Origin Story
In Homer's epic the Odyssey, Odysseus (Ulysses) leaves for the Trojan War and entrusts the upbringing of his son Telemachus and the care of his household to his friend Mentōr. When Odysseus fails to return for twenty years, Athena, goddess of wisdom, disguises herself as Mentor to guide Telemachus in person. As Mentor, Athena instills courage in the young man, urges him to set out in search of his father, and teaches him sound judgment. From this story, Mentor became a common noun meaning "a wise counselor and guide." In the 18th century, Fenelon's novel The Adventures of Telemachus enjoyed enormous popularity across Europe, and mentor settled into place as a central concept in education and leadership.
The original Greek sense of Mentor was "advisor, one who thinks," from the Indo-European root *men- ("to think"). The same root gave us mind, mental, and mania.
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Oxford English Dictionarymentor: from the name of Mentor, a character in Homer's Odyssey whose form Athena took to guide Telemachus
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Online Etymology Dictionarymentor (n.): 1750, from Greek Mentōr, friend of Odysseus, whose form Athena took to guide Telemachus — from PIE root *men- "to think"
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Homer, Odyssey, Books 2-3Athena, disguised as Mentor, advises Telemachus to seek news of his father and stand up to the suitors plaguing his household
Word Evolution
Words from the Same Root
Memory Hook
mentor = Mentor, the character in the Odyssey. The archetypal mentor is "the counselor a goddess disguised herself to be"!
""The finest mentor does not look like a goddess — she comes to you in the guise of a friend.""