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  2. Venus (Shocking Blue song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_(Shocking_Blue_song)

    "Venus" is a song by Dutch rock band Shocking Blue, released as a single in the Netherlands in the summer of 1969. Written by Robbie van Leeuwen , the song topped the charts in nine countries. [ 6 ]

  3. Venus (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_(mythology)

    Venus Victrix ("Venus the Victorious"), a Romanised aspect of the armed Aphrodite that Greeks had inherited from the East, where the goddess Ishtar "remained a goddess of war, and Venus could bring victory to a Sulla or a Caesar". [46] Pompey vied with his patron Sulla and with Caesar for public recognition as her protégé.

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  5. Venus in culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_in_culture

    The Romans considered the planet Lucifer particularly sacred to the goddess Venus, whose name eventually became the scientific name for the planet. The second century Roman mythographer Pseudo-Hyginus said of the planet: [48] "The fourth star is that of Venus, Luciferus by name. Some say it is Juno's. In many tales it is recorded that it is ...

  6. Girdle of Aphrodite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girdle_of_Aphrodite

    Juno Borrowing the Belt of Venus by Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun (1781). The magical Girdle of Aphrodite or Venus (Greek: ἱμάς, himás: 'strap, thong'; κεστός, kestós: 'girdle, belt'; Latin: cingulum Veneri, cestus Veneris), variously interpreted as girdle, belt, breast-band, and otherwise, is one of the erotic accessories of Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love and beauty.

  7. Ninsianna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninsianna

    Ninsianna, the "Red Queen of Heaven," was a divine representation of the planet Venus. [7] In the second millennium BCE this theonym could be used to represent the astral body in various works of Mesopotamian astronomy, though in the first millennium BCE the name Dilbat came to be used more commonly instead, with the exception of Neo-Babylonian Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa, which relied on Old ...

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