A. <span>God’s deliverance of the plague to Egyptian firstborns
The plague that took the life of firstborn sons was the tenth of the plagues sent against Egypt, pressing them to let the Israelite people go free from their land. The Israelite people were spared from the plague by sacrificing a lamb and marking their doorposts with blood from the lamb that was sacrificed.</span>
The unicorn appeared in early Mesopotamian artworks, and it also was referred to in the ancient myths of India and China. The earliest description in Greek literature of a single-horned (Greek monokerōs, Latin unicornis) animal was by the historian Ctesias (c. 400 bce), who related that the Indian wild a** was the size of a horse, with a white body, purple head, and blue eyes,
Cesar Chavez and Maurice Ferre are two I know.
Through the ruler/king/city-state leader. The Sumerian ruler had to show how he was divinely chosen for his ruling, so he oftentimes named himself the father of the country and had himself portrayed as the middle guy or messenger between the gods - they were polytheistic with Zeus, Hera, Poseidon, and others - and the people.