Hera represents women, marriage and birth. Aphrodite represents love, beauty, pleasure and procreation.
Hera did not want to marry Zeus, but Zeus changed himself into a bird, and then made storms rage over him so then Hera felt pity on the bird into her hands. Then Zeus changed and said that Hera had to marry him. Feeling trapped Hera agreed to marry him because she felt pity on this poor bird
Zeus asked Hera to marry him but sherefused night Zeus sent a storm to where Hera was.Zeus turned himself into a bird. Hera thinking it was a bird she snuggled it. When she realized she was snuggling Zeus she was forced to marry him.
Her symbol was the peacock.
Hera is often depicted holding a pomegranate which represents fertility and death.
Hera's peacocks is the bird that revived Argus's eyes.
A favored bird of Hera.
Hera is the God of fertility and only women can relate to that, so she represents women in a way men can't.
Hera gave her sacred bird, the peacock, the eyes of Argus.
After Argus was killed, Hera took his many eyes and placed them on a bird's tail, now known as a Peacock or the Common Pea Fowl.
Hera had spurned the overtures of Zeus, as she knew he had had six different lovers before her. So, Zeus appeared to Hera in the form of a poor little rain-soaked cuckoo bird. Hera took pity on the bird, whereby Zeus returned to his true form and ravished her, thus shaming her into marrying.
Yes, the Mexican golden eagle (not the bald eagle, which is the bird that represents America).