ATHENE CULT 3
Greek Name
Αθηνη
Transliteration
Athênê
Latin Spelling
Athena
Translation
Minerva

ATHENA was the Olympian goddess of the defense of towns and the crafts of weaving, pottery and sculpture.
This page describes the cult of the goddess in the north-western Peloponnese and central Greece. Her most important sanctuary in the region was the Alean shrine in the Arkadian town of Tegea. Another important sanctuary was that of Alalkomenai in Boiotia which was her reputed birth place.
CLASSICAL LITERATURE QUOTES
CULT IN ACHAEA (SOUTHERN GREECE)
I. PATRAE (PATRAI) Main Town of Achaea (Akhaia)
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 20. 2 (trans. Jones) (Greek travelogue C2nd A.D.)
:
"Within the precincts of [Artemis] Laphria [at Patrai, Akhaia] is a temple of Athena surnamed Panakhaia (of
All Akhaia). The image is of ivory and gold."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 20. 3 :
"In the marketplace [of Patrai, Akhaia] s a temple of Zeus Olympios; the god himself is on a throne with
Athena standing by it."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 20. 5 :
"On the market-place [of Patrai, Akhaia], in the open, is an image of Athena with the grave of Patreos in
front of it."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 20. 9 :
"The people of Patrai have other sanctuaries. These are not in the open, but there is an entrance to them
through the porticoes. The image of Asklepios, save for the drapery, is of stone; Athena is made of ivory and
gold."
II. LARISUS R. (LARISOS) River in Elis & Achaea
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 17. 5 :
"The boundary between Akhaia and Elis is the river Larisos, and by the river is a temple of Athena Larisaia
(of the Larisos)."
III. DYME Village in Achaea
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 17. 9 :
"The people of Dyme [in Akhaia] have a temple of Athena with an extremely ancient image."
IV. TRITEIA Village in Achaea
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 22. 9 :
"[In Triteia, Akhaia] there is also a temple of Athena, and the modern image is of stone. The ancient
image, as the folk of Triteia say, was carried to Rome."
V. Near PANORMUS (PANORMOS) Village in Achaea
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 22. 10 :
"It is another fifteen stades from Panormos [in Akhaia] to what is known as the Fort of Athena."
VI. AEGIUM (AIGION) Town in Achaea
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 23. 9 :
"At Aigion [in Akhaia] you find a temple of Athena . . . Of Athena there are two images of white
marble."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 23. 10 :
"In a building right in front of the entrance are images, of bronze like the others, representing Poseidon,
Herakles, Zeus and Athena. They are called gods from Argos. The Argives say it is because they were made in
Argos; the people of Aegion themselves say that the images were deposited by the Argives with them on trust.
They say further that they were ordered to sacrifice each day to the images. But bethinking themselves of a
trick they sacrificed a vast number of animals, but the victims they ate up at public feasts, so that they were
not put to any expense. At last the Argives asked for the images to be returned, whereupon the people of Aegion
asked for the cost of the sacrifices. As the Argives had not the means to pay, they left the images at
Aegion."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 24. 2 :
"By the sea at Aigion is a sanctuary of . . . Zeus Homagyrios (Assembler). Here are images of Zeus, of
Aphrodite and of Athena."
VII. AEGEIRA (AIGEIRA) Town in Achaea
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 26. 4 :
"The sights of Aigeira [in Akhaia] worth recording include a sanctuary of Zeus with a sitting image of
Pentelic marble . . . In this sanctuary there also stands an image of Athena. The face, hands and feet are of
ivory, the rest is of wood, with ornamentation of gilt work and of colors."
VIII. PELLENE Town in Achaea
Pausanias, Description of Greece 7. 27. 2 :
"On the way to the city [of Pellene, Akhaia], close up to it, is a temple of Athena, built of local stone,
but the image is of ivory and gold. They say that Pheidias made it before he made the images of Athena on the
Athenian acropolis and at Plataia. The people of Pellene also say that a shrine of Athena sinks deep into the
ground, that this shrine is under the pedestal of the image, and that the air from the shrine is damp, and
consequently good for the ivory."
CULT IN ARCADIA (SOUTHERN GREECE)

I. MEGALOPOLIS Main City of Arcadia (Arkadia)
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 31. 2 :
"Before them [the statues of Demeter and Persephone at Megalopolis, Arkadia] he made small maids in tunics
reaching to the ankles, each of whom carries on her head a basket full of flowers. They are said to be daughters
of Damophon, but those inclining to a more religious interpretation hold that they are Athena and Artemis
gathering the flowers with Persephone."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 31. 7 :
"Within the enclosure of the goddesses [Demeter and Persephone in Megalopolis, Arkadia] are the following
images, which all have a square shape : Hermes, surnamed Agetor, Apollon, Athena, Poseidon, Helios too, surnamed
Soteiros (Saviour), and Herakles."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 31. 9 :
"Behind the portico called after Philip of Makedon [in Megalopolis, Arkadia] are two hills, rising to no
great height. Ruins of a sanctuary of Athena Polias (of the City) are on one."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 32. 4 :
"A little lower down [the hill of the temple of Artemis in Megalopolis, Arkadia] there are [statues of]
gods, also of square shape, surnamed Ergatai (Workers), Athena Ergane (Worker) and Apollon Aguieus (God of
Streets), to Hermes, Herakles and Eileithyia."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 36. 5 :
"[Outside the Gate of the Marsh at Megalopolis, Arkadia] there is also a sanctuary of Athena surnamed
Makhanitis (Contriver), because the goddess is the inventor of plans and devices of all sorts."
II. TEGEA Town in Arcadia
Strabo, Geography 8. 8. 2 (trans. Jones) (Greek geographer C1st B.C. to C1st A.D.)
:
"Tegea [in Arkadia] still endures fairly well, and so does the temple of Athene Alee."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 4. 8 (trans. Jones) (Greek travelogue C2nd A.D.)
:
"[The mythical king] Aleos built the old sanctuary in Tegea of Athena Alea, and made Tegea the capital of
his kingdom."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 5. 3 :
"Laodike, a descendant of Agapenor [i.e. leader of the Arkadians in the Trojan War who settled in Kypros],
sent to Tegea a robe as a gift for Athena Alea. The inscription on the offering told as well the race of Laodike
:--‘This is the robe of Laodike; she offered it to her Athena, sending it to her broad fatherland from
divine Kypros.’"
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 45. 4 - 47. 4 :
"[In Tegea, Arkadia there is] the ancient sanctuary of Athena Alea [which] was made for the Tegeans by [the
mythical king] Aleos. Later on the Tegeans set up for the goddess a large temple, worth seeing. The sanctuary
was utterly destroyed by a fire which suddenly broke out when Diophantos was archon at Athens, in the second
year of the ninety-sixth Olympiad, at which Eupolemos of Elis won the foot-race. The modern temple is far
superior to all other temples in the Peloponnesos on many grounds, especially for its size. Its first row of
pillars is Doric, and the next to it Korinthian; also, outside the temple, stand pillars of the Ionic order. I
discovered that its architect was Skopas the Parian, who made images in many places of ancient Greece, and some
besides in Ionia and Karia. On the front gable is the hunting of the Kalydonian boar . . . On the gable at the
back is a representation of Telephos fighting Akhilleus on the plain of the Kaikos.
The ancient image of Athena Alea, and with it the tusks of the Kalydonian boar, were carried away by the Roman
emperor Augustus after his defeat of Antonios [i.e. Marc Antony] and his allies, among whom were all the
Arkadians except the Mantineans . . . The emperor Augustus only followed a custom in vogue among the Greeks and
barbarians from of old. The image of Athena Alea at Rome is as you enter the Forum made by Augustus. Here then
it has been set up, made throughout of ivory, the work of Endoios. Those in charge of the curiosities say that
one of the boar's tusks has broken off; the remaining one is kept in the gardens of the emperor, in a sanctuary
of Dionysos, and is about half a fathom long.
The present image at Tegea was brought from the parish of Manthurenses, and among them it had the surname of
Hippia (Horse Goddess). According to their account, when the battle of the gods and giants took place the
goddess drove the chariot and horses against Enkelados. Yet this goddess too has come to receive the name of
Alea among the Greeks generally and the Peloponnesians themselves. On one side of the image of Athena stands
Asklepios, on the other Hygeia (Health), works of Skopas of Paros in Pentelic marble. Of the votive offerings in
the temple these are the most notable. There is the hide of the Kalydonian boar, rotted by age and by now
altogether without bristles. Hanging up are the fetters, except such as have been destroyed by rust, worn by the
[historic] Lakedaimonian prisoners when they dug the plain of Tegea. There have been dedicated a sacred couch of
Athena, a portrait painting of [the mythical princess] Auge, and the shield of Marpessa, surnamed Khoira, a
woman of Tegea . . .
The priest of Athena is a boy; I do not know how long his priesthood lasts, but it must be before, and not
after, puberty. The altar for the goddess was made, they say, by [the mythical hero] Melampos, the son of
Amythaon. Represented on the altar are Rhea and the nymph Oinoe holding the baby Zeus. On either side are four
figures: on one, Glauke, Neda, Theisoa and Anthrakia; on the other Ide, Hagno, Alkinoe and Phrixa. There are
also images of the Mousai and of Mnemosyne (Memory). Not far from the temple is a stadium formed by a mound of
earth, where they celebrate games, one festival called Aleaia after Athena, the other Halotia (Capture Festival)
because they captured the greater part of the Lakedaimonians alive in the [historical] battle."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 47. 5 :
"There is at Tegea another sanctuary of Athena, namely of Athena Poliatis (Keeper of the City) into which a
priest enters once in each year. This sanctuary they name Eryma (Defence ) saying that [the mythical king]
Kepheos, the son of Aleos, received from Athena a boon, that Tegea should never be captured while time shall
endure, adding that the goddess cut off some of the hair of Medousa and gave it to him as a guard to the city
[i.e. when Herakles led the Arkadians in an attack on Sparta]."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 2. 17. 7 :
"Khryseis went to Tegea [in Arkadia] and supplicated Athena Alea."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 3. 5. 6 :
"[The historical Spartan general Pausanias] did not wait to stand his trial, but was received by the people
of Tegea as a suppliant of Athena Alea. Now this sanctuary had been respected from early days by all the
Peloponnesians, and afforded peculiar safety to its suppliants, as the Lakedaemonians showed in the case of
Pausanias and of Leotykhides before him, and the Argives in the case of Khryseis; they never wanted even to ask
for these refugees, who were sitting as suppliants in the sanctuary, to be given up."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 3. 7. 10 :
"[The Spartan Leotykhides] being brought to trial in Lakedaimon he voluntarily went into exile to Tegea,
where he sought sanctuary as a suppliant of Athena Alea."
III. MANTINEIA Town in Arcadia

Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 9. 3 :
"[For the temple of Hera in Mantineia, Arkadia] Praxiteles made the images Hera is sitting, while Athena
and Hera's daughter Hebe are standing by her side."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 9. 6 :
"They [the people of Mantineia, Arkadia] also worship Athena Alea, of whom they have a sanctuary and an
image."
IV. PHENEUS (PHENEOS) Town in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 14. 4 :
"The acropolis [of Pheneos, Arkadia] is precipitous on all sides, mostly so naturally, but a few parts have
been artificially strengthened, to make it more secure. On the acropolis here is a temple of Athena surnamed
Tritonia, but of it I found ruins only remaining."
V. Near CLEITOR (KLEITOR) Village in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 21. 4 :
"There is also built upon a mountain-top, thirty stades away from the city [of Kleitor, Arkadia], a temple
of Athena Koria (the Maiden) with an image of the goddess."
VI. ALEA Village in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 23. 1 :
"The sanctuaries of the gods here [at Alea, Arkadia] are those of Artemis Ephesia and Athena Alea."
VII. ALIPHERA Village in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 26. 6 - 7 :
"There are sanctuaries here [in the town of Aliphera, Arkadia] of Asklepios and Athena; the latter they
worship more than any other god, saying that she was born and bred among them. They also set up an altar of Zeus
Lekheates (In child-bed), because here he gave birth to Athena. There is a stream they call Tritonis, adopting
the story about the river Triton. The image of Athena is made of bronze, the work of Hypatodoros, worth seeing
for its size and workmanship. They keep a general festival in honor of some god or other; I think in honor of
Athena. At this festival they sacrifice first to Myagron (Fly or Mouse-catcher), praying to the hero over the
victims and calling upon Myagron (the Fly or Mouse-catcher). When they have done this the flies [or mice]
trouble them no longer."
VIII. TEUTHIS Village in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 28. 5 - 6 :
"Adjoining the land of Theisoa is a village called Teuthis [in Arkadia], which in old days was a town. In
the Trojan war the inhabitants supplied a general of their own. His name according to some was Teuthis,
according to others Ornytos. When the Greeks failed to secure favorable winds to take them from Aulis, but were
shut in for a long time by a violent gale, Teuthis quarrelled with Agamemnon and was about to lead the Arkadians
under his command back home again. Whereupon, they say, Athena in the guise of Melas, the son of Ops, tried to
turn Teuthis aside from his journey home. But Teuthis, his wrath swelling within him, struck with his spear the
thigh of the goddess, and actually did lead his army back from Aulis. On his return to his native land the
goddess appeared to him in a vision with a wound in her thigh. After this a wasting disease fell on Teuthis, and
its people, alone of the Arkadians, suffered from famine. Later, oracles were delivered to them from Dodona,
telling them what to do to appease the goddess, and in particular they had an image of Athena made with a wound
in the thigh. This image I have myself seen, with its thigh swathed in a purple bandage."
IX. MAENALUS (MAINALOS) Village in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 36. 8 :
"There are still left ruins of Mainalos [in Arkadia] itself: traces of a temple of Athena."
X. Near ACACESIUM (AKAKESION) Village in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 37. 12 :
"[In the sanctuary of Despoine, near Akakesion, Arkadia :] There are also wooden images of Apollon and of
Athena. Of Athena a sanctuary also has been made."
XI. Near HAEMONIAE (HAIMONIAI) Village in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 44 .2 :
"On the straight road from Haimoniai [in Arkadia] is a place . . . called Athenaion (place of Athena). On
the left of it is a temple of Athena with a stone image in it."
XII. MT. BOREIUS (BOREIOS) Mountain in Arcadia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 44. 4 :
"From Asea [in Arkadia] is an ascent up Mount Boreios, and on the top of the mountain are traces of a
sanctuary. It is said that the sanctuary was built in honor of Athena Soteira (Saviour) and Poseidon by Odysseus
after his return from Troy."
CULT IN BOEOTIA (CENTRAL GREECE)

I. THEBES Main City of Boeotia (Boiotia)
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 10. 2 :
"On the right of the gate [of Thebes, Boiotia] is a hill sacred to Apollon. Both the hill and the god are
called Ismenion . . . First at the entrance are [statues of] Athena and Hermes, stone figures and named Pronai
(Of the fore-temple). The Hermes is said to have been made by Pheidias, the Athena by Skopas."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 11. 6 :
"[The historic] Thrasyboulos, son of Lykos, and the Athenians who with him put down the tyranny of the
Thirty, set out from Thebes when they returned to Athens, and therefore they dedicated in the sanctuary of
Herakles [at Thebes, Boiotia] colossal figures of Athena and Herkcles, carved by Alkamenes in relief out of
Pentelic marble."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 12. 2 :
"[The mythical founder of Thebes] Kadmos and the host with him were to make their dwelling [found Thebes]
where the cow was going to sink down in weariness. So this is one of the places that they [the Thebans] point
out. Here there is in the open an altar and an image of Athena, said to have been dedicated by Kadmos. Those who
think that the Kadmos who came to the Theban land was an Aigyptian (Egyptian), and not a Phoinikian
(Phoenician), have their opinion contradicted by the name of this Athena, because she is called by the
Phoinikian name of Onga, and not by the Aigyptian name of Sais."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 17. 3 :
"[In Thebes, Boiotia] are two stone images of Athena, surnamed Zosteria (Girder), said to have been
dedicated by [the mythical step-father of Herakles] Amphitryon. For here, they say, he put on his armour when he
was about to give battle to Khalkodon and the Euboians. It seems that the ancients used the verb ‘to gird
oneself’ in the sense of ‘to put on one's armour.’"
Aelian, Historical Miscellany 12. 57 (trans. Wilson) (Greek rhetorician C2nd to 3rd
A.D.) :
"When Alexandros the son of Philippos led his forces against Thebes the gods sent them signs and portents
presaging their imminent fate . . . In the city . . . the statue of Athena known as Alalkomeneis caught fire
spontaneously, though no light was set to it."
II. PLATAEA (PLATAIA) Town in Boeotia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 4. 1 (trans. Jones) (Greek travelogue C2nd A.D.)
:
"The Plataians [of Plataia, Boiotia] have also a sanctuary of Athena surnamed Areia (Warlike); it was built
from the spoils given them by the Athenians as their share from the battle of Marathon. It is a wooden image
gilded, but the face, hands and feet are of Pentelic marble. In size it is but little smaller than the bronze
Athena on the Akropolis, the one which the Athenians also erected as first-fruits of the battle at Marathon; the
Plataeans too had Pheidias for the maker of their image of Athena. In the temple are paintings: one of them, by
Polygnotos, represents Odysseus after he has killed the wooers; the other, painted by Onasias, is the former
expedition of the Argives, under Adrastos, against Thebes. These paintings are on the walls of the fore-temple,
while at the feet of the image is a portrait of [the historic] Arimnestos, who commanded the Plataians at the
battle against [the Persians under] Mardonios, and yet before that at Marathon."
III. TEUMESSUS (TEUMESSOS) Village in Boeotia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 19. 1 :
"In Teumessos [in Boiotia] there is also a sanctuary of Athena Telkhinia, which contains no image. As to
her surname, we may hazard the conjecture that a division of the Telkhinians who once dwelt in Kypros came to
Boiotia and established a sanctuary of Athena Telkhinia (of Telkhinia)."
IV. THESPIAE (THESPIAI) Village in Boeotia
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 26. 8 :
"[In Thespia, Boiotia there is an image of] Athena Ergane (Worker), as well as Ploutos (Wealth), who stands
beside her."
V. ALALCOMENAE (ALALKOMENAI) Village in Boeotia
Strabo, Geography 9. 2. 36 (trans. Jones) (Greek geographer C1st B.C. to C1st A.D.)
:
"Now as for Alalkomenai, the poet [Homer] mentions it, but not in the Catalogue : ‘Hera
Argeia (of Argos) and Athena Alalkomeneis.’ It has an ancient temple of Athena which is held in great
honor; and they say, at least, that the goddess was born there, just as Hera was born in Argos, and that it was
because of this that the poet named them both in this way, as natives of these places. And it was because of
this, perhaps, that he did not mention in the Catalogue the men of Alalkomenai, since, being sacred, they were
excused from the expedition. And in fact the city always continued unravaged, although it was neither large nor
situated in a secure position, but in a plain. But all peoples, since they revered the goddess, held aloof from
any violence towards the inhabitants, so that when the Thebans, at the time of the expedition of the Epigonoi,
left their city, they are said to have fled for refuge to Alalkomenai, and to Tilphossios, the mountain [sacred
to Apollon]."
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 33. 5 - 7 (trans. Jones) (Greek travelogue C2nd
A.D.) :
"Alalkomenai [in Boiotia] is a small village, and it lies at the very foot of a mountain of no great
height. Its name, some say, is derived from Alalkomeneos, an aboriginal, by whom Athena was brought up; others
declare that Alalkomenia was one of the daughters of Ogygos. At some distance from the village on the level
ground has been made a temple of Athena with an ancient image of ivory.
[The Roman General] Sulla's treatment of the Athenians was savage and foreign to the Roman character . . . in
Alalkomenai he added yet another to his crimes by stealing the image of Athena itself. After these mad outrages
against the Greek cities and the gods of the Greeks he was attacked by the most foul of diseases. He broke out
into lice, and what was formerly accounted his good fortune came to such an end. The sanctuary at Alalkomenai,
deprived of the goddess, was hereafter neglected. In my time yet another incident added to the ruin of the
temple. A large and strong ivy-tree grew over it, loosening the stones from their joints and tearing them apart.
Here too there flows a river, a small torrent. They call it Triton, because the story is that beside a river
Triton Athena was reared, the implication being that the Triton was this and not the river in Libya, which flows
into the Libyan sea out of lake Tritonis."
CULT IN EUBOEA (CENTRAL GREECE)
I. CHALCIS (KHALKIS) Town in Southern Euboea (Euboia)
Aelian, Historical Miscellany 6. 1 (trans. Wilson) (Greek rhetorician C2nd to 3rd
A.D.) :
"When the Athenians took control of Khalkis [in Euboia, 506 B.C.] they divided the land into parcels for
two thousand settlers; this was the area known as Hippobotos. They consecrated shrines to Athena in the place
called Lelanton, and they leased out the rest of the land, according to the pillars which stand by the Stoa
Basileios and carry a record of the leases."
SOURCES
GREEK
- Strabo, Geography - Greek Geography C1st B.C. - C1st A.D.
- Pausanias, Description of Greece - Greek Travelogue C2nd A.D.
- Aelian, Historical Miscellany - Greek Rhetoric C2nd - 3rd A.D.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
A complete bibliography of the translations quoted on this page.