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Diana (mythology)

Diana[a] is a goddess in Roman and Hellenistic religion, primarily considered a patroness of the countryside, hunters, crossroads, and the Moon. She is equated with the Greek goddess Artemis, and absorbed much of Artemis' mythology early in Roman history, including a birth on the island of Delos to parents Jupiter and Latona, and a twin brother, Apollo,[2] though she had an independent origin in Italy.

Diana
Goddess of the hunt, wild animals, fertility, and the Moon[1]
Member of the Dii Consentes
Diana as Huntress. Marble by Bernardino Cametti, 1720. Pedestal by Pascal Latour, 1754. Bode Museum, Berlin.
SymbolBow and quiver, deer, hunting dogs, crescent moon
TemplesSanctuary at Lake Nemi, Temple of Diana (Rome)
FestivalsNemoralia
Personal information
ParentsJupiter and Latona
Siblings
  • Early Roman: N/A
  • Hellenistic: Apollo
Children
  • Early Roman: N/A
  • Hellenistic: N/A
Equivalents
Greek equivalentArtemis, Hecate
Etruscan equivalentArtume
Egyptian equivalentNeith
Statue of Diana-Artemis, fresco from Pompeii, 50–1 BCE
Diana by Renato Torres (Portalegre), is one of the best and most representative tapestries of the European and Portuguese tapestries of the 20th century.

Diana is considered a virgin goddess and protector of childbirth. Historically, Diana made up a triad with two other Roman deities: Egeria the water nymph, her servant and assistant midwife; and Virbius, the woodland god.[3]

Diana is revered in modern neopagan religions including Roman neopaganism, Stregheria, and Wicca. In the ancient, medieval, and modern periods, Diana has been considered a triple deity, merged with a goddess of the moon (Luna/Selene) and the underworld (usually Hecate).[4][5]

Etymology

The name Dīāna probably derives from Latin dīus ('godly'), ultimately from Proto-Italic *dīwī, meaning 'divine, heavenly'.[6][7] It stems from Proto-Indo-European *diwyós ('divine, heavenly'), formed with the stem *dyew- ('daylight sky') attached the thematic suffix -yós.[8][9] Cognates appear in Myceanean Greek di-wi-ja, in Ancient Greek dîos (δῖος; 'belonging to heaven, godlike'), and in Sanskrit divyá ('heavenly' or 'celestial').[10]

The ancient Latin writers Varro and Cicero considered the etymology of Dīāna as allied to that of dies and connected to the shine of the Moon, noting that one of her titles is Diana Lucifera ("light-bearer").

... people regard Diana and the moon as one and the same. ... the moon (luna) is so called from the verb to shine (lucere). Lucina is identified with it, which is why in our country they invoke Juno Lucina in childbirth, just as the Greeks call on Diana the Light-bearer. Diana also has the name Omnivaga ("wandering everywhere"), not because of her hunting but because she is numbered as one of the seven planets; her name Diana derives from the fact that she turns darkness into daylight (dies). She is invoked at childbirth because children are born occasionally after seven, or usually after nine, lunar revolutions ...

--Quintus Lucilius Balbus as recorded by Marcus Tullius Cicero and translated by P.G. Walsh. De Natura Deorum (On the Nature of the Gods), Book II, Part ii, Section c [11]

Description

As a goddess of the countryside

 
Diana Hunting, Guillaume Seignac

The persona of Diana is complex, and contains a number of archaic features. Diana was originally considered to be a goddess of the wilderness and of the hunt, a central sport in both Roman and Greek culture.[12] Early Roman inscriptions to Diana celebrated her primarily as a huntress and patron of hunters. Later, in the Hellenistic period, Diana came to be equally or more revered as a goddess not of the wild woodland but of the "tame" countryside, or villa rustica, the idealization of which was common in Greek thought and poetry. This dual role as goddess of both civilization and the wild, and therefore the civilized countryside, first applied to the Greek goddess Artemis (for example, in the 3rd century BCE poetry of Anacreon).[13] By the 3rd century CE, after Greek influence had a profound impact on Roman religion, Diana had been almost fully combined with Artemis and took on many of her attributes, both in her spiritual domains and in the description of her appearance. The Roman poet Nemesianus wrote a typical description of Diana: She carried a bow and a quiver full of golden arrows, wore a golden cloak, purple half-boots, and a belt with a jeweled buckle to hold her tunic together, and wore her hair gathered in a ribbon.[12] By the 5th century CE, almost a millennia after her cult's entry into Rome, the philosopher Proclus could still characterize Diana as "the inspective guardian of every thing rural, [who] represses every thing rustic and uncultivated."[14]

As a triple goddess

Diana was often considered an aspect of a triple goddess, known as Diana triformis: Diana, Luna, and Hecate. According to historian C.M. Green, "these were neither different goddesses nor an amalgamation of different goddesses. They were Diana...Diana as huntress, Diana as the moon, Diana of the underworld."[5] At her sacred grove on the shores of Lake Nemi, Diana was venerated as a triple goddess beginning in the late 6th century BCE.

 
 
Two examples of a 1st-century BCE denarius (RRC 486/1) depicting the head of Diana Nemorensis and her triple cult statue[15]

Andreas Alföldi interpreted an image on a late Republican coin as the Latin Diana "conceived as a threefold unity of the divine huntress, the Moon goddess and the goddess of the nether world, Hekate".[16] This coin, minted by P. Accoleius Lariscolus in 43 BCE, has been acknowledged as representing an archaic statue of Diana Nemorensis.[17] It represents Artemis with the bow at one extremity, Luna-Selene with flowers at the other and a central deity not immediately identifiable, all united by a horizontal bar. The iconographical analysis allows the dating of this image to the 6th century at which time there are Etruscan models. The coin shows that the triple goddess cult image still stood in the lucus of Nemi in 43 BCE. Lake Nemi was called Triviae lacus by Virgil (Aeneid 7.516), while Horace called Diana montium custos nemoremque virgo ("keeper of the mountains and virgin of Nemi") and diva triformis ("three-form goddess").[18]

Two heads found in the sanctuary[19] and the Roman theatre at Nemi, which have a hollow on their back, lend support to this interpretation of an archaic triple Diana.[20]

As goddess of crossroads and the underworld

The earliest epithet of Diana was Trivia, and she was addressed with that title by Virgil,[21] Catullus,[22] and many others. "Trivia" comes from the Latin trivium, "triple way", and refers to Diana's guardianship over roadways, particularly Y-junctions or three-way crossroads. This role carried a somewhat dark and dangerous connotation, as it metaphorically pointed the way to the underworld.[5] In the 1st-century CE play Medea, Seneca's titular sorceress calls on Trivia to cast a magic spell. She evokes the triple goddess of Diana, Selene, and Hecate, and specifies that she requires the powers of the latter.[5] The 1st century poet Horace similarly wrote of a magic incantation invoking the power of both Diana and Proserpina.[23] The symbol of the crossroads is relevant to several aspects of Diana's domain. It can symbolize the paths hunters may encounter in the forest, lit only by the full moon; this symbolizes making choices "in the dark" without the light of guidance.[5]

Diana's role as a goddess of the underworld, or at least of ushering people between life and death, caused her early on to be conflated with Hecate (and occasionally also with Proserpina). However, her role as an underworld goddess appears to pre-date strong Greek influence (though the early Greek colony of Cumae had a cult of Hekate and certainly had contacts with the Latins[24]). A theater in her sanctuary at Lake Nemi included a pit and tunnel that would have allowed actors to easily descend on one side of the stage and ascend on the other, indicating a connection between the phases of the moon and a descent by the moon goddess into the underworld.[5] It is likely that her underworld aspect in her original Latin worship did not have a distinct name, like Luna was for her moon aspect. This is due to a seeming reluctance or taboo by the early Latins to name underworld deities, and the fact that they believed the underworld to be silent, precluding naming. Hekate, a Greek goddess also associated with the boundary between the earth and the underworld, became attached to Diana as a name for her underworld aspect following Greek influence.[5]

As goddess of childbirth

Diana was often considered to be a goddess associated with fertility and childbirth, and the protection of women during labor. This probably arose as an extension of her association with the moon, whose cycles were believed to parallel the menstrual cycle, and which was used to track the months during pregnancy.[5] At her shrine in Aricia, worshipers left votive terracotta offerings for the goddess in the shapes of babies and wombs, and the temple there also offered care of pups and pregnant dogs. This care of infants also extended to the training of both young people and dogs, especially for hunting.[5] In her role as a protector of childbirth, Diana was called Diana Lucina, Diana Lucifera or even Juno Lucina, because her domain overlapped with that of the goddess Juno. The title of Juno may also have had an independent origin as it applied to Diana, with the literal meaning of "helper" – Diana as Juno Lucina would be the "helper of childbirth".[5]

As a "frame god"

 
Diana as Personification of the Night. Anton Raphael Mengs, c. 1765.

According to a theory proposed by Georges Dumézil, Diana falls into a particular subset of celestial gods, referred to in histories of religion as frame gods. Such gods, while keeping the original features of celestial divinities (i.e. transcendent heavenly power and abstention from direct rule in worldly matters), did not share the fate of other celestial gods in Indoeuropean religions – that of becoming dei otiosi, or gods without practical purpose,[25] since they did retain a particular sort of influence over the world and mankind.[26] The celestial character of Diana is reflected in her connection with inaccessibility, virginity, light, and her preference for dwelling on high mountains and in sacred woods. Diana, therefore, reflects the heavenly world in its sovereignty, supremacy, impassibility, and indifference towards such secular matters as the fates of mortals and states. At the same time, however, she is seen as active in ensuring the succession of kings and in the preservation of humankind through the protection of childbirth.[27] These functions are apparent in the traditional institutions and cults related to the goddess:

  1. The legend of the rex Nemorensis, Diana's sacerdos (priest) in the Arician wood, who held the position until someone else challenged and killed him in a duel, after breaking a branch from a certain tree of the wood. This ever open succession reveals the character and mission of the goddess as a guarantor of kingly status through successive generations.[28] Her function as bestower of authority to rule is also attested in the story related by Livy in which a Sabine man who sacrifices a heifer to Diana wins for his country the seat of the Roman empire.[29]
  2. Diana was also worshiped by women who wanted to be pregnant or who, once pregnant, prayed for an easy delivery. This form of worship is attested in archaeological finds of votive statuettes in her sanctuary in the nemus Aricinum as well as in ancient sources, e.g. Ovid.[28]

According to Dumezil, the forerunner of all frame gods is an Indian epic hero who was the image (avatar) of the Vedic god Dyaus. Having renounced the world, in his roles of father and king, he attained the status of an immortal being while retaining the duty of ensuring that his dynasty is preserved and that there is always a new king for each generation. The Scandinavian god Heimdallr performs an analogous function: he is born first and will die last. He too gives origin to kingship and the first king, bestowing on him regal prerogatives. Diana, although a female deity, has exactly the same functions, preserving mankind through childbirth and royal succession.

F. H. Pairault, in her essay on Diana, qualified Dumézil's theory as "impossible to verify".

Mythology

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

Unlike the Greek gods, Roman gods were originally considered to be numina: divine powers of presence and will that did not necessarily have physical form. At the time Rome was founded, Diana and the other major Roman gods probably did not have much mythology per se, or any depictions in human form. The idea of gods as having anthropomorphic qualities and human-like personalities and actions developed later, under the influence of Greek and Etruscan religion.[30]

By the 3rd century BCE, Diana is found listed among the twelve major gods of the Roman pantheon by the poet Ennius. Though the Capitoline Triad were the primary state gods of Rome, early Roman myth did not assign a strict hierarchy to the gods the way Greek mythology did, though the Greek hierarchy would eventually be adopted by Roman religion as well.[30]

Once Greek influence had caused Diana to be considered identical to the Greek goddess Artemis, Diana acquired Artemis's physical description, attributes, and variants of her myths as well. Like Artemis, Diana is usually depicted in art wearing a women’s chiton, shortened in the kolpos style to facilitate mobility during hunting, with a hunting bow and quiver, and often accompanied by hunting dogs. A 1st-century BCE Roman coin (see above) depicted her with a unique, short hairstyle, and in triple form, with one form holding a bow and another holding a poppy.[5]

Family

When worship of Apollo was first introduced to Rome, Diana became conflated with Apollo's sister Artemis as in the earlier Greek myths, and as such she became identified as the daughter of Apollo's parents Latona and Jupiter. Though Diana was usually considered to be a virgin goddess like Artemis, later authors sometimes attributed consorts and children to her. According to Cicero and Ennius, Trivia (an epithet of Diana) and Caelus were the parents of Janus, as well as of Saturn and Ops.[31]

According to Macrobius (who cited Nigidius Figulus and Cicero), Janus and Jana (Diana) are a pair of divinities, worshiped as the sun and moon. Janus was said to receive sacrifices before all the others because, through him, the way of access to the desired deity is made apparent.[32]

Myth of Actaeon

Diana's mythology incorporated stories which were variants of earlier stories about Artemis. Possibly the most well-known of these is the myth of Actaeon. In Ovid's version of this myth, part of his poem Metamorphoses, he tells of a pool or grotto hidden in the wooded valley of Gargaphie. There, Diana, the goddess of the woods, would bathe and rest after a hunt. Actaeon, a young hunter, stumbled across the grotto and accidentally witnessed the goddess bathing without invitation. In retaliation, Diana splashed him with water from the pool, cursing him, and he transformed into a deer. His own hunting dogs caught his scent, and tore him apart.[5]

Ovid's version of the myth of Actaeon differs from most earlier sources. Unlike earlier myths about Artemis, Actaeon is killed for an innocent mistake, glimpsing Diana bathing. An earlier variant of this myth, known as the Bath of Pallas, had the hunter intentionally spy on the bathing goddess Pallas (Athena), and earlier versions of the myth involving Artemis did not involve the bath at all.[33]

Worship in the classical period

 
An ancient Fourth-Pompeian-Style Roman wall painting depicting a scene of sacrifice in honor of the goddess Diana; she is seen here accompanied by a deer. The fresco was discovered in the triclinium of House of the Vettii in Pompeii, Italy.

Diana was an ancient goddess common to all Latin tribes. Therefore, many sanctuaries were dedicated to her in the lands inhabited by Latins. Her primary sanctuary was a woodland grove overlooking Lake Nemi, a body of water also known as "Diana's Mirror", where she was worshiped as Diana Nemorensis, or "Diana of the Wood". In Rome, the cult of Diana may have been almost as old as the city itself. Varro mentions her in the list of deities to whom king Titus Tatius promised to build a shrine. His list included Luna and Diana Lucina as separate entities. Another testimony to the antiquity of her cult is to be found in the lex regia of King Tullus Hostilius that condemns those guilty of incest to the sacratio to Diana. She had a temple in Rome on the Aventine Hill, according to tradition dedicated by king Servius Tullius. Its location is remarkable as the Aventine is situated outside the pomerium, i.e. original territory of the city, in order to comply with the tradition that Diana was a goddess common to all Latins and not exclusively of the Romans. Being placed on the Aventine, and thus outside the pomerium, meant that Diana's cult essentially remained a foreign one, like that of Bacchus; she was never officially transferred to Rome as Juno was after the sack of Veii.

Other known sanctuaries and temples to Diana include Colle di Corne near Tusculum,[34] where she is referred to with the archaic Latin name of deva Cornisca and where existed a collegium of worshippers;[35] at Évora, Portugal;[36] Mount Algidus, also near Tusculum;[37] at Lavinium;[38] and at Tibur (Tivoli), where she is referred to as Diana Opifera Nemorensis.[39] Diana was also worshiped at a sacred wood mentioned by Livy[40]ad compitum Anagninum (near Anagni), and on Mount Tifata in Campania.[41]

According to Plutarch, men and women alike were worshipers of Diana and were welcomed into all of her temples. The one exception seems to have been a temple on the Vicus Patricius, which men either did not enter due to tradition, or were not allowed to enter. Plutarch related a legend that a man had attempted to assault a woman worshiping in this temple and was killed by a pack of dogs (echoing the myth of Diana and Actaeon), which resulted in a superstition against men entering the temple.[42]

A feature common to nearly all of Diana's temples and shrines by the second century AD was the hanging up of stag antlers. Plutarch noted that the only exception to this was the temple on the Aventine Hill, in which bull horns had been hung up instead. Plutarch explains this by way of reference to a legend surrounding the sacrifice of an impressive Sabine bull by King Servius at the founding of the Aventine temple.[42]

Sanctuary at Lake Nemi

 
An 18th-century depiction of Lake Nemi as painted by John Robert Cozens

Diana's worship may have originated at an open-air sanctuary overlooking Lake Nemi in the Alban Hills near Aricia, where she was worshiped as Diana Nemorensis, or ("Diana of the Sylvan Glade").[43] According to legendary accounts, the sanctuary was founded by Orestes and Iphigenia after they fled from the Tauri. In this tradition, the Nemi sanctuary was supposedly built on the pattern of an earlier Temple of Artemis Tauropolos,[44] and the first cult statue at Nemi was said to have been stolen from the Tauri and brought to Nemi by Orestes.[12][45] Historical evidence suggests that worship of Diana at Nemi flourished from at least the 6th century BCE[45] until the 2nd century CE. Her cult there was first attested in Latin literature by Cato the Elder, in a surviving quote by the late grammarian Priscian.[46] By the 4th century BCE, the simple shrine at Nemi had been joined by a temple complex.[45] The sanctuary served an important political role as it was held in common by the Latin League.[47][48]

A festival to Diana, the Nemoralia, was held yearly at Nemi on the Ides of August (August 13–15[49]). Worshipers traveled to Nemi carrying torches and garlands, and once at the lake, they left pieces of thread tied to fences and tablets inscribed with prayers.[50][51] Diana's festival eventually became widely celebrated throughout Italy, which was unusual given the provincial nature of Diana's cult. The poet Statius wrote of the festival:[5]

"It is the season when the most scorching region of the heavens takes over the land and the keen dog-star Sirius, so often struck by Hyperion's sun, burns the gasping fields. Now is the day when Trivia's Arician grove, convenient for fugitive kings, grows smoky, and the lake, having guilty knowledge of Hippolytus, glitters with the reflection of a multitude of torches; Diana herself garlands the deserving hunting dogs and polishes the arrowheads and allows the wild animals to go in safety, and at virtuous hearths all Italy celebrates the Hecatean Ides." (Statius Silv. 3.I.52–60)

Statius describes the triple nature of the goddess by invoking heavenly (the stars), earthly (the grove itself) and underworld (Hecate) imagery. He also suggests by the garlanding of the dogs and polishing of the spears that no hunting was allowed during the festival.[5]

Legend has it that Diana's high priest at Nemi, known as the Rex Nemorensis, was always an escaped slave who could only obtain the position by defeating his predecessor in a fight to the death.[43] Sir James George Frazer wrote of this sacred grove in The Golden Bough, basing his interpretation on brief remarks in Strabo (5.3.12), Pausanias (2,27.24) and Servius' commentary on the Aeneid (6.136). The legend tells of a tree that stood in the center of the grove and was heavily guarded. No one was allowed to break off its limbs, with the exception of a runaway slave, who was allowed, if he could, to break off one of the boughs. He was then in turn granted the privilege to engage the Rex Nemorensis, the current king and priest of Diana, in a fight to the death. If the slave prevailed, he became the next king for as long as he could defeat his challengers. However, Joseph Fontenrose criticised Frazer's assumption that a rite of this sort actually occurred at the sanctuary,[52] and no contemporary records exist that support the historical existence of the Rex Nemorensis.[53]

Spread and conflation with Artemis

 
A Roman fresco depicting Diana hunting, 4th century AD, from the Via Livenza hypogeum in Rome.

Rome hoped to unify into and control the Latin tribes around Nemi,[47] so Diana's worship was imported to Rome as a show of political solidarity. Diana soon afterwards became Hellenized, and combined with the Greek goddess Artemis, "a process which culminated with the appearance of Diana beside Apollo [the brother of Artemis] in the first lectisternium at Rome" in 399 BCE.[54] The process of identification between the two goddesses probably began when artists who were commissioned to create new cult statues for Diana's temples outside Nemi were struck by the similar attributes between Diana and the more familiar Artemis, and sculpted Diana in a manner inspired by previous depictions of Artemis. Sibyllene influence and trade with Massilia, where similar cult statues of Artemis existed, would have completed the process.[45]

According to Françoise Hélène Pairault's study,[55] historical and archaeological evidence point to the fact that the characteristics given to both Diana of the Aventine Hill and Diana Nemorensis were the product of the direct or indirect influence of the cult of Artemis, which was spread by the Phoceans among the Greek towns of Campania Cuma and Capua, who in turn had passed it over to the Etruscans and the Latins by the 6th and 5th centuries BCE.

Evidence suggests that a confrontation occurred between two groups of Etruscans who fought for supremacy, those from Tarquinia, Vulci and Caere (allied with the Greeks of Capua) and those of Clusium. This is reflected in the legend of the coming of Orestes to Nemi and of the inhumation of his bones in the Roman Forum near the temple of Saturn.[56] The cult introduced by Orestes at Nemi is apparently that of the Artemis Tauropolos. The literary amplification[57] reveals a confused religious background: different versions of Artemis were conflated under the epithet.[58] As far as Nemi's Diana is concerned there are two different versions, by Strabo[59] and Servius Honoratus. Strabo's version looks to be the most authoritative as he had access to first-hand primary sources on the sanctuaries of Artemis, i.e. the priest of Artemis Artemidoros of Ephesus. The meaning of Tauropolos denotes an Asiatic goddess with lunar attributes, lady of the herds.[60] The only possible interpretatio graeca of high antiquity concerning Diana Nemorensis could have been the one based on this ancient aspect of a deity of light, master of wildlife. Tauropolos is an ancient epithet attached to Artemis, Hecate, and even Athena.[61] According to the legend Orestes founded Nemi together with Iphigenia.[62] At Cuma the Sybil is the priestess of both Phoibos and Trivia.[63] Hesiod[64] and Stesichorus[65] tell the story according to which after her death Iphigenia was divinised under the name of Hecate, a fact which would support the assumption that Artemis Tauropolos had a real ancient alliance with the heroine, who was her priestess in Taurid and her human paragon. This religious complex is in turn supported by the triple statue of Artemis-Hecate.[17]

In Rome, Diana was regarded with great reverence and was a patroness of lower-class citizens, called plebeians, as well as slaves, who could receive asylum in her temples. Georg Wissowa proposed that this might be because the first slaves of the Romans were Latins of the neighboring tribes.[66] However, the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus had the same custom of the asylum.

In Rome

 
Diana of Versailles, a 2nd-century Roman version in the Greek tradition of iconography (Louvre Museum, Paris).

Worship of Diana probably spread into the city of Rome beginning around 550 BCE,[45] during her Hellenization and combination with the Greek goddess Artemis. Diana was first worshiped along with her brother and mother, Apollo and Latona, in their temple in the Campus Martius, and later in the Temple of Apollo Palatinus.[12]

The first major temple dedicated primarily to Diana in the vicinity of Rome was the Temple of Diana Aventina (Diana of the Aventine Hill). According to the Roman historian Livy, the construction of this temple began in the 6th century BCE and was inspired by stories of the massive Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, which was said to have been built through the combined efforts of all the cities of Asia Minor. Legend has it that Servius Tullius was impressed with this act of massive political and economic cooperation, and convinced the cities of the Latin League to work with the Romans to build their own temple to the goddess.[67] However, there is no compelling evidence for such an early construction of the temple, and it is more likely that it was built in the 3rd century BCE, following the influence of the temple at Nemi, and probably about the same time the first temples to Vertumnus (who was associated with Diana) were built in Rome (264 BCE).[45] The misconception that the Aventine Temple was inspired by the Ephesian Temple might originate in the fact that the cult images and statues used at the former were based heavily on those found in the latter.[45] Whatever its initial construction date, records show that the Avantine Temple was rebuilt by Lucius Cornificius in 32 BCE.[44] If it was still in use by the 4th century CE, the Aventine temple would have been permanently closed during the persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire. Today, a short street named the Via del Tempio di Diana and an associated plaza, Piazza del Tempio di Diana, commemorates the site of the temple. Part of its wall is located within one of the halls of the Apuleius restaurant.[68]

Later temple dedications often were based on the model for ritual formulas and regulations of the Temple of Diana.[69] Roman politicians built several minor temples to Diana elsewhere in Rome to secure public support. One of these was built in the Campus Martius in 187 BCE; no Imperial period records of this temple have been found, and it is possible it was one of the temples demolished around 55 BCE in order to build a theater.[44] Diana also had a public temple on the Quirinal Hill, the sanctuary of Diana Planciana. It was dedicated by Plancius in 55 BCE, though it is unclear which Plancius.[44]

In their worship of Artemis, Greeks filled their temples with sculptures of the goddess created by well-known sculptors, and many were adapted for use in the worship of Diana by the Romans, beginning around the 2nd century BCE (the beginning of a period of strong Hellenistic influence on Roman religion). The earliest depictions of the Artemis of Ephesus are found on Ephesian coins from this period. By the Imperial period, small marble statues of the Ephesian Artemis were being produced in the Western region of the Mediterranean and were often bought by Roman patrons.[70] The Romans obtained a large copy of an Ephesian Artemis statue for their temple on the Aventine Hill.[12] Diana was usually depicted for educated Romans in her Greek guise. If she was shown accompanied by a deer, as in the Diana of Versailles, this is because Diana was the patroness of hunting. The deer may also offer a covert reference to the myth of Acteon (or Actaeon), who saw her bathing naked. Diana transformed Acteon into a stag and set his own hunting dogs to kill him.

At Mount Tifata

 
Diana and her hound, c.1720

In Campania, Diana had a major temple at Mount Tifata, near Capua. She was worshiped there as Diana Tifatina. This was one of the oldest sanctuaries in Campania. As a rural sanctuary, it included lands and estates that would have been worked by slaves following the Roman conquest of Campania, and records show that expansion and renovation projects at her temple were funded in part by other conquests by Roman military campaigns. The modern Christian church of Sant'Angelo in Formis was built on the ruins of the Tifata temple.[44]

Roman provinces

In the Roman provinces, Diana was widely worshiped alongside local deities. Over 100 inscriptions to Diana have been cataloged in the provinces, mainly from Gaul, Upper Germania, and Britannia. Diana was commonly invoked alongside another forest god, Silvanus, as well as other "mountain gods". In the provinces, she was occasionally conflated with local goddesses such as Abnoba, and was given high status, with Augusta and regina ("queen") being common epithets.[71]

Household worship

Diana was not only regarded as a goddess of the wilderness and the hunt, but was often worshiped as a patroness of families. She served a similar function to the hearth goddess Vesta, and was sometimes considered to be a member of the Penates, the deities most often invoked in household rituals. In this role, she was often given a name reflecting the tribe of family who worshiped her and asked for her protection. For example, in what is now Wiesbaden, Diana was worshiped as Diana Mattiaca by the Mattiaci tribe. Other family-derived named attested in the ancient literature include Diana Cariciana, Diana Valeriana, and Diana Plancia. As a house goddess, Diana often became reduced in stature compared to her official worship by the Roman state religion. In personal or family worship, Diana was brought to the level of other household spirits, and was believed to have a vested interest in the prosperity of the household and the continuation of the family. The Roman poet Horace regarded Diana as a household goddess in his Odes, and had an altar dedicated to her in his villa where household worship could be conducted. In his poetry, Horace deliberately contrasted the kinds of grand, elevated hymns to Diana on behalf of the entire Roman state, the kind of worship that would have been typical at her Aventine temple, with a more personal form of devotion.[13]

Images of Diana and her associated myths have been found on sarcophagi of wealthy Romans. They often included scenes depicting sacrifices to the goddess, and on at least one example, the deceased man is shown joining Diana's hunt.[12]

Theology

Since ancient times, philosophers and theologians have examined the nature of Diana in light of her worship traditions, attributes, mythology, and identification with other gods.

Conflation with other goddesses

 
Wooden statue of Diana Abnoba, Museum for Prehistory in Thuringia

Diana was initially a hunting goddess and goddess of the local woodland at Nemi,[72] but as her worship spread, she acquired attributes of other similar goddesses. As she became conflated with Artemis, she became a moon goddess, identified with the other lunar goddesses goddess Luna and Hekate.[72] She also became the goddess of childbirth and ruled over the countryside. Catullus wrote a poem to Diana in which she has more than one alias: Latonia, Lucina, Juno, Trivia, Luna.[73]

Along with Mars, Diana was often venerated at games held in Roman amphitheaters, and some inscriptions from the Danubian provinces show that she was conflated with Nemesis in this role, as Diana Nemesis.[12]

Outside of Italy, Diana had important centers of worship where she was syncretised with similar local deities in Gaul, Upper Germania, and Britannia. Diana was particularly important in the region in and around the Black Forest, where she was conflated with the local goddess Abnoba and worshiped as Diana Abnoba.[74]

Some late antique sources went even further, syncretizing many local "great goddesses" into a single "Queen of Heaven". The Platonist philosopher Apuleius, writing in the late 2nd century, depicted the goddess declaring:

"I come, Lucius, moved by your entreaties: I, mother of the universe, mistress of all the elements, first-born of the ages, highest of the gods, queen of the shades, first of those who dwell in heaven, representing in one shape all gods and goddesses. My will controls the shining heights of heaven, the health-giving sea-winds, and the mournful silences of hell; the entire world worships my single godhead in a thousand shapes, with divers rites, and under many a different name. The Phrygians, first-born of mankind, call me the Pessinuntian Mother of the gods; the native Athenians the Cecropian Minerva; the island-dwelling Cypriots Paphian Venus; the archer Cretans Dictynnan Diana; the triple-tongued Sicilians Stygian Proserpine; the ancient Eleusinians Actaean Ceres; some call me Juno, some Bellona, others Hecate, others Rhamnusia; but both races of Ethiopians, those on whom the rising and those on whom the setting sun shines, and the Egyptians who excel in ancient learning, honour me with the worship which is truly mine and call me by my true name: Queen Isis."

--Apuleius, translated by E. J. Kenny. The Golden Ass[75]

Later poets and historians looked to Diana's identity as a triple goddess to merge her with triads heavenly, earthly, and underworld (cthonic) goddesses. Maurus Servius Honoratus said that the same goddess was called Luna in heaven, Diana on earth, and Proserpina in hell.[4]Michael Drayton praises the Triple Diana in poem The Man in the Moone (1606): "So these great three most powerful of the rest, Phoebe, Diana, Hecate, do tell. Her sovereignty in Heaven, in Earth and Hell".[76][77][78]

In Platonism

Based on the earlier writings of Plato, the Neoplatonist philosophers of late antiquity united the various major gods of Hellenic tradition into a series of monads containing within them triads, with some creating the world, some animating it or bringing it to life, and others harmonizing it. Within this system, Proclus considered Diana to be one of the primary animating, or life-giving, deities. Proclus, citing Orphic tradition, concludes that Diana "presides over all the generation in nature, and is the midwife of physical productive principles" and that she "extends these genitals, distributing as far as to subterranean natures the prolific power of [Bacchus]."[14] Specifically, Proclus considered the life-generating principle of the highest order, within the Intellectual realm, to be Rhea, whom he identified with Ceres. Within her divinity was produced the cause of the basic principle of life. Projecting this principle into the lower, Hypercosmic realm of reality generated a lower monad, Kore, who could therefore be understood as Ceres' "daughter". Kore embodied the "maidenly" principle of generation that, more importantly, included a principle of division – where Demeter generates life indiscriminately, Kore distributes it individually. This division results in another triad or trinity, known as the Maidenly trinity, within the monad of Kore: namely, Diana, Proserpine, and Minerva, through whom individual living beings are given life and perfected. Specifically, according to a commentary by scholar Spyridon Rangos, Diana (equated with Hecate) gives existence, Proserpine (equated with "Soul") gives form, and Minerva (equated with "Virtue") gives intellect.[79]

In his commentary on Proclus, the 19th century Platonist scholar Thomas Taylor expanded upon the theology of the classical philosophers, further interpreting the nature and roles of the gods in light of the whole body of Neoplatonist philosophy. He cites Plato in giving a three-form aspect to her central characteristic of virginity: the undefiled, the mundane, and the anagogic. Through the first form, Diana is regarded as a "lover of virginity". Through the second, she is the guardian of virtue. Through the third, she is considered to "hate the impulses arising from generation." Through the principle of the undefiled, Taylor suggests that she is given supremacy in Proclus' triad of life-giving or animating deities, and in this role the theurgists called her Hekate. In this role, Diana is granted undefiled power (Amilieti) from the other gods. This generative power does not proceed forth from the goddess (according to a statement by the Oracle of Delphi) but rather resides with her, giving her unparalleled virtue, and in this way she can be said to embody virginity.[80] Later commentators on Proclus have clarified that the virginity of Diana is not an absence of sexual drive, but a renunciation of sexuality. Diana embodies virginity because she generates but precedes active fertility (within Neoplatonism, an important maxim is that "every productive cause is superior to the nature of the produced effect").[79]

Using the ancient Neoplatonists as a basis, Taylor also commented on the triadic nature of Diana and related goddesses, and the ways in which they subsist within one another, partaking unevenly in each other's powers and attributes. For example, Kore is said to embody both Diana/Hecate and Minerva, who create the virtuous or virgin power within her, but also Proserpine (her sole traditional identification), through whom the generative power of the Kore as a whole is able to proceed forth into the world, where it joins with the demiurge to produce further deities, including Bacchus and "nine azure-eyed, flower-producing daughters".[80]

Proclus also included Artemis/Diana in a second triad of deities, along with Ceres and Juno. According to Proclus:

"The life-generating triad begins with Demeter who engenders the entire encosmic life, namely intellectual life, psychic life and the life that is inseparable from body; Hera who brings forth the birth of soul occupies the cohering middle position (for the intellectual goddess outpours from herself all the processions of the psychic kinds); finally, Artemis has been assigned to the end of the trinity because she activates all the natural formative principles and perfects the self-completeness of matter; it is for this reason, namely because she supervises natural development and natural birth, that the theologians and Socrates in the Theaetetus call her Lochia."[79]

Proclus pointed to the conflict between Hera and Artemis in the Illiad as a representation of the two kinds of human souls. Where Hera creates the higher, more cultured, or "worthy" souls, Artemis brings light to and perfects the "less worthy" or less rational. As explained by Ragnos (2000), "The aspect of reality which Artemis and Hera share, and because of which they engage in a symbolic conflict, is the engendering of life." Hera elevates rational living beings up to intellectual rational existence, whereas Artemis's power pertains to human life as far as its physical existence as a living thing. "Artemis deals with the most elementary forms of life or the most elementary part of all life, whereas Hera operates in the most elevated forms of life or the most elevated part of all life.[79]

Worship in Post Roman Europe

 
Gallo-Roman bronze statuette of Diana (latter 1st century)

Sermons and other religious documents have provided evidence for the worship of Diana during the Middle Ages. Though few details have been recorded, enough references to Diana worship during the early Christian period exist to give some indication that it may have been relatively widespread among remote and rural communities throughout Europe, and that such beliefs persisted into the Merovingian period.[81] References to contemporary Diana worship exist from the 6th century on the Iberian peninsula and what is now southern France,[81] though more detailed accounts of Dianic cults were given for the Low Countries, and southern Belgium in particular. Many of these were probably local goddesses, and wood nymphs or dryads, which had been conflated with Diana by Christian writers Latinizing local names and traditions.[81]

In the Low Countries

The 6th century bishop Gregory of Tours reported meeting with a deacon named Vulfilaic (also known as Saint Wulflaicus or Walfroy the Stylite), who founded a hermitage on a hill in what is now Margut, France. On the same hill, he found "an image of Diana which the unbelieving people worshiped as a god." According to Gregory's report, worshipers would also sing chants in Diana's honor as they drank and feasted. Vulfilaic destroyed a number of smaller pagan statues in the area, but the statue of Diana was too large. After converting some of the local population to Christianity, Vulfilaic and a group of local residents attempted to pull the large statue down the mountain in order to destroy it, but failed, as it was too large to be moved. In Vulfilaic's account, after praying for a miracle, he was then able to single-handedly pull down the statue, at which point he and his group smashed it to dust with their hammers. According to Vulfilaic, this incident was quickly followed by an outbreak of pimples or sores that covered his entire body, which he attributed to demonic activity and similarly cured via what he described as a miracle. Vulfilaic would later found a church on the site, which is today known as Mont Saint-Walfroy.[82]

Additional evidence for surviving pagan practices in the Low Countries region comes from the Vita Eligii, or "Life of Saint Eligius", written by Audoin in the 7th century. Audoin drew together the familiar admonitions of Eligius to the people of Flanders. In his sermons, he denounced "pagan customs" that the people continued to follow. In particular, he denounced several Roman gods and goddesses alongside Druidic mythological beliefs and objects:

"I denounce and contest, that you shall observe no sacrilegious pagan customs. For no cause or infirmity should you consult magicians, diviners, sorcerers or incantators. ..Do not observe auguries ... No influence attaches to the first work of the day or the [phase of the] moon. ... [Do not] make vetulas, little deer or iotticos or set tables at night or exchange New Year gifts or supply superfluous drinks... No Christian... performs solestitia or dancing or leaping or diabolical chants. No Christian should presume to invoke the name of a demon, not Neptune or Orcus or Diana or Minerva or Geniscus... No one should observe Jove's day in idleness. ... No Christian should make or render any devotion to the gods of the trivium, where three roads meet, to the fanes or the rocks, or springs or groves or corners. None should presume to hang any phylacteries from the neck of man nor beast. ..None should presume to make lustrations or incantations with herbs, or to pass cattle through a hollow tree or ditch ... No woman should presume to hang amber from her neck or call upon Minerva or other ill-starred beings in their weaving or dyeing. .. None should call the sun or moon lord or swear by them. .. No one should tell fate or fortune or horoscopes by them as those do who believe that a person must be what he was born to be."[83]

Legends from medieval Belgium concern a natural spring which came to be known as the "Fons Remacli", a location which may have been home to late-surviving worship of Diana. Remacle was a monk appointed by Eligius to head a monastery at Solignac, and he is reported to have encountered Diana worship in the area around the river Warche. The population in this region was said to have been involved in the worship of "Diana of the Ardennes" (a syncretism of Diana and the Celtic goddess Arduinna), with effigies and "stones of Diana" used as evidence of pagan practices. Remacle believed that demonic entities were present in the spring, and had caused it to run dry. He performed and exorcism of the water source, and installed a lead pipe, which allowed the water to flow again.[84]

The "Society of Diana"

Diana is the only pagan goddess mentioned by name in the New Testament (only in some Bible versions of Acts 19; many other Bibles refer to her as Artemis instead). As a result, she became associated with many folk beliefs involving goddess-like supernatural figures that Catholic clergy wished to demonize. In the Middle Ages, legends of night-time processions of spirits led by a female figure are recorded in the church records of Northern Italy, western Germany, and southern France. The spirits were said to enter houses and consume food which then miraculously re-appeared. They would sing and dance, and dispense advice regarding healing herbs and the whereabouts of lost objects. If the house was in good order, they would bring fertility and plenty. If not, they would bring curses to the family. Some women reported participating in these processions while their bodies still lay in bed. Historian Carlo Ginzburg has referred to these legendary spirit gatherings as "The Society of Diana".[85]

Local clergy complained that women believed they were following Diana or Herodias, riding out on appointed nights to join the processions or carry out instructions from the goddess.[86] The earliest reports of these legends appear in the writings of Regino of Prüm in the year 899, followed by many additional reports and variants of the legend in documents by Ratherius and others. By 1310, the names of the goddess figures attached to the legend were sometimes combined as Herodiana.[86] It is likely that the clergy of this time used the identification of the procession's leader as Diana or Herodias in order to fit an older folk belief into a Biblical framework, as both are featured and demonized in the New Testament. Herodias was often conflated with her daughter Salome in legend, which also holds that, upon being presented with the severed head of John the Baptist, she was blown into the air by wind from the saint's mouth, through which she continued to wander for eternity. Diana was often conflated with Hecate, a goddess associated with the spirits of the dead and with witchcraft. These associations, and the fact that both figures are attested to in the Bible, made them a natural fit for the leader of the ghostly procession. Clergy used this identification to assert that the spirits were evil, and that the women who followed them were inspired by demons. As was typical of this time period, though pagan beliefs and practices were near totally eliminated from Europe, the clergy and other authorities still treated paganism as a real threat, in part thanks to biblical influence; much of the Bible had been written when various forms of paganism were still active if not dominant, so medieval clergy applied the same kinds of warnings and admonitions for any non-standard folk beliefs and practices they encountered.[86] Based on analysis of church documents and parishioner confessions, it is likely that the spirit identified by the Church as Diana or Herodias was called by names of pre-Christian figures like Holda (a Germanic goddess of the winter solstice), or with names referencing her bringing of prosperity, like the Latin Abundia (meaning "plenty"), Satia (meaning "full" or "plentiful") and the Italian Richella (meaning "rich").[86] Some of the local titles for her, such as bonae res (meaning "good things"), are similar to late classical titles for Hecate, like bona dea. This might indicate a cultural mixture of medieval folk ideas with holdovers from earlier pagan belief systems. Whatever her true origin, by the 13th century, the leader of the legendary spirit procession had come to be firmly identified with Diana and Herodias through the influence of the Church.[86]

Modern development and folklore

The Golden Bough

 
J. M. W. Turner's 1834 painting of the Golden Bough incident in the Aeneid

In his wide-ranging, comparative study of mythology and religion, The Golden Bough, anthropologist James George Frazer drew on various lines of evidence to re-interpret the legendary rituals associated with Diana at Nemi, particularly that of the rex Nemorensis. Frazer developed his ideas in relation to J. M. W. Turner's painting, also titled The Golden Bough, depicting a dream-like vision of the woodland lake of Nemi. According to Frazer, the rex Nemorensis or king at Nemi was the incarnation of a dying and reviving god, a solar deity who participated in a mystical marriage to a goddess. He died at the harvest and was reincarnated in the spring. Frazer claimed that this motif of death and rebirth is central to nearly all of the world's religions and mythologies. In Frazer's theory, Diana functioned as a goddess of fertility and childbirth, who, assisted by the sacred king, ritually returned life to the land in spring. The king in this scheme served not only as a high priest but as a god of the grove. Frazer identifies this figure with Virbius, of which little is known, but also with Jupiter via an association with sacred oak trees. Frazer argued furthermore that Jupiter and Juno were simply duplicate names of Jana and Janus; that is, Diana and Dianus, all of whom had identical functions and origins.[87]

Frazer's speculatively reconstructed folklore of Diana's origins and the nature of her cult at Nemi were not well received even by his contemporaries. Godfrey Lienhardt noted that even during Frazer's lifetime, other anthropologists had "for the most part distanced themselves from his theories and opinions", and that the lasting influence of The Golden Bough and Frazer's wider body of work "has been in the literary rather than the academic world."[88] Robert Ackerman wrote that, for anthropologists, Frazer is "an embarrassment" for being "the most famous of them all" and that most distance themselves from his work. While The Golden Bough achieved wide "popular appeal" and exerted a "disproportionate" influence "on so many [20th century] creative writers", Frazer's ideas played "a much smaller part" in the history of academic social anthropology.[88]

The Gospel of the Witches

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

Folk legends like the Society of Diana, which linked the goddess to forbidden gatherings of women with spirits, may have influenced later works of folklore. One of these is Charles Godfrey Leland's Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches, which prominently featured Diana at the center of an Italian witch-cult.[86] In Leland's interpretation of supposed Italian folk witchcraft, Diana is considered Queen of the Witches. In this belief system, Diana is said to have created the world of her own being having in herself the seeds of all creation yet to come. It was said that out of herself she divided the darkness and the light, keeping for herself the darkness of creation and creating her brother Lucifer. Diana was believed to have loved and ruled with her brother, and with him bore a daughter, Aradia (a name likely derived from Herodias), who leads and teaches the witches on earth.[89][86]

Leland's claim that Aradia represented an authentic tradition from an underground witch-cult, which had secretly worshiped Diana since ancient times has been dismissed by most scholars of folklore, religion, and medieval history. After the 1921 publication of Margaret Murray's The Witch-cult in Western Europe, which hypothesized that the European witch trials were actually a persecution of a pagan religious survival, American sensationalist author Theda Kenyon's 1929 book Witches Still Live connected Murray's thesis with the witchcraft religion in Aradia.[90][91] Arguments against Murray's thesis would eventually include arguments against Leland. Witchcraft scholar Jeffrey Russell devoted some of his 1980 book A History of Witchcraft: Sorcerers, Heretics and Pagans to arguing against the claims Leland presented in Aradia.[92] Historian Elliot Rose's A Razor for a Goat dismissed Aradia as a collection of incantations unsuccessfully attempting to portray a religion.[93] In his book Triumph of the Moon, historian Ronald Hutton doubted not only of the existence of the religion that Aradia claimed to represent, and that the traditions Leland presented were unlike anything found in actual medieval literature,[94] but also of the existence of Leland's sources, arguing that it is more likely that Leland created the entire story than that Leland could be so easily "duped".[95] Religious scholar Chas S. Clifton took exception to Hutton's position, writing that it amounted to an accusation of "serious literary fraud" made by an "argument from absence".[96]

Building on the work of Frazer, Murray, and others, some 20th and 21st century authors have attempted to identify links between Diana and more localized deities. R. Lowe Thompson, for example, in his 2013 book The History of the Devil, speculated that Diana may have been linked as an occasional "spouse" to the Gaulish horned god Cernunnos. Thompson suggested that Diana in her role as wild goddess of the hunt would have made a fitting consort for Cernunnos in Western Europe, and further noted the link between Diana as Proserpina with Pluto, the Greek god associated with the riches of the earth who served a similar role to the Gaulish Cernunnos.

Modern worship

Because Leland's claims about an Italian witch-cult are questionable, the first verifiable worship of Diana in the modern age was probably begun by Wicca. The earliest known practitioners of Neopagan witchcraft were members of a tradition begun by Gerald Gardner. Published versions of the devotional materials used by Gardner's group, dated to 1949, are heavily focused on the worship of Aradia, the daughter of Diana in Leland's folklore. Diana herself was recognized as an aspect of a single "great goddess" in the tradition of Apuleius, as described in the Wiccan Charge of the Goddess (itself adapted from Leland's text).[97] Some later Wiccans, such as Scott Cunningham, would replace Aradia with Diana as the central focus of worship.[98]

In the early 1960s, Victor Henry Anderson founded the Feri Tradition, a form of Wicca that draws from both Charles Leland's folklore and the Gardnerian tradition. Anderson claimed that he had first been initiated into a witchcraft tradition as a child in 1926,[99] and that he had been told the name of the goddess worshiped by witches was Tana.[100] The name Tana originated in Leland's Aradia, where he claimed it was an old Etruscan name for Diana. The Feri Tradition founded by Anderson continues to recognize Tana/Diana as an aspect of the Star Goddess related to the element of fire, and representing "the fiery womb that gives birth to and transforms all matter."[100] (In Aradia, Diana is also credited as the creatrix of the material world and Queen of Faeries[101]).

A few Wiccan traditions would elevate Diana to a more prominent position of worship, and there are two distinct modern branches of Wicca focused primarily on Diana. The first, founded during the early 1970s in the United States by Morgan McFarland and Mark Roberts, has a feminist theology and only occasionally accepts male participants, and leadership is limited to female priestesses.[102][103] McFarland Dianic Wiccans base their tradition primarily on the work of Robert Graves and his book The White Goddess, and were inspired by references to the existence of medieval European "Dianic cults" in Margaret Murray's book The Witch-Cult in Western Europe.[103] The second Dianic tradition, founded by Zsuzsanna Budapest in the mid 1970s, is characterized by an exclusive focus on the feminine aspect of the divine, and as a result is exclusively female. This tradition combines elements from British Traditional Wicca, Italian folk-magic based on the work of Charles Leland, feminist values, and healing practices drawn from a variety of different cultures.[104][102]

A third Neopagan tradition heavily inspired by the worship of Diana through the lens of Italian folklore is Stregheria, founded in the 1980s. It centers around a pair of deities regarded as divine lovers, who are known by several variant names including Diana and Dianus, alternately given as Tana and Tanus or Jana and Janus (the later two deity names were mentioned by James Frazer in The Golden Bough as later corruptions of Diana and Dianus, which themselves were alternate and possibly older names for Juno and Jupiter).[105] The tradition was founded by author Raven Grimassi, and influenced by Italian folktales he was told by his mother. One such folktale describes the moon being impregnated by her lover the morning star, a parallel to Leland's mythology of Diana and her lover Lucifer.[85]

Diana was also a subject of worship in certain Feraferian rites, particularly those surrounding the autumnal equinox, beginning in 1967.[106]

Legacy

In language

Both the Romanian words for "fairy" Zână[107] and Sânziană, the Leonese and Portuguese word for "water nymph" xana, and the Spanish word for "shooting target" and "morning call" (diana) seem to come from the name of Diana.

In the arts

 
Diana Reposing by Paul-Jacques-Aimé Baudry. The nude goddess, identified by the crescent moon in her hair and the bow and quiver at her side, reclines on a blue drapery.

Since the Renaissance, Diana's myths have often been represented in the visual and dramatic arts, including the opera L'arbore di Diana. In the 16th century, Diana's image figured prominently at the châteaus of Fontainebleau, Chenonceau, & at Anet, in deference to Diane de Poitiers, mistress of Henri of France. At Versailles she was incorporated into the Olympian iconography with which Louis XIV, the Apollo-like "Sun King" liked to surround himself. Diana is also a character in the 1876 Léo Delibes ballet Sylvia. The plot deals with Sylvia, one of Diana's nymphs and sworn to chastity, and Diana's assault on Sylvia's affections for the shepherd Amyntas.

In literature

  • In "The Knight's Tale" in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, Emily prays to Diana to be spared from marriage to either Palamon or Arcite.
  • In "Ode" by John Keats, he writes 'Browsed by none but Dian's fawns' (line 12)
  • In the sonnet "To Science" by Edgar Allan Poe, science is said to have "dragged Diana from her car".
  • Diana Soren, the main character in Carlos Fuentes' novel Diana o la cazadora soltera (Diana, or The Lone Huntress), is described as having the same personality as the goddess.
  • In "Castaway" by Augusta Webster, women who claim they are virtuous despite never having been tempted are referred to as "Dianas". (Line 128)
  • In Jonathan Swift's poem: "The Progress of Beauty", as goddess of the moon, Diana is used in comparison to the 17th/early 18th century everyday woman Swift satirically writes about. Starts: 'When first Diana leaves her bed...'
  • In Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae ("History of the Kings of Britain"), Diana leads the Trojan Brutus to Britain, where he and his people settle.
  • The character of Diana is the principal character in the children's novel The Moon Stallion by Brian Hayles (1978) and the BBC Television series of the same name Diana is played by the actress Sarah Sutton.
  • In Rick Riordan's Camp Half-Blood Chronicles, Diana acts as the Roman incarnation of Artemis, although she doesn't appear until The Tyrant's Tomb. Throughout The Heroes of Olympus, along with the other gods, Artemis is split between her Greek and Roman incarnations. In The Tyrant's Tomb, Apollo summons his sister for help against Tarquin and his undead army. Diana appears with the Hunters of Artemis to slay Tarquin and his army and she heals Apollo's wounds before departing again.
In Shakespeare
 
Diana as the Huntress, by Giampietrino
  • In Shakespeare's Pericles, Prince of Tyre Diana appears to Pericles in a vision, telling him to go to her temple and tell his story to her followers.
  • Diana is referenced in As You Like It to describe how Rosalind feels about marriage.
  • Diana is referred to in Twelfth Night when Orsino compares Viola (in the guise of Cesario) to Diana. "Diana's lip is not more smooth and rubious".
  • Speaking of his wife, Desdemona, Othello the Moor says, "Her name, that was as fresh as Dian's visage, is now begrimed and black as my own face."
  • There is a reference to Diana in Much Ado About Nothing where Hero is said to seem like 'Dian in her orb', in terms of her chastity.
  • In Henry IV, Part 1, Falstaff styles himself and his highway-robbing friends as "Diana's foresters, gentlemen of the shade, minions of the moon" who are governed by their "noble and chase mistress the moon under whose countenance [they] steal".
  • In All's Well That Ends Well Diana appears as a figure in the play and Helena makes multiple allusions to her, such as, "Now, Dian, from thy altar do I fly..." and "...wish chastely and love dearly, that your Dian/was both herself and love..." The Steward also says, "...; Dian no queen of virgins,/ that would suffer her poor knight surprised, without/ rescue in the first assault or ransom afterward." It can be assumed that 'Dian' is simply a shortening of 'Diana' since later in the play when Parolles' letter to Diana is read aloud it reads 'Dian'.[108]
  • The goddess is also referenced indirectly in A Midsummer Night's Dream. The character Hippolyta states "And then the moon, like to a silver bow new bent in Heaven". She refers to Diana, goddess of the moon, who is often depicted with a silver hunting bow. In the same play the character Hermia is told by the Duke, Theseus that she must either wed the character Demetrius "Or on Diana's alter to protest for aye austerity and single life". He is referring to her becoming a nun, with the goddess Diana having connotations of chastity.
  • In The Merchant of Venice Portia states "I will die as chaste as Diana, unless I be obtained by the manner of my father's will". (I.ii)
  • In Romeo and Juliet, Romeo describes Rosaline, saying that "She hath Dian's wit".
In games and comics
  • The character of Diana from the video game League of Legends is largely based on the goddess.
  • Dr. William Moulton Marston drew from the Diana archetype as an allegorical basis for Wonder Woman's proper name, Princess Diana for DC Comics. Most versions of Wonder Woman's origin story state that she is given the name Diana because her mother Hippolyte was inspired by the goddess of the moon that Diana was born under.
  • Diana also is one of the primary gods in the video game Ryse.
  • In the manga and anime series Sailor Moon, Diana is the feline companion to Chibiusa, Usagi's daughter. Diana is the daughter of Artemis and Luna. All of these characters are advisers to rulers of the kingdom of the moon and therefore have moon-associated names.

In painting and sculpture

 
Diana Wounded, bronze statue by Sir Edgar Bertram Mackennal, housed in Tate Gallery of London

Diana has been one of the most popular themes in art. Painters like Titian, Peter Paul Rubens, François Boucher, Nicolas Poussin and made use of her myth as a major theme. Most depictions of Diana in art featured the stories of Diana and Actaeon, or Callisto, or depicted her resting after hunting. Some famous work of arts with a Diana theme are:

 
Pomona (left, symbolizing agriculture), and Diana (symbolizing commerce) as building decoration

Many statues of Diana huntress in Yambol ,Bulgaria

In film

  • In Jean Cocteau's 1946 film La Belle et la Bête, it is Diana's power which has transformed and imprisoned the beast.
  • Diana/Artemis appears at the end of the 'Pastoral Symphony' segment of Fantasia.
  • In his 1968 film La Mariée était en noir François Truffaut plays on this mythological symbol. Julie Kohler, played by Jeanne Moreau, poses as Diana/Artemis for the artist Fergus. This choice seems fitting for Julie, a character beset by revenge, of which Fergus becomes the fourth victim. She poses with a bow and arrow, while wearing white.
  • In the 1995 comedy Four Rooms, a coven of witches resurrects a petrified Diana on New Year's Eve.
  • French based collective LFKs and his film/theatre director, writer and visual artist Jean Michel Bruyere produced a series of 600 shorts and "medium" film, an interactive audiovisual 360° installation (Si poteris narrare licet ("if you are able to speak of it, then you may do so" ...... ) in 2002, and a 3D 360° audiovisual installation La Dispersion du Fils <http://www.newmediaart.eu/str10.html> from 2008 to 2016 as well as an outdoor performance, "Une Brutalité pastorale" (2000), all about the myth of Diana and Actaeon.

In music

  • Diana is a character in Hippolytus and Aricia, an opera by Jean-Philippe Rameau.
  • Diana is mentioned along with two other goddesses, Luna and Lucina, in Mike Oldfield's 1978 album, Incantations.
  • For the album art of progressive metal band Protest the Hero's second studio album Fortress, Diana is depicted protected by rams and other animals. The theme of Diana is carried throughout the album.
  • The Norwegian classical composer Martin Romberg wrote a mass for mixed choir in seven parts after a selection of poems from Leland's text Aradia, in which Diana features heavily. The Witch Mass was premiered at the Vestfold International Festival in 2012 with Grex Vocalis. In order to create the right atmosphere for the music, the festival blocked of an entire road tunnel in Tønsberg to use it as a venue.[111] The work was released on CD through Lawo Classics in 2014.[112]
  • Artemis, and subsequently Diana, is used as focal point in “Artemis”, track twelve of AURORA’s 2022 album “The Gods We Can Touch”

Other

  • In the funeral oration of Diana, Princess of Wales in 1997, her brother drew an analogy between the ancient goddess of hunting and his sister – "the most hunted person of the modern age".
  • DIANA Mayer & Grammelspacher GmbH & Co.KG, an airgun company, is named after Diana, the goddess of hunting.[113]
  • The Royal Netherlands Air Force 323rd Squadron is named Diana and uses a depiction of Diana with her bow in its badge.[114]
  • In Ciudad Juárez in Mexico a woman calling herself "Diana Huntress of Bus Drivers" was responsible for the shooting of two bus drivers in 2013 in what may have been vigilante attacks.[115][116]
  • Diana is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of coral snake, Micrurus diana.[117]
  • Diana is also the name given to Wonder Woman of the DC Universe.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Latin: [diˈaːna]; conservative pronunciation: [diːˈaːna]. The name was also written as Deiana by the Romans.

References

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  2. ^ Larousse Desk Reference Encyclopedia, The Book People, Haydock, 1995, p. 215.
  3. ^ The Clay-footed Superheroes: Mythology Tales for the New Millennium ISBN 978-0-865-16719-3 p. 56
  4. ^ a b Servius, Commentary on Virgil's Aeneid 6.118.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Green, C. M. C. (2007). Roman Religion and the Cult of Diana at Aricia. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  6. ^ G.Dumézil La religion Romaine archaique Paris, 1974, part 3, chap. 1.
  7. ^ de Vaan 2008, p. 168.
  8. ^ Mallory & Adams 2006, p. 408–409.
  9. ^ Ringe 2006, p. 76.
  10. ^ Beekes 2009, p. 338.
  11. ^ Cicero, Marcus Tullius; Walsh, P.G. (2008). The Nature of the Gods (Reissue. ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 70–72. ISBN 978-0-19-954006-8.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Poulsen, B. (2009). Sanctuaries of the Goddess of the Hunt. In Tobias Fischer-Hansen & Birte Poulsen, eds. From Artemis to Diana: The Goddess of Man and Beast. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 8763507889, 9788763507882.
  13. ^ a b Cairns, F. (2012). Roman Lyric: Collected Papers on Catullus and Horace. Volume 301 of Beiträge zur Altertumskunde. Walter de Gruyter, 2012.
  14. ^ a b Proclus, Platonic Theology Book VII.
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  16. ^ Alföldi, "Diana Nemorensis", American Journal of Archaeology (1960:137-44) p 141.
  17. ^ a b A. Alföldi"Diana Nemorensis" in American journal of Archaeology 64 1960 p. 137-144.
  18. ^ Horace, Carmina 3.22.1.
  19. ^ Excavation of 1791 by cardinal Despuig not mentioned in the report: cf. P. Riis who cites E. Lucidi Memorie storiche dell'antichissimo municipio ora terra dell'Ariccia e delle sue colonie Genzano e Nemi Rome 1796 p. 97 ff. finds at Valle Giardino.
  20. ^ NSA 1931 p. 259-261 platesVI a-b.
  21. ^ Aeneid 6.35, 10.537.
  22. ^ Carmina 34.14 tu potens Trivia...
  23. ^ Horace, Epode 17
  24. ^ Dionysius Hal. VII 6, 4: the people of Aricia help Aristdemos in bringing home the Etruscan booty.
  25. ^ Mircea Eliade Tre' d'histoire des religionsait Paris, 1954.
  26. ^ G. Dumezil La religion Romaine archaique Paris 1974, part 3, chap.1.
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  39. ^ CIL, 3537.
  40. ^ Livy Ab Urbe Condita XXVII 4.
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  46. ^ Supposed Greek origins for the Aricia cult are strictly a literary topos. (Gordon 1932:178 note, and p. 181).
  47. ^ a b commune Latinorum Dianae templum in Varro, Lingua Latina V.43; the cult there was of antiqua religione in Pliny's Natural History, xliv. 91, 242 and Ovid's Fasti III 327–331.
  48. ^ Poulsen, B. (2009). Introduction. Tobias Fischer-Hansen & Birte Poulsen, eds. From Artemis to Diana: The Goddess of Man and Beast. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 8763507889, 9788763507882.
  49. ^ The date coincides with the founding dates celebrated at Aricium. Arthur E. Gordon, "On the Origin of Diana", Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 63 (1932, pp. 177–192) p 178.
  50. ^ Ovid, Fasti, trans. James George Frazer, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1931), 3:259–275.
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  54. ^ Gordon 1932:179.
  55. ^ "Diana Nemorensis, déesse latine, déesse hellénisée" in Mélanges d' archéologie et d'histoire 81 1969 p. 425-471.
  56. ^ Servius ad Aeneidem II 116; VI 136; Hyginus Fabulae 261.
  57. ^ Ovid Metamorphoses XIV 331-2 Scythicae regnum nemorale Dianae; Lucanus Pharsalia III 86 "qua sublime nemus Scythicae qua regna Dianae". Silius Italicus Punica IV 367; VIII 362; Valerius Flaccus Argonauticae II 305.
  58. ^ Jean Bayet, "Les origines de l'Arcadisme romain" p.135; M. P. Nilson Griechische Religionsgeschichte Munich 1955 p. 485 ff.
  59. ^ Strabo V 249: αφιδρύματα της ταυροπόλου.
  60. ^ Suidas s.v. :η Άρτεμις εν Ταύροις της Σκυθίας τιμωμένη; η από μέρους, των ποιμνίων επστάσις. η ότι η αυτη τη σελήνη εστι καί εποχειται ταύροις. Darehnberg -Saglio-Pottier Dictionnaire des antiquités s.v. Diana fig.. 2357.
  61. ^ Hesichius s.v. Tauropolai; Scholiasta ad Aristophanem Lysistrata 447; Suidas above; Photius Lexicon s.v. Tuaropolos; N. Yalouris Athena als Herrin der Pferde in Museum Helveticum 7 1950 p. 99; E. Abel Orphica, Hymni I in Hecaten 7. Hymni magici V in Selenen 4.
  62. ^ Servius ad Aeneidem VI 136.
  63. ^ Aeneis VI 35; F. H. Pairault p. 448 citing Jean Bayet, Origines de l' Hercule romain p. 280 n. 4.
  64. ^ Hesiod Catalogueedited by Augusto Traversa, Naples 1951 p. 76 text 82; R. Merkelbach, M. L. West Fragmenta Hesiodea Oxonii 1967, fragment 23.
  65. ^ Orestia cited by Philodemos Περι εύσεβείας 24 Gomperz II 52: fragment 38 B; Pausanias I 43, 1; II 22, 7.
  66. ^ as quoted by Dumézil La religion romaine archaique Paris, 1974, part 3, chap. 1.
  67. ^ Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.45
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  78. ^ Edited by Cesare Barbieri and Francesca Rampazzi (2001), Earth-Moon Relationships p.7. ISBN 0-7923-7089-9.
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  82. ^ History of the Franks, Book VIII, 195.
  83. ^ McNamara's translation of the Vita Eligii.
  84. ^ Arnold, Ellen F. Negotiating the Landscape: Environment and Monastic Identity in the Medieval Ardennes (The Middle Ages Series). University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012. ISBN 0812207521, 9780812207521.
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Bibliography

  • Beekes, Robert S. P. (2009). Etymological Dictionary of Greek. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-32186-1.
  • Mallory, James P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (2006). The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-929668-2.
  • de Vaan, Michiel (2008). Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages. Brill. ISBN 9789004167971.
  • Ringe, Donald (2006). From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic: A Linguistic History of English: Volume I. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-928413-9.
  • A. Alföldi "Diana Nemorensis" in American Journal of Archaeology 64 1960 p. 137-144.
  • A. Alföldi Early Rome and the Latins Ann Arbor 1964 p. 47-100.
  • E. Paribeni "A note on Diana Nemorensis" in American Journal of Archaeology 65 1961 p. 55.
  • P. J. Riis "The Cult Image of Diana Nemorensis" in Acta Archaeologica Kopenhagen 37 1966 p. 69 ff.
  • J. Heurgon in Magna Graecia 1969 Jan. Feb. 1969 p. 12 ff.; March Apr. p. 1ff.
  • J.G. Frazer Balder the Beautiful II London 1913 p. 95 ff.; 302 ff.
  • L. Morpurgo "Nemus Aricinum" in MonAntLincei 13 1903 c. 300 ff.
  • A. Merlin "L'Aventin dans l'antiquité" Paris BÉFAR 97 1906.
  • G. Wissowa Religion und Kultus der Römer Munich 1912 p. 198 ff.
  • F. Altheim Griechischen Götter im alten Rom Giessen 1930 p. 93–172.
  • A.E. Gordon "On the Origin of Diana" in Transactions of the AMerican Philological Association 63 1932 p. 177ff.
  • A.E. Gordon Local Cults in Aricia University of California Publications in Classical Archaeology 2 1934 p. 1ff.
  • J. Heurgon "Recherhes sur... Capoue préromaine" in BÉFAR 154 Paris 1942 p. 307 ff.
  • J. Gagé "Apollon Romain" in BÉFAR 182 Paris 1955.
  • J. Bayet Histoire politique et psychologique de la religion romaine Paris 1957 p. 20 ff., 39ff.
  • K. Latte Römische Religionsgeschichte Munich 1960 p. 169–173.
  • R. Schilling "Une victime des vicissitudes politiques, la Diane latine" in Hommages á Jean Bayet, Collection Latomus 45 Bruxelles 1960 p. 650 ff.
  • A. Momigliano "Sul dies natalis del santuario federale di Diana sull' Aventino" in RAL 17 1962 p. 387 ff.
  • G. Dumézil La religion romaine archaïque Paris 1966 p. 398 ff.

External links

  • Landscape with Diana and Callisto painting page
  • Diana and her Nymphs painting description
  • The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database: ca 1150 images of Diana 2013-04-30 at the Wayback Machine

diana, mythology, diana, goddess, roman, hellenistic, religion, primarily, considered, patroness, countryside, hunters, crossroads, moon, equated, with, greek, goddess, artemis, absorbed, much, artemis, mythology, early, roman, history, including, birth, islan. Diana a is a goddess in Roman and Hellenistic religion primarily considered a patroness of the countryside hunters crossroads and the Moon She is equated with the Greek goddess Artemis and absorbed much of Artemis mythology early in Roman history including a birth on the island of Delos to parents Jupiter and Latona and a twin brother Apollo 2 though she had an independent origin in Italy DianaGoddess of the hunt wild animals fertility and the Moon 1 Member of the Dii ConsentesDiana as Huntress Marble by Bernardino Cametti 1720 Pedestal by Pascal Latour 1754 Bode Museum Berlin SymbolBow and quiver deer hunting dogs crescent moonTemplesSanctuary at Lake Nemi Temple of Diana Rome FestivalsNemoraliaPersonal informationParentsJupiter and Latona Early Roman N A Hellenistic Jupiter and LatonaSiblingsEarly Roman N A Hellenistic ApolloChildrenEarly Roman N A Hellenistic N AEquivalentsGreek equivalentArtemis HecateEtruscan equivalentArtumeEgyptian equivalentNeithStatue of Diana Artemis fresco from Pompeii 50 1 BCE Diana by Renato Torres Portalegre is one of the best and most representative tapestries of the European and Portuguese tapestries of the 20th century Diana is considered a virgin goddess and protector of childbirth Historically Diana made up a triad with two other Roman deities Egeria the water nymph her servant and assistant midwife and Virbius the woodland god 3 Diana is revered in modern neopagan religions including Roman neopaganism Stregheria and Wicca In the ancient medieval and modern periods Diana has been considered a triple deity merged with a goddess of the moon Luna Selene and the underworld usually Hecate 4 5 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Description 2 1 As a goddess of the countryside 2 2 As a triple goddess 2 3 As goddess of crossroads and the underworld 2 4 As goddess of childbirth 2 5 As a frame god 3 Mythology 3 1 Family 3 2 Myth of Actaeon 4 Worship in the classical period 4 1 Sanctuary at Lake Nemi 4 2 Spread and conflation with Artemis 4 3 In Rome 4 4 At Mount Tifata 4 5 Roman provinces 4 6 Household worship 5 Theology 5 1 Conflation with other goddesses 5 2 In Platonism 6 Worship in Post Roman Europe 6 1 In the Low Countries 6 2 The Society of Diana 7 Modern development and folklore 7 1 The Golden Bough 7 2 The Gospel of the Witches 7 3 Modern worship 8 Legacy 8 1 In language 8 2 In the arts 8 2 1 In literature 8 2 2 In painting and sculpture 8 2 3 In film 8 2 4 In music 8 3 Other 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 External linksEtymology EditThe name Diana probably derives from Latin dius godly ultimately from Proto Italic diwi meaning divine heavenly 6 7 It stems from Proto Indo European diwyos divine heavenly formed with the stem dyew daylight sky attached the thematic suffix yos 8 9 Cognates appear in Myceanean Greek di wi ja in Ancient Greek dios dῖos belonging to heaven godlike and in Sanskrit divya heavenly or celestial 10 The ancient Latin writers Varro and Cicero considered the etymology of Diana as allied to that of dies and connected to the shine of the Moon noting that one of her titles is Diana Lucifera light bearer people regard Diana and the moon as one and the same the moon luna is so called from the verb to shine lucere Lucina is identified with it which is why in our country they invoke Juno Lucina in childbirth just as the Greeks call on Diana the Light bearer Diana also has the name Omnivaga wandering everywhere not because of her hunting but because she is numbered as one of the seven planets her name Diana derives from the fact that she turns darkness into daylight dies She is invoked at childbirth because children are born occasionally after seven or usually after nine lunar revolutions Quintus Lucilius Balbus as recorded by Marcus Tullius Cicero and translated by P G Walsh De Natura Deorum On the Nature of the Gods Book II Part ii Section c 11 Description EditAs a goddess of the countryside Edit Diana Hunting Guillaume Seignac The persona of Diana is complex and contains a number of archaic features Diana was originally considered to be a goddess of the wilderness and of the hunt a central sport in both Roman and Greek culture 12 Early Roman inscriptions to Diana celebrated her primarily as a huntress and patron of hunters Later in the Hellenistic period Diana came to be equally or more revered as a goddess not of the wild woodland but of the tame countryside or villa rustica the idealization of which was common in Greek thought and poetry This dual role as goddess of both civilization and the wild and therefore the civilized countryside first applied to the Greek goddess Artemis for example in the 3rd century BCE poetry of Anacreon 13 By the 3rd century CE after Greek influence had a profound impact on Roman religion Diana had been almost fully combined with Artemis and took on many of her attributes both in her spiritual domains and in the description of her appearance The Roman poet Nemesianus wrote a typical description of Diana She carried a bow and a quiver full of golden arrows wore a golden cloak purple half boots and a belt with a jeweled buckle to hold her tunic together and wore her hair gathered in a ribbon 12 By the 5th century CE almost a millennia after her cult s entry into Rome the philosopher Proclus could still characterize Diana as the inspective guardian of every thing rural who represses every thing rustic and uncultivated 14 As a triple goddess Edit Diana was often considered an aspect of a triple goddess known as Diana triformis Diana Luna and Hecate According to historian C M Green these were neither different goddesses nor an amalgamation of different goddesses They were Diana Diana as huntress Diana as the moon Diana of the underworld 5 At her sacred grove on the shores of Lake Nemi Diana was venerated as a triple goddess beginning in the late 6th century BCE Two examples of a 1st century BCE denarius RRC 486 1 depicting the head of Diana Nemorensis and her triple cult statue 15 Andreas Alfoldi interpreted an image on a late Republican coin as the Latin Diana conceived as a threefold unity of the divine huntress the Moon goddess and the goddess of the nether world Hekate 16 This coin minted by P Accoleius Lariscolus in 43 BCE has been acknowledged as representing an archaic statue of Diana Nemorensis 17 It represents Artemis with the bow at one extremity Luna Selene with flowers at the other and a central deity not immediately identifiable all united by a horizontal bar The iconographical analysis allows the dating of this image to the 6th century at which time there are Etruscan models The coin shows that the triple goddess cult image still stood in the lucus of Nemi in 43 BCE Lake Nemi was called Triviae lacus by Virgil Aeneid 7 516 while Horace called Diana montium custos nemoremque virgo keeper of the mountains and virgin of Nemi and diva triformis three form goddess 18 Two heads found in the sanctuary 19 and the Roman theatre at Nemi which have a hollow on their back lend support to this interpretation of an archaic triple Diana 20 As goddess of crossroads and the underworld Edit The earliest epithet of Diana was Trivia and she was addressed with that title by Virgil 21 Catullus 22 and many others Trivia comes from the Latin trivium triple way and refers to Diana s guardianship over roadways particularly Y junctions or three way crossroads This role carried a somewhat dark and dangerous connotation as it metaphorically pointed the way to the underworld 5 In the 1st century CE play Medea Seneca s titular sorceress calls on Trivia to cast a magic spell She evokes the triple goddess of Diana Selene and Hecate and specifies that she requires the powers of the latter 5 The 1st century poet Horace similarly wrote of a magic incantation invoking the power of both Diana and Proserpina 23 The symbol of the crossroads is relevant to several aspects of Diana s domain It can symbolize the paths hunters may encounter in the forest lit only by the full moon this symbolizes making choices in the dark without the light of guidance 5 Diana s role as a goddess of the underworld or at least of ushering people between life and death caused her early on to be conflated with Hecate and occasionally also with Proserpina However her role as an underworld goddess appears to pre date strong Greek influence though the early Greek colony of Cumae had a cult of Hekate and certainly had contacts with the Latins 24 A theater in her sanctuary at Lake Nemi included a pit and tunnel that would have allowed actors to easily descend on one side of the stage and ascend on the other indicating a connection between the phases of the moon and a descent by the moon goddess into the underworld 5 It is likely that her underworld aspect in her original Latin worship did not have a distinct name like Luna was for her moon aspect This is due to a seeming reluctance or taboo by the early Latins to name underworld deities and the fact that they believed the underworld to be silent precluding naming Hekate a Greek goddess also associated with the boundary between the earth and the underworld became attached to Diana as a name for her underworld aspect following Greek influence 5 As goddess of childbirth Edit Diana was often considered to be a goddess associated with fertility and childbirth and the protection of women during labor This probably arose as an extension of her association with the moon whose cycles were believed to parallel the menstrual cycle and which was used to track the months during pregnancy 5 At her shrine in Aricia worshipers left votive terracotta offerings for the goddess in the shapes of babies and wombs and the temple there also offered care of pups and pregnant dogs This care of infants also extended to the training of both young people and dogs especially for hunting 5 In her role as a protector of childbirth Diana was called Diana Lucina Diana Lucifera or even Juno Lucina because her domain overlapped with that of the goddess Juno The title of Juno may also have had an independent origin as it applied to Diana with the literal meaning of helper Diana as Juno Lucina would be the helper of childbirth 5 As a frame god Edit Diana as Personification of the Night Anton Raphael Mengs c 1765 According to a theory proposed by Georges Dumezil Diana falls into a particular subset of celestial gods referred to in histories of religion as frame gods Such gods while keeping the original features of celestial divinities i e transcendent heavenly power and abstention from direct rule in worldly matters did not share the fate of other celestial gods in Indoeuropean religions that of becoming dei otiosi or gods without practical purpose 25 since they did retain a particular sort of influence over the world and mankind 26 The celestial character of Diana is reflected in her connection with inaccessibility virginity light and her preference for dwelling on high mountains and in sacred woods Diana therefore reflects the heavenly world in its sovereignty supremacy impassibility and indifference towards such secular matters as the fates of mortals and states At the same time however she is seen as active in ensuring the succession of kings and in the preservation of humankind through the protection of childbirth 27 These functions are apparent in the traditional institutions and cults related to the goddess The legend of the rex Nemorensis Diana s sacerdos priest in the Arician wood who held the position until someone else challenged and killed him in a duel after breaking a branch from a certain tree of the wood This ever open succession reveals the character and mission of the goddess as a guarantor of kingly status through successive generations 28 Her function as bestower of authority to rule is also attested in the story related by Livy in which a Sabine man who sacrifices a heifer to Diana wins for his country the seat of the Roman empire 29 Diana was also worshiped by women who wanted to be pregnant or who once pregnant prayed for an easy delivery This form of worship is attested in archaeological finds of votive statuettes in her sanctuary in the nemus Aricinum as well as in ancient sources e g Ovid 28 According to Dumezil the forerunner of all frame gods is an Indian epic hero who was the image avatar of the Vedic god Dyaus Having renounced the world in his roles of father and king he attained the status of an immortal being while retaining the duty of ensuring that his dynasty is preserved and that there is always a new king for each generation The Scandinavian god Heimdallr performs an analogous function he is born first and will die last He too gives origin to kingship and the first king bestowing on him regal prerogatives Diana although a female deity has exactly the same functions preserving mankind through childbirth and royal succession F H Pairault in her essay on Diana qualified Dumezil s theory as impossible to verify Mythology Edit Mosaic depicting Diana and her nymph surprised by Actaeon Ruins of Volubilis 2nd century CE Unlike the Greek gods Roman gods were originally considered to be numina divine powers of presence and will that did not necessarily have physical form At the time Rome was founded Diana and the other major Roman gods probably did not have much mythology per se or any depictions in human form The idea of gods as having anthropomorphic qualities and human like personalities and actions developed later under the influence of Greek and Etruscan religion 30 By the 3rd century BCE Diana is found listed among the twelve major gods of the Roman pantheon by the poet Ennius Though the Capitoline Triad were the primary state gods of Rome early Roman myth did not assign a strict hierarchy to the gods the way Greek mythology did though the Greek hierarchy would eventually be adopted by Roman religion as well 30 Once Greek influence had caused Diana to be considered identical to the Greek goddess Artemis Diana acquired Artemis s physical description attributes and variants of her myths as well Like Artemis Diana is usually depicted in art wearing a women s chiton shortened in the kolpos style to facilitate mobility during hunting with a hunting bow and quiver and often accompanied by hunting dogs A 1st century BCE Roman coin see above depicted her with a unique short hairstyle and in triple form with one form holding a bow and another holding a poppy 5 Family Edit When worship of Apollo was first introduced to Rome Diana became conflated with Apollo s sister Artemis as in the earlier Greek myths and as such she became identified as the daughter of Apollo s parents Latona and Jupiter Though Diana was usually considered to be a virgin goddess like Artemis later authors sometimes attributed consorts and children to her According to Cicero and Ennius Trivia an epithet of Diana and Caelus were the parents of Janus as well as of Saturn and Ops 31 According to Macrobius who cited Nigidius Figulus and Cicero Janus and Jana Diana are a pair of divinities worshiped as the sun and moon Janus was said to receive sacrifices before all the others because through him the way of access to the desired deity is made apparent 32 Myth of Actaeon Edit Diana s mythology incorporated stories which were variants of earlier stories about Artemis Possibly the most well known of these is the myth of Actaeon In Ovid s version of this myth part of his poem Metamorphoses he tells of a pool or grotto hidden in the wooded valley of Gargaphie There Diana the goddess of the woods would bathe and rest after a hunt Actaeon a young hunter stumbled across the grotto and accidentally witnessed the goddess bathing without invitation In retaliation Diana splashed him with water from the pool cursing him and he transformed into a deer His own hunting dogs caught his scent and tore him apart 5 Ovid s version of the myth of Actaeon differs from most earlier sources Unlike earlier myths about Artemis Actaeon is killed for an innocent mistake glimpsing Diana bathing An earlier variant of this myth known as the Bath of Pallas had the hunter intentionally spy on the bathing goddess Pallas Athena and earlier versions of the myth involving Artemis did not involve the bath at all 33 Worship in the classical period Edit An ancient Fourth Pompeian Style Roman wall painting depicting a scene of sacrifice in honor of the goddess Diana she is seen here accompanied by a deer The fresco was discovered in the triclinium of House of the Vettii in Pompeii Italy Diana was an ancient goddess common to all Latin tribes Therefore many sanctuaries were dedicated to her in the lands inhabited by Latins Her primary sanctuary was a woodland grove overlooking Lake Nemi a body of water also known as Diana s Mirror where she was worshiped as Diana Nemorensis or Diana of the Wood In Rome the cult of Diana may have been almost as old as the city itself Varro mentions her in the list of deities to whom king Titus Tatius promised to build a shrine His list included Luna and Diana Lucina as separate entities Another testimony to the antiquity of her cult is to be found in the lex regia of King Tullus Hostilius that condemns those guilty of incest to the sacratio to Diana She had a temple in Rome on the Aventine Hill according to tradition dedicated by king Servius Tullius Its location is remarkable as the Aventine is situated outside the pomerium i e original territory of the city in order to comply with the tradition that Diana was a goddess common to all Latins and not exclusively of the Romans Being placed on the Aventine and thus outside the pomerium meant that Diana s cult essentially remained a foreign one like that of Bacchus she was never officially transferred to Rome as Juno was after the sack of Veii Other known sanctuaries and temples to Diana include Colle di Corne near Tusculum 34 where she is referred to with the archaic Latin name of deva Cornisca and where existed a collegium of worshippers 35 at Evora Portugal 36 Mount Algidus also near Tusculum 37 at Lavinium 38 and at Tibur Tivoli where she is referred to as Diana Opifera Nemorensis 39 Diana was also worshiped at a sacred wood mentioned by Livy 40 ad compitum Anagninum near Anagni and on Mount Tifata in Campania 41 According to Plutarch men and women alike were worshipers of Diana and were welcomed into all of her temples The one exception seems to have been a temple on the Vicus Patricius which men either did not enter due to tradition or were not allowed to enter Plutarch related a legend that a man had attempted to assault a woman worshiping in this temple and was killed by a pack of dogs echoing the myth of Diana and Actaeon which resulted in a superstition against men entering the temple 42 A feature common to nearly all of Diana s temples and shrines by the second century AD was the hanging up of stag antlers Plutarch noted that the only exception to this was the temple on the Aventine Hill in which bull horns had been hung up instead Plutarch explains this by way of reference to a legend surrounding the sacrifice of an impressive Sabine bull by King Servius at the founding of the Aventine temple 42 Sanctuary at Lake Nemi Edit Main article Diana Nemorensis An 18th century depiction of Lake Nemi as painted by John Robert Cozens Diana s worship may have originated at an open air sanctuary overlooking Lake Nemi in the Alban Hills near Aricia where she was worshiped as Diana Nemorensis or Diana of the Sylvan Glade 43 According to legendary accounts the sanctuary was founded by Orestes and Iphigenia after they fled from the Tauri In this tradition the Nemi sanctuary was supposedly built on the pattern of an earlier Temple of Artemis Tauropolos 44 and the first cult statue at Nemi was said to have been stolen from the Tauri and brought to Nemi by Orestes 12 45 Historical evidence suggests that worship of Diana at Nemi flourished from at least the 6th century BCE 45 until the 2nd century CE Her cult there was first attested in Latin literature by Cato the Elder in a surviving quote by the late grammarian Priscian 46 By the 4th century BCE the simple shrine at Nemi had been joined by a temple complex 45 The sanctuary served an important political role as it was held in common by the Latin League 47 48 A festival to Diana the Nemoralia was held yearly at Nemi on the Ides of August August 13 15 49 Worshipers traveled to Nemi carrying torches and garlands and once at the lake they left pieces of thread tied to fences and tablets inscribed with prayers 50 51 Diana s festival eventually became widely celebrated throughout Italy which was unusual given the provincial nature of Diana s cult The poet Statius wrote of the festival 5 It is the season when the most scorching region of the heavens takes over the land and the keen dog star Sirius so often struck by Hyperion s sun burns the gasping fields Now is the day when Trivia s Arician grove convenient for fugitive kings grows smoky and the lake having guilty knowledge of Hippolytus glitters with the reflection of a multitude of torches Diana herself garlands the deserving hunting dogs and polishes the arrowheads and allows the wild animals to go in safety and at virtuous hearths all Italy celebrates the Hecatean Ides Statius Silv 3 I 52 60 Statius describes the triple nature of the goddess by invoking heavenly the stars earthly the grove itself and underworld Hecate imagery He also suggests by the garlanding of the dogs and polishing of the spears that no hunting was allowed during the festival 5 Legend has it that Diana s high priest at Nemi known as the Rex Nemorensis was always an escaped slave who could only obtain the position by defeating his predecessor in a fight to the death 43 Sir James George Frazer wrote of this sacred grove in The Golden Bough basing his interpretation on brief remarks in Strabo 5 3 12 Pausanias 2 27 24 and Servius commentary on the Aeneid 6 136 The legend tells of a tree that stood in the center of the grove and was heavily guarded No one was allowed to break off its limbs with the exception of a runaway slave who was allowed if he could to break off one of the boughs He was then in turn granted the privilege to engage the Rex Nemorensis the current king and priest of Diana in a fight to the death If the slave prevailed he became the next king for as long as he could defeat his challengers However Joseph Fontenrose criticised Frazer s assumption that a rite of this sort actually occurred at the sanctuary 52 and no contemporary records exist that support the historical existence of the Rex Nemorensis 53 Spread and conflation with Artemis Edit A Roman fresco depicting Diana hunting 4th century AD from the Via Livenza hypogeum in Rome Rome hoped to unify into and control the Latin tribes around Nemi 47 so Diana s worship was imported to Rome as a show of political solidarity Diana soon afterwards became Hellenized and combined with the Greek goddess Artemis a process which culminated with the appearance of Diana beside Apollo the brother of Artemis in the first lectisternium at Rome in 399 BCE 54 The process of identification between the two goddesses probably began when artists who were commissioned to create new cult statues for Diana s temples outside Nemi were struck by the similar attributes between Diana and the more familiar Artemis and sculpted Diana in a manner inspired by previous depictions of Artemis Sibyllene influence and trade with Massilia where similar cult statues of Artemis existed would have completed the process 45 According to Francoise Helene Pairault s study 55 historical and archaeological evidence point to the fact that the characteristics given to both Diana of the Aventine Hill and Diana Nemorensis were the product of the direct or indirect influence of the cult of Artemis which was spread by the Phoceans among the Greek towns of Campania Cuma and Capua who in turn had passed it over to the Etruscans and the Latins by the 6th and 5th centuries BCE Evidence suggests that a confrontation occurred between two groups of Etruscans who fought for supremacy those from Tarquinia Vulci and Caere allied with the Greeks of Capua and those of Clusium This is reflected in the legend of the coming of Orestes to Nemi and of the inhumation of his bones in the Roman Forum near the temple of Saturn 56 The cult introduced by Orestes at Nemi is apparently that of the Artemis Tauropolos The literary amplification 57 reveals a confused religious background different versions of Artemis were conflated under the epithet 58 As far as Nemi s Diana is concerned there are two different versions by Strabo 59 and Servius Honoratus Strabo s version looks to be the most authoritative as he had access to first hand primary sources on the sanctuaries of Artemis i e the priest of Artemis Artemidoros of Ephesus The meaning of Tauropolos denotes an Asiatic goddess with lunar attributes lady of the herds 60 The only possible interpretatio graeca of high antiquity concerning Diana Nemorensis could have been the one based on this ancient aspect of a deity of light master of wildlife Tauropolos is an ancient epithet attached to Artemis Hecate and even Athena 61 According to the legend Orestes founded Nemi together with Iphigenia 62 At Cuma the Sybil is the priestess of both Phoibos and Trivia 63 Hesiod 64 and Stesichorus 65 tell the story according to which after her death Iphigenia was divinised under the name of Hecate a fact which would support the assumption that Artemis Tauropolos had a real ancient alliance with the heroine who was her priestess in Taurid and her human paragon This religious complex is in turn supported by the triple statue of Artemis Hecate 17 In Rome Diana was regarded with great reverence and was a patroness of lower class citizens called plebeians as well as slaves who could receive asylum in her temples Georg Wissowa proposed that this might be because the first slaves of the Romans were Latins of the neighboring tribes 66 However the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus had the same custom of the asylum In Rome Edit Diana of Versailles a 2nd century Roman version in the Greek tradition of iconography Louvre Museum Paris Worship of Diana probably spread into the city of Rome beginning around 550 BCE 45 during her Hellenization and combination with the Greek goddess Artemis Diana was first worshiped along with her brother and mother Apollo and Latona in their temple in the Campus Martius and later in the Temple of Apollo Palatinus 12 The first major temple dedicated primarily to Diana in the vicinity of Rome was the Temple of Diana Aventina Diana of the Aventine Hill According to the Roman historian Livy the construction of this temple began in the 6th century BCE and was inspired by stories of the massive Temple of Artemis at Ephesus which was said to have been built through the combined efforts of all the cities of Asia Minor Legend has it that Servius Tullius was impressed with this act of massive political and economic cooperation and convinced the cities of the Latin League to work with the Romans to build their own temple to the goddess 67 However there is no compelling evidence for such an early construction of the temple and it is more likely that it was built in the 3rd century BCE following the influence of the temple at Nemi and probably about the same time the first temples to Vertumnus who was associated with Diana were built in Rome 264 BCE 45 The misconception that the Aventine Temple was inspired by the Ephesian Temple might originate in the fact that the cult images and statues used at the former were based heavily on those found in the latter 45 Whatever its initial construction date records show that the Avantine Temple was rebuilt by Lucius Cornificius in 32 BCE 44 If it was still in use by the 4th century CE the Aventine temple would have been permanently closed during the persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire Today a short street named the Via del Tempio di Diana and an associated plaza Piazza del Tempio di Diana commemorates the site of the temple Part of its wall is located within one of the halls of the Apuleius restaurant 68 Later temple dedications often were based on the model for ritual formulas and regulations of the Temple of Diana 69 Roman politicians built several minor temples to Diana elsewhere in Rome to secure public support One of these was built in the Campus Martius in 187 BCE no Imperial period records of this temple have been found and it is possible it was one of the temples demolished around 55 BCE in order to build a theater 44 Diana also had a public temple on the Quirinal Hill the sanctuary of Diana Planciana It was dedicated by Plancius in 55 BCE though it is unclear which Plancius 44 In their worship of Artemis Greeks filled their temples with sculptures of the goddess created by well known sculptors and many were adapted for use in the worship of Diana by the Romans beginning around the 2nd century BCE the beginning of a period of strong Hellenistic influence on Roman religion The earliest depictions of the Artemis of Ephesus are found on Ephesian coins from this period By the Imperial period small marble statues of the Ephesian Artemis were being produced in the Western region of the Mediterranean and were often bought by Roman patrons 70 The Romans obtained a large copy of an Ephesian Artemis statue for their temple on the Aventine Hill 12 Diana was usually depicted for educated Romans in her Greek guise If she was shown accompanied by a deer as in the Diana of Versailles this is because Diana was the patroness of hunting The deer may also offer a covert reference to the myth of Acteon or Actaeon who saw her bathing naked Diana transformed Acteon into a stag and set his own hunting dogs to kill him At Mount Tifata Edit Diana and her hound c 1720 In Campania Diana had a major temple at Mount Tifata near Capua She was worshiped there as Diana Tifatina This was one of the oldest sanctuaries in Campania As a rural sanctuary it included lands and estates that would have been worked by slaves following the Roman conquest of Campania and records show that expansion and renovation projects at her temple were funded in part by other conquests by Roman military campaigns The modern Christian church of Sant Angelo in Formis was built on the ruins of the Tifata temple 44 Roman provinces Edit In the Roman provinces Diana was widely worshiped alongside local deities Over 100 inscriptions to Diana have been cataloged in the provinces mainly from Gaul Upper Germania and Britannia Diana was commonly invoked alongside another forest god Silvanus as well as other mountain gods In the provinces she was occasionally conflated with local goddesses such as Abnoba and was given high status with Augusta and regina queen being common epithets 71 Household worship Edit Diana was not only regarded as a goddess of the wilderness and the hunt but was often worshiped as a patroness of families She served a similar function to the hearth goddess Vesta and was sometimes considered to be a member of the Penates the deities most often invoked in household rituals In this role she was often given a name reflecting the tribe of family who worshiped her and asked for her protection For example in what is now Wiesbaden Diana was worshiped as Diana Mattiaca by the Mattiaci tribe Other family derived named attested in the ancient literature include Diana Cariciana Diana Valeriana and Diana Plancia As a house goddess Diana often became reduced in stature compared to her official worship by the Roman state religion In personal or family worship Diana was brought to the level of other household spirits and was believed to have a vested interest in the prosperity of the household and the continuation of the family The Roman poet Horace regarded Diana as a household goddess in his Odes and had an altar dedicated to her in his villa where household worship could be conducted In his poetry Horace deliberately contrasted the kinds of grand elevated hymns to Diana on behalf of the entire Roman state the kind of worship that would have been typical at her Aventine temple with a more personal form of devotion 13 Images of Diana and her associated myths have been found on sarcophagi of wealthy Romans They often included scenes depicting sacrifices to the goddess and on at least one example the deceased man is shown joining Diana s hunt 12 Theology EditSince ancient times philosophers and theologians have examined the nature of Diana in light of her worship traditions attributes mythology and identification with other gods Conflation with other goddesses Edit Wooden statue of Diana Abnoba Museum for Prehistory in Thuringia Diana was initially a hunting goddess and goddess of the local woodland at Nemi 72 but as her worship spread she acquired attributes of other similar goddesses As she became conflated with Artemis she became a moon goddess identified with the other lunar goddesses goddess Luna and Hekate 72 She also became the goddess of childbirth and ruled over the countryside Catullus wrote a poem to Diana in which she has more than one alias Latonia Lucina Juno Trivia Luna 73 Along with Mars Diana was often venerated at games held in Roman amphitheaters and some inscriptions from the Danubian provinces show that she was conflated with Nemesis in this role as Diana Nemesis 12 Outside of Italy Diana had important centers of worship where she was syncretised with similar local deities in Gaul Upper Germania and Britannia Diana was particularly important in the region in and around the Black Forest where she was conflated with the local goddess Abnoba and worshiped as Diana Abnoba 74 Some late antique sources went even further syncretizing many local great goddesses into a single Queen of Heaven The Platonist philosopher Apuleius writing in the late 2nd century depicted the goddess declaring I come Lucius moved by your entreaties I mother of the universe mistress of all the elements first born of the ages highest of the gods queen of the shades first of those who dwell in heaven representing in one shape all gods and goddesses My will controls the shining heights of heaven the health giving sea winds and the mournful silences of hell the entire world worships my single godhead in a thousand shapes with divers rites and under many a different name The Phrygians first born of mankind call me the Pessinuntian Mother of the gods the native Athenians the Cecropian Minerva the island dwelling Cypriots Paphian Venus the archer Cretans Dictynnan Diana the triple tongued Sicilians Stygian Proserpine the ancient Eleusinians Actaean Ceres some call me Juno some Bellona others Hecate others Rhamnusia but both races of Ethiopians those on whom the rising and those on whom the setting sun shines and the Egyptians who excel in ancient learning honour me with the worship which is truly mine and call me by my true name Queen Isis Apuleius translated by E J Kenny The Golden Ass 75 Later poets and historians looked to Diana s identity as a triple goddess to merge her with triads heavenly earthly and underworld cthonic goddesses Maurus Servius Honoratus said that the same goddess was called Luna in heaven Diana on earth and Proserpina in hell 4 Michael Drayton praises the Triple Diana in poem The Man in the Moone 1606 So these great three most powerful of the rest Phoebe Diana Hecate do tell Her sovereignty in Heaven in Earth and Hell 76 77 78 In Platonism Edit Based on the earlier writings of Plato the Neoplatonist philosophers of late antiquity united the various major gods of Hellenic tradition into a series of monads containing within them triads with some creating the world some animating it or bringing it to life and others harmonizing it Within this system Proclus considered Diana to be one of the primary animating or life giving deities Proclus citing Orphic tradition concludes that Diana presides over all the generation in nature and is the midwife of physical productive principles and that she extends these genitals distributing as far as to subterranean natures the prolific power of Bacchus 14 Specifically Proclus considered the life generating principle of the highest order within the Intellectual realm to be Rhea whom he identified with Ceres Within her divinity was produced the cause of the basic principle of life Projecting this principle into the lower Hypercosmic realm of reality generated a lower monad Kore who could therefore be understood as Ceres daughter Kore embodied the maidenly principle of generation that more importantly included a principle of division where Demeter generates life indiscriminately Kore distributes it individually This division results in another triad or trinity known as the Maidenly trinity within the monad of Kore namely Diana Proserpine and Minerva through whom individual living beings are given life and perfected Specifically according to a commentary by scholar Spyridon Rangos Diana equated with Hecate gives existence Proserpine equated with Soul gives form and Minerva equated with Virtue gives intellect 79 In his commentary on Proclus the 19th century Platonist scholar Thomas Taylor expanded upon the theology of the classical philosophers further interpreting the nature and roles of the gods in light of the whole body of Neoplatonist philosophy He cites Plato in giving a three form aspect to her central characteristic of virginity the undefiled the mundane and the anagogic Through the first form Diana is regarded as a lover of virginity Through the second she is the guardian of virtue Through the third she is considered to hate the impulses arising from generation Through the principle of the undefiled Taylor suggests that she is given supremacy in Proclus triad of life giving or animating deities and in this role the theurgists called her Hekate In this role Diana is granted undefiled power Amilieti from the other gods This generative power does not proceed forth from the goddess according to a statement by the Oracle of Delphi but rather resides with her giving her unparalleled virtue and in this way she can be said to embody virginity 80 Later commentators on Proclus have clarified that the virginity of Diana is not an absence of sexual drive but a renunciation of sexuality Diana embodies virginity because she generates but precedes active fertility within Neoplatonism an important maxim is that every productive cause is superior to the nature of the produced effect 79 Using the ancient Neoplatonists as a basis Taylor also commented on the triadic nature of Diana and related goddesses and the ways in which they subsist within one another partaking unevenly in each other s powers and attributes For example Kore is said to embody both Diana Hecate and Minerva who create the virtuous or virgin power within her but also Proserpine her sole traditional identification through whom the generative power of the Kore as a whole is able to proceed forth into the world where it joins with the demiurge to produce further deities including Bacchus and nine azure eyed flower producing daughters 80 Proclus also included Artemis Diana in a second triad of deities along with Ceres and Juno According to Proclus The life generating triad begins with Demeter who engenders the entire encosmic life namely intellectual life psychic life and the life that is inseparable from body Hera who brings forth the birth of soul occupies the cohering middle position for the intellectual goddess outpours from herself all the processions of the psychic kinds finally Artemis has been assigned to the end of the trinity because she activates all the natural formative principles and perfects the self completeness of matter it is for this reason namely because she supervises natural development and natural birth that the theologians and Socrates in the Theaetetus call her Lochia 79 Proclus pointed to the conflict between Hera and Artemis in the Illiad as a representation of the two kinds of human souls Where Hera creates the higher more cultured or worthy souls Artemis brings light to and perfects the less worthy or less rational As explained by Ragnos 2000 The aspect of reality which Artemis and Hera share and because of which they engage in a symbolic conflict is the engendering of life Hera elevates rational living beings up to intellectual rational existence whereas Artemis s power pertains to human life as far as its physical existence as a living thing Artemis deals with the most elementary forms of life or the most elementary part of all life whereas Hera operates in the most elevated forms of life or the most elevated part of all life 79 Worship in Post Roman Europe Edit Gallo Roman bronze statuette of Diana latter 1st century Sermons and other religious documents have provided evidence for the worship of Diana during the Middle Ages Though few details have been recorded enough references to Diana worship during the early Christian period exist to give some indication that it may have been relatively widespread among remote and rural communities throughout Europe and that such beliefs persisted into the Merovingian period 81 References to contemporary Diana worship exist from the 6th century on the Iberian peninsula and what is now southern France 81 though more detailed accounts of Dianic cults were given for the Low Countries and southern Belgium in particular Many of these were probably local goddesses and wood nymphs or dryads which had been conflated with Diana by Christian writers Latinizing local names and traditions 81 In the Low Countries Edit The 6th century bishop Gregory of Tours reported meeting with a deacon named Vulfilaic also known as Saint Wulflaicus or Walfroy the Stylite who founded a hermitage on a hill in what is now Margut France On the same hill he found an image of Diana which the unbelieving people worshiped as a god According to Gregory s report worshipers would also sing chants in Diana s honor as they drank and feasted Vulfilaic destroyed a number of smaller pagan statues in the area but the statue of Diana was too large After converting some of the local population to Christianity Vulfilaic and a group of local residents attempted to pull the large statue down the mountain in order to destroy it but failed as it was too large to be moved In Vulfilaic s account after praying for a miracle he was then able to single handedly pull down the statue at which point he and his group smashed it to dust with their hammers According to Vulfilaic this incident was quickly followed by an outbreak of pimples or sores that covered his entire body which he attributed to demonic activity and similarly cured via what he described as a miracle Vulfilaic would later found a church on the site which is today known as Mont Saint Walfroy 82 Additional evidence for surviving pagan practices in the Low Countries region comes from the Vita Eligii or Life of Saint Eligius written by Audoin in the 7th century Audoin drew together the familiar admonitions of Eligius to the people of Flanders In his sermons he denounced pagan customs that the people continued to follow In particular he denounced several Roman gods and goddesses alongside Druidic mythological beliefs and objects I denounce and contest that you shall observe no sacrilegious pagan customs For no cause or infirmity should you consult magicians diviners sorcerers or incantators Do not observe auguries No influence attaches to the first work of the day or the phase of the moon Do not make vetulas little deer or iotticos or set tables at night or exchange New Year gifts or supply superfluous drinks No Christian performs solestitia or dancing or leaping or diabolical chants No Christian should presume to invoke the name of a demon not Neptune or Orcus or Diana or Minerva or Geniscus No one should observe Jove s day in idleness No Christian should make or render any devotion to the gods of the trivium where three roads meet to the fanes or the rocks or springs or groves or corners None should presume to hang any phylacteries from the neck of man nor beast None should presume to make lustrations or incantations with herbs or to pass cattle through a hollow tree or ditch No woman should presume to hang amber from her neck or call upon Minerva or other ill starred beings in their weaving or dyeing None should call the sun or moon lord or swear by them No one should tell fate or fortune or horoscopes by them as those do who believe that a person must be what he was born to be 83 Legends from medieval Belgium concern a natural spring which came to be known as the Fons Remacli a location which may have been home to late surviving worship of Diana Remacle was a monk appointed by Eligius to head a monastery at Solignac and he is reported to have encountered Diana worship in the area around the river Warche The population in this region was said to have been involved in the worship of Diana of the Ardennes a syncretism of Diana and the Celtic goddess Arduinna with effigies and stones of Diana used as evidence of pagan practices Remacle believed that demonic entities were present in the spring and had caused it to run dry He performed and exorcism of the water source and installed a lead pipe which allowed the water to flow again 84 The Society of Diana Edit Diana is the only pagan goddess mentioned by name in the New Testament only in some Bible versions of Acts 19 many other Bibles refer to her as Artemis instead As a result she became associated with many folk beliefs involving goddess like supernatural figures that Catholic clergy wished to demonize In the Middle Ages legends of night time processions of spirits led by a female figure are recorded in the church records of Northern Italy western Germany and southern France The spirits were said to enter houses and consume food which then miraculously re appeared They would sing and dance and dispense advice regarding healing herbs and the whereabouts of lost objects If the house was in good order they would bring fertility and plenty If not they would bring curses to the family Some women reported participating in these processions while their bodies still lay in bed Historian Carlo Ginzburg has referred to these legendary spirit gatherings as The Society of Diana 85 Local clergy complained that women believed they were following Diana or Herodias riding out on appointed nights to join the processions or carry out instructions from the goddess 86 The earliest reports of these legends appear in the writings of Regino of Prum in the year 899 followed by many additional reports and variants of the legend in documents by Ratherius and others By 1310 the names of the goddess figures attached to the legend were sometimes combined as Herodiana 86 It is likely that the clergy of this time used the identification of the procession s leader as Diana or Herodias in order to fit an older folk belief into a Biblical framework as both are featured and demonized in the New Testament Herodias was often conflated with her daughter Salome in legend which also holds that upon being presented with the severed head of John the Baptist she was blown into the air by wind from the saint s mouth through which she continued to wander for eternity Diana was often conflated with Hecate a goddess associated with the spirits of the dead and with witchcraft These associations and the fact that both figures are attested to in the Bible made them a natural fit for the leader of the ghostly procession Clergy used this identification to assert that the spirits were evil and that the women who followed them were inspired by demons As was typical of this time period though pagan beliefs and practices were near totally eliminated from Europe the clergy and other authorities still treated paganism as a real threat in part thanks to biblical influence much of the Bible had been written when various forms of paganism were still active if not dominant so medieval clergy applied the same kinds of warnings and admonitions for any non standard folk beliefs and practices they encountered 86 Based on analysis of church documents and parishioner confessions it is likely that the spirit identified by the Church as Diana or Herodias was called by names of pre Christian figures like Holda a Germanic goddess of the winter solstice or with names referencing her bringing of prosperity like the Latin Abundia meaning plenty Satia meaning full or plentiful and the Italian Richella meaning rich 86 Some of the local titles for her such as bonae res meaning good things are similar to late classical titles for Hecate like bona dea This might indicate a cultural mixture of medieval folk ideas with holdovers from earlier pagan belief systems Whatever her true origin by the 13th century the leader of the legendary spirit procession had come to be firmly identified with Diana and Herodias through the influence of the Church 86 Modern development and folklore EditThe Golden Bough Edit J M W Turner s 1834 painting of the Golden Bough incident in the Aeneid In his wide ranging comparative study of mythology and religion The Golden Bough anthropologist James George Frazer drew on various lines of evidence to re interpret the legendary rituals associated with Diana at Nemi particularly that of the rex Nemorensis Frazer developed his ideas in relation to J M W Turner s painting also titled The Golden Bough depicting a dream like vision of the woodland lake of Nemi According to Frazer the rex Nemorensis or king at Nemi was the incarnation of a dying and reviving god a solar deity who participated in a mystical marriage to a goddess He died at the harvest and was reincarnated in the spring Frazer claimed that this motif of death and rebirth is central to nearly all of the world s religions and mythologies In Frazer s theory Diana functioned as a goddess of fertility and childbirth who assisted by the sacred king ritually returned life to the land in spring The king in this scheme served not only as a high priest but as a god of the grove Frazer identifies this figure with Virbius of which little is known but also with Jupiter via an association with sacred oak trees Frazer argued furthermore that Jupiter and Juno were simply duplicate names of Jana and Janus that is Diana and Dianus all of whom had identical functions and origins 87 Frazer s speculatively reconstructed folklore of Diana s origins and the nature of her cult at Nemi were not well received even by his contemporaries Godfrey Lienhardt noted that even during Frazer s lifetime other anthropologists had for the most part distanced themselves from his theories and opinions and that the lasting influence of The Golden Bough and Frazer s wider body of work has been in the literary rather than the academic world 88 Robert Ackerman wrote that for anthropologists Frazer is an embarrassment for being the most famous of them all and that most distance themselves from his work While The Golden Bough achieved wide popular appeal and exerted a disproportionate influence on so many 20th century creative writers Frazer s ideas played a much smaller part in the history of academic social anthropology 88 The Gospel of the Witches Edit 4th century BC Praxitelean bronze head of a goddess wearing a lunate crown found at Issa Vis Croatia Folk legends like the Society of Diana which linked the goddess to forbidden gatherings of women with spirits may have influenced later works of folklore One of these is Charles Godfrey Leland s Aradia or the Gospel of the Witches which prominently featured Diana at the center of an Italian witch cult 86 In Leland s interpretation of supposed Italian folk witchcraft Diana is considered Queen of the Witches In this belief system Diana is said to have created the world of her own being having in herself the seeds of all creation yet to come It was said that out of herself she divided the darkness and the light keeping for herself the darkness of creation and creating her brother Lucifer Diana was believed to have loved and ruled with her brother and with him bore a daughter Aradia a name likely derived from Herodias who leads and teaches the witches on earth 89 86 Leland s claim that Aradia represented an authentic tradition from an underground witch cult which had secretly worshiped Diana since ancient times has been dismissed by most scholars of folklore religion and medieval history After the 1921 publication of Margaret Murray s The Witch cult in Western Europe which hypothesized that the European witch trials were actually a persecution of a pagan religious survival American sensationalist author Theda Kenyon s 1929 book Witches Still Live connected Murray s thesis with the witchcraft religion in Aradia 90 91 Arguments against Murray s thesis would eventually include arguments against Leland Witchcraft scholar Jeffrey Russell devoted some of his 1980 book A History of Witchcraft Sorcerers Heretics and Pagans to arguing against the claims Leland presented in Aradia 92 Historian Elliot Rose s A Razor for a Goat dismissed Aradia as a collection of incantations unsuccessfully attempting to portray a religion 93 In his book Triumph of the Moon historian Ronald Hutton doubted not only of the existence of the religion that Aradia claimed to represent and that the traditions Leland presented were unlike anything found in actual medieval literature 94 but also of the existence of Leland s sources arguing that it is more likely that Leland created the entire story than that Leland could be so easily duped 95 Religious scholar Chas S Clifton took exception to Hutton s position writing that it amounted to an accusation of serious literary fraud made by an argument from absence 96 Building on the work of Frazer Murray and others some 20th and 21st century authors have attempted to identify links between Diana and more localized deities R Lowe Thompson for example in his 2013 book The History of the Devil speculated that Diana may have been linked as an occasional spouse to the Gaulish horned god Cernunnos Thompson suggested that Diana in her role as wild goddess of the hunt would have made a fitting consort for Cernunnos in Western Europe and further noted the link between Diana as Proserpina with Pluto the Greek god associated with the riches of the earth who served a similar role to the Gaulish Cernunnos Modern worship Edit Because Leland s claims about an Italian witch cult are questionable the first verifiable worship of Diana in the modern age was probably begun by Wicca The earliest known practitioners of Neopagan witchcraft were members of a tradition begun by Gerald Gardner Published versions of the devotional materials used by Gardner s group dated to 1949 are heavily focused on the worship of Aradia the daughter of Diana in Leland s folklore Diana herself was recognized as an aspect of a single great goddess in the tradition of Apuleius as described in the Wiccan Charge of the Goddess itself adapted from Leland s text 97 Some later Wiccans such as Scott Cunningham would replace Aradia with Diana as the central focus of worship 98 In the early 1960s Victor Henry Anderson founded the Feri Tradition a form of Wicca that draws from both Charles Leland s folklore and the Gardnerian tradition Anderson claimed that he had first been initiated into a witchcraft tradition as a child in 1926 99 and that he had been told the name of the goddess worshiped by witches was Tana 100 The name Tana originated in Leland s Aradia where he claimed it was an old Etruscan name for Diana The Feri Tradition founded by Anderson continues to recognize Tana Diana as an aspect of the Star Goddess related to the element of fire and representing the fiery womb that gives birth to and transforms all matter 100 In Aradia Diana is also credited as the creatrix of the material world and Queen of Faeries 101 A few Wiccan traditions would elevate Diana to a more prominent position of worship and there are two distinct modern branches of Wicca focused primarily on Diana The first founded during the early 1970s in the United States by Morgan McFarland and Mark Roberts has a feminist theology and only occasionally accepts male participants and leadership is limited to female priestesses 102 103 McFarland Dianic Wiccans base their tradition primarily on the work of Robert Graves and his book The White Goddess and were inspired by references to the existence of medieval European Dianic cults in Margaret Murray s book The Witch Cult in Western Europe 103 The second Dianic tradition founded by Zsuzsanna Budapest in the mid 1970s is characterized by an exclusive focus on the feminine aspect of the divine and as a result is exclusively female This tradition combines elements from British Traditional Wicca Italian folk magic based on the work of Charles Leland feminist values and healing practices drawn from a variety of different cultures 104 102 A third Neopagan tradition heavily inspired by the worship of Diana through the lens of Italian folklore is Stregheria founded in the 1980s It centers around a pair of deities regarded as divine lovers who are known by several variant names including Diana and Dianus alternately given as Tana and Tanus or Jana and Janus the later two deity names were mentioned by James Frazer in The Golden Bough as later corruptions of Diana and Dianus which themselves were alternate and possibly older names for Juno and Jupiter 105 The tradition was founded by author Raven Grimassi and influenced by Italian folktales he was told by his mother One such folktale describes the moon being impregnated by her lover the morning star a parallel to Leland s mythology of Diana and her lover Lucifer 85 Diana was also a subject of worship in certain Feraferian rites particularly those surrounding the autumnal equinox beginning in 1967 106 Legacy EditIn language Edit Both the Romanian words for fairy Zană 107 and Sanziană the Leonese and Portuguese word for water nymph xana and the Spanish word for shooting target and morning call diana seem to come from the name of Diana In the arts Edit This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Diana mythology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Diana Reposing by Paul Jacques Aime Baudry The nude goddess identified by the crescent moon in her hair and the bow and quiver at her side reclines on a blue drapery Since the Renaissance Diana s myths have often been represented in the visual and dramatic arts including the opera L arbore di Diana In the 16th century Diana s image figured prominently at the chateaus of Fontainebleau Chenonceau amp at Anet in deference to Diane de Poitiers mistress of Henri of France At Versailles she was incorporated into the Olympian iconography with which Louis XIV the Apollo like Sun King liked to surround himself Diana is also a character in the 1876 Leo Delibes ballet Sylvia The plot deals with Sylvia one of Diana s nymphs and sworn to chastity and Diana s assault on Sylvia s affections for the shepherd Amyntas In literature Edit In The Knight s Tale in Geoffrey Chaucer s The Canterbury Tales Emily prays to Diana to be spared from marriage to either Palamon or Arcite In Ode by John Keats he writes Browsed by none but Dian s fawns line 12 In the sonnet To Science by Edgar Allan Poe science is said to have dragged Diana from her car Diana Soren the main character in Carlos Fuentes novel Diana o la cazadora soltera Diana or The Lone Huntress is described as having the same personality as the goddess In Castaway by Augusta Webster women who claim they are virtuous despite never having been tempted are referred to as Dianas Line 128 In Jonathan Swift s poem The Progress of Beauty as goddess of the moon Diana is used in comparison to the 17th early 18th century everyday woman Swift satirically writes about Starts When first Diana leaves her bed In Geoffrey of Monmouth s Historia Regum Britanniae History of the Kings of Britain Diana leads the Trojan Brutus to Britain where he and his people settle The character of Diana is the principal character in the children s novel The Moon Stallion by Brian Hayles 1978 and the BBC Television series of the same name Diana is played by the actress Sarah Sutton In Rick Riordan s Camp Half Blood Chronicles Diana acts as the Roman incarnation of Artemis although she doesn t appear until The Tyrant s Tomb Throughout The Heroes of Olympus along with the other gods Artemis is split between her Greek and Roman incarnations In The Tyrant s Tomb Apollo summons his sister for help against Tarquin and his undead army Diana appears with the Hunters of Artemis to slay Tarquin and his army and she heals Apollo s wounds before departing again In Shakespeare Diana as the Huntress by Giampietrino In Shakespeare s Pericles Prince of Tyre Diana appears to Pericles in a vision telling him to go to her temple and tell his story to her followers Diana is referenced in As You Like It to describe how Rosalind feels about marriage Diana is referred to in Twelfth Night when Orsino compares Viola in the guise of Cesario to Diana Diana s lip is not more smooth and rubious Speaking of his wife Desdemona Othello the Moor says Her name that was as fresh as Dian s visage is now begrimed and black as my own face There is a reference to Diana in Much Ado About Nothing where Hero is said to seem like Dian in her orb in terms of her chastity In Henry IV Part 1 Falstaff styles himself and his highway robbing friends as Diana s foresters gentlemen of the shade minions of the moon who are governed by their noble and chase mistress the moon under whose countenance they steal In All s Well That Ends Well Diana appears as a figure in the play and Helena makes multiple allusions to her such as Now Dian from thy altar do I fly and wish chastely and love dearly that your Dian was both herself and love The Steward also says Dian no queen of virgins that would suffer her poor knight surprised without rescue in the first assault or ransom afterward It can be assumed that Dian is simply a shortening of Diana since later in the play when Parolles letter to Diana is read aloud it reads Dian 108 The goddess is also referenced indirectly in A Midsummer Night s Dream The character Hippolyta states And then the moon like to a silver bow new bent in Heaven She refers to Diana goddess of the moon who is often depicted with a silver hunting bow In the same play the character Hermia is told by the Duke Theseus that she must either wed the character Demetrius Or on Diana s alter to protest for aye austerity and single life He is referring to her becoming a nun with the goddess Diana having connotations of chastity In The Merchant of Venice Portia states I will die as chaste as Diana unless I be obtained by the manner of my father s will I ii In Romeo and Juliet Romeo describes Rosaline saying that She hath Dian s wit In games and comicsThe character of Diana from the video game League of Legends is largely based on the goddess Dr William Moulton Marston drew from the Diana archetype as an allegorical basis for Wonder Woman s proper name Princess Diana for DC Comics Most versions of Wonder Woman s origin story state that she is given the name Diana because her mother Hippolyte was inspired by the goddess of the moon that Diana was born under Diana also is one of the primary gods in the video game Ryse In the manga and anime series Sailor Moon Diana is the feline companion to Chibiusa Usagi s daughter Diana is the daughter of Artemis and Luna All of these characters are advisers to rulers of the kingdom of the moon and therefore have moon associated names In painting and sculpture Edit Fuente de la Diana Cazadora 1938 1942 in bronze at Paseo de la Reforma Mexico City Diana 1892 93 Augustus Saint Gaudens Bronze Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Diana Wounded bronze statue by Sir Edgar Bertram Mackennal housed in Tate Gallery of London Diana has been one of the most popular themes in art Painters like Titian Peter Paul Rubens Francois Boucher Nicolas Poussin and made use of her myth as a major theme Most depictions of Diana in art featured the stories of Diana and Actaeon or Callisto or depicted her resting after hunting Some famous work of arts with a Diana theme are Diana and Actaeon Diana and Callisto and Death of Actaeon by Titian Diana and Callisto Diana Returning from the Hunt Diana Resting After a Bath and Diana Getting Out of Bath by Francois Boucher Diana Bathing With Her Nymphs by Rembrandt Diana and Endymion by Poussin Diana and Callisto Diana and Her Nymph Departing From Hunt Diana and Her Nymphs Surprised By A Faun by Rubens Diana and Endymion by Johann Michael Rottmayr Diana Wounded bronze statue by Sir Edgar Bertram Mackennal housed in Tate Gallery of London purchased 1908 109 The famous fountain at Palace of Caserta Italy created by Paolo Persico Brunelli Pietro Solari depicting Diana being surprised by Acteon A sculpture by Christophe Gabriel Allegrain can be seen at the Musee du Louvre Diana of the Tower a copper statue by Augustus Saint Gaudens was created as the weather vane for the second Madison Square Garden in 1893 It now is on display at the Philadelphia Museum of Art A sculpture by French sculptor Francois Leon Sicard in the Archibald Fountain Sydney NSW Australia 110 In Parma at the convent of San Paolo Antonio Allegri da Correggio painted the chamber of the Abbess Giovanna Piacenza s apartment He was commissioned in 1519 to paint the ceiling and mantel of the fireplace On the mantel he painted an image of Diana riding in a chariot possibly pulled by a stag Fuente de la Diana Cazadora Fountain of the Huntress Diana a fountain sculpture of huntress Diana with arrow pointing skyward stands in the roundabout at Paseo de la Reforma Zona Rosa Mexico City s Mexican Federal District Beaux Arts architecture and garden design late 19th and early 20th centuries used classic references in a modernized form Two of the most popular of the period were of Pomona goddess of orchards as a metaphor for Agriculture and Diana representing Commerce which is a perpetual hunt for advantage and profits Pomona left symbolizing agriculture and Diana symbolizing commerce as building decoration Many statues of Diana huntress in Yambol Bulgaria In film Edit In Jean Cocteau s 1946 film La Belle et la Bete it is Diana s power which has transformed and imprisoned the beast Diana Artemis appears at the end of the Pastoral Symphony segment of Fantasia In his 1968 film La Mariee etait en noir Francois Truffaut plays on this mythological symbol Julie Kohler played by Jeanne Moreau poses as Diana Artemis for the artist Fergus This choice seems fitting for Julie a character beset by revenge of which Fergus becomes the fourth victim She poses with a bow and arrow while wearing white In the 1995 comedy Four Rooms a coven of witches resurrects a petrified Diana on New Year s Eve French based collective LFKs and his film theatre director writer and visual artist Jean Michel Bruyere produced a series of 600 shorts and medium film an interactive audiovisual 360 installation Si poteris narrare licet if you are able to speak of it then you may do so in 2002 and a 3D 360 audiovisual installation La Dispersion du Fils lt http www newmediaart eu str10 html gt from 2008 to 2016 as well as an outdoor performance Une Brutalite pastorale 2000 all about the myth of Diana and Actaeon In music Edit Diana is a character in Hippolytus and Aricia an opera by Jean Philippe Rameau Diana is mentioned along with two other goddesses Luna and Lucina in Mike Oldfield s 1978 album Incantations For the album art of progressive metal band Protest the Hero s second studio album Fortress Diana is depicted protected by rams and other animals The theme of Diana is carried throughout the album The Norwegian classical composer Martin Romberg wrote a mass for mixed choir in seven parts after a selection of poems from Leland s text Aradia in which Diana features heavily The Witch Mass was premiered at the Vestfold International Festival in 2012 with Grex Vocalis In order to create the right atmosphere for the music the festival blocked of an entire road tunnel in Tonsberg to use it as a venue 111 The work was released on CD through Lawo Classics in 2014 112 Artemis and subsequently Diana is used as focal point in Artemis track twelve of AURORA s 2022 album The Gods We Can Touch Other Edit In the funeral oration of Diana Princess of Wales in 1997 her brother drew an analogy between the ancient goddess of hunting and his sister the most hunted person of the modern age DIANA Mayer amp Grammelspacher GmbH amp Co KG an airgun company is named after Diana the goddess of hunting 113 The Royal Netherlands Air Force 323rd Squadron is named Diana and uses a depiction of Diana with her bow in its badge 114 In Ciudad Juarez in Mexico a woman calling herself Diana Huntress of Bus Drivers was responsible for the shooting of two bus drivers in 2013 in what may have been vigilante attacks 115 116 Diana is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of coral snake Micrurus diana 117 Diana is also the name given to Wonder Woman of the DC Universe See also EditArtemis Diana Nemorensis Dianic Wicca Janus Domus de Janas Pachamama List of lunar deitiesNotes Edit Latin diˈaːna conservative pronunciation diːˈaːna The name was also written as Deiana by the Romans References Edit Diana Roman Religion Encyclopaedia Britannica com Retrieved 21 Nov 2018 Larousse Desk Reference Encyclopedia The Book People Haydock 1995 p 215 The Clay footed Superheroes Mythology Tales for the New Millennium ISBN 978 0 865 16719 3 p 56 a b Servius Commentary on Virgil s Aeneid 6 118 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Green C M C 2007 Roman Religion and the Cult of Diana at Aricia New York Cambridge University Press G Dumezil La religion Romaine archaique Paris 1974 part 3 chap 1 de Vaan 2008 p 168 Mallory amp Adams 2006 p 408 409 Ringe 2006 p 76 Beekes 2009 p 338 Cicero Marcus Tullius Walsh P G 2008 The Nature of the Gods Reissue ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 70 72 ISBN 978 0 19 954006 8 a b c d e f g Poulsen B 2009 Sanctuaries of the Goddess of the Hunt In Tobias Fischer Hansen amp Birte Poulsen eds From Artemis to Diana The Goddess of Man and Beast Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 8763507889 9788763507882 a b Cairns F 2012 Roman Lyric Collected Papers on Catullus and Horace Volume 301 of Beitrage zur Altertumskunde Walter de Gruyter 2012 a b Proclus Platonic Theology Book VII CNG Ancient Greek Roman British Coins www cngcoins com Alfoldi Diana Nemorensis American Journal of Archaeology 1960 137 44 p 141 a b A Alfoldi Diana Nemorensis in American journal of Archaeology 64 1960 p 137 144 Horace Carmina 3 22 1 Excavation of 1791 by cardinal Despuig not mentioned in the report cf P Riis who cites E Lucidi Memorie storiche dell antichissimo municipio ora terra dell Ariccia e delle sue colonie Genzano e Nemi Rome 1796 p 97 ff finds at Valle Giardino NSA 1931 p 259 261 platesVI a b Aeneid 6 35 10 537 Carmina 34 14 tu potens Trivia Horace Epode 17 Dionysius Hal VII 6 4 the people of Aricia help Aristdemos in bringing home the Etruscan booty Mircea Eliade Tre d histoire des religionsait Paris 1954 G Dumezil La religion Romaine archaique Paris 1974 part 3 chap 1 Artemis Retrieved 2012 11 11 a b Ovid Fasti III 262 271 Titus Livius Ab Urbe Condita 1 31 1 60 a b Gods and Goddesses of Rome Nova Roma Ennius Annales 27 edition of Vahlen Varro as cited by Nonius Marcellus p 197M Cicero Timaeus XI Arnobius Adversus Nationes 2 71 3 29 Macrobius Saturnalia I 9 8 9 Cicero De Natura Deorum ii 67 Schlam C C 1984 Diana and Actaeon Metamorphoses of a Myth Classical Antiquity Vol 3 No 1 Apr 1984 pp 82 110 Pliny the Elder Naturalis Historia XVI 242 CIL 975 CIL XIV 2633 Hifler Joyce The Goddess Diana Witches Of The Craft 1 accessed November 27 2012 Horace Carmina I 21 5 6 Carmen Saeculare CIL XIV 2112 CIL 3537 Livy Ab Urbe Condita XXVII 4 Roy Merle Peterson The cults of Campania Rome Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome 1919 pp 322 328 a b Plutarch Roman Questions 3 a b Porteous A 2001 The Forest in Folklore and Mythology Courier Corporation ISBN 0486420108 9780486420103 a b c d e Carlsen J 2009 Sanctuaries of Artemis and the Domitii Ahenobarbi Tobias Fischer Hansen amp Birte Poulsen eds From Artemis to Diana The Goddess of Man and Beast Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 8763507889 9788763507882 a b c d e f g Gordon A E 1932 On the Origin of Diana Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 63 1932 pp 177 192 p 178 Supposed Greek origins for the Aricia cult are strictly a literary topos Gordon 1932 178 note and p 181 a b commune Latinorum Dianae templum in Varro Lingua Latina V 43 the cult there was of antiqua religione in Pliny s Natural History xliv 91 242 and Ovid s Fasti III 327 331 Poulsen B 2009 Introduction Tobias Fischer Hansen amp Birte Poulsen eds From Artemis to Diana The Goddess of Man and Beast Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 8763507889 9788763507882 The date coincides with the founding dates celebrated at Aricium Arthur E Gordon On the Origin of Diana Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 63 1932 pp 177 192 p 178 Ovid Fasti trans James George Frazer Loeb Classical Library Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1931 3 259 275 Anguelova V N 2011 The Sound of Silence Sacred Place in Byzantine and Post Byzantine Devotional Art Fontenrose J 1966 The Ritual Theory of Myth University of California Press ch 3 Gordon Arthur E On the Origin of Diana 186 and Encyclopedia Britannica 1911 Nemorensis Lacus 369 which cites Strabo Pausanius and Servius as the first sources for the rex N legend Gordon 1932 179 Diana Nemorensis deesse latine deesse hellenisee in Melanges d archeologie et d histoire 81 1969 p 425 471 Servius ad Aeneidem II 116 VI 136 Hyginus Fabulae 261 Ovid Metamorphoses XIV 331 2 Scythicae regnum nemorale Dianae Lucanus Pharsalia III 86 qua sublime nemus Scythicae qua regna Dianae Silius Italicus Punica IV 367 VIII 362 Valerius Flaccus Argonauticae II 305 Jean Bayet Les origines de l Arcadisme romain p 135 M P Nilson Griechische Religionsgeschichte Munich 1955 p 485 ff Strabo V 249 afidrymata ths tayropoloy Suidas s v h Artemis en Tayrois ths Sky8ias timwmenh h apo meroys twn poimniwn epstasis h oti h ayth th selhnh esti kai epoxeitai tayrois Darehnberg Saglio Pottier Dictionnaire des antiquites s v Diana fig 2357 Hesichius s v Tauropolai Scholiasta ad Aristophanem Lysistrata 447 Suidas above Photius Lexicon s v Tuaropolos N Yalouris Athena als Herrin der Pferde in Museum Helveticum 7 1950 p 99 E Abel Orphica Hymni I in Hecaten 7 Hymni magici V in Selenen 4 Servius ad Aeneidem VI 136 Aeneis VI 35 F H Pairault p 448 citing Jean Bayet Origines de l Hercule romain p 280 n 4 Hesiod Catalogueedited by Augusto Traversa Naples 1951 p 76 text 82 R Merkelbach M L West Fragmenta Hesiodea Oxonii 1967 fragment 23 Orestia cited by Philodemos Peri eysebeias 24 Gomperz II 52 fragment 38 B Pausanias I 43 1 II 22 7 as quoted by Dumezil La religion romaine archaique Paris 1974 part 3 chap 1 Livy Ab urbe condita 1 45 Apuleius 24 November 2014 John Scheid 2003 1998 An Introduction to Roman Religion La Religion des Romains Translated by Janet Lloyd Bloomington IN Indiana University Press p 66 Nielsen M 2009 Diana Efesia Multimammia The metamorphosis of a pagan goddess from the Renaissance to the age of Neo Classicism In Tobias Fischer Hansen amp Birte Poulsen eds From Artemis to Diana The Goddess of Man and Beast Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 8763507889 9788763507882 Diane Abnobae to Diana Abnoba Deo Mercurio Access date 21 Nov 2018 a b Diana Roman religion Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 August 2015 Latin Oration scribd com Nicole Jufer amp Thierry Luginbuhl 2001 Les dieux gaulois repertoire des noms de divinites celtiques connus par l epigraphie les textes antiques et la toponymie Paris Editions Errance ISBN 2 87772 200 7 p 18 Apuleius 1998 The Golden Ass Penguin classics ISBN 978 0140435900 Alexander Chalmers Samuel Johnson 1810 The Works of the English Poets from Chaucer to Cowper VOL IV p 421 Gil Harootunian Gil Haroian Guerin 1996 The Fatal Hero Diana Deity of the Moon As an Archetype of the Modern Hero in English Literature p 261 Edited by Cesare Barbieri and Francesca Rampazzi 2001 Earth Moon Relationships p 7 ISBN 0 7923 7089 9 a b c d Rangos S 200 Proclus and Artemis On the Relevance of Neoplatonism to the Modern Study of Ancient Religion Kernos Online 13 2000 Online since 21 April 2011 connection on 01 May 2019 DOI 10 4000 kernos 1293 a b Taylor T 1816 The Six Books of Proclus the Platonic Successor on the Theology of Plato a b c Filotas Bernadette Pagan Survivals Superstitions and Popular Cultures in Early Medieval Pastoral Literature PIMS 2005 ISBN 0888441517 9780888441515 History of the Franks Book VIII 195 McNamara s translation of the Vita Eligii Arnold Ellen F Negotiating the Landscape Environment and Monastic Identity in the Medieval Ardennes The Middle Ages Series University of Pennsylvania Press 2012 ISBN 0812207521 9780812207521 a b Magliocco Sabina 2006 Italian American Stregheria and Wicca Ethnic Ambivalence in American Neopaganism Pp 55 86 in Michael Strmiska ed Modern Paganism in World Cultures Comparative Perspectives Santa Barbara CA ABC Clio a b c d e f g Magliocco Sabina 2009 Aradia in Sardinia The Archaeology of a Folk Character Pp 40 60 in Ten Years of Triumph of the Moon Hidden Publishing Frazer Sir James 1993 The Golden Bough London Wordsworth a b Lienhardt Godfrey 1993 Frazer s anthropology science and sensibility Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford 24 1 1 12 ISSN 0044 8370 Charles G Leland Aradia The Gospel of Witches Theophania Publishing US 2010 Hutton 2000 p 199 Clifton p 62 Russell Jeffrey 1982 A History of Witchcraft Sorcerers Heretics and Pagans Thames and Hudson p 218 ISBN 0 19 820744 1 Rose Elliot 1962 A Razor for a Goat University of Toronto Press pp 148 53 ISBN 9780802070555 Hutton 2000 pp 145 148 Hutton Ronald 1991 The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles Their Nature and Legacy Oxford University Press p 301 Clifton p 67 Kelly A The Gardnerian Book of Shadows Accessed online 26 Nov 2018 at http www sacred texts com pag gbos index htm Cunningham S 2009 Cunningham s Book of Shadows The Path of An American Traditionalist ISBN 0 73871 914 5 Llewellyn Woodbury MN Wallworth William 2015 Victor Henry Anderson 1917 2001 Deadfamilies com Archived from the original on 19 February 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2015 a b Faerywolf S 2018 Forbidden Mysteries of Faery Witchcraft Llewellyn Worldwide ISBN 0738756644 9780738756646 Gary Gemma 2018 Forward In Leland Charles G Aradia or the Gospel of Witches London Troy Books Publishing a b Adler Margot Drawing Down the Moon Witches Druids Goddess Worshippers and Other Pagans in America Today Boston Beacon press 1979 1986 ISBN 0 8070 3237 9 Chapter 8 Women Feminism and the Craft a b The McFarland Dianics A Chronology Spring Equinox 2000 Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Budapest Zsuzsanna Holy Book of Women s Mysteries The 1980 2003 electronic ISBN 0 914728 67 9 The Encyclopedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo Paganism Shelley Rabinovitch amp James Lewis page 262 2004 Butyrin Svetlana Early Autumnal Festival Accessed online 26 Nov 2018 http www phaedrus dds nl mabon5 htm Zană in DEX 98 Cross Wilbur L 1993 The Yale Shakespeare the complete works United States of America Barnes amp Noble pp 365 399 ISBN 1 56619 104 1 Encyclopaedia Britannica ed 1911 vol 24 pg 505 Plate IV City of Sydney Archived from the original on 2003 04 08 Report from the planning of the concert tb no 12 April 2012 Witch Mass on CD challengerecords com DIANA Mayer amp Grammelspacher GmbH amp Co KG THE DIANA TRADEMARK COMPANY THE DIANA TRADEMARK 2 accessed November 27 2012 F 16 Units RNLAF 323rd squadron f 16 net Tuckman Jo 6 September 2013 Diana Huntress of Bus Drivers instils fear and respect in Ciudad Juarez The Guardian Retrieved 20 September 2018 Diana Hunter of Bus Drivers This American Life Retrieved 20 September 2018 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Diana p 72 Bibliography Edit Beekes Robert S P 2009 Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill ISBN 978 90 04 32186 1 Mallory James P Adams Douglas Q 2006 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 929668 2 de Vaan Michiel 2008 Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages Brill ISBN 9789004167971 Ringe Donald 2006 From Proto Indo European to Proto Germanic A Linguistic History of English Volume I Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 928413 9 A Alfoldi Diana Nemorensis in American Journal of Archaeology 64 1960 p 137 144 A Alfoldi Early Rome and the Latins Ann Arbor 1964 p 47 100 E Paribeni A note on Diana Nemorensis in American Journal of Archaeology 65 1961 p 55 P J Riis The Cult Image of Diana Nemorensis in Acta Archaeologica Kopenhagen 37 1966 p 69 ff J Heurgon in Magna Graecia 1969 Jan Feb 1969 p 12 ff March Apr p 1ff J G Frazer Balder the Beautiful II London 1913 p 95 ff 302 ff L Morpurgo Nemus Aricinum in MonAntLincei 13 1903 c 300 ff A Merlin L Aventin dans l antiquite Paris BEFAR 97 1906 G Wissowa Religion und Kultus der Romer Munich 1912 p 198 ff F Altheim Griechischen Gotter im alten Rom Giessen 1930 p 93 172 A E Gordon On the Origin of Diana in Transactions of the AMerican Philological Association 63 1932 p 177ff A E Gordon Local Cults in Aricia University of California Publications in Classical Archaeology 2 1934 p 1ff J Heurgon Recherhes sur Capoue preromaine in BEFAR 154 Paris 1942 p 307 ff J Gage Apollon Romain in BEFAR 182 Paris 1955 J Bayet Histoire politique et psychologique de la religion romaine Paris 1957 p 20 ff 39ff K Latte Romische Religionsgeschichte Munich 1960 p 169 173 R Schilling Une victime des vicissitudes politiques la Diane latine in Hommages a Jean Bayet Collection Latomus 45 Bruxelles 1960 p 650 ff A Momigliano Sul dies natalis del santuario federale di Diana sull Aventino in RAL 17 1962 p 387 ff G Dumezil La religion romaine archaique Paris 1966 p 398 ff External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Diana Look up Diana in Wiktionary the free dictionary Landscape with Diana and Callisto painting page Diana and her Nymphs painting description The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database ca 1150 images of Diana Archived 2013 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diana mythology amp oldid 1146825383, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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