| Other Names /
Variations: |
’Afrodith,
Anadyomene, |
|
Meaning of Name: |
Anadyomene = 'she
who emerges' |
| Gender (if known): |
Female |
|
Origin / Tradition: |
Cyprus |
| Time Period: |
She appeared in Greece about 1500 BCE |
|
Attributes / Spheres of Influence: |
Goddess of Sexual
Love, to some degree Fertility, Beauty |
|
Major Site of Worship: |
Aphrodite Porne at
Corinth &/or the temple at Akrokorinthos. |
|
Name of Major Temple: |
Paphos on Cyprus is
regarded as the center & origin of her cult. |
|
Symbols: |
Septre, Myrtle,
Dove, a Mirror & Comb (or plectrum), Fishtail |
|
Appropriate Incense / Fragrances: |
Floral scents,
Myrrh, Frankincense |
|
Appropriate Offerings: |
Quince, Flowers,
Myrtle, Myrrh, Seashells, Honey |
|
Animals Associated with the Deity: |
Dove, Sturgeon,
Scallop |
|
Colors Associated with the Deity: |
White, Green, Blue,
and Scarlet |
|
Plants Associated with the Deity: |
Myrtle, Mruex,
Myrrh trees, Periwinkle |
|
Direction Associated with the Deity: |
|
|
Married to: |
Hephaestus.
However, she has numerous affairs. |
|
Children: |
By
Anchises: Aeneas
By
Dionysis: Priapus
By Hermes:
Hermaphroditus
By Ares
(varies by source) either:
Deimos
('terror'), Phobos ('fear') & Harmonia ('discord')
or
Eros
(love) & Anteros (love that fails)
|
|
Miscellaneous: |
Her birthday was
celebrated on the fourth day of every month.
She had several temples throughout Greece and Asia
Minor including: Epidauros Peloponnesos, Athens, Aphrodisias,
& the Erechtheion.
There was also a Sanctuary of Aphrodite on Sacred Way to Eleusis. |
|
Basic Information / General Synopsis:
A Very Brief Overview
of Aphrodite:
Aphrodite was born after Oranos' genitals
were cut off they were thrown into the sea. Foam begins to form at the
point where they entered the water. From the foam arises Aphrodite.
Aphrodite is the goddess of sexual love
and has a connection to fertility. Her temples supported themselves
financially through ritual prostitution. Young women whose fathers
could not afford a dowry were given to the temple to serve as priestesses.
The priestesses slept with any patron who paid the fee. In Greek
society there was no shame in this, it was perfectly acceptable given the
circumstances of the father.
Hephaestus, god of Blacksmith forges &
pottery (the creative force of fire) was Aphrodite's legal husband.
However she had numerous affairs. Ares, god of war, was one of her
lovers. Together they had Eros & Anteros. She also symbolizes
danger as all the mortals she slept with suffer. (1)
APHRODITE (a-fro-DYE-tee; Roman
name Venus) was the goddess of love, beauty and fertility. She was also a
protectress of sailors.
The poet Hesiod said that Aphrodite was born
from sea-foam. Homer, on the other hand, said that she was the daughter of
Zeus and Dione.
When the Trojan prince Paris was asked to judge which of three Olympian
goddesses was the most beautiful, he chose Aphrodite over Hera and Athena.
The latter two had hoped to bribe him with power and victory in battle, but
Aphrodite offered the love of the most beautiful woman in the world.
This was Helen of Sparta, who became infamous as Helen of Troy when Paris
subsequently eloped with her. In the ensuing Trojan War, Hera and Athena
were implacable enemies of Troy while Aphrodite was loyal to Paris and the
Trojans.
IN HOMER
In his epic of the Trojan War, Homer tells how Aphrodite intervened in
battle to save her son Aeneas, a Trojan ally. The Greek hero Diomedes, who
had been on the verge of killing Aeneas, attacked the goddess herself,
wounding her on the wrist with his spear and causing the ichor to flow. (Ichor
is what immortals have in the place of blood.)
Aphrodite promptly dropped Aeneas, who was rescued by Apollo, another
Olympian sponsor of the Trojans. In pain she sought out her brother Ares,
the god of war who stood nearby admiring the carnage, and borrowed his
chariot so that she might fly up to Olympus. There she goes crying to her
mother Dione, who soothes her and cures her wound. Her father Zeus tells her
to leave war to the likes of Ares and Athena, while devoting herself to the
business of marriage.
Elsewhere in Homer's Iliad , Aphrodite saves Paris when he is about to be
killed in single combat by Menelaus. The goddess wraps him in a mist and
spirits him away, setting him down in his own bedroom in Troy. She then
appears to Helen in the guise of an elderly handmaiden and tells her that
Paris is waiting for her.
Helen recognizes the goddess in disguise and asks if she is being led once
more to ruin. For Aphrodite had bewitched her into leaving her husband
Menelaus to run off with Paris. She dares to suggest that Aphrodite go to
Paris herself.
Suddenly furious, the goddess warns Helen not to go too far, lest she be
abandoned to the hatred of Greeks and Trojans alike. "I'll hate you," says
the mercurial goddess, "as much as I love you now."
Even though Zeus's queen Hera and Aphrodite are on different sides in the
Trojan War, the goddess of love loans Hera her magical girdle in order to
distract Zeus from the fray. This garment has the property of causing men
(and gods) to fall hopelessly in love with whomever is wearing it.
Homer calls Aphrodite "the Cyprian", and many of her attributes may have
come from Asia via Cyprus (and Cythera) in Mycenaean times. These almost
certainly mixed with a preexisting Hellenic or Aegean goddess. The ancient
Greeks themselves felt that Aphrodite was both Greek and foreign.
JASON
Aphrodite involved herself on other
occasions in the affairs of mortal heroes. When Jason asked permission of
the king of Colchis to remove the Golden Fleece from the grove in which it
hung, the king was clearly unwilling. So the goddess Hera, who sponsored
Jason's quest, asked her fellow-Olympian Aphrodite to intervene. The love
goddess made the king's daughter Medea fall in love with Jason, and Medea
proved instrumental in Jason's success.
AENEAS
Another time, Zeus punished Aphrodite for
beguiling her fellow gods into inappropriate romances. He caused her to
become infatuated with the mortal Anchises. That's how she came to be the
mother of Aeneas. She protected this hero during the Trojan War and its
aftermath, when Aeneas quested to Italy and became the mythological founder
of a line of Roman emperors.
A minor Italic goddess named Venus became identified with Aphrodite, and
that's how she got her Roman name. It is as Venus that she appears in the
Aeneiad , the poet Virgil's epic of the founding of Rome.
And on still another occasion,
HEPHAESTUS
The love goddess was married to the homely
craftsman-god Hephaestus. She was unfaithful to him with Ares, and Homer
relates in the Odyssey how Hephaestus had his revenge.
IN ART
Elsewhere in classical art she has no
distinctive attributes other than her beauty. Flowers and vegetation motifs
suggest her connection to fertility.
Aphrodite was associated with the dove. Another of her sacred birds was the
goose, on which she is seen to ride in a vase painting from antiquity.
Hesiod's reference to Aphrodite's having been born from the sea inspired the
Renaissance artist Botticelli's famous painting of the goddess on a giant
scallop shell. Equally if not better known is the Venus de Milo, a statue
which lost its arms in ancient times.
WAR GODDESS?
The ancient travel writer Pausanias
describes a number of statues of Aphrodite dressed for battle, many of them
in Sparta. Given the manner in which the militaristic Spartans raised their
girls, it is not surprising that they conceived of a female goddess in
military attire. She also would have donned armaments to defend cities, such
as Corinth, who adopted her as their patroness. This is not to say that she
was a war goddess, although some have seen her as such and find significance
in her pairing with the war god Ares in mythology and worship.
The two most recent editions of "The Oxford Classical Dictionary" are at
variance over this aspect of the goddess. The 1970 edition sees her as a
goddess of war and traces this to her Oriental roots. It is true that she
has resemblances to Astarte, who is a goddess of war as well as fertility.
The 1996 edition of "The Oxford Classical Dictionary", on the other hand,
offers several counterarguments. It sees her being paired with Ares, for
instance, not because they are similarly warlike but precisely because love
and war are opposites.
In any case, Aphrodite's primary function was to preside over reproduction,
since this was essential for the survival of the community. (2)
Visit these links for more info:
http://apk.net/~fjk/aphro.html
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