Arachne was better at weaving than her, and Athena was the goddess of household crafts, so Arachne being better than her made Athena angry.
Athena wanted avenge the Greeks when Paris(from Greece) chose aphrodite to be the owner of the apple "For the Fairest".
Athena was angry that Medusa slept with Poseidon in her temple, so she turned her into a Gorgon. ____ Some myths say Medusa was a priestess of Athena and that she (Medusa) was raped by Poseidon in Athena's temple. Athena didn't care that Medusa was raped Athena just cared that her temple was defiled.
She feels passionate for a good cause, angry at Aphrodite, and responsible for mortal knowledge
Medusa. This is how she got a head of snakes because Athena was angry when she found them in her temple.
Turning Medussa into a woman with snake hair and the body of a snake.
No, because Athena (who is a virgin goddess) has no children.
Arachne was better at weaving than her, and Athena was the goddess of household crafts, so Arachne being better than her made Athena angry.
because Athena was jealous and wanted the apple
Athena wanted avenge the Greeks when Paris(from Greece) chose aphrodite to be the owner of the apple "For the Fairest".
Athena was angry that Medusa slept with Poseidon in her temple, so she turned her into a Gorgon. ____ Some myths say Medusa was a priestess of Athena and that she (Medusa) was raped by Poseidon in Athena's temple. Athena didn't care that Medusa was raped Athena just cared that her temple was defiled.
medussa
She feels passionate for a good cause, angry at Aphrodite, and responsible for mortal knowledge
Yes. Multiple times in greek myths Athena became angry with the greeks. That is the reason of the myth "Pandora's box"
She dose not have one. Medussa is not from a roman analog.
Medusa. This is how she got a head of snakes because Athena was angry when she found them in her temple.
Depending on the account you read, Athena was either Hera's step-daughter or her sister, and although in the step-daughter account, Hera was very angry at Zeus for having a child without her, the anger was directed at Zeus (or in some accounts his mistress), and not at Athena herself.