Daphne.
In Greek mythology, the god Apollo is closely associated with the laurel tree. According to myth, Apollo pursued the nymph Daphne, who was turned into a laurel tree to escape his advances. As a result, the laurel tree became sacred to Apollo, and its leaves were used to make crowns to honor him.
Apollo afterwards wore the laurel tree branch as a wreath upon his head.
Apollo chased Daphne, a nymph who ran away from him. She asked the earth to change her into a tree in order to escape him. She became the first laurel tree. The laurel tree then became sacred to Apollo.
Daphne, a patroness of Diana (Goddess of the Hunt), asked to be turned into a laurel tree after Apollo fell in love with her. She did not love him back and wished to remain an unmarried virgin, true only to Diana, for the rest of her life. Apollo pursued her and she finally begged the gods to be turned into the tree. Thus, to show his devotion, Apollo adopted the laurel tree as his sacred tree and wore the laurel leaves on his head as a crown.
Apollo was deeply in love with a mountain nymph named Daphne, who rejected his advances and fled from him. To escape him forever, she was turned into a laurel tree, which Apollo then made sacred, and he made a wreath from the leaves to console himself.
Artemis' tree is not the laurel. That belonged to her twin brother Apollo, because he feel in love with a nymph named Daphne who turned into a laurel to escape from him. Artemis' tree is the cypress.
In Greek mythology, the laurel tree was sacred to Apollo because it was believed to have been created by the god to commemorate the story of Daphne, a nymph whom Apollo pursued. When Daphne prayed to her father, the river god Peneus, for help, he transformed her into a laurel tree to protect her from Apollo's advances. As a result, Apollo declared the laurel tree sacred and used its leaves to make a wreath symbolizing victory and honor.
Peace and quiet, a guard against poisons, victory. Laurel was Apollo's sacred plant. He pursued a nymph named Daphne, whom he loved. Daphne asked the gods to save her, and so they turned her in to a laurel tree to do so. Bernini's statue "Apollo and Daphne" is a beautiful example. Everafter, Apollo kept the laurel plant as his sacred plant.
Apollo used the leaves of the laurel tree to create a wreath, which he then wore as a symbol of victory and achievement. The laurel wreath became a common motif in Greek art and was awarded to winners of athletic contests, symbolizing Apollo's protection.
Apollo honors Daphne by making the laurel tree his sacred tree. Daphne is turned into a laurel tree to save her from being raped by Apollo. Eros trying to prove to Apollo his bow was truly powerful shot Apollo with a golden arrow of love, and Daphne with an iron arrow forever turning her away from love.
Daphne was a nymph who was turned into a laurel bush to save her from the amorous pursuit of Apollo.
Daphne was being pursued for her beauty by Apollo. She appealed to her father, the river god, Ladon, for help, and he changed her into a laurel tree. A laurel wreath was awarded as the prize in the Pythian Games, in her honour.