Penelope is compared to Artemis or golden Aphrodite when she comes down the stairs in Homer's "The Odyssey" because of her beauty, grace, and poise. These comparisons highlight her allure and elegance, emphasizing her status as a desirable and noble woman in Greek society.
When Homer is comparing Penelope to Artemis and Aphrodite in the Odyssey, he means she looks like Artemis in chastity and like Aphrodite in beauty.
Nobody but Ares and the three graces. Athena and Hera don't like her because she won the golden apple from Pairs. Artemis doesn't like her because Aphrodite encourages love.
Hephaestus gave Aphrodite the golden girdle.
Paris gave Aphrodite the amazing golden apple.
Paris, the Prince of Troy, gave the Golden Apple to the goddess Aphrodite.
Venus/Aphrodite: because her son, Aeneas, was a Trojan. Plus, Paris gave her the Golden Apple. Mars/Ares: because he basically followed Aphrodite. Apollo: because he was a patron god of Troy Artemis/Diana: because she was Apollo's twin.
Aphrodite has green eyes. And her hair was a golden blonde.
No God can resist her beauty when she wore her Golden Girdle, but there where three goddesses that she had no power over, Hestia, Athena and Artemis, as virgin goddesses they could not be swayed by her powers of love
the one where she wins the golden apple and when aphrodite chooses a husband
Artemis's symbol was not a stag, it was a golden hind. There were only five Golden Hinds, a gift of Taygeta to Artemis; the most famous is the Cerynitian Hinds which Heracles borrowed unharmed for his Labor.
Aphrodite.
Because she was golden and rich and liked apples