Goddess of wisdom and war

Pallas, the goddess of wisdom and war, or Minerva. Pallas is the human name for the goddess of wisdom, Minerva is derived from the Elvish pronunciation, but both refer to the goddess known as the "wisdom of the gods".

She was one of the first goddesses of the Great Creation Will Creation, and in terms of generation, she should be the aunt of the modern-day god-king Goddess of Radiance, Serokxia. She is the only deity who has had a deep spiritual communication with the World Tree, and is naturally the wisest goddess in the Heavenly Palace. She swallowed the fruit of a World Tree, and since then she has a pair of pupils known as the "Eyes of True Knowledge", which can gain insight into the past and future of the world.

In the prosperous Age of the Gods and the tragic Age of Annihilation, Pallas was the goddess who helped and influenced the world the most. The calendar, writing, astrological signs, agricultural hours, animal husbandry, blacksmithing, and later the ultimate tool of warfare, the art of war, were all incarnated into the mortal world in different images, either indirectly influenced by the guò, or passed on to the mortals through direct education. Shure, the god of war who fell in the War of the Gods, is worshipped as the patron god of warriors, but the goddess Pallas, who is in charge of the art of war, is the true god of war.

Pallas is also a goddess with a great sense of humor. A greedy tyrant had promised her that if Pallas helped him conquer the world, he would believe in her as the only god to be worshipped and worshipped on earth, and the goddess of wisdom teleported the tyrant into a subspace where he could only survive - in a sense, the tyrant's wish was granted.

Seeing Pallas in mortal shrines and churches is usually two images. One is a gentle and intellectual woman with a book in her hand and a scholar's robe, which is the side of her god of wisdom, and the other is a female warrior in armor and holding a shield and sword, which is the side of her god of war.

Pallas has a guardian archangel, Hiranphil, who is the watchman and chief of staff of the Angel Legion. Pallas also had two servants, Pashali, the steward of the infinite library of knowledge and learning, and Hollins, the god of learning.

Pashalie and Hollins occasionally descend into the world.

The former was to gather new knowledge and information on earth, because she knew that the development of the mortal world had left the management and shepherding of the gods, and was headed for a path that they could not predict. The deity will no longer be the one who holds the only truth, and she is willing to speak to mortals on behalf of the Holy Spirit of the Heavenly Palace. Legend has it that in the library of Ocean University, many people claim to have seen a little girl reading at a desk at night, conspiracy theorists believe that it is a resentful spirit who has been suppressed to death in the midst of heavy schoolwork, and the pious believe that it must be the goddess Pashali who has descended to earth. Since then, there has been the "Librarian Lori" in the "Seven Incredibles" of Ocean University.

The latter likes to incarnate as a different image of Mr. Teaching, or in a country village, or in an aristocratic school, or in a higher education institution, to impart knowledge and principles of life to mortals, and enjoy the fun of communicating with mortals in the life of teaching and educating people. Of course, there is some gossip that if you get the blessing of Hollins, you can pass the academic exam, so many candidates will silently wear the talisman of the god of knowledge during the exam. Whether it will work or not is a matter of opinion. I1153