Inseparable from the Hellenic culture and tradition, the olive tree would become the timeless symbol of peace, wisdom, fertility, prosperity, joyousness, luck, and victory. According to mythology, the olive tree was brought to the Greeks by the goddess Athena, in honor of whom the city of Athens was named. Another tradition maintains that the olive tree was brought by Hercules from the land of the Hyperboreans. He then planted a wild olive sprout at the city of Olympia, the branches of which were used in the form of olive leaf wreaths to crown the Olympic winners. Moreover, according to both myth and tradition, the domestication and cultivation of the olive tree was taught by Aristaeus, son of the god Apollo and the nymph Cyrene, who is also presented as the inventor of the early press, which, with the usage of a lever, allowed for the production of olive oil.