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YOUR RESULT

Cassandra of Troy

Prophetess, princess, and witness to ruin

Cassandra was given prophecy and denied belief. In the stories of Troy, she saw disaster coming with terrible clarity, but every warning became another reason to dismiss her.

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About you

You notice the fracture before other people admit the wall is breaking. You are used to reading signs that others ignore until the damage is already done.

Like Cassandra, you know the cost of seeing clearly in a room that prefers comfort. You do not confuse disbelief with being wrong.

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About Cassandra of Troy

Cassandra was a princess of Troy, daughter of Priam and Hecuba, and one of the most tragic figures in Greek myth. Apollo gave her the gift of prophecy. When she refused him, he twisted the gift into a curse: she would speak the truth, and no one would believe her.

She warned the Trojans against Paris, against Helen, against the wooden horse brought inside the city walls. Her visions were not vague omens. They were exact, repeated, and ignored.

After Troy fell, Cassandra was taken by Agamemnon as a captive and brought to Mycenae. There, she foresaw both his murder and her own. Again, she was not believed. Again, she was right.

Cassandra endures because her tragedy is not ignorance, but knowledge without power. She is the woman who sees the end before the others have chosen to call it the beginning.