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GREEK
MYTHOLOGY
Athena
The adorable goddess of the Athenians
or
the ancient Greeks, Athena, one of the most important Olympian deities, was the goddess of
wisdom and skill.
The fact that Athena was born from the head of Zeus and never received a
mother's care meant that her powers were more masculine than feminine.
Above all, she was martial goddess, one who had entered life dressed for war and uttering
battle-cries. Her military accoutrements included a helmet, a spear and the aegis, a goat-skin shield which Amaltheia had given Zeus and
which only Athena was entitled to use. To the shield was fastened the gorgoneum, the head of Gorgo the Medusa which turned to stone
anyone who set eyes upon it. Athena was also alone in being allowed to enter her father's
armory, and could even use his thunderbolt. The frequently-used epithet Athena Hippia ('of the horses') is also associated with the
military prowess of the goddess. According to the relevant myth, it was Athena who taught
mankind how to tame the horse, and she gave Bellerophon a golden bridle to enable him to
break in the winged horse Pegasus (for which she was known as Athena Chalinites, "of
the bridle"). When Athena Hippia tamed the wild horse, she acquired a fresh dimension
in the minds of the Greeks: now she became the goddess of ingenuity and skill,
representing the concept of the superiority of the mind over physical power and the
violence of war. She was responsible for the development of all the crafts and techniques
that made it easier for man to live in peace. Architects, sculptors and painters honored
her as their patron. It was Athena, too, who made man's first weapons and tools, and she
who taught the arts of ship-building(to the Argonauts), plugging the fields with oxen,
making pottery on the wheel, working bronze, and creating objects in gold. Her greatest
invention of all, however, was the art of weaving.
Throughout antiquity she was renowned as possessing the highest skills in this field, and
it was she who wove and embroidered the superb garments worn by the gods and heroes. Her
first pupil at the loom was Pandora, who passed on the knowledge to the other women.
This attribute of Athena's was the source of the myth of Arachne
, another skillful weaver who dared to compare herself
to the goddess and challenge her to a competition. The goddess turned Arachne into a
spider (still known by that name in Greek today) and condemned her to spin in perpetuity
but to have all her worksdestroyed by man. The peaceful side of Athena's character was
symbolized by the olive, the tree which she gave to the Athenians and taught them how to
cultivate. According to the myth, it came about that there was a contest between Athena
and Poseidon over which of them should be the patron of the city of Athens. The other gods
advised Athena and Poseidon to offer the city one gift each, and the winner of the contest
would be he or she whose gift was the better. Both ascended to the Acropolis, and Poseidon
struck the ground with his trident: a spring of salt water immediately welled up. Athena
stamped her foot, and an olive, the first in the world, sprouted on the spot. In the end,
the city was awarded to Athena, and took its name from her. The divine olive tree
continued to adorn the sacred rock, and when the Persians burned the Acropolis in 480 BC
it immediately put out fresh leaves. In commemoration of this, an olive tree has been
planted on the Acropolis and can be seen today on the west side of the Erechtheum.





  

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