|  | Goddesses of Ancient Greece - A
 
     
      | Acantha The spirit of the acanthus tree who was once a nymph loved by the sun 
        god and who, at her death, was transformed into a sun-loving herb.
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      | Acanthis The sister of Acanthus. When she cried over the death of her brother the 
        gods turned her into a thistle finch.
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      | Achelois A moon-goddess (she who drives away pain) to whom sacrifice was ordered 
        by the Dodonian Oracle.
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      | Achlys ("mist"', "darkness") The Mother who existed before 
        Chaos, giving birth to it.
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      | Acidalia An epithet of Aphrodite, named after the spring with the same name in 
        Boeotia, where she used to bathe.
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      | Adamanthea The nymph who nursed Zeus (when Rhea gave Cronus a stone to swallow instead 
        of the new-born Zeus). Cronus was supposedly able to see everything that 
        occurred in the realms over which he had dominion (the earth, heavens, 
        and the sea), but Adamanthea deceived him by hanging the baby Zeus (in 
        his cradle) from a tree, so that suspended between earth, sea, and sky 
        he was invisible to his father. There are MANY versions of this story 
        and the nurse has a different name in each: Ida, Adrasteia, Neda, Helice, 
        Aega, Cynosura.
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      | Admete The daughter of Eurystheus. For her Heracles stole the girdle of Hippolyta.
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      | Adrasteia "She whom none can escape". Properly an epithet of Rhea Cybele 
        in her attribute of the Mother who punishes human injustice, which is 
        a transgression of the natural right order of things. The Greeks and Romans 
        identified her with Nemesis.
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      | Aedon Wife of Zethus and mother of a daughter Itylus, whom she slew by mistake, 
        whereupon Zeus transformed her into the nightingale who nightly laments 
        her murdered child -OR- a queen of ancient Thebes who plotted to kill 
        a son of her rival Niobe but killed her own son by mistake. Her grief 
        led her to try suicide but she was transformed into the first nightingale 
        by the gods, a bird that still haunts the night with its mournful cry. 
        Greece Odyssey XIX, 518.
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      | Aegea She was sister to Circe and Pasiphae, and daughter of the sun. When the 
        Titans attacked the gods of Olympus, Gaia placed Aega in a cave to hide 
        her shining loveliness. Japanese (Amaterasu) and Finnish (Paivatar) myths 
        have the same theme.
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Aegiale The daughter of Adrastus and Amphithea. She married Diomedes but was unfaithful 
        to him during his absence.
 
 Aegina
 Aegina is the daughter of the river god Asopus. The girl was abducted 
        Zeus, who carried her off to the island of Attica (in the Sardonic Gulf), 
        which was later named after her. She gave birth to a son, called Aeacus, 
        and he became the monarch of the island.
 
 Aello
 Aello is one of the Greek Harpies who was employed by the gods to make 
        peace and carry out punishments for crimes. Aello was described as a beautiful, 
        winged maiden. Later other writers described her as a winged monster with 
        the face of an ugly old woman, with crooked and sharp talons and claws. 
        She also was described as taking people to the Underworld and torturing 
        them. Aello is known as the Storm Swift of the three. She was also described 
        as a horrid woman with the body of a bird.
 
 Aerope
 The wife of Atreus. She committed adultery with his brother Thyestes and 
        gave him the Golden Fleece through which Atreus would become the legal 
        ruler of Mycene. Atreus prevented this.
 
 Aethra
 Aethra is the daughter Pittheus, the king of Troezen, and the wife of 
        Aegeus. She bore him a son: the hero Theseus.
 
 Aetna
 A daughter of Uranus and Gaia. She is the personified goddess of Mt. Etna, 
        a volcano on Sicily. Underneath this volcano the giant Typhon lies buried 
        (which explains the volcanic eruptions). When Hephaestus and Demeter were 
        arguing over Sicily, land of volcanoes and corn, Aetna stepped in to act 
        as arbitrator. She is sometimes regarded as the mother of the Palici, 
        the twin Sicilian gods of geysers.
 
 Aganippe
 "Mare who kills mercifully" A nymph, the daughter of the river-deity 
        Ternessus. She resides in the well Aganippe near Thespiae, at the base 
        of the mountain Helicon in Boeotia. The horse Pegasus supposedly created 
        this well with his hooves. This fountain was also dedicated to the Muses 
        because it imparted poetic inspiration. Hence the Muses are sometimes 
        called Aganippides.
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      | Agave ("illustrious") The daughter of Cadmus and mother of Pentheus. 
        Agave killed her son when she was afflicted with Dionysic madness (Ovid 
        III, 725).
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      | Agdistis The name of the great rock of Asia Minor (Cybele in disguise) that Zeus 
        raped. The offspring of this union was Agdistis, a hermaphrodite.
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      | Aglaia (Aglaea) One of the three Graces. See also Euphrosyne and Thalia. Sometimes 
        represented as the wife of Hephaestus. Her name means "the brilliant, 
        splendor, shining one".
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      | Aglaulus In Greek mythology, the daughter of Cecrops, sister of Herse and Pandrosus. 
        When the city of Athens was once under siege for a very long time, Aglaulus 
        voluntarily hurled herself from the Acropolis, because an oracle had spoken 
        that through such a sacrifice the city would be saved. In her temple young 
        Athenian men who were called for service made the oath to guard their 
        fatherland. According to other sources, the goddess Athena had entrusted 
        the three sisters a small box that was not to be opened under any circumstance; 
        the young hero Erichthonius had been laid inside the box. When Aglaulus 
        and Herse opened the box and looked upon the face of the child, they were 
        stricken with madness, and hurled themselves from the Acropolis.
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      | Aglauros Daughter of Cecrops, the half-dragon half-man creature. Sister of Herse 
        who was beloved by Hermes. When Hermes visited Herse, Aglauros, who was 
        jealous, got in his way and said she would not move. The god took her 
        at her word and turned her into stone so she could not.
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      | Agrotora Another name for the Greek goddess Artemis, under which title she was 
        regarded as the patron goddess of hunters.
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      | Ainia Ainia was an enemy of Achilles. She fought with Penthesilea at Troy, against 
        Achilles.
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      | Alcestis "Might of the Home" The daughter of King Pelias, and wife of 
        Admetus. She volunteered to die in his place, but was returned from the 
        underworld by Heracles and reunited with her husband. She is a classical 
        example of love and loyalty. On a piece of art in the temple of Artemis 
        (rebuilt after the fire of 356 BCE), made by Scopas of Praxiteles, she 
        is portrayed between the winged god of death and Hermes.
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      | Alcimede The mother of Jason (Jason, the son of Aeson, was the leader of the Argonauts 
        and the husband of Medea. Because of a prophecy that Jason would someday 
        do him harm, King Pelias of Iolcos sent Jason on a seemingly impossible 
        quest to bring the Golden Fleece back from distant Colchis.)
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      | Alcippe The daughter of Ares and Aglaulus. She was raped by a son of Poseidon. 
        Ares then killed the rapist, and was brought before the other gods to 
        go on trial for murder; the first murder trial. After hearing the brutal 
        facts of the case they quickly acquitted him. See: Halirrhotius.
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      | Alcmene The wife of Amphitryon. While he was away, Zeus appeared before her Amphitryon's 
        guise, and seduced her. She became by him the mother or Heracles. "The 
        might of the moon".
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      | Alcyone (Halcyon) Greek demi-goddess, sometimes regarded as one of the Pleiades. 
        More often she was thought of as the daughter of Aeolus and wife of Ceyx, 
        son of Eosphorus and the king of Thessaly. They were very happy together, 
        but then Ceyx perished in a shipwreck and Alcyone threw herself into the 
        sea. Out of compassion, the gods changed them into the halcyon birds. 
        Since Alcyone made her nest on the beach, and waves threatened to destroy 
        it, Aeolus restrained his winds and made the waves be calm during seven 
        days in each year, so she could lay her eggs. These became known as the 
        "halcyon days", when storms never occur. The halcyon became 
        a symbol of tranquillity. (Ovid XI, 410). The name means something like 
        "Queen who wards off (storms)".
 
 
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      | Alectrona An early goddess who was a daughter of the sun.
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      | Alekto ("unceasing in anger") (Alecto). One of the three Erinyes (Furies). 
        See also Megaera and Tisiphone. The Furies had snakes for hair and blood 
        dripped from their eyes. they also had bats' wings and dogs' heads. They 
        were persecutors of men and women who committed parricide, killed a brother, 
        or murdered a fellow clansman. Their effect on their victim was madness.
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      | Alope The daughter of Cercyon, son of Poseidon. She was abducted by her grandfather 
        and gave birth to Hippothoon. When Cercyon discovered this, he had his 
        daughter buried alive, but Poseidon turned her into the spring Alope near 
        Eleusis.
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      | Althaea The wife of Oeneus and mother of Meleager. When her child was born, the 
        three Moirae prophesied that Meleager would live only so long as a brand 
        burning upon the hearth remained unconsumed. Althaea immediately snatched 
        the brand from the fire and kept it in a safe place. When Meleager killed 
        her two brothers in a fight, Althaea removed the half-consumed brand from 
        its hiding place and cast it upon the fire. Ovid VIII, 455.
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      | Amaltheia The divine goat who suckled Zeus on Crete, his island of birth, when he 
        was still an infant. In other traditions, Amaltheia was a nymph who nourished 
        Zeus with honey and the milk of a goat. Out of gratitude Zeus turned one 
        of the goat's horns into the Cornucopia ("horn of plenty") which 
        was always filled with whatever its possessor wished. In some traditions, 
        the goat's skin became the Aegis, the legendary shield of Athena.
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      | Amazons Warrior women, who are described in the Iliad as "antianeirai", 
        meaning: those who go to war like men. They were also described by Herodotus 
        as "androktones", killers of males. It is believed they resided 
        in Pontus, Asia Minor (modern day Turkey) but there are differing views 
        as to how many nations of Amazons there were. The most famous came from 
        Pontus, with Themiscyra as their capital, and it is said that it was this 
        community who built Ephesus on the central west coast of Asia Minor (history 
        records Ephesus as being built circa 1050 BCE. by Ionian Greeks). The 
        name Amazon is believed to descend from the word amazoi which in Greek 
        means "breast less", deriving from the legend that says they 
        removed their young girls right breast, as to facilitate the drawing of 
        the bow, as the bow and arrows were their main weapon. They also used 
        sword, double sided axe and carried a distinctive crescent shaped shield. 
        Most of their fighting was done from horseback. Some say the breast was 
        removed by cutting, others that it was burnt off while the child was young, 
        and one legend says they removed the breast themselves.
 
 As with most mythology, the anciant writers have differing opinions as 
        to where they were from and where they traveled. It has been written that 
        they journeyed as far afield as Egypt. According to Diodorus of Sicily, 
        with Myrine leading them they defeated the Atlantians, occupied Gorgon 
        and the greater part of Libya, and also crossed Phrygia.
 
 Homer wrote in his great work the Iliad that the Amazons with Penthesilea 
        went to Troy in aid of King Priam during the Trojan War, and while doing 
        battle Penthesilea was wounded in her right breast. It was the hero Achilles 
        who inflicted the wound, but then fell in love with her great beauty.
 
 The great Heracles had to travel to the lands of the Amazons to complete 
        the ninth labor imposed on him by Eurystheus. This labor became known 
        as the "Girdle of Hippolyte" and his task was to bring back 
        this symbolic girdle which had been given to the Amazons by the god of 
        war Ares. It has been said that the Amazons were descendants of Ares and 
        Otrera. Heracles took the girdle, but unfortunately he killed queen Hippolyta. 
        Theseus the Athenian hero abducted Antiope, the sister of Hippolyta, and 
        he took her back to Athens. In some versions Theseus married her, and 
        in others he married Hippolyta. The legend tells of the Amazons invading 
        Attica to take back their queen, and on reaching Athens a great battle 
        took place, but the Athenians were glorious. This scene has been depicted 
        in art by the Greeks in many forms, but probably the most famous are the 
        architectural marble carvings from the Parthenon, this form of sculpture 
        is known as Amazonomachy.
 
 The Amazons worshiped Artemis, the virgin goddess of the hunt; and Ares, 
        the god of war. There are many variations to the all female tribe. As 
        how they multiplied, some say the Amazons met with men from nearby societies, 
        then after choosing a suitable partner would take them into the darkness 
        of the forest and there they would couple with them. When the time came, 
        and if they gave birth to a male, they would kill, blind or cripple the 
        infant. If they kept them alive they would then use them when they grew 
        into young men (if they were suitable) as a supply of male seed. They 
        also took men prisoner in battle, after choosing the most handsome they 
        then used them for their sexual pleasure, and would either kill them or 
        use them as slaves once their usefulness had been expended.
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Amphitrite (third encircler of the sea)Daughter of Nereus, by Doris, and wife of 
        Poseidon. Sea Goddess. daughter of Oceanus and Tethys or of Nereus and 
        Doris. When the sea god Poseidon wanted her as his bride, she declined 
        the honor and hid from him in the Atlantic Ocean. A dolphin not only located 
        her, but also brought her back to him, and he married her. The dolphin 
        was awarded a place in heaven. Their son is the fish-man Triton. Amphitrite 
        was portrayed on Greek amphoras together with her consort, riding in a 
        chariot pulled by sea creatures, or sitting on a sea creature, surrounded 
        by Tritons. She is decorated with the attributes of a queen, her waving 
        hair covered with a net, and sometimes with the pincers of a lobster attached 
        to her temples. The Romans referred to her as Salacia.
 
 Amymone
 A daughter of Danaus. She was once assaulted by a satyr near a spring, 
        but was saved by Poseidon. She fell in love with him and became by him 
        the mother of Nauplius (who later founded Nauplia (the current Nafplion), 
        a port at the gulf of Argolis). Her attribute is a water pitcher.
 
 Ananke
 Necessity. Neo-Platonic-Pythagorean Goddess Who governed the world according 
        to Karmic Law. Aspect of the Triple Goddess with Dike and Heimarmene. 
        Plato called Ananke the mother of the Moirae or Fates and is the personfication 
        of (unalterable) necessity or the force of destiny. Also mother of Adrasteia 
        (daughter of Jupiter and distributor of rewards and punishments). Goddess 
        of unalterable necessity. She was little worshipped until the advent of 
        the Orphic mystery cult.
 
 Anaxarete
 A girl from Cyprus who was loved greatly by the shepherd Iphis. She reacted 
        so cooly to his passionate love for her that he killed himself. When she 
        was not even moved by seeing his dead body, the goddess Aphrodite turned 
        her into stone.
 
 Andromeda
 Andromeda was the daughter of Cepheus and Cassiopeia, king and queen of 
        Ethiopia. Cassiopeia boasted that she was more beautiful than the Nereids, 
        and in revenge Poseidon sent a flood and a sea monster to plague the land. 
        When Cepheus consulted the oracle of Ammon he was told that the problem 
        would end if he exposed his daughter as prey for the monster. His people 
        forced him to comply with the oracle, and he chained Andromeda to a rock 
        by the sea. She was rescued by Perseus who killed the monster and married 
        Andromeda. One of their children, Perses, became the ancestor of the kings 
        of Persia.
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      | Antea The daughter of Iobates, wife of Proetus, the king of Argos. She fell 
        in love with Bellerophon but when her love was unrequited, she began to 
        slander him with her husband. Finally, out of desperation, she took her 
        own life.
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      | Antheia Antheia was the Greek goddess referred to as "the blooming", 
        or "friend of the flowers." She had a temple at Argos, and was 
        used by Cnossis as a surname of Aphrodite. She was considered to be the 
        form of a goddess as a flower-like adolescent. In Crete, she was considered 
        the goddess of vegetation, lowlands, gardens, blossoms, the budding earth, 
        and of human love.
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      | Antiope The daughter of king Nycteus of Thebes, or, according to others, of the 
        river-god Asopus. She was seduced by Zeus and fled of shame to Epopeus, 
        king of Sicyon, who married her. Nycteus' attempts to get her back were 
        unsuccessful, and upon his deathbed he charged his brother Lycus to fulfil 
        that task. Lycus and his army marched towards Sicyon, destroyed the city 
        and killed Epopeus. He took Antiope with him to Thebes and gave her as 
        a slave to his own wife Dirce. Dirce mistreated Antiope severely, but 
        she managed to escape and was finally reunited with her sons Amphion and 
        Zethus, her children with Zeus. Her twins exacted a terrible vengeance 
        upon Dirce. Later Antiope married Phocus.
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      | Aoide (Aoede) One of the original three Greek Muses (their number was later 
        increased to nine). She is the Muse of Song, sister of Melete and Mneme. 
        Greece.
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      | Apate Apate was the Greek goddess of deceit, daughter of Nyx. Apate was one 
        of the spirits inside Pandora's box.
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      | Aphaea ("not dark", "vanisher") A Greek goddess of local 
        importance who was worshipped on the island of Aegina where she had a 
        temple. Some sources say she is the nymph Britomartis who fled from Crete, 
        but she is also identified with Athena and Artemis.
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      | Aphrodite Aphrodite, the "Golden 
        One", was the Greek Goddess of Love who was born from the foam of 
        the sea. She was called The Foam-risen, Queen of the Sea. She was attended 
        by the Hours and the Graces who made her even more beautiful before she 
        set foot on shore. As she walked to meet the rest of the goddesses and 
        gods for the first time, flowers sprang up at her feet. The goddess of 
        love, beauty and laughter; of birth, life, death, time and fate, reconciling 
        man to all of them through sensual and sexual mysticism. She was the patroness 
        of arts and letters, craft and cultur; the irresistible Goddess who stole 
        away even the wits of the wise.
 
 Before the classical period, Aphrodite's realm was Nature. It was only 
        after the patriarchal takeover that she became the Goddess of Love in 
        various forms: as Aphrodite Urania she represented ideal love. According 
        to Hesiod, she was born when Uranus (the father of the gods) was castrated 
        by his son Cronus. Cronus threw the severed genitals into the ocean which 
        began to churn and foam about them. From the aphros ("sea foam") 
        arose Aphrodite, and the sea carried her to either Cyprus or Cythera. 
        Hence she is often referred to as Kypris and Cytherea.
 
 Her origins can be traced back to Cyprus, where her temple was decorated 
        with a star, a crescent moon and a dove, and further back to Mesopotamia 
        in her form as Inanna-Ishtar where the myth of her consort Tammuz (Dumuzi) 
        was similar to that of Adonis. The myth of Isis and Osiris had similar 
        themes. Aphrodite fell in love with Adonis, a beautiful young man who, 
        one day went hunting and was killed by a boar; she turned him into an 
        anemone. As the vegetation god, he died and was reborn.
 
 The Dove was her totem, sometimes too the sparrow and swan. Myrtle was 
        Her sacred plant, her sacred number was 6. Copper, Emerald and Pearl, 
        Rose and Violet were associated with her; as were the dolphin, the pomegranate 
        and the lime tree.Cythera and Cyprus are Her sacred places.
 
 Homer calls her a daughter of Zeus and Dione. After her birth, Zeus was 
        afraid that the gods would fight over Aphrodite's hand in marriage, so 
        he married her off to the smith god Hephaestus, the steadiest of the gods. 
        Hephaestus could hardly believe his good luck, and used all his skills 
        to make the most lavish jewels for her. He made her a girdle of finely 
        wrought gold and wove magic into the filigree work. That was not very 
        wise of him, for when she wore her magic girdle no one could resist her, 
        and she was all too irresistible already.
 
 She loved gaiety and glamour and was not at all pleased at being the wife 
        of sooty, hard-working Hephaestus. Aphrodite loved, and was loved by, 
        many gods and mortals. Some of her sons are Eros, Anteros, Hymenaios and 
        Aeneas (with her Trojan lover Anchises).
 
 Her festival is the Aphrodisiac which was celebrated in various centers 
        of Greece and especially in Athens and Corinth. Her priestesses were not 
        prostitutes, but women who represented the goddess, and sacred sexual 
        intercourse with them was just one of the methods of worship. Her rites 
        were austere and highly formalized.
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      | Arachne Goddess of Spinning, Weaving, Thread arts. Spinner of the Web of Fate. 
        Arachne was a young woman from Lydia, sometimes said to be a princess, 
        who offended Athena, and suffered the consequences. Her story helped serve 
        as a warning to all to take care to not offend the gods. Arachne was gifted 
        in the art of weaving. Not only were her finished products beautiful to 
        look at, but the very act of her weaving was a sight to behold. Nymphs 
        were said to abandon their frolicking to come observe Arachne practice 
        her magic.
 
 So remarkable were her works that observers often commented that she must 
        have been trained by the very patron goddess of weaving, Athena herself. 
        Arachne scoffed at this. She was disgusted at being placed in an inferior 
        place to the goddess and proclaimed that Athena herself could not do better 
        than her. Athena was quite perturbed at Arachne's bold claim, but she 
        decided to give the young woman a chance to redeem herself. She came to 
        Arachne disguised as an old woman and warned her to be careful not to 
        offend the gods, lest she incur their wrath. But Arachne told the old 
        woman to save her breath. She welcomed a contest with Athena, and, if 
        she lost, would suffer whatever punishment the goddess deemed necessary. 
        The goddess accepted the challenge and revealed her true form.
 
 The nymphs who had come to watch Arachne's weaving shrunk back in fear, 
        but Arachne stood her shaky ground. She had made a claim, and she was 
        sticking to it. So the contest began, the mortal at her loom, the goddess 
        at hers. Athena began to weave the scene of her contest with Poseidon 
        for the city of Athens. A beautiful scene developed from the threads, 
        showing Poseidon and the salt water spring, and Athena with an olive tree, 
        gifts to the people who would name Athena as their patron, and their city 
        after her. The bystanders marveled at the goddess' work.
 
 Arachne, for her part, created a tapestry showcasing scenes of Zeus' various 
        infidelities: Leda with the Swan, Europa with the bull, Danaë and 
        the golden rain shower. So exquisite was the mortal's work that the bull 
        seemed lifelike, swimming across the tapestry with a real girl on his 
        shoulders. Even Athena herself was forced to admit that Arachne's work 
        was flawless. (Whether or not Arachne was actually better than Athena 
        is still a mystery.)
 
 Angered at Arachne's challenge, as well as the presumptuousness of her 
        choice of subjects, Athena tore the tapestry to pieces and destroyed the 
        loom. Then she touched Arachne's forehead, making sure that she felt full 
        guilt for her actions. Arachne was ashamed, but the guilt was far too 
        deep for her poor, mortal mind. Depressed, she hanged herself. Athena 
        took pity on Arachne. She most likely did not expect that Arachne would 
        commit suicide. She brought her back to life, but not as a human. By sprinkling 
        her with the juices of aconite, Athena transformed the woman into a spider, 
        her and her descendants to forever hang from threads and to be great weavers.
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      | Arete The consort of Alcinous, mother of Nausicaä. She welcomed Odysseus 
        on his journey.
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      | Arethusa A nymph known in several different parts of Greece, usually the Pelopponnese 
        and Sicily. She was one of the Nereids. The river-god Alpheus fell madly 
        in love with her, but she fled to Sicily. There she was changed into a 
        fountain (the Fonte Aretusa, in Syracuse) by Artemis. Apheus made his 
        way beneath the sea, and united his waters with those of Arethusa. On 
        coins from Syracuse the head of Arethusa was often portrayed (ca. 500 
        BCE). This girls' head has often a net in her hair and is usually surrounded 
        by fish.
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      | Ariadne "The High Fruitful One," brings Rebirth. This lunar fertility 
        goddess was known for her athletic prowess. Serpents, symbols of rebirth, 
        were ritually handled by her priestesses, whose bare-breasted costumes 
        suggest the sacred role of sexuality in the Minoan culture. An early agrarian 
        Deity from the Aegean and Cyprus whose story has become inextricably mixed 
        with that of the hero Theseus. In that tale, she is a mortal carried off 
        by Theseus after he defeats the Minotaur, but inadvertantly abandoned 
        to die before he reaches Athens. On Naxos, though, a cult to an Ariadne 
        as a seasonal or vegetation Goddess was preserved, in which the later 
        Thesean tale was introduced into her rites as a sad counterpoint to a 
        joyful rite of springtime renewal, thus completing a seasonal cycle.
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      | Arisbe The daughter of Teucer, married with Dardanus. It is also the name of 
        the wife of Priam before his marriage with Hecuba.
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      | Arne Daughter of Aeolus, ancestress of the Boeotians.
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      | Arsinoe The wet-nurse of Orestes (the son of Agamemnon), or according to some, 
        she is the mother of Asclepius by Apollo. She has also been referred to 
        as the wife and sister of King Ptolemy Philadelphos, deified and identified 
        with both Aphrodite and Isis. A temple was built for her at Zephyrion 
        on the Egyptain coast.
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      | Artemis Amazonian Moon Goddess, Mother of all animals, Goddess of the Heart, Divine 
        Huntress, Patroness of nurture, fertility and birth. Scythian tribes who 
        worshipped Her were called Alani (Hunting Dogs). Great Bitch, her priestesses 
        were the Sacred Bitches. The word Bitch took on negative meaning in Christian 
        Europe because it is one of the most sacred titles of the Goddess. The 
        term "son of a bitch" did not mean son of a dog, but spiritual 
        son of the pagan Goddess.
 
 Virgin Moon Goddess, Lady of the Beasts, Mistress of the Animals. Sometimes 
        depicted as a bear. Mugwort, Wormwood are her plants. Willow, her tree. 
        A mellissae, Queen Bee, She is sometimes surrounded by bees. She is the 
        deity of wild places, groves and ponds.
 
 This moon-goddess was "whole without a man," hence immune to 
        falling in love, and was the Protectress of Animals. Amazonian Moon Goddess, 
        Mother of all animals, Goddess of the Heart, Divine Huntress, Patroness 
        of nurture, fertility and birth. She was a goddess of wild places and 
        wild things, and of personal self-sufficiency and decisiveness. She was 
        both huntress and protector of wild animals, and as Artemis Eileithyia 
        the protectressof women in childbirth.
 
 The Golden Bough grew in her sacred grove on the north shore of Lake Nemi 
        north of Rome. The Romans called her Diana. Twin sister of Apollo although 
        one day older, a bucolic Divinity, she is not much seen among the dwellers 
        of Olympus, but she was one of the most popular Divinities among humans.
 
 Ruler of the Nymphs (who are notorious for their sexual dalliance), she 
        remains a symbol of chastity and indifference to men; she is a patroness 
        of childbirth, in the role of nurse and midwife. Her temper is legendary 
        (reflecting the Hellenic view of the hostility of Nature towards the Human 
        world), but her images invariable display her in a calm and benificent 
        mood. She was often depicted with the crescent of the moon above her forehead 
        and was sometimes identified with Selene (goddess of the moon).
 
 Her main vocation was to roam mountain forests and uncultivated land with 
        her nymphs in attendance hunting for lions, panthers, hinds and stags. 
        She was armed with a bow and arrows which were made by Hephaestus and 
        the Cyclopes. Her dark aspect, Taurian Artemis, was worshipped at Sparta 
        with annual human sacrifices, later modified to ritual flagellation. She 
        is associated with quartz, moonstone, pearl, crystal, mandrake, almond, 
        mugwort, hazel and moonwort. Lead, jasmine, ginseng, menstrual blood, 
        camphor, aloe, and all sweet virginal odours were also associated with 
        her. The festivals celebrating Artemis occurred on the 12th of February 
        and the sixth day from the new moon.
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      | Asia A Greek sea-nymph and the daughter of Oceanus and Tethys. The continent 
        of Asia was named after her. Asia was occasionally regarded as the wife 
        of Iapetus but according to other she was the wife of Prometheus (Herodotus 
        IV, 45).
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      | Asteria The daughter of the Titan Coeus and Phoebe. She was abducted by Zeus, 
        but hurled herself in the sea and became the island of the same name. 
        She was the sixth slain by Heracles in single combat when he came for 
        Hippolyta's girdle. Even though the Amazons knew he was invulnerable, 
        they still chose to challenge him one by one. In order to escape being 
        raped by Zeus, this nymph changed herself into a quail.
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      | Astraia (Astrea) (derived from Astraios: 'starrys) Daughter of Zeus and 
        Themis, and Goddess of holy innocence and purity. She is often depicted 
        bearing a scale, with which to weigh the merits of contending issues. 
        She was, as was her mother, a goddess of justice. During the Golden Age, 
        when the gods dwelled among mankind, she lived on the earth. When evil 
        and wickedness increased its grip on humanity and the gods abandoned the 
        habitations of mankind; Astraea was the last to leave. She took up her 
        abode among the stars where she was transformed into the constellation 
        Virgo.
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      | Atalanta Atalanta is the female athlete in Greek myth.
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      | Ate The Greek personification of infatuation, the rash foolishness of blind 
        impulse, usually caused by guilt and leading to retribution. The goddess 
        of discord and mischief, she tempted man to do evil, and then lead him 
        to ruin. She once even managed to entrap Zeus, but he hurled her down 
        from the Olympus. Now she wanders the earth, as a kind of avenging spirit, 
        but still working her mischief among mankind. Her sisters, the Litai, 
        follow her and repair the damage she has wrought to mortals.
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      | Athena Greek Goddess of culture, wisdom, laws, crafts, and political and military 
        strategy. Her symbols included the owl (wisdom) and the snake (ancient 
        symbol of female power). Patriarchal Greek mythology tells of Athena being 
        born from Zeus's head after he swallowed her mother, Metis. However, Metis 
        can be traced back to North Africa as Medusa whose snake hair symbolized 
        female wisdom. Athena was the virgin form of the triple Gorgon Mother 
        of Fate: Neith; Metis or Medusa; Anath or Ath-enna.
 
 Originally, it was said that she was born in Libya from the uterus of 
        Lake Tritonis (Three Queens). The Goddess of wisdom, her totem was the 
        owl, the olive tree her tree. Mother Goddess of the city of Athens, the 
        Holy Virgin.
 
 Gray-eyed, Flashing eyed Embodiment of Wisdom, Reason and Purity. Protectress 
        of civilized life, handicrafts and agriculture. Inventor of the horse 
        bridle, Who first tamed horses for human use. Sulfur was sacred to Her. 
        Her special gift is the tempered wisdom associated with justice and law.
 
 Athena and her uncle Poseidon were both very fond of a certain city in 
        Greece. Both of them claimed the city and it was decided that the one 
        that could give the finest gift should have it. Leading a procession of 
        citizens, the two gods mounted the Acropolis. Poseidon struck the side 
        of the cliff with his trident and a spring welled up. The people marveled, 
        but the water was as salty as Poseidon's sea and it was not very useful. 
        Athena's gift was an olive tree, which was better because it gave the 
        people food, oil and wood. Athena named her city Athens.
 Athena's companion was the goddess of victory, Nike, and her usual attribute 
        is the owl. Athena possessed the Aegis.
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      | Atropos ("inflexible") The third of the three Fates, daughter of Zeus 
        out of Themis. She is sometimes pictured as an aged crone bearing a pair 
        of shears. Her office it is to cut the thread of life, and thus finish 
        the span of a person's life. See also Klotho and Lachesis. In Greek mythology, 
        Atropos was one of the three Moirae, the Fates, the female deities who 
        supervised fate rather than determine it. Atropos was the fate who cut 
        the thread or web of life. She was known as the "inflexible" 
        or "inevitable" and cut this thread with the "abhorred 
        shears." She worked along with Clotho, who spun the thread, and Lachesis, 
        who measured the length. They were the daughters of Zeus and Themis (the 
        goddess of order.) It is not clear whether the fates were superior to 
        Zeus or if he was subject to them as mortals were. The Roman name of the 
        fates are Nona, Decuma, and Morta.
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      | Auge The daughter of the king of Tegea. She became the mother of Telephus with 
        Heracles and hid the child in the sacred forest of Athena. When the goddess 
        send a famine over the land, the king had the child abandoned and sold 
        Auge into slavery. She ended up in Mysia and married there King Teuthras. 
        Telephus became later, in a rather miraculous fashion, Teuthras' successor 
        for the throne.
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      | Auxesia A Greek goddess of growth, but probably an epithet of Demeter. Often venerated 
        together with Damia.
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