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Athena With Owl Medusa Holding Shield Greek Goddess Alabaster Statue Gold 7 Inches

KWD 18

Category
Home Décor
Weight
295 g
1 +

Special Features

  • Height: 7 inches (18 cm) Width: 1.9 inches (5 cm) Depth: 1.9 inches (5 cm) Weight: 0.39 lbs (180gr)
  • YOUR PERFECT STATUE-Our statues are perfect for your house or office decoration and also a perfect gift
  • TOP QUALITY-Our Alabaster statues are made of top quality alabaster powder ,molded and finished by hand.All coloured statues are hand painted.
  • GENUINE GREEK STATUE MADE IN GREECE-All of our alabaster and bronze statues are made in Greece by top Greek artisans
  • SAFE PACKING-We are giving extra care in packing our products so they can be delivered with safety

Description

Athena With Owl Medusa Holding Shield Greek Goddess Alabaster Statue Gold 7 Inches. Height: 7 inches (18 cm) Width: 1.9 inches (5 cm) Depth: 1.9 inches (5 cm) Weight: 0.39 lbs (180gr). Mythology Birth Athena is "born" from Zeus's forehead as a result of him having swallowed her mother Metis, as he grasps the clothing of Eileithyia on the right; black-figured amphora, 550–525 BC, Louvre. Although Athena appears before Zeus at Knossos—in Linear B, as a-ta-na po-ti-ni-ja, "Mistress Athena"—in the Classical Olympian pantheon, Athena was remade as the favourite daughter of Zeus, born fully armed from his forehead.The story of her birth comes in several versions.In the version recounted by Hesiod in his Theogony, Zeus lay with Metis, the goddess of crafty thought and wisdom,but he immediately feared the consequences because Gaia and Ouranos had prophesized that Metis would bear children wiser than he himself. In order to prevent this, Zeus swallowed Metis, but it was too late because Metis had already conceived. Eventually Zeus experienced an enormous headache; Prometheus, Hephaestus, Hermes, Ares, or Palaemon (depending on the sources examined) cleaved Zeus' head with the double-headed Minoan axe, the labrys.Athena leaped from Zeus's head, fully grown and armed, with a shout—"and pealed to the broad sky her clarion cry of war. And Ouranos trembled to hear, and Mother Gaia…" Plato, in the Laws, attributes the cult of Athena to the culture of Crete, introduced, he thought, from Libya during the dawn of Greek culture. Classical myths thereafter note that Hera was so annoyed at Zeus for having produced a child that she conceived and bore Hephaestus by herself, but in Imagines 2. 27 (trans. Fairbanks), the third-century AD Greek rhetorician Philostratus the Elder writes that Hera "rejoices" at Athena's birth "as though Athena were her daughter also.

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