You do know that she's not real, right? She can't have a "last known location" if she never existed.
Homer writes about her being in Troy. There is a myth in connection with the Temple of Artemis that says she was present when Alexander the great was born.
Either the wilderness or the Trojan War.
idk
Hera was a goddess and omnipresent. To assign a "last known location" implies that she had a physical form that could be attached to a single location. The Greeks did not see their gods this way.
Hera was born and last seen on the isle of Euboa.
That would imply that Hera once actually existed, which she did not. Mythologically, Hera rarely left Mt. Olympus, so it's reasonable to assume she's still there.
Olympus is where she lives, but Hera like other Greek gods and goddesses can move to where she wants to be as fast as thought.
Hera, the Olympian queen of the gods and the goddess of women and marriage. She was also a goddess of the sky and starry heavens. However, Hera was the older sister of Zeus; Zeus being the last born of six siblings is the youngest. Sometimes Kronus is said in swallowing his children and disgorging them to have birthed them a second and last time, but this is only a personal interpretation.
You do know that she's not real, right? She can't have a "last known location" if she never existed.
Hera was a goddess and omnipresent. To assign a "last known location" implies that she had a physical form that could be attached to a single location. The Greeks did not see their gods this way.
Hera was a goddess and omnipresent. To assign a "last known location" implies that she had a physical form that could be attached to a single location. The Greeks did not see their gods this way.
Olympus
Hera was born and last seen on the isle of Euboa.
She is a Greek goddess so her last location would be Ancient Greece.
At her sanctuary in Eleusis.
That would imply that Hera once actually existed, which she did not. Mythologically, Hera rarely left Mt. Olympus, so it's reasonable to assume she's still there.
In Greek mythology, the goddess Echo's chattering annoyed the goddess Hera. Zeus was with some girl and asked/commanded Echo to stall his wife. Irate, Hera made it so that Echo would always get the last word, but never the first word.
Greek Gods and Goddesses only had one name each. Hera's name was Hera. That's it. She is often identified with the equivalent Roman goddess, Juno. So you could say that her Latin name was Juno. But basically she's just called Hera.
Olympus is where she lives, but Hera like other Greek gods and goddesses can move to where she wants to be as fast as thought.
It is not known that the Greek goddess ever had a address.