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Athena or Athene, often given the epithet Pallas, is an ancient Greek religion, ancient Greek goddess associated with wisdom, warfare, and handicraft who was later syncretism, syncretized with the Roman goddess Minerva. Athena was regarded as the patron and protectress of various cities across Greece, particularly the city of Athens, from which she most likely received her name. The Parthenon on the Acropolis of Athens is dedicated to her. Her major symbols include Owl of Athena, owls, olive trees, snakes, and the Gorgoneion. In art, she is generally depicted wearing a helmet and holding a spear. From her origin as an Aegean tutelary deity, palace goddess, Athena was closely associated with the city. She was known as ''Polias'' and ''Poliouchos'' (both derived from ''polis'', meaning "city-state"), and her temples were usually located atop the fortified acropolis in the central part of the city. The Parthenon on the Athenian Acropolis is dedicated to her, along with numerous other temples and monuments. As the patron of craft and weaving, Athena was known as ''Ergane''. She was also a Women in ancient warfare, warrior goddess, and was believed to lead soldiers into battle as ''Athena Promachos''. Her main festival in Athens was the Panathenaic Games, Panathenaia, which was celebrated during the month of Attic calendar, Hekatombaion in midsummer and was the most important festival on the Athenian calendar. In Greek mythology, Athena was believed to have been born from the forehead of her father Zeus. In some versions of the story, Athena has no mother and is born from Zeus' forehead by parthenogenesis. In others, such as Hesiod's ''Theogony'', Zeus swallows his consort Metis (mythology), Metis, who was pregnant with Athena; in this version, Athena is first born within Zeus and then escapes from his body through his forehead. In the founding myth of Athens, Athena bested Poseidon in a competition over patronage of the city by creating the first olive tree. She was known as ''Athena Parthenos'' "Athena the Virgin," but in one archaic Attica, Attic myth, the god Hephaestus tried and failed to rape her, resulting in Gaia giving birth to Erichthonius of Athens, Erichthonius, an important Athenian founding hero. Athena was the patron goddess of heroic endeavor; she was believed to have aided the heroes Perseus, Heracles, Bellerophon, and Jason. Along with Aphrodite and Hera, Athena was one of the three goddesses Judgement of Paris, whose feud resulted in the beginning of the Trojan War. She plays an active role in the ''Iliad'', in which she assists the Achaeans (Homer), Achaeans and, in the ''Odyssey'', she is the divine counselor to Odysseus. In the later writings of the Roman poet Ovid, Athena was said to have competed against the mortal Arachne in a weaving competition, afterward transforming Arachne into the first spider; Ovid also describes how she transformed Medusa into a Gorgon after witnessing her being raped by Poseidon in her temple. Since the Renaissance, Athena has become an international symbol of wisdom, the arts, and Classics, classical learning. Western artists and allegorists have often used Athena as a symbol of freedom and democracy.


Etymology

Athena is associated with the city of Athens. The name of the city in ancient Greek is (), a plural toponym, designating the place where—according to myth—she presided over the ''Athenai'', a sisterhood devoted to her worship. In ancient times, scholars argued whether Athena was named after Athens or Athens after Athena. Now scholars generally agree that the goddess takes her name from the city; the ending -''ene'' is common in names of locations, but rare for personal names. Testimonies from different cities in ancient Greece attest that similar city goddesses were worshipped in other cities and, like Athena, took their names from the cities where they were worshipped. For example, in Mycenae there was a goddess called Mykene, whose sisterhood was known as ''Mykenai'', whereas at Thebes (Greece), Thebes an analogous deity was called Thebe, and the city was known under the plural form ''Thebai'' (or Thebes, in English, where the 's' is the plural formation). The name ''Athenai'' is likely of Pre-Greek origin because it contains the presumably Pre-Greek morpheme ''*-ān-''. In his dialogue ''Cratylus (dialogue), Cratylus'', the ancient Greek philosopher Plato (428–347 BC) gives some rather imaginative etymologies of Athena's name, based on the theories of the ancient Athenians and his etymological speculations: Thus, Plato believed that Athena's name was derived from Greek , —which the later Greeks rationalised as from the deity's (, ) mind (, ). The second-century AD orator Aelius Aristides attempted to derive natural symbols from the etymological roots of Athena's names to be ''aether'', ''air'', ''earth'', and ''moon''.


Origins

Athena was originally the Aegean civilization, Aegean goddess of the palace, who presided over household crafts and protected the king. A single Mycenaean Greek inscription appears at Knossos in the Linear B tablets from the Late Minoan II-era "Room of the Chariot Tablets"; these comprise the earliest Linear B archive anywhere. Although ''Athana potnia'' is often translated as "Mistress Athena", it could also mean "the ''Potnia'' of Athana", or ''the Lady of Athens''. However, any connection to the city of Athens in the Knossos inscription is uncertain. A sign series appears in the still undeciphered corpus of Linear A tablets, written in the unclassified Minoan language. This could be connected with the Linear B Mycenaean expressions and or (''Diwia'', "of Zeus" or, possibly, related to a List of Mycenaean deities#Goddesses, homonymous goddess), resulting in a translation "Athena of Zeus" or "divine Athena". Similarly, in the Greek mythology and epic tradition, Athena figures as a daughter of Zeus (; ''cfr.'' Dyeus). However, the inscription quoted seems to be very similar to "", quoted as Kato Syme, SY Za 1 by Jan Best. Best translates the initial , which is recurrent in line beginnings, as "I have given". A Mycenean fresco depicts two women extending their hands towards a central figure, who is covered by an enormous figure-eight shield; this may depict the warrior-goddess with her ''Palladium (classical antiquity), palladium'', or her palladium in an aniconic representation. In the "List of Aegean frescos, Procession Fresco" at Knossos, which was reconstructed by the Mycenaeans, two rows of figures carrying vessels seem to meet in front of a central figure, which is probably the Minoan precursor to Athena. The early twentieth-century scholar Martin P. Nilsson, Martin Persson Nilsson argued that the Minoan snake goddess figurines are early representations of Athena. Nilsson and others have claimed that, in early times, Athena was either an owl herself or a bird goddess in general. In the third book of the ''Odyssey'', she takes the form of a Sea eagle (bird), sea-eagle. Proponents of this view argue that she dropped her prophylactic owl mask before she lost her wings. "Athena, by the time she appears in art," Jane Ellen Harrison remarks, "has completely shed her animal form, has reduced the shapes she once wore of snake and bird to attributes, but occasionally in Black figure pottery, black-figure vase-paintings she still appears with wings." It is generally agreed that the cult of Athena preserves some aspects of the Proto-Indo-European religion#Societal deities, Proto-Indo-European transfunctional goddess. The cult of Athena may have also been influenced by those of Near Eastern warrior goddesses such as the East Semitic Ishtar and the Ugaritic Anat, both of whom were often portrayed bearing arms. Classical scholar Charles Penglase notes that Athena resembles Inanna in her role as a "terrifying warrior goddess" and that both goddesses were closely linked with creation. Athena's birth from the head of Zeus may be derived from the earlier Sumerian myth of Inanna's descent into and return from the Ancient Mesopotamian Underworld, Underworld. Plato notes that the citizens of Sais in Egypt worshipped a goddess known as Neith, whom he identifies with Athena. Neith was the ancient Egyptian goddess of war and hunting, who was also associated with weaving; her worship began during the Egyptian Pre-Dynastic period. In Greek mythology, Athena was reported to have visited mythological sites in North Africa, including Libya's Triton (mythology), Triton River and the Phlegra (mythology), Phlegraean plain. Based on these similarities, the Sinologist Martin Bernal created the "Black Athena" hypothesis, which claimed that Neith was brought to Greece from Egypt, along with "an enormous number of features of civilization and culture in the third and second millennia". The "Black Athena" hypothesis stirred up widespread controversy near the end of the twentieth century, but it has now been widely rejected by modern scholars.


Cult and patronages


Panhellenic and Athenian cult

In her aspect of ''Athena Polias'', Athena was venerated as the goddess of the city and the protectress of the citadel. In Athens, the Plynteria, or "Feast of the Bath", was observed every year at the end of the month of Thargelion. The festival lasted for five days. During this period, the priestesses of Athena, or ''plyntrídes'', performed a cleansing ritual within the Erechtheion, a sanctuary devoted to Athena and Poseidon. Here Athena's statue was undressed, her clothes washed, and body purified. Athena was worshipped at festivals such as Chalceia as ''Athena Ergane'', the patroness of various crafts, especially weaving. She was also the patron of metalworkers and was believed to aid in the forging of armor and weapons. During the late fifth century BC, the role of goddess of philosophy became a major aspect of Athena's cult (religious practice), cult. As ''Athena Promachos'', she was believed to lead soldiers into battle. Athena represented the disciplined, strategic side of war, in contrast to her brother Ares, the patron of violence, bloodlust, and slaughter—"the raw force of war". Athena was believed to only support those fighting for a just cause and was thought to view war primarily as a means to resolve conflict. The Greeks regarded Athena with much higher esteem than Ares. Athena was especially worshipped in this role during the festivals of the Panathenaea and Pamboeotia, both of which prominently featured displays of athletic and military prowess. As the patroness of heroes and warriors, Athena was believed to favor those who used cunning and intelligence rather than brute strength. In her aspect as a warrior maiden, Athena was known as ''Athena Parthenos, Parthenos'' ( "virgin"), because, like her fellow goddesses Artemis and Hestia, she was believed to remain perpetually a virgin. Athena's most famous temple, the Parthenon on the Athenian Acropolis, takes its name from this title. According to Károly Kerényi, Karl Kerényi, a scholar of Greek mythology, the name ''Parthenos'' is not merely an observation of Athena's virginity, but also a recognition of her role as enforcer of rules of sexual modesty and ritual mystery. Even beyond recognition, the Athenians allotted the goddess value based on this pureness of virginity, which they upheld as a rudiment of female behavior. Kerényi's study and theory of Athena explains her virginal epithet as a result of her relationship to her father Zeus and a vital, cohesive piece of her character throughout the ages. This role is expressed in several stories about Athena. Marinus of Neapolis reports that when Christians removed the statue of the goddess from the Parthenon, a beautiful woman appeared in a dream to Proclus, a devotee of Athena, and announced that the ''"Athenian Lady"'' wished to dwell with him.


Regional cults

Athena was not only the patron goddess of Athens, but also other cities, including Argos, Peloponnese, Argos, Sparta, Gortyn, Lindos, and Larisa. The various cults of Athena were all branches of her panhellenic cult and often proctored various initiation rites of Grecian youth, such as the passage into citizenship by young men or the passage of young women into marriage. These cults were portals of a uniform socialization, even beyond mainland Greece. Athena was frequently equated with Aphaea, a local goddess of the island of Aegina, originally from Crete and also associated with Artemis and the nymph Britomartis. In Arcadia (ancient region), Arcadia, she was assimilated with the ancient goddess Alea and worshiped as Athena Alea. Sanctuaries dedicated to Athena Alea were located in the Laconian towns of Mantineia and Tegea. The temple of Athena Alea in Tegea was an important religious center of ancient Greece. The geographer Pausanias (geographer), Pausanias was informed that the ''temenos'' had been founded by Aleus. Athena had a major temple on the Sparta#Archaeology of the classical period, Spartan Acropolis, where she was venerated as Poliouchos and ''Khalkíoikos'' ("of the Brazen House", often latinized as ''Chalcioecus''). This epithet may refer to the fact that cult statue held there may have been made of bronze, that the walls of the temple itself may have been made of bronze, or that Athena was the patron of metal-workers. Bells made of terracotta and bronze were used in Sparta as part of Athena's cult. An Ionic order, Ionic-style temple to Athena Polias was built at Priene in the fourth century BC. It was designed by Pythius of Priene, Pytheos of Priene, the same architect who designed the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus. The temple was dedicated by Alexander the Great and Priene Inscription, an inscription from the temple declaring his dedication is now held in the British Museum.


Epithets and attributes

Athena was known as ''Atrytone'' ( "the Unwearying"), ''Parthenos'' ( "Virgin"), and ''Promachos'' ( "she who fights in front"). The epithet ''Polias'' (Πολιάς "of the city"), refers to Athena's role as protectress of the city. The epithet ''Ergane'' (Εργάνη "the Industrious") pointed her out as the patron of craftsmen and artisans. Burkert notes that the Athenians sometimes simply called Athena "the Goddess", ''hē theós'' (ἡ θεός), certainly an ancient title. After serving as the judge at the trial of Orestes in which he was acquitted of having murdered his mother Clytemnestra, Athena won the epithet ''Areia'' (Αρεία). Some have described Athena, along with the goddesses Hestia and Artemis as being asexual, this is mainly supported by the fact that in the Homeric Hymns, 5, ''To Aphrodite,'' where Aphrodite is described as having "no power" over the three goddesses. Athena was sometimes given the epithet ''Hippia'' (Ἵππια "of the horses", "equestrian"), referring to her invention of the bit (horse), bit, bridle, chariot, and wagon. The Greek geographer Pausanias (geographer), Pausanias mentions in his ''Guide to Greece'' that the temple of Athena ''Chalinitis'' ("the bridler") in Corinth was located near the tomb of Medea's children. Other epithets include Ageleia, Itonia and ''Aethyia'', under which she was worshiped in Megara. The word ''aíthyia'' () signifies a "diver", also some diving bird species (possibly the shearwater) and figuratively, a "ship", so the name must reference Athena teaching the art of shipbuilding or navigation. In a temple at Phrixa in Ancient Elis, Elis, reportedly built by Clymenus, she was known as ''Cydonia'' (Κυδωνία). Pausanias wrote that at Buporthmus there was a sanctuary of Athena Promachorma (Προμαχόρμα), meaning ''protector of the anchorage''. The Greek biographer Plutarch (AD 46–120) refers to an instance during the construction of the Propylaia (Acropolis of Athens), Propylaia of her being called ''Athena Hygieia'' (Ὑγίεια, i. e. personified "Health") after inspiring a physician to a successful course of treatment. At Athens there is the temple of Athena ''Phratria'', as patron of a phratry, in the Ancient Agora of Athens.


''Glaukopis''

In Homer's Epic poetry, epic works, Athena's most common epithets in Homer, epithet is ' (), which usually is translated as, "bright-eyed" or "with gleaming eyes". The word is a combination of ' (, meaning "gleaming, silvery", and later, "bluish-green" or "gray") and ' (, "eye, face"). The word ' (, "little owl") is from the same root, presumably according to some, because of the bird's own distinctive eyes. Athena was associated with the owl from very early on; in archaic images, she is frequently depicted with an Owl of Athena, owl perched on her hand. Through its association with Athena, the owl evolved into the national mascot of the Athenians and eventually became a symbol of wisdom.


''Tritogeneia''

In the ''Iliad'' (4.514), the ''Odyssey'' (3.378), the ''Homeric Hymns'', and in Hesiod's ''Theogony'', Athena is also given the curious epithet ''Tritogeneia'' (Τριτογένεια), whose significance remains unclear. It could mean various things, including "Triton-born", perhaps indicating that the Triton (mythology), homonymous sea-deity was her parent according to some early myths. One myth relates the foster father relationship of this Triton towards the half-orphan Athena, whom he raised alongside his own daughter Pallas (daughter of Triton), Pallas. Kerényi suggests that "Tritogeneia did not mean that she came into the world on any particular river or lake, but that she was born of the water itself; for the name Triton seems to be associated with water generally." In Ovid's ''Metamorphoses'', Athena is occasionally referred to as "Tritonia". Another possible meaning may be "triple-born" or "third-born", which may refer to a triad or to her status as the third daughter of Zeus or the fact she was born from Metis, Zeus, and herself; various legends list her as being the first child after Artemis and Apollo, though other legends identify her as Zeus' first child. Several scholars have suggested a connection to the Rigveda, Rigvedic god Trita, who was sometimes grouped in a body of three mythological poets. Michael Janda has connected the myth of Trita to the scene in the ''Iliad'' in which the "three brothers" Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades divide the world between them, receiving the "broad sky", the sea, and the underworld respectively. Janda further connects the myth of Athena being born of the head (i. e. the uppermost part) of Zeus, understanding ''Trito-'' (which perhaps originally meant "the third") as another word for "the sky". In Janda's analysis of Indo-European mythology, this heavenly sphere is also associated with the mythological body of water surrounding the inhabited world (''cfr.'' Triton's mother, Amphitrite). Yet another possible meaning is mentioned in Diogenes Laertius' biography of Democritus, that Athena was called "Tritogeneia" because three things, on which all mortal life depends, come from her.


Mythology


Birth

She was the daughter of Zeus, produced without a mother, and emerged full-grown from his forehead. There was an alternate story that Zeus swallowed Metis, the goddess of counsel, while she was pregnant with Athena and when she was fully grown she emerged from Zeus' forehead. Being the favorite child of Zeus, she had great power. In the classical Olympian pantheon, Athena was regarded as the favorite child of Zeus, born fully armed from his forehead. The story of her birth comes in several versions. The earliest mention is in Book V of the ''Iliad'', when Ares accuses Zeus of being biased in favor of Athena because "''autos egeinao''" (literally "you fathered her", but probably intended as "you gave birth to her"). She was essentially urban and civilized, the antithesis in many respects of Artemis, goddess of the outdoors. Athena was probably a pre-Hellenic goddess and was later taken over by the Greeks. In the version recounted by Hesiod in his ''Theogony'', Zeus married the goddess Metis (mythology), Metis, who is described as the "wisest among gods and mortal men", and engaged in sexual intercourse with her.Hesiod, ''Theogony'
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/ref> After learning that Metis was pregnant, however, he became afraid that the unborn offspring would try to overthrow him, because Gaia and Ouranos had prophesied that Metis would bear children wiser than their father. In order to prevent this, Zeus tricked Metis into letting him swallow her, but it was too late because Metis had already conceived. A later account of the story from the ''Bibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus), Bibliotheca'' of Pseudo-Apollodorus, written in the second century AD, makes Metis Zeus's unwilling sexual partner, rather than his wife.Pseudo-Apollodorus, ''Bibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus), Bibliotheca'
1.3.6
/ref> According to this version of the story, Metis transformed into many different shapes in effort to escape Zeus, but Zeus successfully raped her and swallowed her. After swallowing Metis, Zeus took six more wives in succession until he married his seventh and present wife, Hera. Then Zeus experienced an enormous headache. He was in such pain that he ordered someone (either Prometheus, Hephaestus, Hermes, Ares, or Palaemon, depending on the sources examined) to cleave his head open with the ''labrys'', the double-headed Minoan civilization, Minoan axe. Athena leaped from Zeus's head, fully grown and armed. The "First Homeric Hymn to Athena" states in lines 9–16 that the gods were awestruck by Athena's appearance and even Helios, the god of the sun, stopped his chariot in the sky. Pindar, in his "Seventh Olympian Ode", states that she "cried aloud with a mighty shout" and that "the Sky and mother Earth shuddered before her." Hesiod states that Hera was so annoyed at Zeus for having given birth to a child on his own that she conceived and bore Hephaestus by parthenogenesis, herself, but in ''Imagines'
2. 27
(trans. Fairbanks), the third-century AD Greek rhetorician Philostratus the Elder writes that Hera "rejoices" at Athena's birth "as though Athena were her daughter also." The second-century AD Christian apologist Justin Martyr takes issue with those pagans who erect at springs images of Persephone, Kore, whom he interprets as Athena: "They said that Athena was the daughter of Zeus not from intercourse, but when the god had in mind the making of a world through a word (''logos'') his first thought was Athena." According to a version of the story in a scholium on the ''Iliad'' (found nowhere else), when Zeus swallowed Metis (mythology), Metis, she was pregnant with Athena by the Cyclopes, Cyclops Brontes. The ''Etymologicum Magnum'' instead deems Athena the daughter of the Dactyl (mythology), Daktyl Itonus, Itonos. Fragments attributed by the Christian Eusebius of Caesarea to the semi-legendary Phoenician historian Sanchuniathon, which Eusebius thought had been written before the Trojan war, make Athena instead the daughter of Cronus, a king of Byblos who visited "the inhabitable world" and bequeathed Attica to Athena.


Pallas Athena

Athena's epithet ''Pallas'' is derived either from , meaning "to brandish [as a weapon]", or, more likely, from and related words, meaning "youth, young woman". On this topic, Walter Burkert says "she is the Pallas of Athens, ''Pallas Athenaie'', just as Hera of Argos is ''Here Argeie''." In later times, after the original meaning of the name had been forgotten, the Greeks invented myths to explain its origins, such as those reported by the Epicurean philosopher Philodemus and the ''Bibliotheca'' of Pseudo-Apollodorus, which claim that ''Pallas'' was originally a separate entity, whom Athena had slain in combat. In one version of the myth, Pallas (daughter of Triton), Pallas was the daughter of the sea-god Triton (mythology), Triton; she and Athena were childhood friends, but Athena accidentally killed her during a friendly sparring match. Distraught over what she had done, Athena took the name Pallas for herself as a sign of her grief. In another version of the story, Pallas (Giant), Pallas was a Giants (Greek mythology), Gigante; Athena slew him during the Gigantomachy and flaying, flayed off his skin to make her cloak, which she wore as a victory trophy. In an alternative variation of the same myth, Pallas was instead Athena's father, who attempted to assault his own daughter, causing Athena to kill him and take his skin as a trophy. The ''Palladium (classical antiquity), palladium'' was a statue of Athena that was said to have stood in her temple on the Trojan Acropolis. Athena was said to have carved the statue herself in the likeness of her dead friend Pallas. The statue had special talisman-like properties and it was thought that, as long as it was in the city, Troy could never fall. When the Greeks captured Troy, Cassandra, the daughter of Priam, clung to the palladium for protection, but Ajax the Lesser violently tore her away from it and dragged her over to the other captives. Athena was infuriated by this violation of her protection. Although Agamemnon attempted to placate her anger with sacrifices, Athena sent a storm at Cape Kaphereos to destroy almost the entire Greek fleet and scatter all of the surviving ships across the Aegean.


Lady of Athens

In Homer's ''Iliad'', Athena, as a war goddess, inspired and fought alongside the Greek heroes; her aid was synonymous with military prowess. Also in the Iliad, Zeus, the chief god, specifically assigned the sphere of war to Ares, the god of war, and Athena. Athena's moral and military superiority to Ares derived in part from the fact that she represented the intellectual and civilized side of war and the virtues of justice and skill, whereas Ares represented mere blood lust. Her superiority also derived in part from the vastly greater variety and importance of her functions and the patriotism of Homer's predecessors, Ares being of foreign origin. In the Iliad, Athena was the divine form of the heroic, martial ideal: she personified excellence in close combat, victory, and glory. The qualities that led to victory were found on the aegis, or breastplate, that Athena wore when she went to war: fear, strife, defense, and assault. Athena appears in Homer's Odyssey as the tutelary deity of Odysseus, and myths from later sources portray her similarly as the helper of Perseus and Heracles (Hercules). As the guardian of the welfare of kings, Athena became the goddess of good counsel, prudent restraint and practical insight, and war. In a founding myth reported by Pseudo-Apollodorus, Athena competed with Poseidon for the patronage of Athens. They agreed that each would give the Athenians one gift and that Cecrops I, Cecrops, the king of Athens, would determine which gift was better. Poseidon struck the ground with his trident and a salt water spring sprang up; this gave the Athenians access to trade and water. Athens at its height was a significant sea power, defeating the Achaemenid Empire, Persian fleet at the Battle of Salamis—but the water was salty and undrinkable. In an alternative version of the myth from Vergil's ''Georgics'', Poseidon instead gave the Athenians the first horse. Athena offered the first domesticated olive tree. Cecrops accepted this gift and declared Athena the patron goddess of Athens. The olive tree brought wood, oil, and food, and became a symbol of Athenian economic prosperity. Robert Graves was of the opinion that "Poseidon's attempts to take possession of certain cities are political myths", which reflect the conflict between matriarchal and patriarchal religions. Pseudo-Apollodorus records an archaic legend, which claims that Hephaestus once attempted to rape Athena, but she pushed him away, causing him to ejaculate on her thigh. Athena wiped the semen off using a tuft of wool, which she tossed into the dust, impregnating Gaia (mythology), Gaia and causing her to give birth to Erichthonius of Athens, Erichthonius. Athena adopted Erichthonius as her son and raised him. The Roman mythographer Hyginus records a similar story in which Hephaestus demanded Zeus to let him marry Athena since he was the one who had smashed open Zeus's skull, allowing Athena to be born. Zeus agreed to this and Hephaestus and Athena were married, but, when Hephaestus was about to consummate the union, Athena vanished from the bridal bed, causing him to ejaculate on the floor, thus impregnating Gaia with Erichthonius. The geographer Pausanias (geographer), Pausanias records that Athena placed the infant Erichthonius into a small chest (''cista''), which she entrusted to the care of the three daughters of Cecrops I, Cecrops: Herse, Pandrosos, and Aglaulus, daughter of Cecrops, Aglauros of Athens. She warned the three sisters not to open the chest, but did not explain to them why or what was in it. Aglauros, and possibly one of the other sisters, opened the chest. Differing reports say that they either found that the child itself was a serpent, that it was guarded by a serpent, that it was guarded by two serpents, or that it had the legs of a serpent. In Pausanias's story, the two sisters were driven mad by the sight of the chest's contents and hurled themselves off the Acropolis, dying instantly, but an Attic vase painting shows them being chased by the serpent off the edge of the cliff instead. Erichthonius was one of the most important founding heroes of Athens and the legend of the daughters of Cecrops was a cult myth linked to the rituals of the Arrhephoria festival. Pausanias records that, during the Arrhephoria, two young girls known as the ''Arrhephoroi'', who lived near the temple of Athena Polias, would be given hidden objects by the High Priestess of Athena Polias, priestess of Athena, which they would carry on their heads down a natural underground passage. They would leave the objects they had been given at the bottom of the passage and take another set of hidden objects, which they would carry on their heads back up to the temple. The ritual was performed in the dead of night and no one, not even the priestess, knew what the objects were. The serpent in the story may be the same one depicted coiled at Athena's feet in Pheidias's famous statue of the ''Athena Parthenos'' in the Parthenon. Many of the surviving sculptures of Athena show this serpent. Herodotus records that a serpent lived in a crevice on the north side of the summit of the Athenian Acropolis and that the Athenians left a honey cake for it each month as an offering. On the eve of the Second Persian invasion of Greece in 480 BC, the serpent did not eat the honey cake and the Athenians interpreted it as a sign that Athena herself had abandoned them. Another version of the myth of the Athenian maidens is told in ''Metamorphoses'' by the Roman poet Ovid (43 BC17 AD); in this late variant Hermes falls in love with Herse. Herse, Aglaulus, and Pandrosus go to the temple to offer sacrifices to Athena. Hermes demands help from Aglaulus to seduce Herse. Aglaulus demands money in exchange. Hermes gives her the money the sisters have already offered to Athena. As punishment for Aglaulus's greed, Athena asks the goddess Invidia, Envy to make Aglaulus jealous of Herse. When Hermes arrives to seduce Herse, Aglaulus stands in his way instead of helping him as she had agreed. He turns her to stone.


Patron of heroes

According to Pseudo-Apollodorus's ''Bibliotheca'', Athena advised Argus (son of Arestor), Argos, the builder of the ''Argo'', the ship on which the hero Jason and his band of Argonauts sailed, and aided in the ship's construction. Pseudo-Apollodorus also records that Athena guided the hero Perseus (mythology), Perseus in his quest to behead Medusa (mythology), Medusa. She and Hermes, the god of travelers, appeared to Perseus after he set off on his quest and gifted him with tools he would need to kill the Gorgon. Athena gave Perseus a polished bronze shield to view Medusa's reflection rather than looking at her directly and thereby avoid being turned to stone.Pseudo-Apollodorus, ''Bibliotheca'' 2.41 Hermes gave him an adamantine scythe to cut off Medusa's head. When Perseus swung his blade to behead Medusa, Athena guided it, allowing his scythe to cut it clean off. According to Pindar's ''Thirteenth Olympian Ode'', Athena helped the hero Bellerophon tame the winged horse Pegasus by giving him a Bit (horse), bit. In ancient Greek art, Athena is frequently shown aiding the hero Heracles. She appears in four of the twelve metopes on the Temple of Zeus at Olympia depicting Heracles's Labors of Heracles, Twelve Labors, including the first, in which she passively watches him slay the Nemean lion, and the tenth, in which she is shown actively helping him hold up the sky. She is presented as his "stern ally", but also the "gentle... acknowledger of his achievements." Artistic depictions of Heracles's apotheosis show Athena driving him to Mount Olympus in her chariot and presenting him to Zeus for his deification. In Aeschylus's tragedy ''Orestes (play), Orestes'', Athena intervenes to save Orestes from the wrath of the Erinyes and presides over his trial for the murder of his mother Clytemnestra. When half the jury votes to acquittal, acquit and the other half votes to convict, Athena casts the deciding vote to acquit Orestes and declares that, from then on, whenever a jury is tied, the defendant shall always be acquitted. In ''The Odyssey'', Odysseus' cunning and shrewd nature quickly wins Athena's favour. For the first part of the poem, however, she largely is confined to aiding him only from ''afar'', mainly by implanting thoughts in his head during his journey home from Troy. Her guiding actions reinforce her role as the "protectress of heroes," or, as mythologian Walter Friedrich Otto dubbed her, the "goddess of nearness," due to her mentoring and motherly probing. It is not until he washes up on the shore of the island of the Phaeacians, where Nausicaa is washing her clothes that Athena arrives personally to provide more tangible assistance. She appears in Nausicaa's dreams to ensure that the princess rescues Odysseus and plays a role in his eventual escort to Ithaca. Athena appears to Odysseus upon his arrival, disguised as a herdsman; she initially lies and tells him that Penelope, his wife, has remarried and that he is believed to be dead, but Odysseus lies back to her, employing skillful prevarications to protect himself. Impressed by his resolve and shrewdness, she reveals herself and tells him what he needs to know to win back his kingdom. She disguises him as an elderly beggar so that he will not be recognized by the suitors or Penelope, and helps him to defeat the suitors. Athena also appears to Odysseus's son Telemachus. Her actions lead him to travel around to Odysseus's comrades and ask about his father. He hears stories about some of Odysseus's journey. Athena's push for Telemachos's journey helps him grow into the man role, that his father once held. She also plays a role in ending the resultant feud against the suitors' relatives. She instructs Laertes to throw his spear and to kill Eupeithes, the father of Antinous son of Eupeithes, Antinous. File:Athena Herakles Staatliche Antikensammlungen 2648.jpg, Athena and Heracles on an Attica, Attic red-figure Kylix (drinking cup), kylix, 480–470 BC File:Kantharos 58.9.jpg, Athena, detail from a silver ''kantharos'' with Theseus in Crete ( 440-435 BC), part of the Vassil Bojkov Collection, Vassil Bojkov collection, Sofia, Bulgaria File:Herakleia AR SNGANS 064.jpg, Silver coin showing Athena with Scylla decorated helmet and Heracles fighting the Nemean lion (Heraclea Lucania, 390-340 BC) File:Orestes Delphi BM GR1917.12-10.1.jpg, Paestan red-figure bell-krater ( 330 BC), showing Orestes at Delphi flanked by Athena and Pylades among the Erinyes and priestesses of Apollo, with the Pythia sitting behind them on her Sacrificial tripod#Ancient Greece, tripod


Punishment myths

The Gorgoneion appears to have originated as an Apotropaic magic, apotropaic symbol intended to ward off evil. In a late myth invented to explain the origins of the Gorgon, Medusa is described as having been a young priestess who served in the temple of Athena in Athens. Poseidon lusted after Medusa, and raped her in the temple of Athena, refusing to allow her vow of chastity to stand in his way. Upon discovering the desecration of her temple, Athena transformed Medusa into a hideous monster with serpents for hair whose gaze Petrifaction in mythology and fiction, would turn any mortal to stone. In his ''Twelfth Pythian Ode'', Pindar recounts the story of how Athena invented the ''aulos'', a kind of flute, in imitation of the lamentations of Medusa's sisters, the Gorgons, after she was beheaded by the hero Perseus. According to Pindar, Athena gave the aulos to mortals as a gift. Later, the comic playwright Melanippides, Melanippides of Melos ( 480-430 BC) embellished the story in his comedy ''Marsyas'', claiming that Athena looked in the mirror while she was playing the aulos and saw how blowing into it puffed up her cheeks and made her look silly, so she threw the aulos away and cursed it so that whoever picked it up would meet an awful death. The aulos was picked up by the satyr Marsyas, who was later killed by Apollo for his hubris. Later, this version of the story became accepted as canonical and the Athenian sculptor Myron created a group of bronze sculptures based on it, which was installed before the western front of the Parthenon in around 440 BC. A myth told by the early third-century BC Hellenistic poet Callimachus in his ''Hymn'' 5 begins with Athena bathing in a spring on Mount Helicon at midday with one of her favorite companions, the nymph Chariclo. Chariclo's son Tiresias happened to be hunting on the same mountain and came to the spring searching for water. He inadvertently saw Athena naked, so she struck him blind to ensure he would never again see what man was not intended to see. Chariclo intervened on her son's behalf and begged Athena to have mercy. Athena replied that she could not restore Tiresias's eyesight, so, instead, she gave him the ability to understand the language of the birds and thus foretell the future. The fable of Arachne appears in Ovid's ''Metamorphoses'' (8 AD) (vi.5–54 and 129–145), which is nearly the only extant source for the legend. The story does not appear to have been well known prior to Ovid's rendition of it and the only earlier reference to it is a brief allusion in Virgil's ''Georgics'', (29 BC) (iv, 246) that does not mention Arachne by name. According to Ovid, Arachne (whose name means ''spider'' in ancient Greek) was the daughter of a famous dyer in Tyrian purple in Hypaipa of Lydia, and a weaving student of Athena. She became so conceited of her skill as a weaver that she began claiming that her skill was greater than that of Athena herself. Athena gave Arachne a chance to redeem herself by assuming the form of an old woman and warning Arachne not to offend the deities. Arachne scoffed and wished for a weaving contest, so she could prove her skill. Athena wove the scene of her victory over Poseidon in the contest for the patronage of Athens. Athena's tapestry also depicted the 12 Olympian gods and defeat of mythological figures who challenged their authority. Arachne's tapestry featured twenty-one episodes of the deities' infidelity, including Zeus being unfaithful with Leda (mythology), Leda, with Europa (mythical), Europa, and with Danaë. It represented the unjust and discrediting behavior of the gods towards mortals. Athena admitted that Arachne's work was flawless, but was outraged at Arachne's offensive choice of subject, which displayed the failings and transgressions of the deities. Finally, losing her temper, Athena destroyed Arachne's tapestry and loom, striking it with her shuttle. Athena then struck Arachne across the face with her staff four times. Arachne hanged herself in despair, but Athena took pity on her and brought her back from the dead in the form of a spider.


Trojan War

The myth of the Judgement of Paris is mentioned briefly in the ''Iliad'', but is described in depth in an epitome of the ''Cypria'', a lost poem of the Epic Cycle, which records that all the gods and goddesses as well as various mortals were invited to the marriage of Peleus and Thetis (the eventual parents of Achilles). Only Eris (mythology), Eris, goddess of discord, was not invited. She was annoyed at this, so she arrived with a golden apple inscribed with the word καλλίστῃ (kallistēi, "for the fairest"), which she threw among the goddesses. Aphrodite, Hera, and Athena all claimed to be the fairest, and thus the rightful owner of the apple. The goddesses chose to place the matter before Zeus, who, not wanting to favor one of the goddesses, put the choice into the hands of Paris, a Troy, Trojan prince. After bathing in the spring of Mount Ida where Troy was situated, the goddesses appeared before Paris for his decision. In the extant ancient depictions of the Judgement of Paris, Aphrodite is only occasionally represented nude, and Athena and Hera are always fully clothed. Since the Renaissance, however, Western paintings have typically portrayed all three goddesses as completely naked. All three goddesses were ideally beautiful and Paris could not decide between them, so they resorted to bribes. Hera tried to bribe Paris with power over all Asia and Europe, and Athena offered fame and glory in battle, but Aphrodite promised Paris that, if he were to choose her as the fairest, she would let him marry the most beautiful woman on earth. This woman was Helen of Troy, Helen, who was already married to King Menelaus of Sparta#Prehistory, "dark age" and archaic period, Sparta. Paris selected Aphrodite and awarded her the apple. The other two goddesses were enraged and, as a direct result, sided with the Greeks in the Trojan War. In Books V–VI of the ''Iliad'', Athena aids the hero Diomedes, who, in the absence of Achilles, proves himself to be the most effective Greek warrior. Several artistic representations from the early sixth century BC may show Athena and Diomedes, including an early sixth-century BC shield band depicting Athena and an unidentified warrior riding on a chariot, a vase painting of a warrior with his charioteer facing Athena, and an inscribed clay plaque showing Diomedes and Athena riding in a chariot. Numerous passages in the ''Iliad'' also mention Athena having previously served as the patron of Diomedes's father Tydeus. When the Trojan women go to the temple of Athena on the Acropolis to plead her for protection from Diomedes, Athena ignores them. Athena also gets into a duel with Ares, the god of the brutal wars, and her male counterpart Ares blames her for encouraging Diomedes to tear his beautiful flesh. He curses her and strikes with all his strength. Athena deflects his blow with her aegis, a powerful shield that even Zeus's thunderbolt and lightning cannot blast through. Athena picked up a massive boulder and threw it at Ares, who immediately crumpled to the ground. Aphrodite, who was a lover of Ares, came down from Olympus to carry Ares away but was struck by Athena's golden spear and fell. Athena taunted the gods who supported Troy, saying that they will too eventually end up like Ares and Aphrodite, which scared them, therefore proving her power and reputation among the other gods. In Book XXII of the ''Iliad'', while Achilles is chasing Hector around the walls of Troy, Athena appears to Hector disguised as his brother Deiphobus and persuades him to hold his ground so that they can fight Achilles together. Then, Hector throws his spear at Achilles and misses, expecting Deiphobus to hand him another, but Athena disappears instead, leaving Hector to face Achilles alone without his spear. In Sophocles's tragedy ''Ajax (play), Ajax'', she punishes Odysseus's rival Ajax the Great, driving him insane and causing him to massacre the Achaeans' cattle, thinking that he is slaughtering the Achaeans themselves. Even after Odysseus himself expresses pity for Ajax, Athena declares, "To laugh at your enemies - what sweeter laughter can there be than that?" (lines 78–9). Ajax later commits suicide as a result of his humiliation.


Classical art

Athena appears frequently in classical Greek art, including on coins and in paintings on ceramics. She is especially prominent in works produced in Athens. In classical depictions, Athena is usually portrayed standing upright, wearing a full-length chiton (costume), chiton. She is most often represented dressed in armor like a male soldier and wearing a Corinthian helmet raised high atop her forehead. Her shield bears at its centre the aegis with the head of the gorgon (''gorgoneion'') in the center and snakes around the edge. Sometimes she is shown wearing the aegis as a cloak. As Athena Promachos, she is shown brandishing a spear. Scenes in which Athena was represented include her birth from the head of Zeus, her battle with the Giants (Greek mythology), Gigantes, the birth of Erichthonius, and the Judgement of Paris. The ''Mourning Athena'' or ''Athena Meditating'' is a famous relief sculpture dating to around 470-460 BC that has been interpreted to represent Athena Polias. The most famous classical depiction of Athena was the ''Athena Parthenos'', a now-lost Chryselephantine, gold and ivory statue of her in the Parthenon created by the Athenian sculptor Phidias. Copies reveal that this statue depicted Athena holding her shield in her left hand with Nike (mythology), Nike, the winged goddess of victory, standing in her right. Athena Polias is also represented in a Neo-Attic relief now held in the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, which depicts her holding an owl in her hand and wearing her characteristic Corinthian helmet while resting her shield against a nearby ''herma''. The Roman goddess Minerva adopted most of Athena's Greek iconographical associations, but was also integrated into the Capitoline Triad. File:Exaleiptron birth Athena Louvre CA616 n2.jpg, Attic Black-figure pottery, black-figure ''exaleiptron'' of the birth of Athena from the head of Zeus ( 570–560 BC) by the C Painter File:Athena Promachos MGEt Inv39565.jpg, Attic red-figure kylix of Athena Promachos holding a spear and standing beside a Doric order, Doric column ( 500-490 BC) NAMABG-Aphaia Athena statue.JPG, Restoration of the polychrome decoration of the Athena statue from the Aphaea temple at Aegina, BC (from the exposition "Bunte Götter" by the Munich Glyptothek) Acropole Musée Athéna pensante.JPG, The ''Mourning Athena'' relief ( 470-460 BC) File:Athena Enkelados Louvre CA3662.jpg, Attic red-figure kylix showing Athena slaying the Giants (Greek mythology), Gigante Enceladus (giant), Enceladus ( 550–500 BC) File:Pergamonaltarathena.jpg, Relief of Athena and Nike (mythology), Nike slaying the Gigante Alcyoneus, Alkyoneus (?) from the Gigantomachy Frieze on the Pergamon Altar (early second century BC) File:Athena mosaic Pio-Clementino.jpg, Classical mosaic from a villa at Tusculum, 3rd century AD, now at Museo Pio-Clementino, Vatican File:Athena portrait by Eukleidas on Syracuse tetradrachm c. 400 BC.jpg, Athena portrait by Eukleidas on a tetradrachm from Syracuse, Sicily c. 400 BC File:StonePaletteMythologicalScene.jpg, Mythological scene with Athena (left) and Herakles (right), on a stone palette of the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara, India File:Atena farnese, copia romana da orig. greco della cerchia fidiaca, forse Pyrrhos nel 430 ac ca., 6024, 01.JPG, ''Atena farnese'', Roman copy of a Greek original from Phidias' circle, 430 AD, Museo Archeologico, Naples File:Gandharan Athena.jpg, Athena (2nd century BC) in the art of Gandhara, displayed at the Lahore Museum, Pakistan


Post-classical culture


Art and symbolism

Early Christian writers, such as Clement of Alexandria and Julius Firmicus Maternus, Firmicus, denigrated Athena as representative of all the things that were detestable about paganism; they condemned her as "immodest and immoral". During the Middle Ages, however, many attributes of Athena were given to the Virgin Mary, who, in fourth-century portrayals, was often depicted wearing the Gorgoneion. Some even viewed the Virgin Mary as a warrior maiden, much like Athena Parthenos; one anecdote tells that the Virgin Mary once appeared upon the walls of Constantinople when it was under siege by the Avars, clutching a spear and urging the people to fight. During the Middle Ages, Athena became widely used as a Christian symbol and allegory, and she appeared on the family crests of certain noble houses. During the Renaissance, Athena donned the mantle of patron of the arts and human endeavor; allegorical paintings involving Athena were a favorite of the Italian Renaissance painters. In Sandro Botticelli's painting ''Pallas and the Centaur'', probably painted sometime in the 1480s, Athena is the personification of chastity, who is shown grasping the forelock of a centaur, who represents lust. Andrea Mantegna's 1502 painting ''Triumph of the Virtues (Mantegna), Minerva Expelling the Vices from the Garden of Virtue'' uses Athena as the personification of Graeco-Roman learning chasing the vices of medievalism from the garden of modern scholarship. Athena is also used as the personification of wisdom in Bartholomeus Spranger's 1591 painting ''The Triumph of Wisdom'' or ''Minerva Victorious over Ignorance''. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Athena was used as a symbol for female rulers. In his book ''A Revelation of the True Minerva'' (1582), Thomas Blennerhassett portrays Elizabeth I of England, Queen Elizabeth I of England as a "new Minerva" and "the greatest goddesse nowe on earth". A series of paintings by Peter Paul Rubens depict Athena as Marie de' Medici's patron and mentor; the final painting in the series goes even further and shows Marie de' Medici with Athena's iconography, as the mortal incarnation of the goddess herself. The Flemish sculptor Jean-Pierre-Antoine Tassaert (Jan Peter Anton Tassaert) later portrayed Catherine II of Russia as Athena in a marble bust in 1774. During the French Revolution, statues of pagan gods were torn down all throughout France, but statues of Athena were not. Instead, Athena was transformed into the personification of freedom and the republic and a statue of the goddess stood in the center of the Place de la Revolution in Paris. In the years following the Revolution, artistic representations of Athena proliferated. A statue of Athena stands directly in front of the Austrian Parliament Building in Vienna, and depictions of Athena have influenced other symbols of Western freedom, including the Statue of Liberty and Britannia. For over a century, Parthenon (Nashville), a full-scale replica of the Parthenon has stood in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1990, the curators added a gilded forty-two-foot (12.5 m) tall Athena Parthenos#Replica at Nashville, replica of Phidias's ''Athena Parthenos'', built from concrete and fiberglass. The Great Seal of California bears the image of Athena kneeling next to a brown grizzly bear. Athena has occasionally appeared on modern coins, as she did on the ancient Athenian drachma. Her head appears on the $50 1915-S Panama–Pacific commemorative coins, Panama-Pacific commemorative coin. Palas y el Centauro.jpg, ''Pallas and the Centaur'' ( 1482) by Sandro Botticelli Minerve chassant les Vices du jardin des Vertus, Mantegna (Louvre INV 371) 02.jpg, ''Triumph of the Virtues (Mantegna), Minerva Expelling the Vices from the Garden of Virtue'' (1502) by Andrea Mantegna Athena Scorning the Advances of Hephaestus.jpg, ''Athena Scorning the Advances of Hephaestus'' ( 1555–1560) by Paris Bordone Bartholomäus Spranger 017.jpg, ''Minerva Victorious over Ignorance'' ( 1591) by Bartholomeus Spranger Peter Paul Rubens - Marie de Medicis as Bellona2.jpg, ''Maria de Medici'' (1622) by Peter Paul Rubens, showing her as the incarnation of Athena Peter_Paul_Rubens_(1577-1640)_Peace_and_War_(1629).jpg, ''Minerva Protecting Peace from Mars'' (1629) by Peter Paul Rubens Pallas Athena or, Armoured Figure by Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn.jpg, ''Pallas Athena (Rembrandt), Pallas Athena'' ( 1655) by Rembrandt Giuseppe Bottani - Athena revealing Ithaca to Ulysses.jpg, ''Minerva Revealing Ithaca to Ulysses'' (fifteenth century) by Giuseppe Bottani Rene Antoine Houasse - Minerva and the Triumph of Jupiter, 1706.jpg, ''Minerva and the Triumph of Jupiter (mythology), Jupiter'' (1706) by René-Antoine Houasse The Combat of Mars and Minerva.jpg, ''The Combat of Mars and Minerva'' (1771) by Joseph-Benoît Suvée The Combat of Ares and Athena.jpg, ''Minerva Fighting Mars'' (1771) by Jacques-Louis David Minerva-Vedder-Highsmith-detail-1.jpeg, ''Minerva of Peace'' mosaic in the Library of Congress Great Seal of California.svg, Athena on the Great Seal of California


Modern interpretations

One of Sigmund Freud's most treasured possessions was a small, bronze sculpture of Athena, which sat on his desk. Freud once described Athena as "a woman who is unapproachable and repels all sexual desires - since she displays the terrifying genitals of the Mother." Feminism, Feminist views on Athena are sharply divided; some feminists regard her as a symbol of female empowerment, while others regard her as "the ultimate Patriarchy, patriarchal sell out... who uses her powers to promote and advance men rather than others of her sex." In contemporary Wicca, Athena is venerated as an aspect of the Wiccan views of divinity, Goddess and some Wiccans believe that she may bestow the "Owl Gift" ("the ability to write and communicate clearly") upon her worshippers. Due to her status as one of the twelve Olympians, Athena is a major deity in Hellenism (religion), Hellenismos, a Modern Paganism, Neopagan religion which seeks to authentically revive and recreate the religion of ancient Greece in the modern world. Athena is a natural patron of universities: At Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, a statue of Athena (a replica of the original bronze one in the arts and archaeology library) resides in the Great Hall. It is traditional at exam time for students to leave offerings to the goddess with a note asking for good luck, or to repent for accidentally breaking any of the college's numerous other traditions. Pallas Athena is the tutelary goddess of the international social fraternity Phi Delta Theta. Her owl is also a symbol of the fraternity.


Genealogy


See also

* Athenaeum (disambiguation) * Ambulia, a Spartan epithet used for Athena, Zeus, and Castor and Pollux


Notes


References


Bibliography


Ancient sources

* Apollodorus, ''Library, 3,180'' * Augustine, ''De civitate dei xviii.8–9'' * Cicero, ''De natura deorum iii.21.53, 23.59'' * Eusebius, ''Chronicon 30.21–26, 42.11–14'' * Homer, ''The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PhD in two volumes''. Cambridge, Massachusetts., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924
Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
* Homer; ''The Odyssey with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PH.D. in two volumes''. Cambridge, Massachusetts., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1919
Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
* Hesiod, ''Theogony'', in ''The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White'', Cambridge, Massachusetts., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914
Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
* Lactantius, ''Divinae institutions i.17.12–13, 18.22–23'' * Livy, ''Ab urbe condita libri vii.3.7'' * Lucan, ''Pharsalia, Bellum civile ix.350''


Modern sources

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Gantz, Timothy, ''Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources'', Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996, Two volumes: (Vol. 1), (Vol. 2). * * * * * * * Jane Ellen Harrison, Harrison, Jane Ellen, 1903. ''Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion''. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Seppo Telenius, Telenius, Seppo Sakari, (2005) 2006. ''Athena-Artemis'' (Helsinki: Kirja kerrallaan). * * * * *


External links


ATHENA on the Perseus Project



ATHENA from Mythopedia
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