Greek goddess Athena
Greek goddess Athena (A-theen-uh) later called Minerva by the
Romans, was the goddess of wisdom, battle, and certain crafts,
and was the protector of the concept of cities. The olive tree
was sacred to her, and her sacred bird was the owl (which is why
wisdom is associated with owls). Poseidon, the god of the Sea,
and Athena were in competition to become the patron of a new
city. Poseidon, as a bribe, gave the first horses to the people,
but Athena struck the ground with a rod and up sprang the first
olive tree, olives became an agricultural staple for the Greeks.
She was chosen as the patron goddess of the city which was
called Athens, in her honor.
Athena was born from the head of Zeus, the chief Olympian god.
Zeus had a headache which was growing worse and worse until he
finally had the craftsman god, Hephaestus, split his head open
with an axe, and out sprang Athena, fully grown and in full
armor. This sounds like a rather silly myth, but symbolically
this shows the goddess of wisdom coming from the head of the
chief god. Some of the more practical Greeks decided that Zeus
had swallowed his first wife Metis (a Titan goddess of wisdom)
and she had given birth to Athena within Zeus. Athena then moved
to Zeus's head in order to make her grand entrance.
Her name is also spelled Athene. She is identified often in
mythology as grey-eyed or flashing-eyed Athena, and is sometimes
called Pallas Athena because she accidentally killed Pallas, a
daughter of the sea god, Triton. Another explanation for the
name, Pallas Athena, is that she took the name when she killed
the giant, Pallas, during the battle between the Gigantes and
the Olympians. She is identified as Athena Nike and is usually
depicted with wings when she is the goddess of victorious
battle. She is also called Athena Parthenos, to honor her
virtue. Parthenos means virgin.
Athena's sacred temple on the acropolis in Athens, Greece is
called the Parthenon (temple of the virgin) because she was one
of the three virgin Olympian goddesses. The Parthenon is
considered by some to be the most perfect building ever built.
Light is shed on the attitude the Greeks had toward war and
battle by the characterization of the god of war, Ares, and the
goddess of battle, Athena. The Greeks hated the god of war and
depicted him as a bully and a coward, while showing Athena as
glorious and virtuous. Unlike the Romans, who glorified Mars
(the Roman name for Ares) because they intended to conquer the
world, the Greeks had no desire to control the world; but
neither would they lose their freedom. Thus they despised the
god of war and loved the goddess of battle. This is a fitting
Goddess for me to pray to tonight as the courts try to control
spam and about put all ezine publishers out of business. There
is a war between people who want to market to everyone and those
who want privacry. Well, personally I think that I will continue
to publish my ezines and just cut out the ads for now. All ads
will just go online.
I pray to Athena to help me by advising me on this war.