ATHENE PARTHENIA:
RECLAIMING THE FEMININE STANDARD
I was nine when I discovered the world of
Myth, starting with the myths of Greece. The first Goddess with whom I felt an
affinity was Athene. At a time when the
role of woman was measured against her usefulness to man, I was impressed with
the story of Athene’s birth, that she sprang from Zeus’s head, fully grown and
wearing a suit of armor, after causing him an incurable headache. That must have given him something to think
about!
Her name, Parthenia, means "I have
come from myself," while the meaning of Athene has been lost in antiquity.
Her stories have been traced to Mycenaea, Northern Africa including Egypt,
Anatolia and the Minoan culture. Originally she represented the bond existent
among family members, symbolized by hearth and home. Her tools were those
implements associated with domesticity: the spindle, loom and cooking utensils.
Her realm grew to include not only individual family units but finally the
entire community and it was thus that she became known as the Goddess of
civilization.
GODDESS OF CIVILIZATION
According to Robert Graves, Athene also
invented the flute and the trumpet, and agricultural implements such as the
plough and rake. Her gift to humanity extended to the realm of
mathematics, the Arts and, of
course, the "womanly arts" of
spinning, weaving and needlework. She introduced more sophisticated means of
transportation by inventing the ship, chariot and bridle for horses.
Classical Greek myth tells us that Athene
sprang, fully grown, from the head of her "father" Zeus wearing full
battle regalia. She became known as a Goddess of war, although her stories
suggest that she was more a strategist and negotiator than an actual warrior.
Her reputation as a warrior may have arisen from her identification with the
Amazons, women who lived in communities independent of men save for the
purposes of procreation, and who fought against the Achaean invadersintent upon
conquering their lands and destroying their culture.
In the patriarchal myths which gave her
name to the city of Athens, the women of that city-state lost their rights to
vote, to citizenship and to pass their names on to their children, rendering them solely the
property of their husbands, because they had outnumbered the men by one. All
the women voted on behalf of their own Goddess, who offered them the
multi-purpose olive tree, while the men had cast their vote in favor of
the god of the changeful sea, Poseidon, he who usurped the realms of the more ancient ocean Goddess, Tethys, an
indication that this is yet another myth which
documents the spread of a male-dominant worldview.
PALLAS ATHENE
Often referred to as Pallas Athene, there
are several stories recounting how she came to bear this name. One myth tells
us that Athene took the name Pallas upon the inadvertent death of her friend by that name during
a sparring match. Pallas was a pre-Hellenic Goddess whose name means
"great maiden." Another Pallas, a tribal protector-Goddess of Greek
origin, was introduced to the indigenous
followers of Athene, and the two concepts of the Goddess became fused together,
indicating the emergence of a new society. Other sources suggest that Pallas
was a phallic god whom Athene took as a lover but did not marry. However, "Pallas" may derive from
"Palladium," a statue of the Goddess purported to have fallen from
the sky and which was paraded through the city
streets to the water's edge where it was bathed and thus "renewed"
during her yearly festivals.
The serpent, however, has long been
associated with both feminine wisdom and the life force itself, chi (China) or
Kundalini (India), most often represented as a serpent coiled at the base of
the human spinal column but which can rise either spontaneously or through
disciplined meditation to the energy centre located above the individual's
physical head, hence bestowing enlightenment. The serpent and the owl are two
of the totem animals affiliated with the concept of wisdom and both appear with
representations of Athene as her familiars.
MEDUSA THE GORGON
No examination of Athene can be
endeavored without consideration of the Gorgon Medusa, the roots of whose story
lie in the myths of the Sun Goddesses of pre-Hellenic Anatolia,Africa, Assyria, Crete and
the Sumero-Akkadian cultures (21st century, B.C.E.).
Medusa is most familiar to us from the
Classical Greek story of the beautiful woman who took Poseidon (whose name
means "husband of earth") as a lover and offended Athene by engaging
him in intercourse within the precinct of one of the Goddess's temples.
Enraged, Athene turned Medusa's hair into
snakes and cursed her with a gaze which
could turn humans to stone should they chance to look upon her. She then banished Medusa to the end of the world, there to live with the two other
Gorgons until the Achaean hero Perseus,
equipped with a mirror-like shield from Athene herself, beheaded Medusa. Upon
her death, the winged horse Pegasus and the boy-child Chryasoar were born from
the blood of her severed head.
Perseus quickly put Medusa's
head in a bag and brought it back to the Goddess. Thereafter, Athene wore Medusa's snake-haired
head upon her shield.
Myths of the dismemberment of female deities,
called "demons" by the conquering patriarchs, abound. These are a
testament of the often brutal subjugation of earlier female-based or egalitarian cultures by
the "heroes" of the incoming hierarchic social order, and hence,
the psychological paradigm whereby the feminine aspect is violently repressed
within the masculine psyche.

THE GODDESS IS ALIVE
In the late twentieth century we
experience Athene's manifestation in the Women's Movement, in feminist theory
and the visibility of women in all sectors of public life. The growing
WomanSpirit Movement is an affirmation of her perennial existence: the Divine
is immanent and all life is sacred as an expression of Divinity. Her multicultural
roots serve to remind us of the varieties of Feminine experience and the
necessity for us to honor our diversity, for therein lies one of the keys to
our human perpetuity.
© 2003, 2013, Jessica North-O’Connell
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