no Pandora is the first mortal or human ever created. the gods wanted another being to live, but they didnt want them as powerful as the gods themselves, so they created the mortal in the image of the gods, but she was powerless. they named her Pandora, and its a girl because the gods wanted to make her in aphrodites form
Pandora was not a greek goddess. She was a human, cousins with a greek hero. Her purpose was to open Pandora's jar which contained some nasty stuff
what were pandora's the greek ancient goddess' intrests
Pandora was not a Greek goddess, but a mortal woman. Anyway, she was a young lady, probably about 20. She had an inquisitive nature, and physical features are unknown.
Many believe Pandora was the goddess of curiosity, but she was mortal; the first woman. There is no Greek god or goddess of curiosity.
i dont know either :(
Do you know if Pandora the Goddess was respected/
Pandora was not a greek goddess. She was a human, cousins with a greek hero. Her purpose was to open Pandora's jar which contained some nasty stuff
No. Hestia is a Greek goddess, but Pandora was made by Hephaestus.
Actually, Atlanta was a demigod, not a goddess.
Pandora was not a goddess. She was the first woman ever created in order to be a plague to men.
what were pandora's the greek ancient goddess' intrests
Pandora was not a Greek goddess, but a mortal woman. Anyway, she was a young lady, probably about 20. She had an inquisitive nature, and physical features are unknown.
Pandora was not a goddess, but the first mortal woman, created by the gods. She had one child: Pyrrha.
Many believe Pandora was the goddess of curiosity, but she was mortal; the first woman. There is no Greek god or goddess of curiosity.
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i dont know either :(
Pandora is not a Greek goddess in the traditional sense, but rather the first mortal woman in Greek mythology. She was created by the gods, particularly by Hephaestus on the orders of Zeus, and each god gave her a unique trait (beauty, cunning, curiosity, etc.). She is most famous for opening a jar (commonly miscalled "Pandora’s box") that released all the evils into the world, leaving only hope inside. Roman Equivalent of Pandora: Pandora does not have a direct Roman counterpart as goddesses like Hera (Juno), Athena (Minerva), and Aphrodite (Venus) do. However, the story of Pandora was still adopted by Roman writers like Ovid and Hesiod (translated/adapted), but her name remained Pandora in Roman mythology too. So, her Roman name is also Pandora.