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Zeus your daddy, Diana!

By Zeus! Wonder Woman is a daddy’s girl.

The iconic character is getting something she’s never had in her almost 70-year-old history — a father.

“She’s going to learn she’s not who she was told she was,” “Wonder Woman” writer Brian Azzarello told The Post.

A storyline in the amazing Amazon’s newly relaunched comic will reveal she’s actually the daughter of Zeus, the thunderbolt throwing father of the Olympian gods.

That’s a seismic change in the character’s mythology, which is one that stood out as unusual even in a universe where characters get heat vision and the power of flight after being rocketed to Earth from a distant planet.

In the original comics, Wonder Woman’s mother, Amazon queen Hippolyta, fashioned her baby Diana out of clay, and the clay was given life and superpowers by Greek goddesses.

When they relaunched their entire line of comics last month, DC Comics figured it was a good time to break the mold.

“In this case, making her a god actually makes her more human, more relatable,” DC co-publisher Jim Lee said.

“Everybody’s got a father,” Azzarello said. “Even if he’s not the nicest guy in the world.”

The braceleted beauty won’t discover her true origins until “Wonder Woman” No. 3, which goes on sale next month. The paternity revelation is one of several DC will be dropping about their retooled characters at the New York Comic Con, which kicks off at the Javits Center on Thursday.

“We’re approaching all the classic characters in a way that feels true to their origins but thoroughly modern,” Lee said.

Wonder Woman has been one of the big winners of the DC relaunch, as the first issue of her critically acclaimed title sold more than 100,000 copies — her best sales in years.

Now the star-spangled stunner will discover she has a slew of new relatives in the Greek gods.

“There are going to be some family issues,” Azzarello said, referring to the Olympians as “the original crime family.”

He said he’s based his take on the Olympians from the original myths.

“They’re pretty nasty people,” but “they can also do a lot of good. They’re like a mirror of human beings, turned up to 11.”

And that should bolster Wonder Woman’s iconic standing alongside her fellow DC legends Batman and Superman.

“She’s an epic character. She needs an epic supporting cast,” Azzarello said.