Tritogeneia
Also Tritô and Tritogenês, a surname of Athena (Homer's Iliad; Theogony of Hesiod), which is explained in different ways.
Some derive it from lake Tritonis in Libya, near which she is said to have been born; others from the stream Triton near Alalcomenae in Boeotia, where she was worshipped, and where according to some statements she was also born.
The grammarians, lastly, derive the name from tritô which, in the dialect of the Athamanians, is said to signify "head," so that it would be the goddess born out of the head of her father.
From Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and MythologyFrom The Shield Of Heracles by Hesiod
(ll. 197-200) There, too, was the daughter of Zeus, Tritogeneia who drives the spoil. She was like as if she would array a battle, with a spear in her hand, and a golden helmet, and the aegis about her shoulders. And she was going towards the awful strife.
(ll. 886-900) Now Zeus, king of the gods, made Metis his wife first, and she was wisest among gods and mortal men. But when she was about to bring forth the goddess bright-eyed Athene, Zeus craftily deceived her with cunning words and put her in his own belly, as Earth and starry Heaven advised. For they advised him so, to the end that no other should hold royal sway over the eternal gods in place of Zeus; for very wise children were destined to be born of her, first the maiden bright-eyed Tritogeneia, equal to her father in strength and in wise understanding; but afterwards she was to bear a son of overbearing spirit, king of gods and men. But Zeus put her into his own belly first, that the goddess might devise for him both good and evil.