
ATHENA (a-THEE-nuh; Roman
name Minerva) was the goddess of crafts and the domestic arts and
also those of war. She was the patron goddess of Athens. Her symbol
was the owl. She was originally the Great Goddess in the form of
a bird. By the late Classic, she had come to be regarded as a goddess
of wisdom Zeus was once married to Metis, a daughter of Ocean who
was renowned for her wisdom. When Metis became pregnant, Zeus was
warned by Earth that a son born to Metis would overthrow him, just
as he had usurped his own father's throne.
So Zeus swallowed Metis. In time he was overcome
with a splitting headache and summoned help from the craftsman god
Hephaestus (or, some say, the Titan Prometheus). Hephaestus cleaved
Zeus's forehead with an ax, and Athena sprang forth fully armed.
The poet Hesiod tells the story to account
for Zeus's great wisdom, since he can be said to have literally
incorporated Metis. One can also read into the myth wishful thinking
on the part of the mythmakers who replaced the worship of the Great
Goddess, mother of all growing things, for that of the male sky-god
Zeus. Zeus gave birth to Athena himself, as if to say, Who needs
a woman in order to bring forth new life?
Athena aided the heroes Perseus, Jason, Cadmus,
Odysseus and Heracles in their quests.
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