Hebe. According to some sources also Eris.
Ares's mother was Hera. Ares's aunts (Hera's sisters) were Demeter and Hestia.
Hera was Ares mother.
All that is done is not right.
If you mean in Greek Mythology, Ares is a male, and he would be the god of war.
His half sister is Athena, the goddess of wisdom
In Greek mythology, they were both sons of the god Zeus and goddess Hera.
Ares is a war god and god of violence in Greek mythology. He was not well-liked or trusted by the ancient Greeks and there are few tales in which he plays a major role. Cults of Ares are found mainly in Crete and the Peloponnese where the militaristic Spartans honored him. Athena is also a war goddess, but was well-respected, as a polis protector and goddess of strategy instead of Ares' forte, mayhem and destruction.
Ares, son of Zeus, was the god of war. Athena was the goddess of battle and wisdom, but typically there is only one god/goddess for one thing such as battle. Athena and Ares despised each other.
The Greek goddess of love was named Aphrodite, or Venus in Roman mythology, and the Greek god of war was named Ares, otherwise known as Mars in Roman Mythology.
Eris is Ares's sister. She is the goddess of contention.
Athena is the Greek goddess of warfare, weapons, and wisdom. Apart from Ares, which is the Greek God of War
In Greek myth, this is Eris, twin-sister to Ares, mother of Ate, goddess of delusion.
Athena is the Greek goddess of warfare, weapons, and wisdom. Apart from Ares, which is the Greek God of War
Eris, the sister and companion of Ares, the god of war.
Ares, Hermes, Aphrodite, Artemis, and Hestia. (The goddess is Aphrodite, Athena's sister.)
No, Artemis is the goddess of the Hunt, the moon, animals, virginity, childbirth, and the wild. The Greek god of war is Ares. Athena is also called a warrior goddess too.
All that is done is not right.
Phobos was a god, not a goddess. In Greek mythology, he was the god of fear and horror (which is where we get the word "phobia"). He was the son of Ares, the god of war, and Aphrodite, the goddess of love.
No, Ares the Greek god of war does not appear in Norse mythology.