In Greek mythology, Antianara succeeded Penthesilea as Queen of the Amazons. She was best known for crippling her male servants "as the lame best perform the acts of love". Greek mythology comprises the collected narratives of Greek gods, goddesses, heroes, and heroines, originally created and spread within an oral-poetic tradition. ... In Greek mythology, Penthesilea (also spelled Penthesilia) was an Amazonian queen, daughter of Ares and Otrera, sister of Hippolyte, Antiope and Melanippe. ... In Greek mythology, the Amazons were either an ancient legendary nation of female warriors or a contemporary land of women at the outer edges of the world. ...
She was a brutal and fierce woman who tolerated no man. The most that the pirates knew of her origins was that she was from the city Arcen, and that if she had any family, she refused to acknowledge them.
In Arcen she worked on the docks, and one day managed to steal the Antianara with a few of her fellow women who were sick of their lot in life.
Not many of the crew survived the wreckage of the Antianara, but Tarona and her first mate, Valari Tragaron, as well as a few others pulled them selves to safety on the grounds of the Forests of Life.
On the day when the chaos gates opened, the Antianara was attacking a rich and arrogant enemy of Photaron.
For years, the crew of the Antianara made their home in the shelter of the Ecomantic forests, and because of its healing properties, they aged very little.
She won, and shortly after, an exploratory group of Imperial citizens found the Antianaran women, and brought them out of the chaos lands, where they started their own free-holding Tribe, The Antianara, which is open to all women who have the guts to pass the initiation rites.