Cyprus-The island of Aphrodite Cyprus Aphrodite
It was around 1200 BC when Aphrodite, Goddess of Love and Beauty, emerged from the gentle jade-colored sea foam at Petra tou Romiou, a boulder that juts up from the south coast of Cyprus as majestically today as it did then. The name Aphrodite, in fact, means “foam born.” She was the most ancient goddess in the Olympian pantheon.
An awestruck Paris, son of
King Priam of Troy once gave Aphrodite a golden apple in recognition
of supreme beauty, unmatched by the other goddesses.
Zeus put Aphrodite in
charge of wedlock and arranged her marriage to the good but ugly
craft-god Hephaistos. She took solace in the strong arms of Ares,
god of war. But the ultimate key to her heart was not strength, but
sweetness - and this she found in Adonis.
Eros, Aphrodite's son,
accidentally wounded her bosom with one of his arrows. Reeling from
the wound, she took solace in her mineral pool, the famed Baths of
Aphrodite on the Akamas Peninsula of Cyprus. The hunter Adonis was
within sight that day, and the love he inspired in Aphrodite was the
greatest and most painful she would ever know.
Aphrodite-Venus-Cyprus-The island of Aphrodite
She told the proud mortal
(who was born from a myrrh tree): "Your youth and beauty will not
touch the hearts of lions and bristly boars. Think of their terrible
claws and prodigious strength!". But Adonis did not heed his
beloved's admonition. While Aphrodite was out spreading the spirit
of love and beauty, Adonis pursued a boar which proceeded to trounce
and kill him with his tusks. Little did he know this was a jealous
Ares in disguise. Aphrodite heard his cries from her swan-drawn
chariot, high above the
island's highest
forested peaks. Once by his side, she summoned the nymph Menthe (the
mint spirit), who sprinkled nectar on his blood, and then by a
process as yet unclassified by scientists red anemones sprang forth.
The flowers' blossoms are opened by the same wind that scatters
their petals. (Anemos in Greek means wind.) And yet, each spring,
they rise again from the fertile soil of Cyprus. Is it Aphrodite's
tears that coax the anemonies
into bloom?
It was the Italian poet
Arioste who named "Fontana Amorosa" the natural spring on the Akamas
Peninsula from which Aphrodite used to drink. Take a sip from it and
even today love may materialize. A riot of green in the spring, the
fountain is accessible via a beautiful hiking path on the Akamas.
A goddess of
inestimable allure, Aphrodite was bound to attract a following, and
sure enough, in the 12th century BC, an elaborate sanctuary was
built in her honour her at Palea Pafos (present-day Kouklia) - the
most significant of a dozen such consecrated sites in Cyprus.
Amphoras and ceremonial bowls from here, many of which are on
display in the Cyprus Museum in Lefkosia (Nicosia), depict
exquisitely costumed priestesses as well as erotic scenes from the
sacred gardens that once surrounded the temple. While some accounts
have young women congregating at the site to ritually sacrifice
their virginity, sacred prostitution was the likelier scenario.
According to Herodotus, every girl had to make a pilgrimage to the
sanctuary and there make love to a stranger. The girls would sit in
the sacred gardens wearing crowns of rope and wait for men passing
by to choose them. A man would throw an offering at the feet of his
preferred "pilgrim" and utter the words "I invoke the goddess upon
you," whereupon the sacrificial act would be consummated.While
Herodotus was given to overstatement, it is no exaggeration to say
that the Sanctuary of Aphrodite was among the most revered and
frequented temples of the ancient world.
Cyprus
Aphrodite's Baths |
Petra
tou Romiou |
Cyprus
Aphrodite |



