Religion:Artemis

From HandWiki
Short description: Goddess of the hunt and the wild in ancient Greek religion and mythology
Artemis
Goddess of nature, childbirth, wildlife, healing, the hunt, sudden death, animals, virginity, young women and archery
Member of the Twelve Olympians
Diana of Versailles.jpg
The Diana of Versailles, a Roman copy of a Greek sculpture by Leochares
(Louvre Museum)
AbodeMount Olympus
PlanetMoon
Animalsdeer, serpent, dog, boar, goat, bear, quail, buzzard, guineafowl
Symbolbow and arrows, crescent moon, animal pelts, spear, knives, torch, lyre, amaranth
Treecypress, palm, walnut
MountA golden chariot driven by four golden-horned deer
Personal information
Born
Island of Delos, Greece
ParentsZeus and Leto
SiblingsApollo (twin), many paternal half-siblings
Equivalents
Roman equivalentDiana
Etruscan equivalentArtume

In ancient Greek religion and mythology, Artemis (/ˈɑːrtɪmɪs/; Greek: Ἄρτεμις) is the goddess of the hunt, the wilderness, wild animals, nature, vegetation, childbirth, care of children, and chastity.[1][2] In later times, she was identified with Selene, the personification of the Moon.[3] She was often said to roam the forests and mountains, attended by her entourage of nymphs. The goddess Diana is her Roman equivalent.

In Greek tradition, Artemis is the daughter of Zeus and Leto, and the twin sister of Apollo. In most accounts, the twins are the products of an extramarital liaison. For this, Zeus' wife Hera forbade Leto from giving birth anywhere on land. Only the island of Delos gave refuge to Leto, allowing her to give birth to her children. In most accounts, Artemis is born first and then proceeds to assist Leto in the birth of the second twin, Apollo. Artemis was a kourotrophic (child-nurturing) deity, that is the patron and protector of young children, especially young girls. Artemis was worshipped as one of the primary goddesses of childbirth and midwifery along with Eileithyia and Hera.

Artemis was also a patron of healing and disease, particularly among women and children, and believed to send both good health and illness upon women and children.

Artemis was one of the three major virgin goddesses alongside Athena and Hestia. Artemis preferred to remain an unmarried maiden and was one of the three Greek goddesses over whom Aphrodite had no power.[4]

In myth and literature, Artemis is presented as a hunting goddess of the woods, surrounded by her chaste band of nymphs. In the myth of Actaeon, when the young hunter sees her bathing naked, he is transformed into a deer by the angered goddess and is then devoured by his own hunting dogs, who do not recognize their master. In the story of Callisto, the girl is driven away from Artemis' company after breaking her vow of virginity, having lain with and been impregnated by Zeus. In the Epic tradition, Artemis halted the winds blowing the Greek ships during the Trojan War, stranding the Greek fleet in Aulis, after King Agamemnon, the leader of the expedition, shot and killed her sacred deer. Artemis demanded the sacrifice of Iphigenia, Agamemnon's young daughter, as compensation for her slain deer. In most versions, when Iphigenia is led to the altar to be offered as a sacrifice, Artemis pities her and takes her away, leaving a deer in her place. In the war that followed, Artemis supported the Trojans against the Greeks, and challenged Hera into battle.

Artemis was one of the most widely venerated of the Ancient Greek deities; her worship spread throughout ancient Greece, with her multiple temples, altars, shrines, and local veneration found everywhere in the ancient world. Her great temple at Ephesus was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, before it was burnt to the ground. Artemis' symbols included a bow and arrow, a quiver, and hunting knives, and the deer and the cypress were sacred to her. Diana, her Roman equivalent, was especially worshipped on the Aventine Hill in Rome, near Lake Nemi in the Alban Hills, and in Campania.[5]

Etymology

Artémis (Diane), the huntress. Roman copy of a Greek statue, 2nd century. Galleria dei Candelabri - Vatican Museums

The name "Artemis" (n., f.) is of unknown or uncertain etymology,[6][7] although various sources have been proposed. R. S. P. Beekes suggested that the e/i interchange points to a Pre-Greek origin.[8] Artemis was venerated in Lydia as Artimus.[9] Georgios Babiniotis, while accepting that the etymology is unknown, also states that the name is already attested in Mycenean Greek and is possibly of pre-Greek origin.[7]

The name may be related to Greek árktos "bear" (from PIE *h₂ŕ̥tḱos), supported by the bear cult the goddess had in Attica (Brauronia) and the Neolithic remains at the Arkoudiotissa Cave, as well as the story of Callisto, which was originally about Artemis (Arcadian epithet kallisto);[10] this cult was a survival of very old totemic and shamanistic rituals and formed part of a larger bear cult found further afield in other Indo-European cultures (e.g., Gaulish Artio). It is believed that a precursor of Artemis was worshipped in Minoan Crete as the goddess of mountains and hunting, Britomartis. While connection with Anatolian names has been suggested,[11][12] the earliest attested forms of the name Artemis are the Mycenaean Greek 𐀀𐀳𐀖𐀵, a-te-mi-to /Artemitos/ (gen.) and 𐀀𐀴𐀖𐀳, a-ti-mi-te /Artimitei/ (dat.), written in Linear B at Pylos.[13][8]

According to J. T. Jablonski, the name is also Phrygian and could be "compared with the royal appellation Artemas of Xenophon.[14] Charles Anthon argued that the primitive root of the name is probably of Persian origin from *arta, *art, *arte, all meaning "great, excellent, holy", thus Artemis "becomes identical with the great mother of Nature, even as she was worshipped at Ephesus".[14] Anton Goebel "suggests the root στρατ or ῥατ, "to shake", and makes Artemis mean the thrower of the dart or the shooter".[15]

Ancient Greek writers, by way of folk etymology, and some modern scholars, have linked Artemis (Doric Artamis) to ἄρταμος, artamos, i.e. "butcher"[16][17] or, like Plato did in Cratylus, to ἀρτεμής, artemḗs, i.e. "safe", "unharmed", "uninjured", "pure", "the stainless maiden".[15][14][18] A. J. Van Windekens tried to explain both ἀρτεμής and Artemis from ἀτρεμής, atremḗs, meaning "unmoved, calm; stable, firm" via metathesis.[19][20]

Description

Artemis as Mistress of Animals, Parian pottery, 675–600 BCE . Hypothetical restoration (only some parts have been preserved). Archaeological Museum of Mykonos.


Artemis is presented as a goddess who delights in hunting and punishes harshly those who cross her. Artemis' wrath is proverbial, and represents the hostility of wild nature to humans.[2] Homer calls her πότνια θηρῶν, "the mistress of animals", a title associated with representations in art going back as far as the Bronze Age, showing a woman between a pair of animals.[21] Artemis carries with her certain functions and characteristics of a Minoan form whose history was lost in the myths.[22]

Artemis was one of the most popular goddesses in Ancient Greece. The most frequent name of a month in the Greek calendars was Artemision in Ionic, territories Artemisios or Artamitios in the Doric and Aeolic territories and in Macedonia. Also Elaphios in Elis, Elaphebolion in Athens, Iasos, Apollonia of Chalkidice and Munichion in Attica.[23] In the calendars of Aetolia, Phocis and Gytheion there was the month Laphrios and in Thebes, Corcyra, and Byzantion the month Eucleios. The goddess was venerated in festivals during spring.[24]

In some cults she retains the theriomorphic form of a Pre-Greek goddess who was conceived with the shape of a bear (άρκτος árktos: bear). Kallisto in Arcadia is a hypostasis of Artemis with the shape of a bear, and her cults at Brauron and at Piraeus (Munichia) are remarkable for the arkteia where virgin girls before marriage were disguised as she-bears.[25][26]

The ancient Greeks called potnia theron the representation of the goddess between animals; on a Greek vase from circa 570 BCE, a winged Artemis stands between a spotted panther and a deer.[27] "Potnia theron" is very close to the daimons and this differentiates her from the other Greek divinities. This is the reason that Artemis was later identified with Hecate, since the daimons were tutelary deities. Hecate was the goddess of crossroads and she was the queen of the witches.[28]

Minoan seal from Knossos. A goddess flanked by two lionesses, probably the "Mother of the Mountains", in the presence of her consort or the dedicant.

Laphria is the Pre-Greek "mistress of the animals" at Delphi and Patras. There was a custom to throw animals alive into the annual fire of the fest.[29] The festival at Patras was introduced from Calydon and this relates Artemis to the Greek heroine Atalanta who symbolizes freedom and independence.[30] Other epithets that relate Artemis to the animals are Amarynthia and Kolainis.[26]

In the Homeric poems Artemis is mainly the goddess of hunting, because it was the most important sport in Mycenean Greece. An almost formulaic epithet used in the Iliad and Odyssey to describe her is ἰοχέαιρα iocheaira, "she who shoots arrows", often translated as "she who delights in arrows" or "she who showers arrows". [31] She is called Artemis Chrysilakatos, of the golden shafts, or Chrysinios, of the golden reins, as a goddess of hunting in her chariot.[32][26] The Homeric Hymn 27 to Artemis paints this picture of the goddess:

I sing of Artemis, whose shafts are of gold, who cheers on the hounds, the pure maiden, shooter of stags, who delights in archery, own sister to Apollo with the golden sword. Over the shadowy hills and windy peaks she draws her golden bow, rejoicing in the chase, and sends out grievous shafts. The tops of the high mountains tremble and the tangled wood echoes awesomely with the outcry of beasts: earthquakes and the sea also where fishes shoal.

According to the beliefs of the first Greeks in Arcadia Artemis is the first nymph, a goddess of free nature. She is an independent free woman, and she doesn't need any partner. She is hunting surrounded by her nymphs.[33] This idea of freedom and women's skill is expressed in many Greek myths.[30]

Artemis pouring a libation. Attic white-ground lekythos, ca. 460–450 BCE. From Eretria.c. 460-450 BCE. Attributed to Bowdoin Painter. Louvre, Paris

In Peloponnese the temples of Artemis were built near springs, rivers and marshes. Artemis was closely related to the waters and especially to Poseidon, the god of the waters. Her common epithets are Limnnaia, Limnatis (relation to waters) and Potamia and Alphaea (relation to rivers). In some cults she is the healer goddess of women with the surnames Lousia and Thermia.[34]

Artemis is the leader of the nymphs (Hegemone) and she is hunting surrounded by them.[35] The nymphs appear during the festival of the marriage, and they are appealed by the pregnant women.[36] Artemis became goddess of marriage and childbirth. She was worshipped with the surname Eucleia in several cities.[34] Women consecrated clothes to Artemis for a happy childbirth and she had the epithets Lochia and Lecho.[37]

The Dorians interpreted Artemis mainly as goddess of vegetation who was worshipped in an orgiastic cult with lascivious dances, with the common epithets Orthia, Korythalia and Dereatis.[38] The female dancers wore masks and were famous in antiquity. The goddess of vegetation was also related to the tree-cult with temples near the holy trees and the surnames Apanchomene, Caryatis and Cedreatis.[39]

According to Greek beliefs the image of a god or a goddess gave signs or tokens and had divine and magic powers. With these conceptions she was worshipped as Tauria (the Tauric, goddess),[40] Aricina (Italy) and Anaitis (Lydia). In the bucolic (pastoral) songs the image of the goddess was discovered in bundles of leaves or dry sticks and she had the surnames Lygodesma and Phakelitis.[41]

Scene from sacrifice in honour of Artemis-Diana who is accompanied by a deer. Fresco from the triclinium of the house of Vettii in Pompeii Italy, between 62 CE and 79 CE (Destruction of Pompeii).

In the European folklore, a wild hunter is chasing an elfish woman who falls in the water. In the Greek myths the hunter is chasing a female deer (doe) and both disappear into the waters. In relation to these myths Artemis was worshipped as Saronia and Stymphalia . The myth of a goddess who is chased and then falls in the sea is related to the cults of Aphaea and Diktynna.[26]

Artemis carrying torches was identified with Hecate and she had the surnames Phosphoros and Selasphoros .[42] In Athens and Tegea, she was worshipped as Artemis Kalliste, "the most beautiful".[43] Sometimes the goddess had the name of an Amazon like Lyceia (with a helmet of a wolf-skin) and Molpadia. The female warriors Amazons embody the idea of freedom and women's independence.[44]

In spite of her status as a virgin who avoided potential lovers, there are multiple references to Artemis' beauty and erotic aspect;[45] in the Odyssey, Odysseus compares Nausicaa to Artemis in terms of appearance when trying to win her favor, Libanius, when praising the city of Antioch, wrote that Ptolemy was smitten by the beauty of (the statue of) Artemis;[45] whereas her mother Leto often took pride in her daughter's beauty.[46][47] She has several stories surrounding her where men such as Actaeon, Orion, and Alpheus tried to couple with her forcibly, only to be thwarted or killed. Ancient poets note Artemis' height and imposing stature, as she stands taller and more impressive than all the nymphs accompanying her.[47][48]

Epithets and functions

Artemis with bow and arrow in front of an altar. Attic red-figure lekythos, ca. 475 BCE, from Selinunte, Sicily. Antonino Salinas Regional Archaeological Museum, Palermo

Artemis is rooted to the less developed personality of the Mycenean goddess of nature. The goddess of nature was concerned with birth and vegetation and had certain chthonic aspects. The Mycenean goddess was related to the Minoan mistress of the animals, who can be traced later in local cults,[49] however we don't know to what extent we can differentiate the Minoan from the Mycenean religion.[50] Artemis carries with her certain functions and characteristics of a Minoan form whose history was lost in the myths.[49] According to the beliefs of the first Greeks in Arcadia, Artemis is the first nymph, a divinity of free nature. She was a great goddess and her temples were built near springs marshes and rivers where the nymphs live, and they are appealed by the pregnant women.[51] In Greek religion we must see less tractable elements which have nothing to do with the Olympians, but come from an old, less organized world–exorcisms, rituals to raise crops, gods and goddesses conceived not quite in human shape. Some cults of Artemis retained the pre-Greek features which were consecrated by immemorial practices and connected with daily tasks. Artemis shows sometimes the wild and darker side of her character and can bring immediate death with her arrows, however she embodies the idea of "the free nature" which was introduced by the first Greeks.[52] The Dorians came later in the area, probably from Epirus and the goddess of nature was mostly interpreted as a vegetation goddess who was related to the ecstatic Minoan tree-cult. She was worshipped in orgiastic cults with lascivious and sometimes obscene dances, which have pure Greek elements introduced by the Dorians.[53] The feminine (sometimes male) dancers wore usually masks, and they were famous in the antiquity. The great popularity of Artemis corresponds to the Greek belief in freedom[54] and she is mainly the goddess of women in a patriarchal society. The goddess of free nature is an independent woman and doesn't need a partner.[clarification needed] Artemis is frequently depicted carrying a torch and she was occasionally identified with Hecate. Like other Greek deities, she had a number of other names applied to her, reflecting the variety of roles, duties, and aspects ascribed to the goddess.[55][37]

Statue of Artemis, marble. Pergamon Museum, Berlin

Aeginaea, probably huntress of chamois or the wielder of the javelin, at Sparta[56] However the word may mean "from the island Aegina", that relates Artemis with Aphaia (Britomartis).[57]

Aetole, of Aetolia at Nafpaktos. A marble statue represented the goddess in the attitude of one hurling a javelin.[58]

Agoraea, guardian of popular assemblies in Athens. She was considered to be the protector of the assemblies of the people in the agora. At Olympia the cult of "Artemis Agoraea" was related to the cult of Despoinai.[59] (The double named goddesses Demeter and Persephone).[60]

Agrotera, the huntress of wild wood, in the Iliad and many cults.[61] It was believed that she first hunted at Agrae of Athens after her arrival from Delos. There was a custom of making a "slaughter sacrifice", to the goddess before a battle.[62] The deer always accompanies the goddess of hunting. Her epithet Agraea is similar with Agrotera.[63]

Alphaea, in the district of Elis. The goddess had an annual festival at Olympia and a temple at Letrinoi near the river Alpheus.[64] At the festival of Letrinoi, the girls were dancing wearing masks. In the legend, Alphaea and her nymphs covered their faces with mud and the river god Alpheus, who was in love with her, could not distinguish her from the others. This explains, somehow, the clay masks at Sparta.[65][66]

Artemis on her two hind-drawn chariot, Boeotian red-figure kylix, 450–425 BCE, by the Painter of Great Athens. Louvre, Paris.)

Amarynthia, or Amarysia, with a famous temple at Amarynthus near Eretria. The goddess was related to the animals, however she was also a healer goddess of women. She is identified with Kolainis.[60]

Amphipyros, with fire at each end, a rare epithet of Artemis as bearing a torch in either hand. Sophocles calls her, "Elaphebolos, (deer slayer) Amphipyros", reminding the annual fire of the festival Laphria[67] The adjective refers also to the twin fires of the two peaks of the Mount Parnassus above Delphi (Phaedriades).[68]

Anaitis, in Lydia. The fame of Tauria (the Tauric goddess) was very high, and the Lydians claimed that the image of the goddess was among them. It was considered that the image had divine powers. The Athenians believed that the image became booty to the Persians and was carried from Brauron to Susa.[69]

Angelos, messenger, envoy, title of Artemis at Syracuse in Sicily.[70][71]

Apanchomene, the strangled goddess, at Caphyae in Arcadia. She was a vegetation goddess related to the ecstatic tree cult. The Minoan tree goddesses Helene, Dentritis, and Ariadne were also hanged. This epithet is related to the old traditions where icons and puppets of a vegetation goddess would be hung on a tree. It was believed that the plane tree near the spring at Caphyae, was planted by Menelaus, the husband of Helen of Troy. The tree was called "Menelais". The previous name of the goddess was most likely Kondyleatis.[72][73]

Aphaea, or Apha, unseen or disappeared, a goddess at Aegina and a rare epithet of Artemis. Aphaea is identified with Britomartis. In the legend Britomartis (the sweet young woman) escaped from Minos, who fell in love with her. She travelled to Aegina on a wooden boat and then she disappeared. The myth indicates an identity in nature with Diktynna.[74]

Sacrifice of Iphigenia. Antique fresco from Pompei, probably a copy of a painting by Timanthes. Agamemnon (right) and Clytemnestra crying (left). In the sky appears the fawn which will replace her. National Archaeological Museum, Naples

Aricina, derived from the town Aricia in Latium, or from Aricia, the wife of the Roman forest god Virbius (Hippolytus). The goddess was related with Artemis Tauria (the Tauric Artemis). Her statue was considered the same with the statue that Orestes brought from Tauris.[75] Near the sanctuary of the goddess there was a combat between slaves who had run away from their masters and the prize was the priesthood of Artemis.[76]

Ariste, the best, a goddess of the women. Pausanias describes xoana of "Ariste" and "Kalliste" in the way to the academy of Athens and he believes that the names are surnames of the goddess Artemis, who is depicted carrying a torch.[77] Kalliste is not related to Kalliste of Arcadia.[60]

Aristobule, the best advisor, at Athens. The politician and general Themistocles built a temple of Artemis Aristobule near his house in the deme of Melite, in which he dedicated his own statue.[78]

Astrateias, she that stops an invasion, at Pyrrichos in Laconia. A wooden image (xoanon), was dedicated to the goddess, because she stopped the invasion of the Amazons in this area. Another xoanon represented "Apollo Amazonios".[79]

Artemis Bendis (with her Thracian cap), Apollo, Hermes and a young warrior. Apulian red-figure bell-shaped krater, ca. 380–370 BCE by the Bendis Painter. Louvre, Paris

Basileie, at Thrace and Paeonia. The women offered wheat stalks to the goddess. In this cult, which reached Athens, Artemis is relative to the Thracian goddess Bendis.[80]

Brauronia, worshipped at Brauron in Attica. Her cult is remarkable for the "arkteia", young girls who dressed with short saffron-yellow chitons and imitated bears (she-bears: arktoi).[81] In the Acropolis of Athens, the Athenian girls before puberty should serve the goddess as "arktoi".[25] Artemis was the goddess of marriage and childbirth.[81] The name of the small "bears" indicate the theriomorphic form of Artemis in an old pre-Greek cult. In the cult of Baubronia, the myth of the sacrifice of Iphigenia was represented in the ritual.[82][83][84]

Boulaia, of the council, in Athens.[85][60]

Boulephoros, counselling, advising, at Miletus, probably a Greek form of the mother-goddess.[86][87]

Caryatis, the lady of the nut-tree, at Caryae on the borders between Laconia and Arcadia. Artemis was strongly related to the nymphs, and young girls were dancing the dance Caryatis. The dancers of Caryai were famous in antiquity.[88] In a legend, Carya, the female lover of Dionysos was transformed into a nut tree and the dancers into nuts.[89] The city is considered to be the place of the origin of the bucolic (pastoral) songs.[26]

Cedreatis, near Orchomenus in Arcadia. A xoanon was mounted on the holy cedar (kedros).[26]

Chesias, from the name of a river at Samos.[64]

Heracles throwing the Erymanthian Boar on Eurystheus, who, frightened, hides in a jar. Goddesses Artemis (left) and Athena (right). Attic Amphora 500-515 BCE by Rycroft Painter. National Archaeological Museum (Madrid)

Chitonia, wearing a loose tunic, at Syracuse in Sicily, as goddess of hunting. The festival was distinguished by a peculiar dance and by a music on the flute.[90][64]

Chrisilakatos, of the golden arrow, in Homer's Iliad as a powerful goddess of hunting. In the Odyssey, she descends from a peak and travels along the ridges of Mount Erymanthos, that was sacred to the "Mistress of the animals".[91] In a legend, when the old goddess became wrathful, she would send the terrible Erymanthian boar to lay waste to fields.[92] Artemis can bring an immediate death with her arrows. In the Iliad, Hera stresses the wild and darker side of her character and she accuses her of being "a lioness between women".[93][31]

Chrisinios, of the golden reins, as a goddess of hunting in her chariot. In the Iliad, in her wrath, she kills the daughter of Bellerophon.[32]

Coryphaea, of the peak, at Epidaurus in Argolis. On the top of the mountain Coryphum there was a sanctuary of the goddess. The famous lyric poet Telesilla mentions "Artemis Coryphaea" in an ode.[94]

Cnagia, near Sparta in Laconia. In a legend the native Cnageus was sold as a slave in Crete. He escaped to his country taking with him the virgin priestess of the goddess Artemis. The priestess carried with her from Crete the statue of the goddess, who was named Cnagia.[95]

Cynthia, as goddess of the moon, from her birthplace on Mount Cynthos at Delos. Selene, the Greek personification of the moon, and the Roman Diana were also sometimes called Cynthia.[96]

Daphnaea, as goddess of vegetation. Her name is most likely derived from the "laurel-branch" which was used as "May-branch",[97] or an allusion to her statue being made of laurel-wood (daphne)[98] Strabo refers to her annual festival at Olympia.[64]

Delia, the feminine form of Apollo Delios

Delphinia, the feminine form of Apollo Delphinios (literally derived from Delphi).

Dereatis, at Sparta near Taygetos. Dancers were performing the obscene dance "kallabis".[99][100]

Diktynna, from Mount Dikti, who is identified with the Minoan goddess Britomartis. Her name is derived from the mountain Dikti in Crete. A folk etymology derives her name from the word "diktyon" (net).[101] In the legend Britomartis (the sweet young woman) was hunting together with Artemis who loved her desperately. She escaped from Minos, who fell in love with her, by jumping into the sea and falling into a net of fishes.[102]

Apollo and Artemis. Tondo of an Attic red-figure cup, circa 470 BCE, by the Briseis Painter.Louvre, Paris

Eileithyia, goddess of childbirth in Boeotia and other local cults especially in Crete and Laconia. During the Bronze Age, in the cave of Amnisos, she was related to the annual birth of the divine child.[103] In the Minoan myth the child was abandoned by his mother and then he was nurtured by the powers of nature.

Elaphia, goddess of hunting (deer). Strabo refers to her annual festival at Olympia.[64]

Elaphebolos, shooter of deer, with the festival "Elaphebolia" at Phocis and Athens,[104] and the name of a month in several local cults. Sophocles calls Artemis "Elaphebolos, Amphipyros", carrying a torch in each hand. This was used during the annual fire of the festival of Laphria at Delphi.[105][106]

Ephesia, at the city Ephesus of Minor Asia. The city was a great center of the cult of the goddess, with a magnificent temple, (Artemision). Ephesia belongs to the series of the Anatolian goddesses (Great mother, or mountain-mother). However she is not a mother-goddess, but the goddess of free nature. In the Homeric Ionic sphere she is the goddess of hunting.[60]

Eucleia, as a goddess of marriage in Boeotia, Locris and other cities. Epheboi and girls who wanted to marry should make a preliminary sacrifice in honour of the goddess.[107][108] "Eukleios" was the name of a month in several cities and "Eucleia" was the name of a festival at Delphi.[64][109][110] In Athens Peitho, Harmonia and Eucleia can create a good marriage. The bride would sacrifice to the virgin goddess Artemis.[111]

Eupraxis, fine acting. On a relief from Sicily the goddess is depicted holding a torch in one hand and an offering on the other. The torch was used for the ignition of the fire on the altar.[112]

The Niobid Krater. Apollo and Artemis kill the children of Niobe, 460-450 BCE by the Niobid Painter. Louvre, Paris

Eurynome, wide ruling, at Phigalia in Arcadia. Her wooden image (xoanon) was bound with a roller golden chain. The xoanon depicted a woman's upper body and the lower body of a fish. Pausanias identifies her as one of the Oceanids daughters of Oceanus and Tethys[26][113]

Hagemo, or Hegemone, leader,[114] as the leader of the nymphs. Artemis was playing and dancing with the nymphs who lived near springs, waters and forests and she was hunting surrounded by them. The nymphs joined the festival of the marriage and then they returned to their original form. The pregnant women appealed to the nymphs for help.[36] In Greek popular culture the commandress of the Neraiden (fairies) is called "Great lady", "Lady Kalo" or "Queen of the mountains".[60]

Heleia, related to the marsh or meadow in Arcadia, Messenia and Kos.[64][115]

Hemeresia, the soothing goddess worshipped at well Lusoi[116]

Heurippa, horse finder, at Pheneus in Arcadia. Her sanctuary was near the bronze statue of Poseidon Hippios (horse). In a legend, Odysseus lost his mares and travelled throughout Greece to find them. He found his mares at Pheneus, where he founded the temple of "Artemis Heurippa".[117]

Hymnia, at Orchomenos in Boeotia. She was a goddess of dance and songs, especially of female choruses. The priestesses of Artemis Hymnia couldn't have a normal life like the other women. They were at first virgins and were to remain celibate in the priesthood. They could not use the same baths and they were not allowed to enter the house of a private man.[118][119][120]

Iakinthotrophos, nurse of Hyacinthos at Knidos. Hyacinthos was a god of vegetation with Minoan origin. After his birth he was abandoned by his mother and then he was nurtured by Artemis who represents the first power of nature.[72]

Imbrasia, from the name of a river at Samos.[64]

Iocheaira, shooter of arrows by Homer (archer queen), as goddess of hunting. She has a wild character and Hera advises her to kill animals in the forest, instead of fighting with her superiors.[93] Apollo and Artemis kill with their arrows the children of Niobe because she offended her mother Leto.[121] [31][122] In the European and Greek popular religion the arrow-shots from invisible beings can bring diseases and death.

Left to right: Artemis, Apollo with his lyre, Leto and Ares. Attic amphora ca. 510 BC, by Psiax Painter. National Archaeological Museum (Madrid)

Issora, or Isora, at Sparta, with the surname Limnaia or Pitanitis. Issorium was a part of a great summit which advances into the level of Eurotas[123] a Pausanias identifies her with the Minoan Britomartis.[124][64]

Kalliste, the most beautiful, another form of Artemis with the shape of a bear at Tricoloni near Megalopolis a mountainous area full of wild beasts.[125] Kallisto the attendant of Artemis, bore Arcas the patriarch of the Arcaden. In a legend Kallisto was transformed into a bear and in another myth Artemis shot her. Kallisto is a hypostasis of Artemis with a theriomorphic form from a pre-Greek cult.[126]

'Keladeini, echoing chasing (noisy) in Homer's Iliad because she hunts wild boars and deer surrounded by her nymphs.[60][127]

'Kithone, as a goddess of childbirth at Millet. Her name is probably derived from the custom of clothes consecration to the goddess, for a happy childbirth.[60]

Kolainis, related with the animals at Euboea and Attica. At Eretria she had a major temple and she was called Amarysia.[128] The goddess became a healer goddess of women.[26]

Kolias, in a cult of women. Men were excluded because the fertility of the earth was related to motherhood. Aristophanes mentions Kolias and Genetyllis who are accused for lack of restraint. Their cult had a very emotional character.[129][130][131]

Kondyleatis, named after the village Kondylea, where she had a grove and a temple. In a legend some boys tied a rope around the image of the goddess and said that Artemis was hanged. The boys were killed by the inhabitants and this caused a divine punishment. All the women brought dead children in the world, until the boys were honourably buried. An annual sacrifice was instituted to the divine spirits of the boys. Kondyleatis was most likely the original name of Artemis Apanchomeni.[26][132]

Kordaka, in Elis. Τhe dancers performed the obscene dance kordaka, which is considered the origin of the dance of the old comedy. The dance is famous for its nudge and hilarity and gave the name to the goddess.[133][134]

Korythalia, derived from Korythale, probably the "laurel May-branch",[135] as a goddess of vegetation at Sparta. The epheboi and the girls who entered the marriage age placed the Korythale in front of the door of the house.[136] In the cult the female dancers (famous in the antiquity) performed boisterous dances and were called Korythalistriai. In Italy, the male dancers wore wooden masks and they were called kyrritoi (pushing with the horns).[137][138][139]

Kourotrophos, protector of young boys. During the Apaturia the front hair of young girls and young boys (koureion) were offered to the goddess.[64]

Laphria, the mistress of the animals (Pre-Greek name) in many cults, especially in central Greece, Phocis and Patras.[140] "Laphria" was the name of the festival. The characteristic rite was the annual fire and there was a custom to throw animals alive in the flames during the fest.[29][141][142] The cult of "Laphria" at Patras was transferred from the city Calydon of Aetolia[143][144] In a legend during the Calydonian boar hunt the fierce-huntress Atalanta was the first who wounded the boar.[145] Atalanta was a Greek heroine, symbolizing the free nature and independence [146]

Lecho, protector of a woman in childbed, or of one who has just given birth.[37]

Leukophryene, derived from the city Leucophrys in Magnesia of Ionia. The original form of the cult of the goddess is unknown, however it seems that once the character of the goddess was similar with her character in Peloponnese.[60]

Limnaia, of the marsh, at Sparta, with a swimming place Limnaion. (λίμνη: lake).[147][64]

Limnatis, of the marsh and the lake, at Patras, Ancient Messene and many local cults. During the festival, the Messenian young ladies were violated. Cymbals have been found around the temple, indicating that the festival was celebrated with dances.[133][148]

Lochia, as goddess of childbirth and midwifery.[149] Women consecrated clothes to the goddess for a happy childbirth. Other less common epithets of Artemis as goddess of childbirth are Eulochia and Geneteira.[37]

Lousia, bather or purifier, as a healer goddess at Lusoi in Arcadia, where Melampus healed the Proitiden.[64]

Lyaia, at Syracuse in Sicily. (Spartan colony). There is a clear influence from the cult of Artemis Caryatis in Laconia. The Sicilian songs were transformed songs from the Laconic bucolic (pastoral) songs at Caryai.[64]

Heracles breaking off the golden antler of the Ceryneian Hind, while Athena (left) and Artemis (right) look on. Black-figure amphora, ca. 540–530 BC, from Vulci. British Museum, London.

Lyceia, of the wolf or with a helmet of a wolf skin,[150] at Troezen in Argolis. It was believed that her temple was built by the hunter Hippolytus who abstained from sex and marriage. Lyceia was probably a surname of Artemis among the Amazons from whom Hippolytus descended from his mother.[151] (Hippolyta).

Lycoatis, with a bronze statue at the city Lycoa in Arcadia. The city was near the foot of the mountain Mainalo, which was sacred to, Pan. On the south slope the Mantineians fetched the bones of Arcas, the son of Kallisto.(Kalliste).[152]

Archaic representation of the goddess Artemis Orthia. Ivory relief plate of a bronze fibula. The goddess holds waterbirds and wears a traditional hair style. From her sactuary at Sparta, 660 BC. National Archaeological Museum of Athens

Lygodesma, willow bound, at Sparta (another name of Orthia). In a legend her image was discovered in a thicket of willows.[41] standing upright (orthia).[26][153]

Melissa, bee or beauty of nature, as a moon goddess. In Neoplatonic philosophy melissa is any pure being of souls coming to birth. The goddess took suffering away from mothers giving birth. It was Melissa who drew souls coming to birth.[154][155]

Molpadia, singer of divine songs, a rare epithet of Artemis as a goddess of dances and songs and leader of the nymphs.[37] In a legend Molpadia was an Amazon. During the Attic war she killed Antiope to save her by the Athenian king Theseus, but she was killed by Theseus.[156]

Munichia, in a cult at Piraeus, related to the arkteia of Brauronian Artemis. According to legend, if someone killed a bear, he should be punished by sacrificing his daughter in the sanctuary. Embaros disguised his daughter by dressing her like a bear (arktos), and hid her in the adyton. He placed a goat on the altar and he sacrificed the goat instead of his daughter.[26][157]

Mysia, with a temple on the road from Sparta to Arcadia near the "Tomb of the Horse".[158]

Oenoatis, derived from the city Oenoe in Argolis. Above the town there was the mountain Artemisium, with the temple of the goddess on the summit.[159] In a Greek legend the mountain was the place where Heracles chased and captured the terrible Ceryneian Hind, an enormous female deer with golden antlers and hooves of bronze. The deer was sacred to Artemis.[160]

Orthia, upright, with a famous festival at Sparta. Her cult was introduced by the Dorians. She was worshipped as a goddess of vegetation in an orgiastic cult with boisterous cyclic dances. Among the offerings, there were teracotta masks representing grotesque faces and it seems that animal-masks were also used.[161] In literature there was a great fight for taking the pieces of cheese that were offered to the goddess.[162] The whipping of the epheboi near the altar was a ritual of initiation, preparing them for their future life as soldiers.[163] During this ritual the altar was full of blood.[164]

Votive relief with a dedication to Artemis Phosphorus. An exhibit of Varna Archaeological Museum

Paidotrophos, protector of children at Corone in Messenia. During a festival of Korythalia the wet-nurses brought the infants in the sanctuary of the goddess, to get her protection.[64]

Peitho, Persuasion, at the city Argos in Argolis. Her sanctuary was in the market place.[165] In Pelopponnese Peitho is related to Artemis. In Athens Peitho is the consensual force in civilized society and emphasizes civic armony.[111]

Pergaia, who was worshipped at Pamphylia of Ionia. A famous annual festival was celebrated in honor of Artemis in the city Perga. Filial cults existed in Pisidia, north of Pamphylia.[166]

Pheraia, from the city Pherai, at Argos, Athens and Sicyon. It was believed that the image of the goddess was brought from the city Pherai of Thessaly.[167] This conception relates Artemis with the distinctly Thessalian goddess Enodia. Enodia had similar functions with Hecate and she carried the common epithet "Pheraia".[168]

Phakelitis, of the bundle, at Tyndaris in Sicily. In the local legend the image of the goddess was found in a bundle of dry sticks.[64]

Phoebe, bright, as a moon goddess sister of Phoebus.[37] The epithet Phoebe is also given to the moon goddess Selene.[169]

Phosphoros, carrier of light. In Ancient Messene she is carrying a torch as a moon-goddess and she is identified with Hecate.[64]

Artemis (potnia theron) on amphora of Naxos, Delos, 700-675 BC, Archaelogical Museum of Myconos

Polo, in Thasos, with inscriptions and statues from the Hellenistic and Roman period. The name is probably related to "parthenos" (virgin).[26]

Potamia, of the river, at Ortygia in Sicily.[170] In a legend Arethusa, was a chaste nymph and tried to escape from the river god Alpheus who fell in love with her. She was transformed by Artemis into a stream, traversed underground and appeared at Ortygia, thus providing water for the city.[26] Ovid calls Arethusa, "Alfeias"[171] (Alfaea) (of the river god).

Potnia Theron, mistress of the animals. The origin of her cult is Pre-Greek and the term is used by Homer for the goddess of hunting.[61] Potnia was the name of the Mycenean goddess of nature.[49] In the earliest Minoan conceptions the "Master of the animals" is depicted between lions and daimons (Minoan Genius). Sometimes "potnia theron" is depicted with the head of a Gorgon, who is her distant ancestor.[172] She is the only Greek goddess who stands close to the daimons and she has a wild side which differentiates her from other Greek gods.[28] In the Greek legends when the goddess was offended she would send terrible animals like the Erymanthian boar and Calydonian boar to laid waste the farmer's land, or voracious birds like the Stymphalian birds to attack farms and humans.[92][173] In Arcadia and during the festival of Laphria, there is evidence of barbaric animal sacrifices.[29][141]

Pythia, as a goddess worshipped at Delphi.[174]

Hecate or Artemis is depicted with a bow, twin flaming torches and a large dog. Archaic Attic black figure kylix, attributed to Kleibolos Painter. Museum of the University of Tübingen, Baden

Saronia, of Saron, at Troezen across the Saronic gulf. In a legend the king Saron was chasing a doe that dashed into the sea. He followed the doe in the waters and he was drowned in the waves of the sea. He gave his name to the Saronic gulf.[26][175]

Selasphoros, carrier of light, flame, as a moon-goddess identified with Hecate, in the cult of Munichia at Piraeus.[176][64]

Soteira (Kore Soteira), Kore saviour, at Phigalia. In Arcadia the mistress of the animals is the first nymph closely related to the springs and the animals, in a surrounding of animal-headed daimons. At Lycosura Artemis is depicted holding a snake and a torch and dressed with a deer skin, besides Demeter and Persephone. It was said that she was not the daughter of Leto, but the daughter of Demeter.[177][178]

Stymphalia, of Stymphalus, a city in Arcadia. In a legend the water of the river descended in a chasm which was clogged up and the water overflowed creating a big marsh on the plain. A hunter was chasing a deer and both fell into the mud at the bottom of the chasm. The next day the whole water of the marsh dried up and the land was cultivated.[179][26] The monstrous man eating Stymphalian birds that were killed by Heracles were considered birds of Artemis.[92]

Tauria, or Tauro (the Tauric goddess), from the Tauri or of the bull. Euripides mentions the image of "Artemis Tauria". It was believed that the image of the goddess had divine powers.[180] Her image was considered to have been carried from Tauris by Orestes and Iphigenia and was brought to Brauron, Sparta or Aricia.[181]

Coin from Tauric Chersonesus with Artemis, deer, bull, club and quiver. ca 320-290 BC. Diagora-, magistrate. CHER, Artemis Parthenos left. DIAGORA, Bull butting right; Christopher Markom Collection

Tauropolos, usually interpreted as hunting bull goddess. Tauropolos was not original in Greece and she has similar functions with foreign goddesses, especially with the mythical bull-goddess. The cult can be identified at Halae Araphenides in Attica. At the end of the peculiar festival, a man was sacrificed. He was killed in the ritual with a sword cutting his throat.[182] Strabo mentions that during the night-fest of Tauropolia a girl was raped.[183][26]

Thermia, as a healer goddess at Lousoi in Arcadia, where Melampus healed the Proitiden.[64]

Toxia, or Toxitis, bowstring in torsion, as goddess of hunting in the island of Kos and at Gortyn. She is the sister of "Apollo Toxias".[184][185][26]

Triclaria, at Patras. Her cult was superimposed on the cult of Dionysos Aisemnetis. During the festival of the god the children were wearing garlands of corn-ears. In a ritual they laid them aside to the goddess Artemis.[64][186] Triclaria was a priestess of Artemis who made love with her lover in the sanctuary. They were punished to be sacrificed in the temple and each year the people should sacrifice a couple to the goddess. Europylus came carrying a chest with the image of Dionysos who put an end to the killings.[187]

Corythallia, epithet of Artemis at Sparta. During the Tithenidia festival the Spartan boys were carried into her temple in the city.[188]

Mythology

Leto bore Apollo and Artemis, delighting in arrows,
Both of lovely shape like none of the heavenly gods,
As she joined in love to the Aegis-bearing ruler.

HesiodTheogony, lines 918–920 (written in the 7th century BCE)

Birth

Leto on the run with Artemis and Apollo, Roman statue circa 350-400 CE

Various conflicting accounts are given in Greek mythology regarding the birth of Artemis and Apollo, her twin brother. In terms of parentage, though, all accounts agree that she was the daughter of Zeus and Leto and that she was the twin sister of Apollo. In some sources, she is born at the same time as Apollo; but in others, earlier or later.[5]

Although traditionally stated to be twins, the author of The Homeric Hymn 3 to Apollo (the oldest extant account of Leto's wandering and birth of her children) is only concerned with the birth of Apollo, and sidelines Artemis;[189] in fact in the Homeric Hymn they are not stated to be twins at all.

It is a slightly later poet, Pindar, who speaks of a single pregnancy.[190] The two earliest poets, Homer and Hesiod, confirm Artemis and Apollo's status as full siblings born to the same mother and father, but neither explicitly makes them twins.[191]

According to Callimachus, Hera, who was angry with her husband Zeus for impregnating Leto, forbade her from giving birth on either terra firma (the mainland) or on an island, but the island of Delos disobeyed and allowed Leto to give birth there. According to some, this rooted the once freely floating island to one place.

According to the Homeric Hymn to Artemis, however, the island where she and her twin were born was Ortygia.[192][193] In ancient Cretan history, Leto was worshipped at Phaistos, and in Cretan mythology, Leto gave birth to Apollo and Artemis on the islands known today as Paximadia.

A scholium of Servius on Aeneid iii. 72 accounts for the island's archaic name Ortygia[194] by asserting that Zeus transformed Leto into a quail (ortux) to prevent Hera from finding out about his infidelity, and Kenneth McLeish suggested further that in quail form, Leto would have given birth with as few birth-pains as a mother quail suffers when she lays an egg.[195]

Artemis (left) and Apollo try to get the Ceryneian Hind from Heracles. Detail of an Attic black-figure amphora ca. 530-520 BC. Louvre, Paris

The myths also differ as to whether Artemis was born first, or Apollo. Most stories depict Artemis as firstborn, becoming her mother's midwife upon the birth of her brother Apollo. Servius, a late fourth/early fifth-century grammarian, wrote that Artemis was born first because at first it was night, whose instrument is the Moon, which Artemis represents, and then day, whose instrument is the Sun, which Apollo represents.[196] Pindar however writes that both twins shone like the Sun when they came into the bright light.[197]

After their troubling childbirth, Leto took the twin infants and crossed over to Lycia, in the southwest corner of Asia Minor, where she tried to drink from and bathe the babies in a spring she found there. However, the local Lycian peasants tried to prevent the twins and their mother from making use of the water by stirring up the muddy bottom of the spring, so the three of them could not drink it. Leto, in her anger that the impious Lycians had refused to offer hospitality to a fatigued mother and her thirsty infants, transformed them all into frogs, forever doomed to swim and hop around the spring.[198]

Childhood

The childhood of Artemis is not fully related to any surviving myth.

Avenging of Leto

The eighth book of Pausanias’s Description of Greece tells a story of how Artemis, along with her brother Apollo traveled the lands to enact vengeance on those who ignored their mother's suffering during her pregnancy. The twins arrived at Tegea. Apollo spoke privately with Skephros, son of Tegeates, but his brother Leimon grew paranoid that Skephros was relating to Apollo charges against him. Leimon charged and murdered his brother then was shot by Artemis in swift justice.

Abduction of Persephone

According to the Homeric Hymn 2 to Demeter and Diodorus Siculus,[199] Artemis was reared beside Athena and Persephone on the island of Sicily. They who had also chosen to remain virgins like Persephone, joined her in collecting flowers and weaving a robe for their father Zeus. They had such a wonderful time together and became so close that they all loved Sicily more than any other place. They each received a portion of land on the island as their own. Athena received the region around Himera, where the nymphs created hot springs for her.

Artemis received the island of Syracuse, which was also named after her, Ortygia. The nymphs made a fountain for her, which was called Arethusa. This fountain contained large fish in great numbers, which were holy and not to be eaten by people. When people ate them in times of stress, the goddess inflicted them with great suffering.

Callimachus’s Hmyn 3 to Artemis

Dedicated to the goddess whose love is for the bow, and dance and sport upon the mountains imagines a few vignettes of a young Artemis. While sitting on the knee of her father, she asks him to grant her 10 wishes:

  1. To remain a virgin forever
  2. To have many names to set her apart from her brother Phoebus (Apollo)
  3. To have a bow and arrow forged by the Cyclopes
  4. To be the Phaesporia or Light Bringer
  5. To have a short, knee-length tunic so that she could hunt.
  6. To have a choir of 60 daughters of Okeanos, all nine years of age.
  7. To have 20 Amnisides nymphs as handmaidens to watch over her hunting dogs and bow while she rested
  8. To rule over all the mountains
  9. To be called to the cities only by children and birthing mothers
  10. To be the helper of women with the pains of childbirth.[200]
Leto with Zeus and their children, 420-410 BC, marble, Archaeological Museum of Brauron

All of her companions remained virgins, and Artemis closely guarded her own chastity. Her symbols included the golden bow and arrow, the hunting dog, the stag, and the moon. Callimachus then tells[201] how Artemis spent her girlhood seeking out the things she would need to be a huntress, and how she obtained her bow and arrows from the isle of Lipara, where Hephaestus and the Cyclopes worked. While Oceanus' daughters were initially fearful, the young Artemis bravely approached and asked for a bow and arrows. He goes on to describe how she visited Pan, god of the forest, who gave her seven female and six male hounds. She then captured six golden-horned deer to pull her chariot. Artemis practiced archery first by shooting at trees and then at wild game.[201]

Artemis proclaimed that the Fates chose her to be a goddess of childbirth, because she had given her mother a painless pregnancy and delivery.

She said all this, and tried to touch her father's beard to beg him, but she couldn't reach it. Her father smiled and agreed. He hugged her and said:

"When I have children like you, I have little need to heed the wrath of Hera's jealousy. You can have everything you asked for, and more. I will give you thirty times ten cities and towers, where people will worship only you and call you Artemis. And you will be the protector of the streets and the harbors." He said that, and nodded his head in assent. [202]

Artemis obtains 80 Nymph Attendants

Then the young Artemis went to the white mountain of Crete, where the trees were green, to fetch twenty river nymphs. Next she went to the ocean, to fetch sixty ocean nymphs to serve as her choir. She chose many nymphs, all nine years old and unmarried. The river Kairatos (or Amnisos) and the ocean goddess Tethys were exceedingly glad that their daughters were going to serve the daughter of Leto. [203]

Artemis obtains her Bow and Arrows from the Cyclopes

Artemis went to see the Cyclopes. She found them on the island of Meligounis (later called Lipara), where they were forging a metal trough for Poseidon, the god of the sea. The nymphs who came with Artemis were afraid of the monstrous forms of the Cyclopes. They were frightened of the noise made by their hammers and bellows. So loud was the sound that it made the nearby islands and lands shake and cry out. The ocean nymphs could not stand to look at them or hear them. They were not the only ones. Even the goddesses were afraid of the Cyclopes, even when they were grown up.

But Artemis was not afraid of them, even as a baby. When she was three years old, her mother Leto brought her to Hephaestus, who wanted to give her gifts. One of the Cyclopes, Brontes, set her on his lap. She had pulled out his chest hair, and left a bald spot that never grew back.

So Artemis spoke to them bravely, and asked them to make her a bow and arrows and a quiver, like the ones they made for her brother Apollo. She said that she was also a child of Leto, and that she would use her bow to hunt wild animals and monsters, and would keep the Cyclopes fed with them. The Cyclopes agreed, and set to work. Then Artemis dressed herself as a goddess. [204]

Artemis obtains her Hunting Dogs from Pan

Artemis came to the Arcadian pasture of Pan, the god of shepherds. There he was cutting up the meat of a lynx from Mount Maenalus, to feed his hounds. He gifted Artemis two black-and-white dogs, three reddish ones, and one spotted one, which could take down lions and drag them alive to the pasture. He also gave her seven Arcadian dogs, faster than the wind, which could chase and find any animal, from deer and hares to stags and porcupines. [205]

Artemis captures Golden Horned Deer for her chariot

Artemis left with her dogs and found a herd of deer near the Parrhasian hill in Arcadia. They were huge, bigger than bulls, and had horns of shining gold. Artemis was amazed and thought to herself: "This would be a capture worthy of Artemis." There were five deer in total, and Artemis caught four of them with her own speed of foot, without using her dogs. But one deer escaped, thanks to Hera's plan, who wanted to make it a task for Heracles later. The deer ran to the Ceryneian hill, where it hid. Artemis used the deer to drive her chariot. She had golden weapons and a golden belt, and a golden chariot with golden bridles. [206]

Artemis Tests her New Powers

Artemis cut a pine tree from the Mysian Olympus, and lit it with the fire that came from her father's thunderbolts. She made a torch that never went out.

Artemis tested her bow. First she shot an elm tree, then an oak tree, then a wild animal. But the fourth time, she shot at a city of wicked people, who did evil things to each other and to strangers. She sent plagues on their cattle, frost on their crops, and sorrow on their families. The old men shaved their heads in grief for their sons, and the women either died in childbirth or gave birth to monsters. But whoever she looked at with a smile and kindness, they had good fortune. Their crops grew well, their animals multiplied, and their wealth increased. They did not die, unless they were very old. They did not have conflicts, but lived in harmony. [207]

Artemis Ascends to Olympus

Artemis returned to Mount Olympus. She was greeted by Hermes and Apollo, who took her weapons and her hunting trophies. Apollo did this before Heracles became a god, but now Heracles does it instead. Always hungry, he waits for Artemis to bring him some meat. He teases her for hunting deer and hares, and tells her to hunt boars and oxen, which are more dangerous to humans. But all the other gods laugh at him, especially Hera, his stepmother, when he carries a bull or a boar by its hind leg, still kicking.

The river nymphs of Amnisos take care of Artemis' deer, which pull her chariot. They rub them down and feed them with clover from Hera's meadow. They fill golden troughs with water for them to drink. Artemis enters her father's house, and all the gods welcome her and offer her a seat. But she sits next to Apollo, her brother. [208]

Relations with men

The river god Alpheus was in love with Artemis, but as he realized he could do nothing to win her heart, he decided to capture her. When Artemis and her companions at Letrenoi go to Alpheus, she becomes suspicious of his motives and covers her face with mud so he does not recognize her. In another story, Alphaeus tries to rape Artemis' attendant Arethusa. Artemis pities the girl and saves her, transforming her into a spring in the temple Artemis Alphaea in Letrini, where the goddess and her attendant drink.

Bouphagos, son of the Titan Iapetus, sees Artemis and thinks about raping her. Reading his sinful thoughts, Artemis strikes him down at Mount Pholoe.

Daphnis was a young boy, a son of Hermes, who was accepted by and became a follower of the goddess Artemis; Daphnis would often accompany her in hunting and entertain her with his singing of pastoral songs and playing of the panpipes.[209]

Artemis taught a man, Scamandrius, how to be a great archer, and he excelled in the use of a bow and arrow with her guidance.[210]

Broteas was a famous hunter who refused to honour Artemis, and boasted that nothing could harm him, not even fire. Artemis then drove him mad, causing him to walk into fire, ending his life.[211]

According to Antoninus Liberalis, Siproites was a Cretan who was metamorphized into a woman by Artemis, for, while hunting, seeing the goddess bathing.[212] Artemis changed a Calydonian man named Calydon, son of Ares and Astynome, into stone when he saw the goddess bathing naked.[213]

Divine retribution

Actaeon

Artemis drives a chariot drawn by a team of deer next to the dying Actaeon. Attic red-figure volute crater, ca. 450–440 BCE by the Painter of the Wooly Satyrs. Louvre, Paris

Multiple versions of the Actaeon myth survive, though many are fragmentary. The details vary but at the core, they involve the great hunter Actaeon whom Artemis turns into a stag for a transgression, and who is then killed by hunting dogs.[214][215] Usually, the dogs are his own, but no longer recognize their master. Occasionally they are said to be the hounds of Artemis.

Various tellings diverge in terms of the hunter's transgression: sometimes merely seeing the virgin goddess naked, sometimes boasting he is a better hunter than she,[216] or even merely being a rival of Zeus for the affections of Semele. Apollodorus, who records the Semele version, notes that the ones with Artemis are more common.[217]

According to Lamar Ronald Lacey's The Myth of Aktaion: Literary and Iconographic Studies, the standard modern text on the work, the most likely original version of the myth portrays Actaeon as the hunting companion of the goddess who, seeing her naked in her sacred spring, attempts to force himself on her. For this hubris, he is turned into a stag and devoured by his own hounds. However, in some surviving versions, Actaeon is a stranger who happens upon Artemis.

Mosaic depicting Diana and her nymph surprised by Actaeon.Mosaic, 2nd century CE Ruins of Volubilis, Morocco

A single line from Aeschylus's now lost play Toxotides ("female archers") is among the earlier attestations of Actaeon's myth, stating that "the dogs destroyed their master utterly", with no confirmation of Actaeon's metamorphosis or the god he offended (but it is heavily implied to be Artemis, due to the title).[218] Ancient artwork depicting the myth of Actaeon predate Aeschylus.[219] Euripides, coming in a bit later, wrote in the Bacchae that Actaeon was torn to shreds and perhaps devoured by his "flesh-eating" hunting dogs when he claimed to be a better hunter than Artemis.[220] Like Aeschylus, he does not mention Actaeon being deer-shaped when that happens. Callimachus writes that Actaeon chanced upon Artemis bathing in the woods, and she caused him to be devoured by his own hounds for the sacrilege, and he makes no mention of transformation into a deer either.[221]

Diodorus Siculus wrote that Actaeon dedicated his prizes in hunting to Artemis, proposed marriage to her, and even tried to forcefully consummate said "marriage" inside the very sacred temple of the goddess; for this he was given the form "of one of the animals which he was wont to hunt", and then torn to shreds by his hunting dogs. Diodorus also mentioned the alternative of Actaeon claiming to be a better hunter than the goddess of the hunt.[222] Hyginus also mentions Actaeon attempting to rape Artemis when he finds her bathing naked, and her transforming him into the doomed deer.[223]

Diana and Actaeon by Titian (1556–59), oil in canvas. National Gallery and Scottish National Gallery, London and Edinburg.

Apollodorus wrote that when Actaeon saw Artemis bathing, she turned him into a deer on the spot, and intentionally drove his dogs into a frenzy so that they would kill and devour him. Afterward, Chiron built a sculpture of Actaeon to comfort his dogs in their grief, as they could not find their master no matter how much they looked for him.[217]

According to the Latin version of the story told by the Roman Ovid, Actaeon was a hunter who after returning home from a long day's hunting in the woods, he stumbled upon Artemis and her retinue of nymphs bathing in her sacred grotto. The nymphs, panicking, rushed to cover Artemis' naked body with their own, as Artemis splashed some water on Actaeon, saying he was welcome to share with everyone the tale of seeing her without any clothes as long as he could share it at all. Immediately, he was transformed into a deer, and in panic ran away. But he did not go far, as he was hunted down and eventually caught and devoured by his own fifty hunting dogs, who could not recognize their own master.[224][225]

Pausanias says that Actaeon saw Artemis naked and that she threw a deerskin on him so that his hounds would kill him, in order to prevent him from marrying Semele.[226]

Niobe

The story of Niobe, queen of Thebes and wife of Amphion, who blasphemously boasted of being superior to Leto. This myth is very old; Homer knew of it and wrote that Niobe had given birth to twelve children, equally divided in six sons and six daughters (the Niobids).

Other sources speak of fourteen children, seven sons, and seven daughters. Niobe claimed of being a better mother than Leto, for having more children than Leto's own two, "but the two, though they were only two, destroyed all those others."[227] Leto was not slow to catch up on that and grew angry at the queen's hubris. She summoned her children and commanded them to avenge the slight against her.

A 1772 painting by Jacques-Louis David depicting Niobe attempting to shield her children from Artemis and Apollo. Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas

Swiftly Apollo and Artemis descended on Thebes. While the sons were hunting in the woods, Apollo crept up on them and slew all seven with his silver bow. The dead bodies were brought to the palace. Niobe wept for them, but did not relent, saying that even now she was better than Leto, for she still had seven children, her daughters.[228]

On cue, Artemis then started shooting the daughters one by one. Right as Niobe begged for her youngest one to be spared, Artemis killed that last one.[228] Niobe cried bitter tears, and was turned into a rock. Amphion, at the sight of his dead sons, killed himself. The gods themselves entombed them. In some versions, Apollo and Artemis spared a single son and daughter each, for they prayed to Leto for help; thus Niobe had as many children as Leto did, but no more.[229]

Orion

Daniel Seiter's 1685 painting of Diana over Orion's dead body, before he is placed in the heavens. Louvre, Paris

Orion was Artemis' hunting companion; after giving up on trying to find Oenopion, Orion met Artemis and her mother Leto, and joined the goddess in hunting. A great hunter himself, he bragged that he would kill every beast on earth. Gaia, the earth, was not too pleased to hear that, and sent a giant scorpion to sting him. Artemis then transferred him into the stars as the constellation Orion.[230] In one version Orion died after pushing Leto out of the scorpion's way.[231]

In another version, Orion tries to violate Opis,[232] one of Artemis' followers from Hyperborea, and Artemis kills him.[233] In a version by Aratus, Orion grabs Artemis' robe and she kills him in self-defense.[234] Other writers have Artemis kill him for trying to rape her or one of her attendants.[235]

Istrus wrote a version in which Artemis fell in love with Orion, apparently the only time Artemis ever fell in love. She meant to marry him, and no talk from her brother Apollo would change her mind. Apollo then decided to trick Artemis, and while Orion was off swimming in the sea, he pointed at him (barely a spot in the horizon) and wagered that Artemis could not hit that small "dot". Artemis, ever eager to prove she was the better archer, shot Orion, killing him. She then placed him among the stars.[236]

In Homer's Iliad, the goddess of the dawn Eos seduces Orion, angering the gods who did not approve of immortal goddesses taking mortal men for lovers, causing Artemis to shoot and kill him on the island of Ortygia.[237]

Callisto

Artemis (seated and wearing a radiate crown), the beautiful nymph Callisto (left), Eros and other nymphs. Antique fresco from Pompeii. National Archaeological Museum, Naples

Callisto, the daughter of Lycaon, King of Arcadia,[238] was one of Artemis' hunting attendants, and, as a companion of Artemis, took a vow of chastity.[239]

According to Hesiod in his lost poem Astronomia, Zeus appeared to Callisto, and seduced her, resulting in her becoming pregnant. Though she was able to hide her pregnancy for a time, she was soon found out while bathing. Enraged, Artemis transformed Callisto into a bear, and in this form she gave birth to her son Arcas. Both of them were then captured by shepherds and given to Lycaon, and Callisto thus lost her child. Sometime later, Callisto "thought fit to go into" a forbidden sanctuary of Zeus, and was hunted by the Arcadians, her son among them.[240] When she was about to be killed, Zeus saved her by placing her in the heavens as a constellation of a bear.[241]

In his De Astronomica, Hyginus, after recounting the version from Hesiod,[242] presents several other alternative versions. The first, which he attributes to Amphis, says that Zeus seduced Callisto by disguising himself as Artemis during a hunting session, and that when Artemis found out that Callisto was pregnant, she replied saying that it was the goddess's fault, causing Artemis to transform her into a bear. This version also has both Callisto and Arcas placed in the heavens, as the constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor.[243]

Hyginus then presents another version in which, after Zeus lay with Callisto, it was Hera who transformed her into a bear. Artemis later, while hunting, kills the bear, and "later, on being recognized, Callisto was placed among the stars".[244] Hyginus also gives another version, in which Hera tries to catch Zeus and Callisto in the act, causing Zeus to transform her into a bear. Hera, finding the bear, points it out to Artemis, who is hunting; Zeus, in panic, places Callisto in the heavens as a constellation.[245]

Diana and Callisto, c. 1556–1559, by Titian. Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

Ovid gives a somewhat different version: Zeus seduced Callisto once again disguised as Artemis, but she seems to realise that it is not the real Artemis,[246] and she thus does not blame Artemis when, during bathing, she is found out. Callisto is, rather than being transformed, simply ousted from the company of the huntresses, and she thus gives birth to Arcas as a human. Only later is she transformed into a bear, this time by Hera. When Arcas, fully grown, is out hunting, he nearly kills his mother, who is saved only by Zeus placing her in the heavens.[247]

In the Bibliotheca, a version is presented in which Zeus raped Callisto, "having assumed the likeness, as some say, of Artemis, or, as others say, of Apollo". He then turned her into a bear himself so as to hide the event from Hera. Artemis then shot the bear, either upon the persuasion of Hera, or out of anger at Callisto for breaking her virginity.[248] Once Callisto was dead, Zeus made her into a constellation, took the child, named him Arcas, and gave him to Maia, who raised him.[249]

Pausanias, in his Description of Greece, presents another version, in which, after Zeus seduced Callisto, Hera turned her into a bear, which Artemis killed to please Hera.[250] Hermes was then sent by Zeus to take Arcas, and Zeus himself placed Callisto in the heavens.[251]

Minor myths

The rape of Leto by Tityos: Apollo (left), tries to grasp Tityos, Leto (middle) pushes him and Artemis (right), ready to stop him. Attic red-figure amphora from Vulci. ca 510-520 BC, by Phintias Painter. Louvre, Paris

When Zeus' gigantic son Tityos tried to rape Leto, she called out to her children for help, and both Artemis and Apollo were quick to respond by raining down their arrows on Tityos, killing him.[252]

Chione was a princess of Phokis. She was beloved by two gods, Hermes and Apollo, and boasted that she was more beautiful than Artemis because she had made two gods fall in love with her at once. Artemis was furious and killed Chione with an arrow,[253] or struck her mute by shooting off her tongue. However, some versions of this myth say Apollo and Hermes protected her from Artemis' wrath.[citation needed]

Artemis saved the infant Atalanta from dying of exposure after her father abandoned her. She sent a female bear to nurse the baby, who was then raised by hunters. In some stories, Artemis later sent a bear to injure Atalanta because others claimed Atalanta was a superior hunter. Among other adventures, Atalanta participated in the Calydonian boar hunt, which Artemis had sent to destroy Calydon because King Oeneus had forgotten her at the harvest sacrifices.

In the hunt, Atalanta drew the first blood and was awarded the prize of the boar's hide. She hung it in a sacred grove at Tegea as a dedication to Artemis. Meleager was a hero of Aetolia. King Oeneus ordered him to gather heroes from all over Greece to hunt the Calydonian boar. After the death of Meleager, Artemis turns his grieving sisters, the Meleagrids, into guineafowl that Artemis favoured.

In Nonnus' Dionysiaca, Aura, the daughter of Lelantos and Periboia, was a companion of Artemis.[254] When out hunting one day with Artemis, she asserts that the goddess's voluptuous body and breasts are too womanly and sensual, and doubts her virginity, arguing that her own lithe body and man-like breasts are better than Artemis' and a true symbol of her own chastity. In anger, Artemis asks Nemesis for help to avenge her dignity. Nemesis agrees, telling Artemis that Aura's punishment will be to lose her virginity, since she dared question that of Artemis.

Artemis (Diana) from the "Rospigliosi type", Roman copy of the 1st–2nd centuries CE after a Hellenistic original, Louvre Museum.

Nemesis then arranges for Eros to make Dionysus fall in love with Aura. Dionysus intoxicates Aura and rapes her as she lies unconscious, after which she becomes a deranged killer. While pregnant, she tries to kill herself or cut open her belly, as Artemis mocks her over it. When she bore twin sons, she ate one, while the other, Iacchus, was saved by Artemis.

The twin sons of Poseidon and Iphimedeia, Otos and Ephialtes, grew enormously at a young age. They were aggressive and skilled hunters who could not be killed except by each other. The growth of the Aloadae never stopped, and they boasted that as soon as they could reach heaven, they would kidnap Artemis and Hera and take them as wives. The gods were afraid of them, except for Artemis who captured a fine deer that jumped out between them. In another version of the story, she changed herself into a doe and jumped between them.[5]

The Death of Adonis, by Giuseppe Mazzuoli, 1709. Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.

The Aloadae threw their spears and so mistakenly killed one another. In another version, Apollo sent the deer into the Aloadae's midst, causing their accidental killing of each other.[5] In another version, they start pilling up mountains to reach Mount Olympus in order to catch Hera and Artemis, but the gods spot them and attack. When the twins had retreated the gods learnt that Ares had been captured. The Aloadae, not sure about what to do with Ares, lock him up in a pot. Artemis then turns into a deer and causes them to kill each other.

In some versions of the story of Adonis, Artemis sent a wild boar to kill him as punishment for boasting that he was a better hunter than her.[255] In other versions, Artemis killed Adonis for revenge. In later myths, Adonis is a favorite of Aphrodite, who was responsible for the death of Hippolytus, who had been a hunter of Artemis. Therefore, Artemis killed Adonis to avenge Hippolytus's death. In yet another version, Adonis was not killed by Artemis, but by Ares as punishment for being with Aphrodite.[256]

Polyphonte was a young woman who fled home in pursuit of a free, virginal life with Artemis, as opposed to the conventional life of marriage and children favoured by Aphrodite. As a punishment, Aphrodite cursed her, causing her to mate and have children with a bear. Artemis, seeing that, was disgusted and sent a horde of wild animals against her, causing Polyphonte to flee to her father's house. Her resulting offspring, Agrius and Oreius, were wild cannibals who incurred the hatred of Zeus. Ultimately the entire family was transformed into birds who became ill portents for mankind.[257]

Coronis was a princess from Thessaly who became the lover of Apollo and fell pregnant. While Apollo was away, Coronis began an affair with a mortal man named Ischys. When Apollo learnt of this, he sent Artemis to kill the pregnant Coronis, or Artemis had the initiative to kill Coronis on her own accord for the insult done against her brother. The unborn child, Asclepius, was later removed from his dead mother's womb.[258]

When two of her hunting companions who had sworn to remain chaste and be devoted to her, Rhodopis and Euthynicus, fell in love with each other and broke their vows in a cavern, Artemis turned Rhodopis into a fountain inside that very cavern as punishment. The two had fallen in love not on their own but only after Eros had struck them with his love arrows, commanded by his mother Aphrodite, who had taken offence in that Rhodopis and Euthynicus rejected love and marriage in favour of a chaste life.[259][260]

When the monstrous Typhon attacked Olympus, all the terrified gods transformed into various animals and fled to Egypt. Artemis became a cat,[261] as she was identified by the Greeks with the Egyptian feline goddess Bastet.[262]

When the queen of Kos Echemeia ceased to worship Artemis, she shot her with an arrow; Persephone then snatched the still-living Euthemia and brought her to the Underworld.[263]

Trojan War

Artemis slaying a deer, from the courtyard of House III, 125–100 BCE, Archaeological Museum of Delos, Greece.

Artemis may have been represented as a supporter of Troy because her brother Apollo was the patron god of the city, and she herself was widely worshipped in western Anatolia in historical times. Artemis plays a significant role in the war; like Leto and Apollo, Artemis took the side of the Trojans. In Iliad Artemis on her chariot with the golden reigns, kills the daughter of Bellerophon.[32] Bellorophone was a divine Greek hero who killed the monster Chimera. At the beginning of the Greek's journey to Troy, Artemis punished Agamemnon after he killed a sacred stag in a sacred grove and boasted that he was a better hunter than the goddess.[264]

The Sacrifice of Iphigeneia (1653) by Sébastien Bourdon, Musée des Beaux-Arts d'Orléans.

When the Greek fleet was preparing at Aulis to depart for Troy to commence the Trojan War, Artemis becalmed the winds. The seer Calchas erroneously advised Agamemnon that the only way to appease Artemis was to sacrifice his daughter Iphigenia. In some version of the myth, Artemis then snatched Iphigenia from the altar and substituted a deer; in others, Artemis allowed Iphigenia to be sacrificed. In versions where Iphigenia survived, a number of different myths have been told about what happened after Artemis took her; either she was brought to Tauris and led the priests there, or she became Artemis' immortal companion.[264]Aeneas was also helped by Artemis, Leto, and Apollo. Apollo found him wounded by Diomedes and lifted him to heaven. There, the three deities secretly healed him in a great chamber.

During the theomachy, Artemis found herself standing opposite of Hera, on which a scholium to the Iliad wrote that they represent the Moon versus the air around the Earth.[265] Artemis chided her brother Apollo for not fighting Poseidon and told him never to brag again; Apollo did not answer her. An angry Hera berated Artemis for daring to fight her:

How now art thou fain, thou bold and shameless thing, to stand forth against me? No easy foe I tell thee, am I, that thou shouldst vie with me in might, albeit thou bearest the bow, since it was against women that Zeus made thee a lion, and granted thee to slay whomsoever of them thou wilt. In good sooth it is better on the mountains to be slaying beasts and wild deer than to fight amain with those mightier than thou. Howbeit if thou wilt, learn thou of war, that thou mayest know full well how much mightier am I, seeing thou matchest thy strength with mine.

Hera then grabbed Artemis' hands by the wrists, and holding her in place, beat her with her own bow.[266] Crying, Artemis left her bow and arrows where they lay and ran to Olympus to cry at her father Zeus' knees, while her mother Leto picked up her bow and arrows and followed her weeping daughter.[267]

Worship

Temple of Artemis at Brauron.The stoa and the sacred spring from the SW.

Artemis, the goddess of forests and hills, was worshipped throughout Ancient Greece .[268] Her best known cults were on the island of Delos (her birthplace), in Attica at Brauron and Mounikhia (near Piraeus), and in Sparta. She was often depicted in paintings and statues in a forest setting, carrying a bow and arrows and accompanied by a deer.

The ancient Spartans used to sacrifice to her as one of their patron goddesses before starting a new military campaign.

Athenian festivals in honor of Artemis included Elaphebolia, Mounikhia, Kharisteria, and Brauronia. The festival of Artemis Orthia was observed in Sparta.

Pre-pubescent and adolescent Athenian girls were sent to the sanctuary of Artemis at Brauron to serve the Goddess for one year. During this time, the girls were known as arktoi, or little she-bears.

The Roman Temple of Artemis in Jerash, Jordan, built during the reign of Antoninus Pius.

A myth explaining this servitude states that a bear had formed the habit of regularly visiting the town of Brauron, and the people there fed it, so that, over time, the bear became tame. A girl teased the bear, and, in some versions of the myth, it killed her, while, in other versions, it clawed out her eyes. Either way, the girl's brothers killed the bear, and Artemis was enraged. She demanded that young girls "act the bear" at her sanctuary in atonement for the bear's death.[269]

Artemis was worshipped as one of the primary goddesses of childbirth and midwifery along with Eileithyia. Dedications of clothing to her sanctuaries after a successful birth was common in the Classical era.[270] Artemis could be a deity to be feared by pregnant women, as deaths during this time were attributed to her. As childbirth and pregnancy was a very common and important event, there were numerous other deities associated with it, many localized to a particular geographic area, including but not limited to Aphrodite, Hera and Hekate.[270]

The site of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus. Its final form was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

It was considered a good sign when Artemis appeared in the dreams of hunters and pregnant women, but a naked Artemis was seen as an ill omen.[271] According to Pseudo-Apollodorus, she assisted her mother in the delivery of her twin.[272] Older sources, such as Homeric Hymn to Delian Apollo (in Line 115), have the arrival of Eileithyia on Delos as the event that allows Leto to give birth to her children. Contradictory is Hesiod's presentation of the myth in Theogony, where he states that Leto bore her children before Zeus' marriage to Hera with no commentary on any drama related to their birth.

Despite her being primarily known as a goddess of hunting and the wilderness, she was also connected to dancing, music, and song like her brother Apollo; she is often seen singing and dancing with her nymphs, or leading the chorus of the Muses and the Graces at Delphi. In Sparta, girls of marriageable age performed the partheneia (choral maiden songs) in her honor.[37] An ancient Greek proverb, written down by Aesop, went "For where did Artemis not dance?", signifying the goddess' connection to dancing and festivity.[273][274]

During the Classical period in Athens, she was identified with Hekate. Artemis also assimilated Caryatis (Carya).

There was a women's cult at Cyzicus worshiping Artemis, which was called Dolon (Δόλων).[275]

Festivals

Artemis was born on the sixth day of the month Thargelion (around May), which made it sacred for her, as her birthday.[276] On the seventh day of the same month was Apollo's birthday.[277] Artemis was worshipped in many festivals throughout Greece mainland and the islands, Asia Minor and south Italy. Most of these festivals were celebrated during spring.

Attica
Bronze statue of Artemis (Piraeus Artemis), with a quiver at the back and the pose of the fingers which held a bow. A classicistic work, 4th century BC attributed to Euphranor. Archaeological Museum of Piraeus
  • Athens. The festival Elaphebolia was celebrated on the sixth day of the month Elaphebolion (ninth month) . The name is related to elaphos (deer) and Artemis is the Deer Huntress. Cakes made from flour, honey, and sesame and in the shape of stags were offered to the goddess during the festival.[278][277][279]
  • Brauron. The festival was remarkable for the arkteia, where girls, aged between five and ten, were dressed in saffron robes and played at being bears, or "act the bear" to appease the goddess after she sent the plague when her bear was killed. Another commentator says that girls had to ‘placate the goddess for their virginity (parthenia), so that they would not be the object of revenge from her.[280]
  • Piraeus. The festival of Artemis Munichia was celebrated on the 6th or 16th day of the month Munichion (tenth month). Young girls were dressed up as bears, as for the Brauronia. In the temple have been found sherds grom the geometric period. The festival commemorated the victory of the Greek fleet over the Persians at Salamis.[281][279]
  • Athens. Artemis had a filial cult of Brauronia, near the Acropolis.[279]
  • Agrae, a district of Athens, with a temple of Artemis-Agrotera. (huntress) [282] On the 6th day of the month Boedromion , an armed procession would take a large numbe of goats to the temple. They would all be sacrificed in honor of the victory at the Battle of Marathon.[283] The festival was called "Charisteria", also known as the Athenian "Thanksgiving".[277]
  • Myrrhinus, a deme near Merenda (Markopoulo).There was a cult of Kolainis.[284] Kolainis is usually identified with Artemis Amarysia in Euboia. Some rites and animal sacrifices were probably similar with the rites of Laphria.[279]
  • Athmonia, a deme near Marousi. The festival of Artemis Amarysia, was no less splendid that the festival of Amarysia in Euboea.[285]
  • Halae Araphenides, a deme near Brauron. The fest Tauropolia was celebrated in honour of Artemis Tauropolos. During the festival a human sacrifice was represented in a ritual.[279]
  • Erchia a district of Athens. The modern Athenian airport was built over the ruins of the deme. A festival was celebrated on the 16th day of the month Metageitnion. Sacrifices were offered to Artemis and Hekate.[277]
Central Greece
Artemis on her chariot drawn by two hinds. Detail from an Attic red figure crater 460-440 BC. Attributed to the Painter of the Wooly Satyrs. Louvre, Paris.
  • Hyampolis in Phocis. During an attack of the Thessalians, the Phocians terrified gathered together in one spot their women, children, movable property, and also their clothes, gold and made a vast pyre. The order was that if they would be defeated, all should be killed and would be thrown into the flames together with their property.[286][287] The Phocians achieved a great victory and each year they celebrated their victory in the festival Elaphebolia-Laphria in honour of Artemis. All kinds of oferrings were burned in an annual fire, reminding the great pyre of the battle.[288]
  • Delphi in Phocis. The festival Laphria was celebrated in the month Laphrios. The cult of Artemis Laphria was introduced by the priests of Delphi Lab(r)yaden who had probably Cretan origin.[289] Laphria is certainly the Pre-Greek "Mistress of the animals".[279]
  • Delphi in Phocis . The festival Eucleia was celebrated in honour of Artemis. According to the Labyaden-inscriptions the oferrings darata are determined by the specified gamela and pedēia. Eucleia was a goddess of marriage.[290]
Mixing Vessel with Hermes, Apollo and Artemis. Lucanian, 415-400 BC, attributed to the Palermo Painter. J. Paul Getty Museum,California
  • Tithorea in Ancient Phocis. It seems that the festival of Isis was a reform of the festival of Artemis Laphria.[291]
  • Erineos in Doris. Festival of Artemis Laphria, indicated by the month Laphrios in the local calendar.[279]
  • Antikyra in Phocis.Cult of Artemis-Diktynaia, a popular goddess who was worshipped with great respect.[292]
  • Thebes in Boeotia. Before marriage a premilinary sacrifice should be made by the bride and the groom to Artemis-Eucleia.[290]
  • Amarynthos in Euboia. Festival of Artemis Amarysia. Animals were sacrificed with rites probably similar with the fest Laphria.[279]
  • Aulis in Boeotia. In a festival all kinds of sacrificial animals were oferred to the goddess. It seems that the festival was a reverberation of the rites of Laphria.[293][279]
  • Calydon in Aetolia. Calydon is considered the origin of the cult of Artemis Laphria at Patras. In the Aetolian calendar there was the month Laphrios.[279] Near the city there was the temple of Apollo Laphrius;[294]
  • Nafpaktos in Aetolia. Cult of Artemis Laphria.[295]
  • Acarnania. Cult of Artemis-Agrotera (huntress) in a society of hunters.[279]
Peloponnese
Apollo's return to Delos from Hyperboreans. Artemis holding a deer welcomes Apollo. Cycladic krater (7th cent. BC) National Archaeological Museum, Athens.
  • Patras in Achaea. The great festival Laphria was celebrated in honour of Artemis. The characteristic rite was the annual fire. Birds, deers, sacrificial animals, young wolves and young bears were thrown alive in a great pyre. Laphria (Pre-Greek name) is the "Mistress of Animals".[279] Traditionally her cult was introduced from Calydon of Aetolia.[295][296]
  • Patras. The Ionians who lived in Ancient Achaea celebrated the annual festival of Artemis Triclaria. Pausanias mentions the legend of human sacrifices to the outraged goddess. The new deity Dionysus, put an end to the sacrifices.[297][290]
  • Corinth. The festival Eucleia was celebrated in honor of Artemis.[298]
  • Aigeira in Achaea. Festival of Artemis Agrotera (huntress). When the Sicyonians attacked the city, the Aigeirians tied torches on all goats of the area and during night they set the torches alight. The Sicyonians believed that Aigeira had a great army and they retreated.[299]
  • Sparta. Festival of Artemis-Orthia. The goddess was associated with the female initiatory rite Partheneion.[300] Women performed round dances. In a legend Theseus stole Helene from the dancing floor of Orthia, during the round-dancing. The significant prize of the competitions was an iron sickle (drepanē) indicating that Orthia was a goddess of vegetation.[301]
  • Sparta on the road to Amyklai. Artemis-Korythalia was a goddess of vegetation. Women performed lascivious dances. The fest was celebrated in round huts covered with leaves. The nurses brought the infants in the temple of Korythalia during the fest Tithenedia.[302]
Marble statue of Artemis-Diana in the Capitoline Museums
  • Messene near the borders with Laconia. Festival of Artemis Limnatis (of the lake). The festival was celebrated with cymbals and dances.[303] The goddess was worshipped by young women during the festivals of transition from childhood to adulthood.[304]
  • Dereion on Taygetos in Laconia. Cult of Artemis -Dereatis. The festival was celebrated with the hymns calavoutoi and with the obscene dance callabis.[305][306]
  • Epidauros Limera in Laconia. Cult of Artemis-Limnatis.[307][279]
  • Caryae on the borders between Laconia and Arcadia . Festival of Artemis-Caryatis, a goddess of vegetation related to the tree-cult. Each year women performed an exstatic dance called the caryatis.[308][279]
  • Boiai in Laconia. Cult of Artemis-Soteira (savior), which was related to the myrtle tree. When the inhabitants of the cities near the gulf were expelled, Artemis with the shape of a hare guided them to a myrtle tree where they built the new city.[309][279]
  • Gytheion in Laconia. Cult of Artemis Laphria, in the month Laphrios.[279]
  • Elis . Pelops (Peloponnese: Pelop's island) had won the sovereignty of Pisa and his followers celebrated their victory near the temple of Artemis-Kordaka. They danced the peculiar dance kordax.[310][301]
Artemis hunting a stag, surrounded by Zeus (left), Nikê (top) and Apollo (right). The goddess is wielding a torch .Attic red-figured pelike 370-350Bc From Campania, South Italy. British Museum, London
  • Elis . Festival of Artemis-Elaphia in the month Elaphios (elaphos:deer). Elaphia was a goddess of hunting.[311][279]
  • Letrinoi in Elis . Festival of Artemis Alpheaia. Girls wearing masks performed dances.[311][301]
  • Olympia in Elis. Annual festival (panegeris) of Artemis Alpheaia .[312][301]
  • Olympia in Elis. Annual festival of Artemis Elaphia.[312][301]
  • Olympia in Elis. Annual festival of Artemis Daphnaia (of the laurel-branch), as a goddess of vegetation.[312][301]
  • Hypsus in Arcadia near the borders of Laconia. Annual festival of Artemis-Diktynna. Her temple was built near the sea.[313]
  • Hypsus . Annual fest of Artemis Daphnaia.(Of the laurel-branch).[314][301]
  • Stymphalus in Arcadia . Festival of Artemis-Stymphalia. The festival begun near the Katavothres where the water overflowed and created a big marsh.[315][279]
  • Orchomenus, in Arcadia. A sanctuary was built for Artemis Hymnia where her festival was celebrated every year.[316]
  • Tegea in Arcadia, on the road to Laconia. Cult of Artemis-Limnatis (of the lake).[317][290]
  • Phigalia in Arcadia. In a battle the Phigalians expelled the conquerors Spartans and recovered their city. On the summit of the Acropolis they built the sanctuary of Artemis-Soteira (Savior) and a statue of the goddess. At the beginning of festivals, all their processions started from the sunctuary.[318]
  • Troizen in Argolis. Festival of Artemis-Saronia. Near the temple was the grave of the king Saron who was drowned into the sea.[319]

[279]

Northern Greece
  • Aegae, in Macedonia. Eucleia had a shrine with dedications in the agora of the city. The goddess is associated with Artemis-Eucleia, the goddess of marriage who was widely worshipped in Boeotia.[320]
  • Apollonia of Chalcidice. The festival Elaphebolia was celebrated in honor of Artemis in the month Elaphebolion[279]
Greek islands
From left to right: Artemis holding an oinochoe, Apollo holding a laurel branch and a phiale, about to pour a libation on the altar. Attic red-figure column-krater 450 BC. National Archaeological Museum (Madrid)
  • Icaria. The Tauropolion,[321] the temple of Artemis Tauropolos was built at Oinoe. There was another smaller temenos that was sacred to Artemis-Tauropolos on the coast of the island.[322]
  • Cephalonia. Cult of Artemis-Laphria who is related to the legend of Britomartis.[323]
  • Corcyra. Cult of Artemis-Laphria in the month Laphrios.[279]
Asia Minor
  • Ephesus in Ionia. The great festival Artemisia was celebreted in honor of Artemis. The wealth and splendor of temple and city were taken as evidence of Artemis Ephesia's power. Under Hellenic rule, and later, under Roman rule, the Ephesian Artemisia festival was increasingly promoted as a key element in the pan-Hellenic festival circuit .[324]
  • Perga in Ionia. Famous festival of Artemis-Pergaia. Under Roman rule Diana-Pergaia is identified with Selene.[166]
  • Iasos in Caria. The festival Elaphebolia was celebrated in honor of Artemis in the month Elaphebolion[279]
  • Byzantion. Festival of Artemis-Eucleia in the month Eucleios.[290]
Magna Graecia
  • Syracuse in Sicily. The festival of Artemis Chitonia was

distinguished by a peculiar dance and by a music on the flute. Chitonia (wearing a loose tunic) was a goddess of hunting.[90]

  • Syracuse in Sicily. Festival of Artemis-Lyaia. Men from the countryside came to the city in a rustic dress. They carried a deer-antler on their head and held a shepherd's stab. They sang satirical songs drinking wine. The festival was the link between the comic performance and the countryside.[325][290]
  • Tauromenion in Sicily. Festival of Artemis-Eucleia in the month Eucleios.[290]
  • Festival of Artemis-Korythalia. The male dancers wore wooden masks.[301]

Attributes

Virginity

This bronze statue of Artemis in the Archaeological Museum of Piraeus (Athens) dates from the mid-fourth century BCE and was given to sculptor Euphranor.
Artemis Diadoumena. Statuette of Artemis from Delos (1st cent. B.C.) at the National Archaeological Museum, Athens

An important aspect of Artemis' persona and worship was her virginity, which may seem contradictory, given her role as a goddess associated with childbirth. The idea of Artemis as a virgin goddess likely is related to her primary role as a huntress. Hunters traditionally abstained from sex prior to the hunt as a form of ritual purity and out of a belief that the scent would scare off potential prey. The ancient cultural context in which Artemis' worship emerged also held that virginity was a prerequisite to marriage, and that a married woman became subservient to her husband.[326]

In this light, Artemis' virginity is also related to her power and independence. Rather than a form of asexuality, it is an attribute that signals Artemis as her own master, with power equal to that of male gods. Her virginity also possibly represents a concentration of fertility that can be spread among her followers, in the manner of earlier mother-goddess figures. However, some later Greek writers did come to treat Artemis as inherently asexual and as an opposite to Aphrodite.[326] Furthermore, some have described Artemis along with the goddesses Hestia and Athena as being asexual; this is mainly supported by the fact that in the Homeric Hymns, 5, To Aphrodite, Aphrodite is described as having "no power" over the three goddesses.[327]

As a mother goddess

Despite her virginity, both modern scholars and ancient commentaries have linked Artemis to the archetype of the mother goddess. Artemis was traditionally linked to fertility and was petitioned to assist women with childbirth. According to Herodotus, Greek playwright Aeschylus identified Artemis with Persephone as a daughter of Demeter. Her worshipers in Arcadia also traditionally associated her with Demeter and Persephone. In Asia Minor, she was often conflated with local mother-goddess figures, such as Cybele, and Anahita in Iran.[326]

The Artemis of Ephesus, second century CE. Ephesus Archaeological Museum, Izmir, Turkey

The archetype of the mother goddess, though, was not highly compatible with the Greek pantheon, and though the Greeks had adopted the worship of Cybele and other Anatolian mother goddesses as early as the seventh century BCE, she was not directly conflated with any Greek goddesses. Instead, bits and pieces of her worship and aspects were absorbed variously by Artemis, Aphrodite, and others as Eastern influence spread.[326]

As the Lady of Ephesus

Main page: Religion:Temple of Artemis

At Ephesus in Ionia, Turkey, her temple became one of the Seven Wonders of the World. It was probably the best-known center of her worship except for Delos. There, the Lady whom the Ionians associated with Artemis through interpretatio graeca was worshipped primarily as a mother goddess, akin to the Phrygian goddess Cybele, in an ancient sanctuary where her cult image depicted the "Lady of Ephesus" adorned with multiple large beads. Excavation at the site of the Artemision in 1987–88 identified a multitude of tear-shaped amber beads that had been hung on the original wooden statue (xoanon), and these were probably carried over into later sculpted copies.[328]

In Acts of the Apostles, Ephesian metalsmiths who felt threatened by Saint Paul's preaching of Christianity, jealously rioted in her defense, shouting "Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!"[329] Of the 121 columns of her temple, only one composite, made up of fragments, still stands as a marker of the temple's location.

As a lunar deity

Praxitelean bronze head of a goddess (probably Artemis), wearing a lunate crown, 4th century BC. Found at Issa, Vis, Croatia).

No records have been found of the Greeks referring to Artemis as a lunar deity, as their lunar deity was Selene,[330][331][332] but the Romans identified Artemis with Selene leading them to perceive her as a lunar deity, though the Greeks did not refer to her or worship her as such.[333][334][335] As the Romans began to associate Apollo more with Helios, the personification of the Sun, it was only natural that the Romans would then begin to identify Apollo's twin sister, Artemis, with Helios' own sister, Selene, the personification of the Moon.[3]

Evidence of the syncretism of Artemis and Selene is found early on; a scholium on the Iliad, claiming to be reporting sixth century BCE author Theagenes's interpretation of the theomachy in Book 21, says that in the fight between Artemis and Hera, Artemis represents the Moon, while Hera represents the earthly air.[265][336]

Active references to Artemis as an illuminating goddess start much later.[337] Notably, Roman-era author Plutarch writes how during the Battle of Salamis, Artemis led the Athenians to victory by shining with the full moon, but all lunar-related narratives of this event come from Roman times, and none of the contemporary writers (such as Herodotus) makes any mention of the night or the Moon.[337]

Marble statue of Artemis-Selene with torch, 3rd century. Museo Chiaramonti - Vatican Museums.

Artemis' connection to childbed and women's labour naturally led to her becoming associated with the menstrual cycle in course of time, thus the Moon.[338] Selene, just like Artemis, was linked to childbirth, as it was believed that women had the easiest labours during the full moon, paving thus the way for the two goddesses to be seen as the same.[339][336] On that, Cicero writes:

Apollo, a Greek name, is called Sol, the sun; and Diana, Luna, the moon. [...] Luna, the moon, is so called a lucendo (from shining); she bears the name also of Lucina: and as in Greece the women in labor invoke Diana Lucifera,[340]

Association to health was another reason Artemis and Selene were syncretized; Strabo wrote that Apollo and Artemis were connected to the Sun and the Moon, respectively, which was due to the changes the two celestial bodies caused in the temperature of the air, as the twins were gods of pestilential diseases and sudden deaths.[341]

Roman authors applied Artemis/Diana's byname, "Phoebe", to Luna/Selene, the same way as "Phoebus" was given to Helios due to his identification with Apollo.[342] Another epithet of Artemis that Selene appropriated is "Cynthia", meaning "born in Mount Cynthus."[343] The goddesses Artemis, Selene, and Hecate formed a triad, identified as the same goddess with three avatars: Selene in the sky (moon), Artemis on earth (hunting), and Hecate beneath the earth (Underworld).[344]

In Italy, those three goddesses became a ubiquitous feature in depictions of sacred groves, where Hecate/Trivia marked intersections and crossroads along with other liminal deities.[345] The Romans enthusiastically celebrated the multiple identities of Diana as Hecate, Luna, and Trivia.[345]

Roman poet Horace in his odes enjoins Apollo to listen to the prayers of the boys, as he asks Luna, the "two-horned queen of the stars", to listen to those of the girls in place of Diana, due to their role as protectors of the young.[346] In Virgil's Aeneid, when Nisus addresses Luna/the Moon, he calls her "daughter of Latona."[347]

In works of art, the two goddesses were mostly distinguished; Selene is usually depicted as being shorter than Artemis, with a rounder face, and wearing a long robe instead of a short hunting chiton, with a billowing cloak forming an arc above her head.[348] Artemis was sometimes depicted with a lunate crown.[349]

As Hecate

Artemis holding torches. Marble, Roman copy of the 2nd century AD after a Greek original of the 4th century BC. Museo Chiaramonti, Vatican Museums

Hecate was the goddess of crossroads, boundaries, ghosts and witchcraft. She is the queen of the witches. [350] Artemis absorbed the Pre-Greek goddess Potnia Theron who was closely associated with the daimons.[28] In the Mycenean age daimons were lesser deities of ghosts, divine spirits and tutelary deities.[351]

Some scholars believe that Hecate was an aspect of Artemis prior to the latter's adoption into the Olympian pantheon. Artemis would have, at that point, become more strongly associated with purity and maidenhood on the one hand, while her originally darker attributes like her association with magic, the souls of the dead, and the night would have continued to be worshipped separately under her title Hecate.[352]

Both goddesses carried torches, and were accompanied by a dog. It seems that the character of Artemis in Arcadia was original.[353] At Acacesium Artemis Hegemone is depicted holding two torches, and at Lycosura Artemis is depicted holding a snake and a torch. A bitch suitable for hunting was lying down by her side.[354]

Sophocles calles Artemis Amphipyros, carrying a torch in each hand, however the adjective refers also to the twin fire on the two peaks of the mountain Parnassus behind Delphi. In the fest of Laphria at Delphi Artemis is related to the Pre-Greek mistress of the animals, with barbaric sacrifices and possible connections with magic and ghosts since Potnia Theron was close to the daimons. The annual fire was the characteristique custom of the fest.[29][141]

At Kerameikos in Athens Artemis is clearly identified with Hecate. Pausanias believes that Kalliste (the most beautiful ) is a surname of Artemis carrying a torch. In Thessaly the distinctly local goddess Enodia with the surname Pheraia is identified with Hecate.[168] Artemis Pheraia was worshipped in Argos, Athens and Sicyon.[167]

Symbols

Artemis with a bow and a deer. Attic lekythos 460-450 BC

Chariots

Detail of an Attic red-figure hydria depicting Apollo and Artemis. 480-450 BC by the Pan Painter. Legion of Honor (museum), San Francisco.

Homer uses the epithet Chrisinios, of the golden reigns, to illustrate the chariot of the goddess of hunting.[355] At the fest of Laphria at Delphi the priestess followed the parade on a chariot which was covered with the skin of a deer.[355]

Spears, nets, and lyre

Artemis is rarely portrayed with a hunting spear. In her cult in Aetolia, the Artemis Aetole was depicted with a hunting spear or javelin.[58]

Artemis is also sometimes depicted with a fishing spear connected with her cult as a patron goddess of fishing. This conception relates her with Diktynna (Britomartis).[101] As a goddess of maiden dances and songs, Artemis is often portrayed with a lyre in ancient art.[356]

Deer

Deer were the only animals held sacred to Artemis herself. On seeing a deer larger than a bull with horns shining, she fell in love with these creatures and held them sacred. Deer were also the first animals she captured. She caught five golden-horned deer and harnessed them to her chariot.[357] At Lycosura in isolated Arcadia Artemis is depicted holding a snake and a torch and dressed with a deer skin, besides Demeter and Persephone.[354] It seems that the depictions of Artemis and Demeter-Melaina (black) in Arcadia correspond to the earliest conceptions of the first Greeks in Greece.[358] At the fest of Laphria at Delphi the priestess followed the parade on a chariot which was covered with the skin of a deer.[355] The third labour of Heracles, commanded by Eurystheus, consisted of chasing and catching the terrible Ceryneian Hind. The hind was a female deer with golden andlers and hooves of bronze and was sacred to Artemis. Heracles begged Artemis for forgiveness and promised to return it alive. Artemis forgave him, but targeted Eurystheus for her wrath.[359]

Hunting dog

Artemis with a hunting dog pouring a libation, c. 460-450 BCE.

In a legend Artemis got her hunting dogs from Pan in the forest of Arcadia. Pan gave Artemis two black-and-white dogs, three reddish ones, and one spotted one – these dogs were able to hunt even lions. Pan also gave Artemis seven bitches of the finest Arcadian race, but Artemis only ever brought seven dogs hunting with her at any one time.[360] In the earliest conceptions of Artemis at Lycosura, a bitch suitable for hunting was lying down by her side.[354]

Bear

In a Pre-Greek cult Artemis was conceived as a bear. Kallisto was transformed into a bear, and she is a hypostasis of Artemis with a theriomorph form. In the cults of Artemis at Brauron and at Piraeus Munichia (arkteia) young virgin girls were disguished to she-bears (arktoi) in a ritual and they served the goddess before marriage.[361]

The small Piraeus Artemis, bronze statue of the 4th century.

An etiological myth tries to explain the origin of the Arkteia. Every year, a girl between five and ten years of age was sent to Artemis' temple at Brauron. A bear was tamed by Artemis and introduced to the people of Athens. They touched it and played with it until one day a group of girls poked the bear until it attacked them. A brother of one of the girls killed the bear, so Artemis sent a plague in revenge. The Athenians consulted an oracle to understand how to end the plague. The oracle suggested that, in payment for the bear's blood, no Athenian virgin should be allowed to marry until she had served Artemis in her temple (played the bear for the goddess).[362]

In a legend of the cult of Munichia if someone killed a bear, then they were to be punished by sacrificing their daughter in the sanctuary. Embaros disguised his daughter dressing her like a bear (arktos), and hid her in the adyton. He placed a goat on the altar and he sacrificed the goat instead of his daughter.[363]

Boar

The boar is one of the favorite animals of the hunters, and also hard to tame. In honor of Artemis' skill, they sacrificed it to her. Oeneus[364] and Adonis[365] were both killed by Artemis' boar. In The Odyssey, she descends from a peak and she travels along the ridges of Mount Erymanthos, that was sacred to the "Mistress of the animals".[355][91] When the goddess became wrathful she would send the terrible Erymanthian boar to laid waste the farmer's fields. Heracles managed to kill the terrible creature during his Twelve Labors.[92]

In one legend, the Calydonian boar had terrorized the territory of Calydon because Artemis (the mistress of the animals) was offended. The Calydonian boar hunt is one of the great heroic adventures in Greek legend. The most famous Greek heroes including Meleager and Atalanta took part in the expedition. The fierce-hunter virgin Atalanta allied to the goddess Artemis was the first who wounded the Calydonian boar.[366]

Ovid describes the boar as follows:[367]

A dreadful boar.—His burning, bloodshot eyes
seemed coals of living fire, and his rough neck
was knotted with stiff muscles, and thick-set
with bristles like sharp spikes. A seething froth
dripped on his shoulders, and his tusks
were like the spoils of Ind [India]. Discordant roars
reverberated from his hideous jaws;
and lightning—belched forth from his horrid throat—
scorched the green fields.
— Ovid, Metamorphoses 8.284–289 (Brookes More translation)

Guinea fowl

Artemis felt pity for the Calydonian princesses Meleagrids as they mourned for their lost brother, Meleager, so she transformed them into Guinea fowl to be her favorite animals.[368]

Buzzard hawk

Hawks were the favored birds of many of the gods, Artemis included.[369]

Coin from Tauric Chersonesus with Artemis, deer, bull, club and quiver (c. 300 BC)

Bull

Artemis is sometimes identified with the mythical bull-goddess in a cult foreign in Greece. The cult can be identified in Halae Araphenides in Attica. At the end of the peculiar fest the sacrifice of a man was represented in a ritual. [182]

Apollo (left) and Artemis (right) carrying a torch and flanking an altar. Terracotta amphora (jar) 490 BC. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Manhattan, NY

Euripides relates her cult with Tauris (tauros:bull) and with the myth of Iphigenia at Brauron. Orestes brought the image of the goddess from Tauris, to Brauron Sparta or Aricia.[370][371]

Torch

Artemis is often depicted holding one or two torches. There is not any sufficient explanation for this depiction. The character of the goddess in Arcadia seems to be original.[353] At Acacesium Artemis Hegemone (the leader) is depicted holding two torches. At Lycosura the goddess is depicted holding a snake and a torch, and a bitch suitable for hunting was lying down by her side[178]Sophocles calls Artemis "Elaphebolos, (deer slayer) Amphipyros (with a fire in each end)" reminding the annual fire of the fest Laphria at Delphi.[372] The adjective refers also to the twin fires of the two peaks of the Mount Parnassus above Delphi (Phaedriades).[68] Heshychius believes that Kalliste is the name of Hecate established at Kerameikos of Athens, who some call Artemis (torch bearing). On a relief from Sicily the goddess is depicted holding a torch in one hand and an offering on the other. The torch was used for the ignition of the fire on the altar.[112]

Archaic and classical art

Artémis Potnia Theron

During the Bronze Age, the "mistress of the animals" is usually depicted between two lions with a peculiar crown on her head. The oldest representations of Artemis in Greek Archaic art portray her as Potnia Theron ("Queen of the Beasts"): a winged goddess holding a stag and lioness in her hands, or sometimes a lioness and a lion. Potnia theron is the only Greek goddess close to the daimons and sometimes is depicted with a Gorgon head, and the Gorgon is her distant ancestor. This winged Artemis lingered in ex-votos as Artemis Orthia, with a sanctuary close by Sparta.

In Greek classical art she is usually portrayed as a maiden huntress, young, tall, and slim, clothed in a girl's short skirt,[373] with hunting boots, a quiver, a golden or silver bow[374] and arrows.

Often, she is shown in the shooting pose, and is accompanied by a hunting dog or stag. When portrayed as a lunar deity, Artemis wore a long robe and sometimes a veil covered her head. Her darker side is revealed in some vase paintings, where she is shown as the death-bringing goddess whose arrows fell young maidens and women, such as the daughters of Niobe.

Artemis was sometimes represented in Classical art with the crown of the crescent moon, such as also found on Luna and others.

On June 7, 2007, a Roman-era bronze sculpture of Artemis and the Stag was sold at Sotheby's auction house in New York state by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery for $25.5 million.

Gallery

Legacy

In astronomy

In taxonomy

The taxonomic genus Artemia, which entirely comprises the family Artemiidae, derives from Artemis. Artemia species are aquatic crustaceans known as brine shrimp, the best-known species of which, Artemia salina, or sea monkeys, was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his Systema Naturae in 1758. Artemia species live in salt lakes, and although they are almost never found in an open sea, they do appear along the Aegean coast near Ephesus, where the Temple of Artemis once stood.

In modern spaceflight

The Artemis program is an ongoing robotic and crewed spaceflight program carried out by NASA, U.S. commercial spaceflight companies, and international partners such as ESA, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency.[376] The program has the goal of landing "the first woman and the next man" on the lunar south pole region no earlier than 2025.[377]

Genealogy

Artemis' family tree [378]
UranusGaia
Uranus' genitalsCoeusPhoebeCronusRhea
LetoZeusHeraPoseidonHadesDemeterHestia
ApolloARTEMIS    a[379]
     b[380]
AresHephaestus
Metis
Athena[381]
Maia
Hermes
Semele
Dionysus
Dione
    a[382]     b[383]
Aphrodite

See also

References

  1. "Artemis | Myths, Symbols, & Meaning" (in en). https://www.britannica.com/topic/Artemis-Greek-goddess. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature. Merriam-Webster. 1995. p. 74. ISBN 9780877790426. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Smith, s.v. Artemis
  4. Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite (5), p.21–32
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Roman, Luke; Roman, Monica (2010). Encyclopedia of Greek and Roman Mythology. Infobase Publishing. pp. 85. ISBN 9781438126395. https://books.google.com/books?id=tOgWfjNIxoMC&q=Encyclopedia+of+Greek+and+roman+mythology+cite&pg=PP1. 
  6. "Artemis". Artemis. http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=Artemis&allowed_in_frame=0. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 Babiniotis, Georgios (2005). "Άρτεμις". Λεξικό της Νέας Ελληνικής Γλώσσας. Athens: Κέντρο Λεξικολογίας. p. 286. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 R. S. P. Beekes, Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009, p.142
  9. Indogermanica et Caucasica: Festschrift fur Karl Horst Schmidt zum 65. Geburtstag (Studies in Indo-European language and culture), W. de Gruyter, 1994, Etyma Graeca, p.213–214, on Google books; Houwink ten Cate, The Luwian Population Groups of Lycia and Cilicia Aspera during the Hellenistic Period (Leiden) 1961:166, noted in this context by Brown 2004:252
  10. Michaël Ripinsky-Naxon, The Nature of Shamanism: Substance and Function of a Religious Metaphor (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1993), 32
  11. Campanile, Ann. Scuola Pisa 28:305; Restelli, Aevum 37:307, 312
  12. Edwin L. Brown, "In Search of Anatolian Apollo", Charis: Essays in Honor of Sara A. Immerwahr, Hesperia Supplements 33 (2004:243–257). p.251: Artemis, as Apollo's inseparable twin, is discussed in p.251ff
  13. John Chadwick and Lydia Baumbach, "The Mycenaean Greek Vocabulary" Glotta, 41.3/4 (1963:157-271). p.176f, s.v. Ἂρτεμις, a-te-mi-to- (genitive); C. Souvinous, "A-TE-MI-TO and A-TI-MI-TE", Kadmos 9 1970:42–47; T. Christidis, "Further remarks on A-TE-MI-TO and A-TI-MI-TE", Kadmos 11:125–28
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Anthon, Charles (1855). "Artemis". A Classical dictionary. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 210. https://books.google.com/books?id=TIYMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA210. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 Lang, Andrew (1887). Myth, Ritual, and Religion. London: Longmans, Green and Co. pp. 209–210. https://archive.org/stream/mythritualreligi02lang#page/209/mode/1up. 
  16. ἄρταμος. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  17. Ἄρτεμις. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  18. ἀρτεμής. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  19. Van Windekens 1986: p.19‒20
  20. Blažek, Václav. "Artemis and her family". In: Graeco-Latina Brunensia vol. 21, iss. 2 (2016). p.40. ISSN 2336-4424
  21. Powell 2012, p. p.225.
  22. Dietrich, "The origins of Greek religion", p.185
  23. Nilsson,"Geschichte", Vol I, p.481
  24. Nilsson,"Geschichte",Vol I, p.483-484 and 493-494
  25. 25.0 25.1 Suidas s,v : " Arkteusai (being bears) ..... is established for the virgins before marriage at the temples of Artemis Mounychia and Brauronia
  26. 26.00 26.01 26.02 26.03 26.04 26.05 26.06 26.07 26.08 26.09 26.10 26.11 26.12 26.13 26.14 26.15 26.16 Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol. I, p. 482-487
  27. Powell 2012, p. 56.
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.227
  29. 29.0 29.1 29.2 29.3 Lane Fox, Robin. Pagan and Christians. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. 1989. p.90-91
  30. 30.0 30.1 Howell 1989",Howell, Reet A.; Howell, Maxwell L. (1989). "The Atalanta Legend in Art and Literature". Journal of Sport History 16 (2): 127–139. 
  31. 31.0 31.1 31.2 Immendörfer 2017, p. p.224-225.
  32. 32.0 32.1 32.2 Iliad 6.200
  33. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.498
  34. 34.0 34.1 Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.492,493
  35. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.499
  36. 36.0 36.1 Nilsson, Geschichte, Vol. I, p.251, 252
  37. 37.0 37.1 37.2 37.3 37.4 37.5 37.6 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome Vol I, 7, Oxford Encyclop, p.268
  38. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.161,490
  39. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.315,486-487
  40. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.83
  41. 41.0 41.1 Bremmer, Jan N. (2008). Greek Religion and Culture, the Bible, and the Ancient Near East. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004164734. https://books.google.com/books?id=YTfxZH4QnqgC&dq=artemis+lygodesma&pg=PA187. 
  42. Nilsson, Geschichte, Vol I, p.495
  43. Pausanias 1.29.2 Pausanias 1.29.2
  44. Adrienne Mayor (September 22, 2014). The Amazons: Lives and Legends of Warrior Women across the Ancient World. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691147208. https://archive.org/details/amazonsliveslege0000mayo. Retrieved January 12, 2021. 
  45. 45.0 45.1 Konstan 2014, p. 65.
  46. Lucian, Dialogues of the Gods Hera and Leto
  47. 47.0 47.1 Homer, Odyssey 6.102 ff
  48. Ovid, Metamorphoses 3.138 ff
  49. 49.0 49.1 49.2 B.C Dietrich (1974), The origins of the Greek religion p.181,182 :p.181–182
  50. Burkert (1985),Greek religion, p.21
  51. Larson, Jennifer (1997). "Handmaidens of Artemis?". The Classical Journal 92 (3): 249–257. 
  52. Nilsson, Geschichte, Vol I, p.498
  53. A not localized phallic dance of women is connected with the boisterous and nudge dances of the cult of Artemis, as a goddess of vegetation": Nilsson, Geschichte Vol I, p.491
  54. "Hospitality to the strangers and freedom fo0r all": L.H.Jeffery (1976), The city states, c.700-500 BCE, p.6, Ernest Benn Limited
  55. Martin Nilsson (1967), "Die Geschichte der Griechischen religion", C.H. Beck Verlag, Munchen, p.481-500
  56. Schmitz, Leonhard (1867). "Aeginaea". in Smith, William. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. 1. Boston. p. 26. http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/0035.html. Retrieved 2007-10-19. 
  57. Αιγινάίη
  58. 58.0 58.1 Pausanias 10.38.12
  59. Pausanias 5.15.4
  60. 60.0 60.1 60.2 60.3 60.4 60.5 60.6 60.7 60.8 Nilsson, "Geshichte", Vol I, p.494-500
  61. 61.0 61.1 Iliad 21.471
  62. Parker, Robert (2005). Polytheism and Society in Athens. Oxford University Press. pp. 56, 178, 400, 419. ISBN 0-19-921611-8. https://books.google.com/books?id=EkXh9roRTC0C. 
  63. Bell, Robert E. (1991). Women of Classical Mythology: A Biographical Dictionary. ABC-CLIO. pp. 17, 191, 253. ISBN 0-87436-581-3. https://archive.org/details/womenofclassical00bell. 
  64. 64.00 64.01 64.02 64.03 64.04 64.05 64.06 64.07 64.08 64.09 64.10 64.11 64.12 64.13 64.14 64.15 64.16 64.17 64.18 Nilsson, "Gescichte", Vol. I, p.488-493
  65. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.490-491
  66. Pausanias 6.22.8-6.22.9
  67. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I p.495 A4 :Sophocles, Trach.205 Sophocles Trach.214
  68. 68.0 68.1 αμφίπυρος
  69. Pausanias 3.16.8
  70. Heschychius Schol.ad.Theocr. ii 12
  71. άγγελος
  72. 72.0 72.1 Nillson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.315-317
  73. Pausanias 8.23.4
  74. Pausanias 2.30.3
  75. Strabo Geographica vp 239
  76. Pausanias 2.27.4
  77. Heshych : Kalliste..... Hecate established in Kerameikos, who some call Artemis
  78. Plutarch, Themistocles 22
  79. Pausanias 3.25.3
  80. Nilsson, Geschichte, Vol I, p.823
  81. 81.0 81.1 Blundell, Sue and Margaret Williamson, eds. The Sacred and the Feminine in Ancient Greece. New York: Routledge, 1998, 33
  82. Stinton, T. C. W. 1976 is. “Iphigeneia and the Bears of Brauron.” The Classical Quarterly 26:11-13
  83. Nelson, Thomas J. (2022). "Iphigenia in the Iliad and the Architecture of Homeric Allusion" (in en). TAPA 152: 55–101. doi:10.1353/apa.2022.0007. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/852866. 
  84. Euripides, "Iphigeneia among the Taurrians", 1446-1468
  85. βουλαία
  86. Artemis the adviser, Skyris. (related to the family of Skyridai), a form of the mother-goddess: Nilsson, Geschichte, Vol I, p.498 A1
  87. βουληφόρος
  88. Καρύαι
  89. Sarah Iles Johnston, Restless Dead: Encounters between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece. (Berkeley: University of ~California Press), 1999:227
  90. 90.0 90.1 Chitonia
  91. 91.0 91.1 Odyssey 6.102
  92. 92.0 92.1 92.2 92.3 Kerenyi(1959), "The Heroes of the Greeks", p.150-151 The Heroes of the Greeks, p.148-151
  93. 93.0 93.1 Iliad 21.480-21.485
  94. u Pausanias 2.28.2
  95. Pausanias 3.18.4)
  96. Imky Panen(2010) : When the bad bleeds, Bonn University Press
  97. Nilsson, Geschichte Vol I, p.124
  98. Daphnaea
  99. Nilsson, Geschichte Vol I, p.161
  100. καλλαβίς
  101. 101.0 101.1 Nilsson, Geschichte Vol I, p.311-312
  102. Calimachus: Hymn III V 189
  103. Dietrich, "The origins of the Greek religion", p.109
  104. Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary. New York: Barnes & Noble. 1994. p. 458. ISBN 1-56619-147-5. https://archive.org/details/webstersnewunive0000unse_o3r6/page/458/mode/2up. 
  105. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.495 -A4
  106. Sophocles's Trach.214
  107. proteleia gamon : sacrifices oferred before the marriage
  108. Plutarch Arist.20
  109. During the festival, the offerings darata correspond to the offerings gamela (offerings of marriage) during the Apaturia : Nilsson, Vol I, p 493.
  110. γάμελα
  111. 111.0 111.1 Smith, Amy C. (2005). "The politics of weddings at Athens: an iconographic assessment". Leeds International Classical Studies 4 (1): 1–32. https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/6921/1/200501.pdf.  pp. 2-4,24
  112. 112.0 112.1 Nilsson, Geschichte, Vol. I, p.80, 81
  113. Pausanias 8.41.4-8.41.6
  114. Pausanias 8.37.1
  115. ελεία
  116. Hemeresia
  117. Pausanias 8.14.5
  118. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.89-90
  119. Brulé, Pierre (2003). "The feminine and the sacred" (in English). Women of Ancient Greece. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN 9780748679843. https://books.google.com/books?id=r28xEAAAQBAJ. 
  120. Pausanias 8.13.1
  121. Jane Ellen Harrison, A Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion (1903), "The Maiden-Trinities" p.286ff
  122. Iliad 24.603
  123. Leake, William Martin (1830). "Travels in the Morea: with a map and plans". https://books.google.com/books?id=eA0xf2SuS2gC&q=polyaen+issorium&pg=PA177. 
  124. Pausanias 3.14.2
  125. Pausanias 8.35,8
  126. Nilsson,"Geschichte", Vol I p.214
  127. Iliad 16.183
  128. κολαινίς
  129. Nilsson, Geschichte Vol I, p.783 :Aristophanes,Lysistr. V 641, V 388
  130. Aristoph. Clouds 52
  131. γενετυλλις
  132. Pausanias 8.23.6
  133. 133.0 133.1 Nilsson, Geschichte Vol I, p.161, 490
  134. κόρδαξ
  135. Heshychius: "Korythali.........some call the "eirisione" :ειρισιώνη
  136. A similar custom exists in modern Greece, at the beginning of May. The May-wreath is hanged over the door of house
  137. Nilsson (1967), Geschichte Vol I, p.123, 490
  138. Hesych. Kyrritoi, the buffoons with the wooden faces who celebrate the "Korythalia"
  139. Heshych. Tavris (tavros:bull), a phallic dance of the people of Taras
  140. λαφρία
  141. 141.0 141.1 141.2 Pausanias 7.18.11-7.18.12
  142. "At Delphi the festival "Laphria" was introduced by the priests of Delphi "Lab(r)yaden". :Sweeney, Emmet John (2009). Gods, Heroes and Tyrants: Greek chronology in chaos. Algora Publishing. p. 116. ISBN 9780875866826. https://books.google.com/books?id=wI6zh4E06TgC&q=Labryades&pg=PA116. 
  143. Strabo VIII, p.387 : Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.130
  144. Pausanias 4.31.7
  145. At birth she was abandoned by her father and then she was nursed by a she-bear (the symbol of Artemis with a Pre-Greek theriomorph form.) "Aelian: Various Histories. Book XIII, Ch. 1". penelope.uchicago.edu. http://penelope.uchicago.edu/aelian/varhist13.html. 
  146. Howell, Reet A.; Howell, Maxwell L. (1989). "The Atalanta Legend in Art and Literature". Journal of Sporet History 16 (2): 127–139. 
  147. λιμναία
  148. Pausanias 4.4.2
  149. λοχία
  150. λυκεία
  151. Pausanias 2.31.4)
  152. Pausanias 8.36.7-8.36.8
  153. Pausanias 3.16.11
  154. Porphyr.Antr 18-19
  155. Gimbutas, Marija (2007). The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe: Myths and Cult Images. University of California Press. pp. 182. ISBN 978-0-520-25398-8. https://books.google.com/books?id=zKFFOoPlyjIC&q=melissa+goddess&pg=PA182. 
  156. Pausanias 1.2.1
  157. μουνυχία
  158. Pausan. 3.20.9
  159. Euripides Herc. Fur.376
  160. "The Library 2. 5. 3-4". Apollodorus the Library. 1. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1921. pp. 191 with the Scholiast. ark:/13960/t00012x9f. 
  161. Suddaby, Toryn (2014). "Masks and Maidens: Women and the Sanctuary of Artemis Orthia" (in en-US). Constellations 6 (1). doi:10.29173/cons24110. ISSN 2562-0509. 
  162. Plutarch Arist.17
  163. Fischer-Hansen, Tobias; Poulsen, Birte (2009) (in en). From Artemis to Diana: The Goddess of Man and Beast. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 9788763507882. https://books.google.com/books?id=2garBSREfywC&dq=From+Artemis+to+Diane%2C+The+Goddess+of+Man+and+Beast&pg=PA9. 
  164. Pausanias 3.16.9-3.16.1
  165. Pausanias 2.21.1
  166. 166.0 166.1 Margret Karola, Johannes Nollé: Götter, Städte, Feste. Kleinasiatische Münzen der römischen Kaiserzeit. Staatliche Münzsammlung, München 2014, S. 61
  167. 167.0 167.1 Pausanias2.23.5
  168. 168.0 168.1 C.D.Graninger "Apollo, Enodia and fourth century Thessaly" Kernos22/2009 p.109-124
  169. Phoebe
  170. ποταμία
  171. Alfeias
  172. Image : Nilsson, Geschichte, Vol I, Table 30.1
  173. Nilsson,Geschichte, Vol I, p.295-297
  174. Πύθιος
  175. Pausanias 2.30.7
  176. σέλας
  177. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.480
  178. 178.0 178.1 Pausanias 8.37.1, 8.37.6
  179. Pausanias 8.228-8.22.9
  180. Euripidis, Iphigenia in Tauris 1170-1179
  181. Pausanias 3.16.7
  182. 182.0 182.1 Euripides,Iphigeneia in Tauris 1450-1460
  183. Strabo IX, 599
  184. τοξίτης
  185. τοξίας
  186. Pausanias 7.20.1-7.20.2
  187. Pausanias 7.19.1-7.19.6
  188. A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, Corythallia
  189. Shelmerdine 1995, p. 63.
  190. Rutherford 2001, p. 368.
  191. Homer, Iliad 1.9 and 21.502–510; Hesiod, Theogony 918–920
  192. Homeric Hymn 3 to Apollo, 14–18; Gantz, p.38; cf. Orphic Hymn 35 to Leto, 3–5 (Athanassakis & Wolkow, p.31)
  193. Hammond. Oxford Classical Dictionary. p.597-598
  194. Or as a separate island birthplace of Artemis: "Rejoice, blessed Leto, for you bear glorious children, the lord Apollon and Artemis who delights in arrows; her in Ortygia, and him in rocky Delos," says the Homeric Hymn; the etymology Ortygia, "Isle of Quail", is not supported by modern scholars
  195. McLeish, Kenneth. Children of the Gods pp 33f; Leto's birth-pangs, however, are graphically depicted by ancient sources
  196. Servius, Commentary on Virgil's Aeneid 3.73
  197. Rutherford 2001, pp. 364–365.
  198. Bryce, Trevor R. (January 1, 1983). "The Arrival of the Goddess Leto in Lycia". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte (Franz Steiner Verlag) 32 (1): 1–13. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4435828. Retrieved February 13, 2023. 
  199. Diodorus, LIBRARY OF HISTORY BOOK 5.1-8 [1]
  200. Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 1-27
  201. 201.0 201.1 Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 46 ff.
  202. Mair, p.62–63 note a
  203. Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 1-27
  204. Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 1-27
  205. Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 1-27
  206. Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 1-27
  207. Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 1-27
  208. Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 1-27
  209. Diodorus Siculus, Historic Library 4.84.1
  210. Homer, Iliad 5.50
  211. "I think that this is an aetiological myth, intended to explain the rite in which a human effigy was burnt upon a pyre in the festival of the hunters' goddess," observes Martin P. Nilsson, "Fire-Festivals in Ancient Greece", The Journal of Hellenic Studies 43.2 (1923:144-148) p.144 note 2; Pseudo-Apollodorus, Epitome 2.2
  212. Forbes Irving, p.89, 149 n. 1, 166; Fontenrose, p.125; Antoninus Liberalis, 17 (Celoria, p.71; Papathomopoulos, p.31)
  213. Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis 22
  214. Heath, "The Failure of Orpheus", Transactions of the American Philological Association 124 (1994:163-196) p.196
  215. Walter Burkert, Homo Necans (1972), translated by Peter Bing (University of California Press) 1983, p.111
  216. Lacy, "Aktaion and a Lost 'Bath of Artemis'" The Journal of Hellenic Studies 110 (1990:26-42)
  217. 217.0 217.1 Apollodorus, 3.4.4
  218. Aeschylus fr 135 (244), Aeschylus: Agamemnon, Libation-Bearers, Eumenides, Fragments. Translated by Smyth, Herbert Weir. Loeb Classical Library Volume 146. Cambridge, MA. Harvard University Press. 1926, p.464
  219. Mattheson, p.264
  220. Euripides, Bacchae 330-342
  221. Callimachus, Hymn 5 On the Bath of Pallas 109-115
  222. Diodorus Siculus, Historic Library 4.81.3-5
  223. Hyginus, Fabulae 181
  224.  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). "Actaeon". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 157. 
  225. Ovid, Metamorphoses 3.138 ff.; Grimal, s.v. Actaeon, p.10
  226. Pausanias, Description of Greece 9.2.3
  227. Homer, Iliad 24.602 ff, trans. Lattimore
  228. 228.0 228.1 Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.146 ff
  229. Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.21.9
  230. Pseudo-Eratosthenes, Catasterismi 32 Hesiod, Astronomia fr. 4 Evelyn-White, p.70–73 = fr. 7 Freeman, p.12–13; Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.26.2; Hard, p.564; cf. Hyginus, Fabulae 195
  231. Ovid, Fasti 5.539
  232. Kerenyi 1951 (p.204) says that this is "[a]nother name for Artemis herself"
  233. Apollodorus 1.4.5
  234. Aratus, Phaenomena 638
  235. Callimachus, Hymn III to Artemis 265; Nonnus, Dionysiaca 48.395
  236. Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.34.4
  237. Homer, Iliad 5.121–124; Gantz, p.97; Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. Orion; Hansen, p.118
  238. Pseudo-Eratosthenes, Catasterismi 1 [= Hesiod, Astronomia fr. 3 Evelyn-White, p.68–71 = fr. 6 Freeman, p.12; Gantz, p.725; Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. Callisto; Pausanias, 1.25.1, 8.2.6; Hyginus, Fabulae 176, 177. According to the Bibliotheca, Eumelos "and some others" called Callisto the daughter of Lycaon, Asius called her the daughter of Nycteus, Pherecydes called her the daughter of Ceteus, and Hesiod called her a nymph. (Apollodorus, 3.8.2 [= Eumelos, fr. 32 (West 2003, p.248–249) = Asius fr. 9 (West 2003, p.258–259) = Pherecydes FGrHist 3 F86 = Hesiod, fr. 163 Merkelbach-West])
  239. Apollodorus, 3.8.2; Gantz, p.98; Tripp, s.v. Callisto, p.145–146; cf. Pseudo-Eratosthenes, Catasterismi 1 [= Hesiod, Astronomia fr. 4 Evelyn-White, p.70–73 = fr. 7 Freeman, p.12–13
  240. Gantz (p.275) notes that "[t]he text here seems to indicate that Arkas (and others) pursued [Callisto] only after she had entered the sanctuary, and only because she had done so"
  241. Pseudo-Eratosthenes, Catasterismi 1 [= Hesiod, Astronomia fr. 3 Evelyn-White, p.68–71 = fr. 6 Freeman, p. 12; Gantz, p. 98, 725–726; cf. Hesiod, Astronomia fr. 3 Evelyn-White, p.68–71
  242. Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.1.1
  243. Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.1.2
  244. Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.1.3; Gantz, p.727. Compare with Hyginus, Fabulae p.177 and Pausanias, 8.2.6
  245. Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.1.4; Gantz, p.727; cf. Apollodorus, 3.8.2
  246. Gantz (p.726) says that "Kallisto realizes the identity (or at least the gender) of her seducer..."
  247. Ovid, Metamorphoses 401–530; Gantz, p.726
  248. In the first version, Artemis was not aware the bear was Callisto. (Gantz, p. 727) Of the second version, Gantz (p. 727) says that it "[q]uite probably … implies a variant in which Kallisto does not become a bear at all, as Artemis is not likely to transform her and shoot her, or to slay her for her own reasons after Hera has accomplished the transformation"
  249. Apollodorus, 3.8.2; Gantz, p.727; Tripp, s.v. Callisto, p.145–146; cf. Eumelos, fr. 32 (West 2003, p.248–249) [= Apollodorus, 3.8.2. Gantz (p.727) suggests that this version may have come from Pherecydes, while West 2003 says that Eumelos "must have told the story of how Zeus made love to Callisto and changed her into a bear. Artemis killed her, but Zeus saved her child, who was Arcas." (West 2003, p.249, note 26 to fr. 32)
  250. Pausanias, 8.2.6; Gantz, p.727. Compare with Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.1.3 and Pausanias, 1.25.1
  251. Pausanias, 8.2.6–7; Gantz, p.727; cf. Apollodorus, 3.8.2
  252. Homer, Odyssey 11.580 ff; Pindar, Pythian Odes 4.161–165; Apollodorus 1.4.1; Quintus Smyrnaeus, Posthomerica 3.390 ff; Hard, p.147–148
  253. Hyginus, Fabulae 200; Hard, p.192
  254. Grimal, s.v. Aura, p.71
  255. Apollodorus, 3.14.4; cf. Ovid, Metamorphoses 10.652; Hyginus, Fabulae 248; Plutarch, Quaestiones Convivales 4.5.3; Athenaeus, The Deipnosophists 2.80
  256. Nonnus, Dionysiaca 42.204–211; Grimal, s.v. Adonis, p.12–13
  257. Antoninus Liberalis, p.21
  258. Pindar, Pythian Ode 3 str1-ant3; Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.26.6
  259. Smith, Rowland (1901). The Greek romances of Heliodorus, Longus and Achilles Tatius; comprising the Ethiopics; or, Adventures of Theagenes and Chariclea; The pastoral amours of Daphnis and Chloe; and The loves of Citopho and Leucippe. London: G. Bell and Sons. p. 8.12. https://archive.org/details/cu31924026460869/mode/2up?view=theater. 
  260. Strelan, Rick (1996). "Paul, Artemis, and the Jews in Ephesus". Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft (Berlin, New York City: De Gruyter) 80: 75. ISBN 9783110150209. ISSN 0171-6441. https://books.google.com/books?id=nw1xdz7fO18C. 
  261. Ovid, Metamorphoses 5.319; Antoninus Liberalis, Collection of Transformations 28
  262. Rutherford, Ian (February 19, 2016). Greco-Egyptian Interactions: Literature, Translation, and Culture, 500 BC-AD 300. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-19-965612-7. https://books.google.com/books?id=oBqHCwAAQBAJ. 
  263. Hyginus, Astronomica 2.16.2
  264. 264.0 264.1 Atsma, Aaron J.. "FAVOUR OF ARTEMIS: Greek mythology". Theoi.com. http://www.theoi.com/Olympios/ArtemisFavour.html#Iphigeneia. 
  265. 265.0 265.1 Scholia on the Iliad 20.67 ; Hansen, p.10; Anecdota græca e codd. manuscriptis Bibliothecæ regiæ parisiensis, p.120
  266. Homer, Iliad 21.468-497
  267. Homer, Iliad 502-510
  268. "... a goddess universally worshipped in historical Greece, but in all likelihood pre-Hellenic." Hammond, Oxford Classical Dictionary, p.126
  269. Golden, M., Children and Childhood in Classical Athens (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990), p.84
  270. 270.0 270.1 Wise, Susan (2007). Childbirth Votives and Rituals in Ancient Greece (PhD). University of Cincinnati. Archived from the original on 17 November 2022. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  271. van der Toorn et al, s.v. Artemis, p. 93
  272. Pseudo-Apollodorus. Bibliotheca. 
  273. The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal, p.81
  274. Budin, p.110 "One site especially famous for its choruses dedicated to Artemis was Ephesos. According to the Hellenistic poet Kallimakhos, this custom was established by the Amazons who founded the cult by dancing around a wooden image of the goddess."
  275. "SOL Search". https://www.cs.uky.edu/~raphael/sol/sol-entries/delta/1345. 
  276. Mikalson, p.18
  277. 277.0 277.1 277.2 277.3 "Ancient Athenian Festival Calendar". Winterscapes.com. 2007-07-24. http://www.winterscapes.com/kharis/calendar.htm#Thar. 
  278. "Elaphebolia". http://www.hellenion.org/festivals/elaphebolia/. 
  279. 279.00 279.01 279.02 279.03 279.04 279.05 279.06 279.07 279.08 279.09 279.10 279.11 279.12 279.13 279.14 279.15 279.16 279.17 279.18 279.19 279.20 279.21 Nilsson, "Geschichte, Vol I p.483-486
  280. Blundell, Sue and Margaret Williamson, eds. The Sacred and the Feminine in Ancient Greece. New York: Routledge, 1998, 33.
  281. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities edited by William Smith (1870) p.769
  282. Pausanias 1.19.6
  283. Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). "Agroteras Thusia". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 427. 
  284. Pausanias 1.31.4
  285. Pausanias 1.31.5
  286. Forlorn hopes: Phocian despair (Φωκική απόνοια)
  287. Pausanias 10,1.6
  288. Nilsson, Geschichte,Vol I, p. 27,484
  289. Sweeney, Emmet John (2009). Gods, Heroes and Tyrants: Greek chronology in chaos. Algora Publishing. p. 116. ISBN 9780875866826. https://books.google.com/books?id=wI6zh4E06TgC&q=Labryades&pg=PA116. 
  290. 290.0 290.1 290.2 290.3 290.4 290.5 290.6 Nilsson, "Geschichte, Vol I p.492-495
  291. Pausanias 10.32.14
  292. Pausanias 10.36.5
  293. Pausanias 9.19.7
  294. Template:Cite Strabo
  295. 295.0 295.1 Pausanias 4.31.7
  296. Eftychia Stavrianopoulou (2013), "Ritual and Communication in Graeco-Roman world",p.102, Open editions books. p.102
  297. Pausanias 7.19.1–7.19.4
  298. Xenophon Hellenica 4.4.2
  299. Pausanias 7.26.2-7.26.3
  300. Eyprosyne Boutsikas (2020), "The Cosmos in Ancient Greek religious experience" p.135, Cambridge University Press p.135
  301. 301.0 301.1 301.2 301.3 301.4 301.5 301.6 301.7 Nilsson, Geschichte, Vol I, p.487-491
  302. Calame, Claude (2001). Choruses of Young women in Ancient Greece. Rowman @Littlefield Publishers Inc.. p. 169. 
  303. Pausanias 4.4.2
  304. Maria Spathi (2018) "Findings of cultic traditions for goddess Artemis", p. Center for Hellenic studies in Greece. Harvard University.Cultic traditions of Artemis
  305. Pausanias 3.20.7
  306. Nilsson, "Geschichte" Vol I, p. 161
  307. Pausanias 3.23.10
  308. Pausanias 3.10.7
  309. Pausanias 3.22.11-3.22.12
  310. Pausanias 6.21.11-6.22.1
  311. 311.0 311.1 Pausanias 6.22.8-6.22.10)
  312. 312.0 312.1 312.2 Strabo VIII p.343
  313. Pausanias 3.24.9
  314. Pausanias 3.24.8
  315. Pausanias 8.22.8
  316. Pausanias 8.13.1
  317. Pausanias 8.53.11
  318. Pausanias 8.39.5
  319. "SARON, Greek Mythology Index". Mythindex.com. http://www.mythindex.com/greek-mythology/S/Saron.html. 
  320. Eugene Borza (2020), "In the shadow of Olympus. Emergence of Macedonia", p.192, Princeton University Press. p.192
  321. Strabo (xiv.1.19)
  322. J. H. Croon, "Hot Springs and Healing: A Preliminary Answer" Mnemosyne, Fourth Series, 14.2 (1961:140–141).
  323. Antonin. Lib 40 : Nilsson, Vol I, p.484
  324. Pliny the Elder. Natural History. 35–93. 
  325. "Theater and Autocracy in Ancient world" (2022), p.65 eds. Walter de Gruyter .p.65
  326. 326.0 326.1 326.2 326.3 Hjerrild, B. (2009). Near Eastern equivalents to Artemis. Tobias Fischer-Hansen & Birte Poulsen, eds. From Artemis to Diana: The Goddess of Man and Beast. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN:8763507889, 9788763507882
  327. The Homeric hymns. London: Penguin Books. 2003. ISBN 0-14-043782-7. OCLC 59339816. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/59339816. 
  328. ""Potnia Aswia: Anatolian Contributions to Greek Religion" by Sarah P. Morris". https://www.scribd.com/doc/98868504/49-MORRIS-Potnia-Aswiya-Anatolian-Greek-Religion. 
  329. Acts 19:28
  330. Sacks (1995), p.35
  331. Hard, p.46; Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. Selene; Morford, p.64, 219–220; Smith, s.v. Selene
  332. Adler, Margot (1986). Drawing Down the Moon: Witches, Druids, Goddess-Worshippers, and Other Pagans in America Today, Revised and Expanded Edition. Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-3253-4. 
  333. Shen (2018), p.60
  334. Gury, Françoise, "Selene, Luna" in Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae (LIMC) VII.1 Artemis Verlag, Zürich and Munich, 1994. ISBN:3-7608-8751-1
  335. Sfameni Gasparro, Giulia (2007). "The Hellenistic Face of Isis: Cosmic and Saviour Goddess". in Bricault, Laurent; Versluys, Miguel John; Meyboom, Paul G. P.. Nile into Tiber: Egypt in the Roman World. Proceedings of the IIIrd International Conference of Isis Studies, Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden University, May 11–14 2005. Brill. pp. 40–72. ISBN 978-90-04-15420-9. https://archive.org/details/nileintotiberegy00bric. 
  336. 336.0 336.1 Hard, p.187
  337. 337.0 337.1 Budin, p.62
  338. van der Toorn et al, s.v. Artemis, p.92
  339. Chrysippus fr. 748
  340. Cicero, De Natura Deorum 2.68
  341. Strabo, Geographica 14.1.6
  342. Morford, p. 64
  343. Pannen, p.96
  344. Servius, Commentary on the Aeneid 6.118; Green, C. M. C. (2007). Roman Religion and the Cult of Diana at Aricia. New York: Cambridge University Press
  345. 345.0 345.1 Bergmann, Bettina, Joseph Farrell, Denis Feeney, James Ker, Damien Nelis, and Celia Schultz. "An Exciting Provocation: John F. Miller's 'Apollo, Augustus, and the Poets.'" Vergilius (1959-) 58 (2012): 10–11
  346. Horace, Carmen Saeculare 33–36
  347. Virgil, Aeneid 9.404
  348. Smith, s.v. Selene
  349. Collins-Clinton, p.88
  350. Seyffert, s.v. Hecate
  351. 2323243 Perseus Tufts Consulted 2017-05-05
  352. Fairbanks, Arthur. A Handbook of Greek Religion. American Book Company, 1910. p.229
  353. 353.0 353.1 Nilsson, "Geschichte Vol I p. 497
  354. 354.0 354.1 354.2 Pausanias 8.37.4
  355. 355.0 355.1 355.2 355.3 Nilsson, "Geschichte" Vol I, p.482-484
  356. Kimberley Christine Patton, Religion of the Gods: Ritual, Paradox, and Reflexivity p.333
  357. Callimachus, Hymn 3 to Artemis 98
  358. L.H.Jeffery (1976), "The city states" p.23 Ernest Benn Ltd.
  359. Pindar, Olympian Odes 3
  360. Callimachus, Hymn 3 to Artemis 86
  361. Nilsson Vol I, p.285-486
  362. Suda, Ἄρκτος ἢ Βραυρωνίοις
  363. Nilsson, "Geschicte", p.485 A6
  364. Homer, the Iliad 9.530
  365. Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.14.4
  366. Hard, p.415, calls it "the greatest adventure in Aetolian legend"
  367. Ovid, Metamorphoses 8.284–289
  368. Antoninus Liberalis, Transformations 2
  369. Aelian, On Animals 12.4
  370. Nilsson, "Gescichte" Vol I, p.83, 482
  371. Pausanias 3.16.7
  372. Nilsson, "Geschichte", Vol I, p.495 A4 :Sophocles, Trach.214 Sophocles Trach.214
  373. Homer portrayed Artemis as girlish in the Iliad
  374. Greek poets variously described Artemis' bow as silver or gold: "Over the shadowy hills and windy peaks she draws her golden bow." (Homeric Hymn to Artemis), and it is a golden bow as well in Ovid, Metamorphoses 1.693, where her nymph's is of horn. "And how often goddess, didst thou make trial of thy silver bow?", asks Callimachus for whom it is a Cydonian bow that the Cyclopes make for her (Callimachus, Hymn 3 to Artemis)
  375. "APEX – Artemis". Apex-telescope.org. 2010-01-11. http://www.apex-telescope.org/instruments/pi/artemis/. 
  376. [2]. NASA. Accessed on 19 May 2019
  377. Foust, Jeff (2021-11-09). "NASA delays human lunar landing to at least 2025" (in en-US). https://spacenews.com/nasa-delays-human-lunar-landing-to-at-least-2025/. 
  378. This chart is based upon Hesiod's Theogony, unless otherwise noted
  379. According to Homer, Iliad 1.570–579, 14.338, Odyssey 8.312, Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus, see Gantz, p.74
  380. According to Hesiod, Theogony 927–929, Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone, with no father, see Gantz, p.74
  381. According to Hesiod's Theogony 886–890, of Zeus' children by his seven wives, Athena was the first to be conceived, but the last to be born; Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her, later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena "from his head", see Gantz, p.51–52, 83–84
  382. According to Hesiod, Theogony 183–200, Aphrodite was born from Uranus' severed genitals, see Gantz, p.99–100
  383. According to Homer, Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus (Iliad 3.374, 20.105; Odyssey 8.308, 320) and Dione (Iliad 5.370–71), see Gantz, p.99–100

Bibliography

  • Aelian, On Animals, Volume III: Books 12-17, translated by A. F. Scholfield, Loeb Classical Library No. 449, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1959. Online version at Harvard University Press. ISBN:978-0-674-99494-2.
  • Apollodorus, Apollodorus, The Library, with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S. in 2 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1921. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Aratus Solensis, Phaenomena translated by G. R. Mair. Loeb Classical Library Volume 129. London: William Heinemann, 1921. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Arnold, Irene Ringwood (1972). "Festivals of Ephesus". American Journal of Archaeology 77 (1): 17–22. doi:10.2307/503607. 
  • Athenaeus, The Learned Banqueters, Volume V: Books 10.420e-11. Edited and translated by S. Douglas Olson. Loeb Classical Library 274. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009.
  • Budin, Stephanie, Artemis, Routledge publications, 2016, ISBN:978-0-415-72541-5. Google books.
  • Burkert, Walter, Greek Religion, Harvard University Press, 1985. ISBN:0-674-36281-0.
  • Callimachus. Hymns, translated by Alexander William Mair (1875–1928). London: William Heinemann; New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1921. Internet Archive. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Celoria, Francis, The Metamorphoses of Antoninus Liberalis: A Translation with a Commentary, Routledge, 1992. ISBN:978-0-415-06896-3.
  • Cicero, Nature of the Gods, from the Treatises of M.T. Cicero, translated by Charles Duke Yonge (1812-1891), Bohn edition of 1878, in the public domain. Text available online at Topos text.
  • Collins-Clinton, Jacquelyn, Cosa: The Sculpture and Furnishings in Stone and Marble, University of Michigan Press, 2020, ISBN:978-0-472-13159-4. Google books.
  • Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca Historica. Vol 1-2. Immanel Bekker. Ludwig Dindorf. Friedrich Vogel. in aedibus B. G. Teubneri. Leipzig. 1888–1890. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Evelyn-White, Hugh, The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White. Homeric Hymns. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Google Books. Internet Archive.
  • Fontenrose, Joseph Eddy, Orion: The Myth of the Hunter and the Huntress, University of California Press, 1981. ISBN:0-520-09632-0.
  • Forbes Irving, P. M. C., Metamorphosis in Greek Myths, Clarendon Press Oxford, 1990. ISBN:978-0-198-14730-5.
  • Freeman, Kathleen, Ancilla to the Pre-Socratic Philosophers: A Complete Translation of the Fragments in Diels, Fragmente Der Vorsokratiker, Harvard University Press, 1983. ISBN:9780674035010.
  • Gantz, Timothy, Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996, Two volumes: ISBN:978-0-8018-5360-9 (Vol. 1), ISBN:978-0-8018-5362-3 (Vol. 2).
  • Robert Graves (1955) 1960. The Greek Myths (Penguin)
  • Grimal, Pierre, The Dictionary of Classical Mythology, Wiley-Blackwell, 1996. ISBN:978-0-631-20102-1.
  • Hansen, William, Handbook of Classical Mythology, ABC-CLIO, 2004. ISBN:978-1576072264.
  • Hard, Robin, The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: Based on H.J. Rose's "Handbook of Greek Mythology", Psychology Press, 2004, ISBN:9780415186360. Google Books.
  • Homer, The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PhD in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Hesiod, Astronomia, in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Internet Archive.
  • Hesiod, Theogony, in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Hyginus, Gaius Julius, De Astronomica, in The Myths of Hyginus, edited and translated by Mary A. Grant, Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1960. Online version at ToposText.
  • Hyginus, Gaius Julius, Fabulae, in The Myths of Hyginus, edited and translated by Mary A. Grant, Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1960. Online version at ToposText.
  • Immendörfer, Michael (2017). Ephesians and Artemis: The Cult of the Great Goddess of Ephesus as the Epistle's Context. Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-3-16-155264-9. 
  • Kerényi, Karl (1951), The Gods of the Greeks, Thames and Hudson, London, 1951.
  • Keightley, Thomas (1838). The Mythology of Ancient Greece and Italy. Whittaker and Co. 
  • Konstan, David (2014). Beauty: The Fortunes of an Ancient Greek Idea. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-992726-5. 
  • Liddell, Henry George, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, revised and augmented throughout by Sir Henry Stuart Jones with the assistance of Roderick McKenzie, Clarendon Press Oxford, 1940. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Mikalson, Jon D., The Sacred and Civil Calendar of the Athenian Year, Princeton University Press, 1975. Google books.
  • Morford, Mark P. O., Robert J. Lenardon, Classical Mythology, Eighth Edition, Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN:978-0-19-530805-1. Internet Archive.
  • Most, G.W., Hesiod, Theogony, Works and Days, Testimonia, Edited and translated by Glenn W. Most, Loeb Classical Library No. 57, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2018. ISBN:978-0-674-99720-2. Online version at Harvard University Press.
  • Most, G.W., Hesiod: The Shield, Catalogue of Women, Other Fragments, Loeb Classical Library, No. 503, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2007, 2018. ISBN:978-0-674-99721-9. Online version at Harvard University Press.
  • Nonnus, Dionysiaca; translated by Rouse, W H D, in three volumes. Loeb Classical Library No. 346, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1940. Internet Archive.
  • Ovid, Metamorphoses, Brookes More, Boston, Cornhill Publishing Co. 1922. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Ovid. Metamorphoses, Volume I: Books 1-8. Translated by Frank Justus Miller. Revised by G. P. Goold. Loeb Classical Library No. 42. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1977, first published 1916. ISBN:978-0-674-99046-3. Online version at Harvard University Press.
  • Ovid, Ovid's Fasti: With an English translation by Sir James George Frazer, London: W. Heinemann LTD; Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1959. Internet Archive.
  • The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal: Volume 24, 1996, ISBN:0-89236-397-5. Google books.
  • The Oxford Classical Dictionary, second edition, Hammond, N.G.L. and Howard Hayes Scullard (editors), Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN:0-19-869117-3.
  • Pannen, Imke, When the Bad Bleeds: Mantic Elements in English Renaissance Revenge Tragedy, Volume 3 of Representations & Reflections; V&R unipress GmbH, 2010. ISBN:9783899716405.
  • Papathomopoulos, Manolis, Antoninus Liberalis: Les Métamorphoses, Collection Budé, Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 1968. ISBN:978-2-251-00020-6.
  • Pausanias, Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Pindar, The Odes of Pindar including the Principal Fragments with an Introduction and an English Translation by Sir John Sandys, Litt.D., FBA. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1937. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Powell, Barry B. (2012). Classical Myth. Pearson. ISBN 978-0-205-17607-6. 
  • Rutherford, Ian (2001). Pindar's Paeans: A Reading of the Fragments with a Survey of the Genre. New York City: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-814381-8. 
  • Shelmerdine, Susan (1995). The Homeric Hymns. Focus Publishing. ISBN 978-1-58510-477-2. 
  • Smith, William; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London (1873).
  • Strabo, The Geography of Strabo. Edition by H.L. Jones. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Toorn, Karel van der; Becking, Bob; Horst, Pieter Willem van der, eds. (1999), Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible, 2nd ed., Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, p. 92 .
  • Tripp, Edward, Crowell's Handbook of Classical Mythology, Thomas Y. Crowell Co; First edition (June 1970). ISBN:069022608X.
  • West, M. L. (2003), Greek Epic Fragments: From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC, edited and translated by Martin L. West, Loeb Classical Library No. 497, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2003. ISBN:978-0-674-99605-2. Online version at Harvard University Press.
  • Sacks, David (January 1, 1995). Murray, Oswyn. ed. A Dictionary of the Ancient Greek World. Oxford, England , United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195112061. https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofanci00sack. 
  • Shen, Ann (April 3, 2018). Legendary Ladies: 50 Goddesses to Empower and Inspire You. San Francisco , United States: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-1452163413. https://books.google.com/books?id=tpNFDwAAQBAJ. Retrieved August 14, 2019. 

External links