Aegina (Αἴγινα) was a figure of
Greek mythology, the
nymph of the island that bears her name,
Aegina, lying in the
Saronic Gulf between
Attica and the
Peloponnesos. The archaic
Temple of Aphaea, the "Invisible Goddess", on the island was later subsumed by the cult of
Athena.
Aphaia (Ἀφαῖα) may be read as an attribute of Aegina that provides an
epithet, or as a doublet of the goddess.
Though the name
Aegina betokens a goat-nymph,Compare
Aegis,
Aegeus,
Aigai "place of goats", etc. such as was Cretan
Amalthea, she was given a mainland identity as the daughter of the river-god
Asopus and the nymph
Metope; of their twelve or twenty daughters, many were ravished by
Apollo or
Zeus. Aegina bore at least two children:
Menoetius by
Actor, and
Aeacus by
Zeus, both of whom became kings.
The mortal son Menoetius was king of
Opus, and was counted among the
Argonauts. His son was
Patroclus,
Achilles' cousin through their paternal family connection to Aegina, and his intimate companion.
The son made immortal, Aeacus, was the king of
Aegina, and was known to have contributed help to
Poseidon and
Apollo in building the walls of
Troy. Through...
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