In Greek mythology, Zeus was tasked with selecting the fairest among the goddesses, which led to the famous event known as the Judgment of Paris. To resolve a dispute among Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite over who was the most beautiful, he appointed Paris, a mortal prince of Troy, to make the decision. Each goddess offered him a bribe to sway his choice, ultimately influencing the course of events leading to the Trojan War. Paris chose Aphrodite, who promised him the love of Helen, the most beautiful mortal woman.
Paris.
Paris was the mortal man that Zeus chose to judge the fairest of the goddesses - Athena, Aphrodite, and Hera.
Hera wife of Zeus, and Athena both lost the golden apple inscribed "for the fairest" to the judgement of Paris who chose Aphrodite.
Hermes was sent to tell Paris to choose the fairest Goddess (either Aphrodite, Hera, or Athena.) This argument about the fairest started when Eris, who didn't get invited to a wedding, rolled a golden apple for the fairest Goddess.
No, they were not friends; Aphrodite was a consort of Ares, son of Hera and Zeus, but once in a myth Priapus was said to be a child of Zeus rather than Aphrodite's lover Adonis/Dionysus. They also rivaled for the "Apple for the Fairest".
The ISBN of Fairest is 0060734086.
Fairest was created in 2006.
Fairest has 326 pages.
Eris, goddes of strife who wrote upon a golden apple "for the fairest" and Hera, Aphrodite and Athena all claimed it and Zeus left the judgement to Paris.
The words " It Was For the Fairest" were attached to The Apple of Discord.
I am. I am the fairest of them all. But if you insist... You are... Sigh...
It was the "will of Zeus" that the mortal Paris judge between the three goddesses, and chose the fairest according to Homer's version in The Iliad.