Aphrodite: Difference between revisions

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|origin = [[Olympus]]
|origin = [[Olympus]]
|sibling = Ares (mythology){{!}}Ares
|sibling = Ares (mythology){{!}}Ares
|child = Eros (mythology){{!}}Eros
|only = The Life Bringer! (comic story)
|only = The Life Bringer! (comic story)
|actor =
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[[File:Shell-craft life bringer.JPG|thumb|right|Aphrodite gives [[Prometheus (mythology)|Prometheus]] and the [[Fourth Doctor]] a lift in her flying [[shell-craft]] ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Life Bringer! (comic story)|The Life Bringer!]]'')]]
[[File:Shell-craft life bringer.JPG|thumb|right|Aphrodite gives [[Prometheus (mythology)|Prometheus]] and the [[Fourth Doctor]] a lift in her flying [[shell-craft]] ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Life Bringer! (comic story)|The Life Bringer!]]'')]]
In one story, Aphrodite and her son [[Eros (mythology)|Eros]] were confronted by the giant beast [[Typhon]]. They leapt into the ocean to evade him, and were dragged to safety by two fish; the fish were rewarded with a place in the heavens and became [[Pisces]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Introduction and links (short story)|Introduction and links]]'')


Displeased to find that [[Prometheus (The Life Bringer!)|Prometheus]] had returned to [[Olympus]], she took him and the [[Fourth Doctor]] to see [[Zeus (The Life Bringer!)|Zeus]], whom she informed that Prometheus stubbornly intended to repopulate the universe with men again. Aphrodite later went to see Prometheus in his cell, hoping to persuade him to be more reasonable, but found that he had escaped and alerted Zeus. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Life Bringer! (comic story)|The Life Bringer!]]'')
Displeased to find that [[Prometheus (The Life Bringer!)|Prometheus]] had returned to [[Olympus]], she took him and the [[Fourth Doctor]] to see [[Zeus (The Life Bringer!)|Zeus]], whom she informed that Prometheus stubbornly intended to repopulate the universe with men again. Aphrodite later went to see Prometheus in his cell, hoping to persuade him to be more reasonable, but found that he had escaped and alerted Zeus. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Life Bringer! (comic story)|The Life Bringer!]]'')

Revision as of 18:17, 9 June 2022

Aphrodite

Aphrodite was a female Olympian, known as a goddess in the home of the Greek gods. (COMIC: The Life Bringer!) She "inspired love in the hearts of mankind". (AUDIO: The Queen of Time)

Her equivalent in the Roman pantheon was Venus. (PROSE: Byzantium!)

Biography

Aphrodite rose from the sea amidst a cluster of oysters. These oysters were later acquired by Hecuba. She tried to serve them to the Second Doctor when she invited him for dinner, seemingly not realising that they had, over the intervening millennia, decayed into putrescent slime. (AUDIO: The Queen of Time)

Aphrodite gives Prometheus and the Fourth Doctor a lift in her flying shell-craft (COMIC: The Life Bringer!)

In one story, Aphrodite and her son Eros were confronted by the giant beast Typhon. They leapt into the ocean to evade him, and were dragged to safety by two fish; the fish were rewarded with a place in the heavens and became Pisces. (PROSE: Introduction and links)

Displeased to find that Prometheus had returned to Olympus, she took him and the Fourth Doctor to see Zeus, whom she informed that Prometheus stubbornly intended to repopulate the universe with men again. Aphrodite later went to see Prometheus in his cell, hoping to persuade him to be more reasonable, but found that he had escaped and alerted Zeus. (COMIC: The Life Bringer!)

At one point, Aphrodite's brother Ares, the god of war, became inflamed with lust for her; as a result, his star Mars began to pursue her star Venus through Greek Space, smashing holes in Olympos and raining fire across the land. Their relative Iris devised a solution in which the two stars would spin about missing each other, only rarely aligning in pleasurable occultations. (PROSE: Wandering Stars)

References

Odysseus hoped that the First Doctor, whom the Greeks had mistaken for Zeus, would tell a tale or two of Aphrodite at dinner. (TV: The Myth Makers)

In a parallel universe, one where the effects of the reality bomb caused its stars to wink out, the ancient Greeks believed that the observable disappearances were Hermes stealing them as gifts for Aphrodite. (AUDIO: The Endless Night)