Aphrodite Articles > Aphrodite Basics > Aphrodite Profile
Who Is Aphrodite?
Aphrodite is the goddess of beauty, love, and sexuality. She is sometimes known as the Cyprian because there was a cult center of Aphrodite on Cyprus [See Map Jc-d]. Aphrodite is the mother of the god of love, Eros (more familiar as Cupid). She is the wife of the ugliest of the gods, Hephaestus. Unlike the powerful virginal goddesses, Athena and Artemis, or the faithful goddess of marriage, Hera, she has love affairs with gods and mortals. Aphrodite's birth story makes her relation to the other gods and goddesses of Mt. Olympus ambiguous.
Occupation:
GoddessMyths Involving Aphrodite:
- Venus and Adonis
- Meleager and Atalanta
- Cupid and Psyche
- Adventures of Aeneas
- Venus and Adonis
- Prometheus and Pandora
- Monsters
- Proserpine - Glaucus and Scylla
- Homer on Mars and Venus Caught in a Net
Family of Origin:
The poet known as Homer calls Aphrodite the daughter of Zeus and Dione. She is also described as the daughter of Oceanus and Tethys (both Titans).
If Aphrodite is the cast-offspring of Uranus, she is of the same generation as Zeus' parents. If she is the daughter of the Titans, she is Zeus' cousin.
Roman Equivalent:
Attributes And Associations:
Sources:
Trojan War and Aeneid's Aphrodite / Venus:
Each of 3 goddesses:
- Hera - marriage goddess and wife of Zeus
- Athena - Zeus' daughter, wisdom goddess, and one of the powerful virginal goddesses mentioned above, and
- Aphrodite
Vergil or Virgil's Aeneid tells a Trojan War sequel story about a surviving Trojan prince, Aeneas, transporting his household gods from the burning city of Troy to Italy, where he founds the race of the Romans. In the Aeneid, the Roman version of Aphrodite, Venus, is Aeneas' mother. In the Iliad, she protected her son, even at the cost of suffering a wound inflicted by Diomedes.


