story as a companion of Heracles. This
emphasis on continuity is possibly connected to the fact that the
constellation which features in the subsequent story also partly
exists in Pisces.
Under Pisces is the constellation Cetus, usually considered as a sea
monster, or a whale. However, it is equally possible to view it as two
closed gates with their gateposts, with a set of three stars behind
the centre of the gate. Since they face the ecliptic, and are
extremely close to it, such gates would be gates to the underworld
(which was below the ecliptic). The guard of the gates to the
underworld was traditionally Cerberus, who had three heads, an
association requiring use of the three main (but comparatively faint)
stars, in the modern constellation Fornax, as a tail.
Since Cerberus was considered a permanent fixture of Hades, nothing
much could happen to him that was damaging. There being no other
constellations in this region, little more story could be given other
than doing something non permanent to Cerberus, such as moving him to
the other side of the gates.
Alternately, an earlier version may not have featured the tale of
Theseus being bound, which may have been a later reapplication of the
constellations to the story. In such a case, the non-escaping branch
of Pisces may have been taken to represent the usual patrol of
Cerberus on a leash, whereas the other branch being taken to represent
Cerberus' subsequent ascent (still on the leash, thus still having to
eventually return).
Cerberus is also a relative of the Chimera and Hydra which is why her,
Moyo and Vigil are sisters
Note about Seajato: Seajato was born with a damage voice box meaning
she can't talk but she can use the slient lanuage that's how she specks
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