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Aphrodite - Birth |  | Aphrodite - Birth: Encyclopedia II - Aphrodite - Birth |  | "Foam-arisen" Aphrodite was born of the sea foam near Paphos, Cyprus after Cronus cut off Uranus' genitals and the elder god's blood and semen dropped on the sea, where they began to foam. Aphrodite was born fully grown out of the foam. Thus Aphrodite is of an older generation than Zeus. Iliad (Book V) expresses another version of her origin, by which she was considered a daughter of Dione, who was the original oracular goddess ("Dione" being simply "the goddess," etymologically an equivalent of "Diana") at Dodona. In Homer, Aphrodite ...
See also:Aphrodite, Aphrodite - Worship, Aphrodite - Birth, Aphrodite - Adulthood, Aphrodite - Marriage with Hephaestus, Aphrodite - Aphrodite and Psyche, Aphrodite - Adonis, Aphrodite - The Judgement of Paris, Aphrodite - Pygmalion and Galatea, Aphrodite - Other Stories, Aphrodite - Aphrodite in Neopaganism, Aphrodite - Consorts and children, Aphrodite - Other names |  | | Aphrodite, Aphrodite - Adonis, Aphrodite - Adulthood, Aphrodite - Aphrodite and Psyche, Aphrodite - Aphrodite in Neopaganism, Aphrodite - Birth, Aphrodite - Consorts and children, Aphrodite - Marriage with Hephaestus, Aphrodite - Other Stories, Aphrodite - Other names, Aphrodite - Pygmalion and Galatea, Aphrodite - The Judgement of Paris, Aphrodite - Worship, Venus, Aphrodite of Knidos, Venus de Milo |  | |
|  |  | Aphrodite: Encyclopedia II - Aphrodite - Birth
Aphrodite - Birth
"Foam-arisen" Aphrodite was born of the sea foam near Paphos, Cyprus after Cronus cut off Uranus' genitals and the elder god's blood and semen dropped on the sea, where they began to foam. Aphrodite was born fully grown out of the foam. Thus Aphrodite is of an older generation than Zeus. Iliad (Book V) expresses another version of her origin, by which she was considered a daughter of Dione, who was the original oracular goddess ("Dione" being simply "the goddess," etymologically an equivalent of "Diana") at Dodona. In Homer, Aphrodite, venturing into battle to protect her son, Aeneas, who has been wounded by Diomedes and returns to her mother, to sink down at her knee and be comforted. "Dione" seems to be an equivalent of Rhea, the Earth Mother, whom Homer has relocated to Olympus. After this story, Aphrodite herself was sometimes referred to as "Dione". Once Zeus had usurped the oak-grove oracle at Dodona, some poets made him out to be the father of Aphrodite.
Aphrodite's chief center of worship remained at Paphos, on the south-western coast of Cyprus, where the goddess of desire had long been worshipped as Ishtar and Ashtaroth. It is said that she first tentatively came ashore at Cytherea, a stopping place for trade and culture between Crete and the Peloponesus. Thus perhaps we have hints of the track of Aphrodite's original cult from the Levant to mainland Greece.
In Plato's Symposium the speech of Pausanias distinguishes two manifestations of Aphrodite, represented by the two stories: Aphrodite Ourania ("heavenly" Aphrodite), and Aphrodite Pandemos ("Common" Aphrodite). These two manifestations represented her role in homosexuality and heterosexuality, respectively.
Alternatively, Aphrodite was a daughter of Thalassa (for she was born of the Sea) and Zeus.
Other related archivesAbas, Achilles, Adonis, Aeneas, Aglaea, Anaxarete, Anchises, Anteros, Apelles, Aphrodite of Knidos, Apollo, Ares, Artemis, Ashtaroth, Assyria, Atalanta, Athena, Athens, Boeotia, Butes, Calliope, Cerberus, Characters in the Iliad, Charites, Charon, Cinyras, Corinth, Crete, Cronus, Cyprus, Cythera, Cytherea, Deimos, Demeter, Diana, Diomedes, Dione, Dionysus, Dodona, Earth Mother, Eris, Eros, Eryx, Etruscan, Eunomia, Euphrosyne, Galatea, Glaucus, Greece, Greek, Greek Pantheon, Greek goddesses, Hades, Harmonia, Hathor, Helen, Helene, Hephaestus, Hera, Hermaphroditus, Hermes, Hesperia, Himeros, Hippolytus, Hippomenes, Homer, Hymenaios, Iliad, Iphis, Ishtar, Isthmian Games, Levant, Love and lust goddesses, Menelaos, Mesopotamian, Mt. Olympus, Myrrha, Neopagan, New Age, Oreads, Paphos, Paris, Peitho, Peleus, Pelias, Peloponesus, Persephone, Phaedra, Phobos, Plato, Poseidon, Priapus, Psyche, Pygmalion, Rhodos, Sicily, Symposium, Thalassa, Thalia, Theias, Themis, Theseus, Thetis, Trojan War, Troy, Turan, Tyche, United States, Uranus, Venus, Venus Erycina, Venus de Milo, Virgil, World Book, Zephyrus, Zeus, apple, apples, beauty, dolphins, doves, girdle, goddess, incest, ivory, lime, love, lust, myrrh, myrtle, nymphs, obolus, oracle, pomegranates, romance, rose, sects, suicide note, swans, ‘Ashtart
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Birth", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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