Bellona

Bellona is the Roman goddess of war and the mother of Reyna Avila Ramírez-Arellano and Hylla Ramírez-Arellano. She is an important goddess to the Romans, as she also controls the policy of foreign warfare.

History
Bellona, the Roman goddess of War, was closely associated with Mars, the Roman god of War. She is invariably his companion, although she is also known for being his wife, daughter, sister, or charioteer but mostly recognized for being his twin sister.

Her temple was built in the Campus Martius, the low-lying field by the Tiber River consecrated to Mars, located outside of the city walls. The area around her temple was considered to symbolize foreign soil, and there the Senate met with ambassadors, received victorious generals, and where war was officially declared. Beside her temple was the columna bellica or war column, representing the boundary of Rome. To declare war, a javelin was thrown over the column by one of the fetialis, a type of priest involved in diplomacy, and this act symbolized the attack on a foreign land. Bellona had several shrines and temples in Rome, though most are known only from inscriptions referencing them, as well as a temple in Ostia, the port city of Rome.

Representation
Bellona is usually shown in a plumed helmet and armor, armed with sword and spear, carrying a shield (being the war goddess); sometimes she carries a torch with a blood-red flame. She is described as loud and active, barking orders or war-cries, her weapons clanging as she runs. She is credited with inspiring violence, starting wars, and goading soldiers into battle; Virgil described her as carrying a bloodstained scourge or whip. She was believed to make wars and battles go well for those who invoked her.



Etymology
The name Bellona derives from the Latin word for war (bellum), and is directly related to the modern English words belligerent (lit. war-waging), bellicose (lit. aggression) and antebellum (lit. happenings before war). In earlier times she was called Duellona, the name being derived from a more ancient word for battle.

The Son of Neptune
Bellona is mentioned to be the mother of Reyna, a praetor of Camp Jupiter, and Hylla, the queen of the Amazons. She is also said to have her own temple at Camp Jupiter, as she is the most important war goddess the Romans worship.

The Mark of Athena
While Reyna talks to Annabeth Chase, she explains the roles her mother plays in the Legion. She also explains when Romans go to war they throw a spear into a patch of soil inside her mother's temple which represents enemy soil.

The House of Hades
Jason saw Reyna wear her ring, mentioning it has the symbol of Bellona.

The Blood of Olympus
Reyna explains to Nico that while her family has been blessed by Bellona for generations, she and her sister Hylla are actually the only demigod children of the goddess that's in the family. She explains that Bellona fell in love with her father and they had two children, her sister and her, but Bellona told him that their family had a great role to play and though Reyna thinks she meant it as a kindness, it drove her father to paranoia and madness.

When close to delivering the Athena Parthenos, Reyna prays to Bellona for guidance, but Orion shows up instead, telling her Bellona has abandoned her. Reyna realizes that Bellona is giving her a chance to prove herself, telling the giant that Bellona sends her potential enemies and friends and gave her the chance to make peace between the Greeks and Romans, saying that while Bellona is a war goddess, her temples were also used to make peace. Reyna believes that Bellona will lend her her strength against Orion and throws her dagger into his heart, saying it will kill him then jumps on an explosive arrow with her cloak to try to shield the statue. Bellona doesn't cause the dagger to kill Orion, but Athena gives Reyna part of aegis to shield and help her. When Reyna attacks Orion, while they don't physically appear to help, both Bellona and Athena aid her with Bellona sharing her strength with Reyna so she can make the jump to Orion and strangle him. While the goddesses aid her, neither physically interferes and lets Reyna be the one to kill Orion with her aegis-infused cloak.

Abilities

 * She possesses the standard powers of a goddess.
 * Prowess in Battle: As the goddess of war, Bellona is a fierce warrior, and a master of both armed and hand-to-hand combat.
 * Warfare: Bellona is an expert in all areas of warfare.
 * War Manipulation: As the goddess of war, Bellona has the power to influence all forms of conflict including mental, physical, spiritual and conceptual ones, regardless of the area and numbers involved, control how they progress and draw power both from the conflict alone as well as the dying. She is naturally extremely skilled in all form of fighting, weapons and both strategy and tactics as well as statistics of war. She can start conflicts by influencing people or events, rise personal and fanatical armies, control and create weapons of every kind and even grant others extensive abilities of combat. She has the incredible power to invoke war and chaos within an enormously large radius, ranging from a city to an entire continent. With this power she has full control over the city or continent that is in war and chaos at the time.
 * Telumkinesis: As the goddess of war, Bellona has absolute control and divine authority over weapons.
 * She can conjure any weapon. She knows everything about a weapon when she sees one.
 * She can curse weapons.
 * She can disarm her opponents.

Aspects of Bellona

 * Bellona Pulvinensis
 * Bellona Insulensis

Known Demigod Children

 * Banastre Tarleton
 * Reyna Avila Ramírez-Arellano
 * Hylla Ramírez-Arellano

Trivia

 * The goddess has also proved popular in post-Renaissance art as a female embodiment of military virtue, and an excellent opportunity to portray the feminine form in armor and helmet.
 * 28 Bellona, a large main-belt asteroid, is named after her; the name was chosen to mark the beginning of the Crimean War.
 * In the series, Reyna states that Bellona has no Greek aspect. This is most likely an error or change made for the series, since Bellona is actually equated and closely associated with the war goddess Enyo, who is a daughter of Zeus and Hera (the Greek aspects of Bellona's parents). This makes Enyo a sister of Ares as well, who in turn is the Greek counterpart of Bellona's brother Mars.
 * Bellona's festival was celebrated on June third.