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Eos

In ancient Greek mythology and religion, Eos (/ˈɒs/; Ionic and Homeric Greek Ἠώς Ēṓs, Attic Ἕως Héōs, "dawn", pronounced [ɛːɔ̌ːs] or [héɔːs]; Aeolic Αὔως Aúōs, Doric Ἀώς Āṓs)[3] is the goddess and personification of the dawn, who rose each morning from her home at the edge of the river Oceanus to deliver light and disperse the night. In Greek tradition and poetry she is characterized as a goddess with a great sexual appetite, who took numerous lovers for her own satisfaction and bore them several children. Like her Roman counterpart Aurora and Rigvedic Ushas, Eos continues the name of an earlier Indo-European dawn goddess, Hausos. Eos, or her earlier Proto-Indo-European (PIE) ancestor, also shares several elements with the love goddess Aphrodite, perhaps signifying Eos's influence on her or otherwise a common origin for the two goddesses. In surviving tradition, Aphrodite is the culprit behind Eos' numerous love affairs, having cursed the goddess with insatiable lust for mortal men.

Eos
The Gates of Dawn, by Herbert James Draper
Ancient GreekἨώς
AbodeSky
AnimalsCicada, horse
SymbolSaffron, cloak, roses, tiara
ColorRed, white, pink, gold, saffron
MountA chariot drawn by two horses
Personal information
ParentsHyperion and Theia
SiblingsHelios and Selene
ConsortAstraeus, Orion, Cephalus, Cleitus, Ares, Tithonus
ChildrenThe Anemoi (Boreas, Eurus, Notus and Zephyrus), the Stars, Memnon, Emathion, and Astraea
Equivalents
Roman equivalentAurora
Matuta
Etruscan equivalentThesan
Slavic equivalentZorya
Hinduism equivalentUshas[1]
Indo-European equivalentHausōs
Japanese equivalentAme-no-Uzume[2]
Nuristani equivalentDisani[2]
Germanic equivalentĒostre

In Greek literature, Eos is presented as a daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia, the sister of the sun god Helios and the moon goddess Selene. In rarer traditions, she is the daughter of the Titan Pallas. Each day she drives her two-horse chariot, heralding the breaking of the new day and her brother's arrival. Thus, her most common epithet of the goddess in the Homeric epics is Rhododactylos, or "rosy-fingered", a reference to the sky's colours at dawn, and Erigeneia, "early-born". Although primarily associated with the dawn and early morning, sometimes Eos would accompany Helios for the entire duration of his journey, and thus she is even seen during dusk.

Eos fell in love with mortal men several times, and would abduct them in similar manner to how male gods did mortal women. Her most notable mortal lover is the Trojan prince Tithonus, for whom she ensured the gift of immortality, but not eternal youth, leading to him aging without dying for an eternity. In another story, she carried off the Athenian Cephalus against his will, but eventually let him go for he ardently wished to be returned to his wife, though not before she denigrated her to him, leading to the couple parting ways. Several other lovers and romances with both mortal men and gods were attributed to the goddess by various poets throughout the centuries.

Eos figures in many works of ancient literature and poetry, but despite her Proto-Indo-European origins, there is little evidence of Eos having received any cult or being the centre of worship during classical times.

Etymology

The Proto-Greek form of Ἠώς / Ēṓs has been reconstructed as *ἀυhώς / auhṓs.[3][4] It is cognate to the Vedic goddess Ushas, Lithuanian goddess Aušrinė, and Roman goddess Aurora (Old Latin Ausosa), all three of whom are also goddesses of the dawn.[1] Beekes notes that the Proto-Greek form *ἇϝος (hãwos) is identical with the Sanskrit relative yāvat, meaning 'as long as'.[3] Meissner (2006) suggested an áwwɔ̄s > /aṷwɔ̄s/ > αὔως lengthening for Aeolic and */aṷwɔ̄s/ > *āwɔ̄s > *ǣwɔ̄s > /ǣɔ̄s/ for Attic-Ionic Greek.[5]

In Mycenaean Greek her name is also attested in the form 𐀀𐀺𐀂𐀍 in Linear B, a-wo-i-jo (Āw(ʰ)oʰios; Ἀϝohιος),[a][7] found in a tablet from Pylos;[b] it has been interpreted as a shepherd's personal name related to "dawn",[8][9][10][11] or dative form Āwōiōi.[12]

Heinrich Wilhelm Stoll offered a different (now rejected) etymology for ἠὼς, linking it to the verb αὔω, meaning "to blow", "to breathe."[13]

Lycophron calls her by an archaic name, Tito, meaning "day" and perhaps etymologically linked to "Titan".[14] Karl Kerenyi observes that Tito shares a linguistic origin with Eos's lover Tithonus, which belonged to an older, pre-Greek language.[15]

Origins

Proto-Indo-European dawn goddess

 
Eos by Evelyn De Morgan (1895)

All four of the aforementioned goddesses sharing a linguistic connection with Eos are considered derivatives of the Proto-Indo-European stem *h₂ewsṓs (later *Ausṓs), "dawn". The root also gave rise to Proto-Germanic *Austrō, Old High German *Ōstara and Old English Ēostre / Ēastre. These and other cognates led to the reconstruction of a Proto-Indo-European dawn goddess, *h₂éwsōs.[1][3]

In the Greek pantheon, Eos, Helios and Zeus are the three gods that are of impeccable Indo-European lineage in both etymology and status, although the former two were sidelined in the pantheon by non-PIE newcomers.[16] A common epithet associated with this dawn goddess is *Diwós Dhuǵh2tḗr, the 'Daughter of Dyēus', the sky god.[17] In Homeric tradition however, Eos is never stated to be the daughter of Zeus (Διὸς θυγάτηρ, Diòs thugátēr), as she is instead the daughter of the Titan Hyperion, who plays little role in mythology or religion. Rather, a commonly occurring epithet of hers is δῖα, dîa, meaning "divine", from earlier *díw-ya, which would have translated into "belonging to Zeus" or "heavenly".[18]

 
L' Aurore, 1693 bronze statue of Eos by Philippe Magnier (1647-1715), on display at Louvre Museum, France.

Eos's characterization as a lovestruck, sexual being who took many lovers is directly inherited from her PIE precursor.[19] A common and widespread theme among Hausos's descendants is their reluctance to bring the light of the new day.[20][4] Eos (and Aurora) is sometimes seen as unwilling to leave her bed in the morning, while Uṣas is punished by Indra for attempting to forestall the day, and the Latvian Auseklis was said to be locked up in a golden chamber so she could not always rise in the morning.[21]

This probably of Proto-Indo-European origin goddess of the dawn was often conflated and equated with Hemera, the goddess of the day and daylight.[22] Eos might have also played a role in Proto-Indo-European poetry.[16]

Connection to Aphrodite

Eos also shares some characteristics with the love goddess Aphrodite connoting perhaps a semi-shared origin or influence of Eos/*Haéusōs on Aphrodite, who otherwise has a Near Eastern origin;[23] both goddesses were known for their erotic beauty and aggressive sexuality, both had relationships with mortal lovers and both were associated with the colors red, white, and gold.[24] Michael Janda etymologizes Aphrodite's name as an epithet of Eos meaning "she who rises from the foam [of the ocean]"[25] and points to Hesiod's Theogony account of Aphrodite's birth as an archaic reflex of Indo-European myth.[25] On the other hand however, it is generally accepted that Aphrodite's name etymology is Semitic in origin, and its exact meaning and derivation cannot be determined.[26] Evidence is also provided by an Italic red-figure krater in which Aphrodite is shown holding a mirror beneath a solar disc while the Theban hero Cadmus slays the dragon, with a female figure nearly identical to Aphrodite being depicted on another krater labelled "ΑΩΣ", or Aṓs, the dawn; this shows that although Aphrodite is assimilated to Astarte/Inanna, in Greek artistic tradition she is sometimes presented in a similar matter to Eos.[27]

Aphrodite, like Eos, is predator and not prey, as no tales of men assaulting Aphrodite exist, but there are many where she abducts mortal men reversing the traditional theme of gods and men pursuing maidens, in the same fashion as Eos.[28] Not only does Aphrodite abduct or seduce mortal men as Eos does, but even cites Eos' own adventures with Tithonus when she seduces Anchises.[19][29] The two goddesses are presented as both maleficent and beneficent abductors, as they confer both death (maleficent) and preservation (beneficent) to their mortal lovers.[30] The two goddesses exist almost side by side in the myth of Phaethon of Syria, with Eos as his mother and Aphrodite as his lover and abductor.[31] Moreover, another telling point is how the name “Aoos” is recorded as both a name for Adonis, Aphrodite’s East-originating lover, and a son of Eos by Cephalus (like Phaethon) who became king of Cyprus, an island that was regarded as Aphrodite’s birthplace. This suggest a mixture of Mycenaean and Phoenician religions on the island; it is possible that Aoos was originally a generic name used for Eos’ son or lover, which was then attached to Aphrodite in the form of a consort of the same name as she developed from Eos.[32]

Description

 
Eos, Sig. Guglielmi's drawing of a statue of Aurora by John Gibson (1790-1866).

Eos was almost always described with rosy fingers or rosy forearms as she opened the gates of heaven for the Sun to rise.[33] In Homer,[34] her saffron-colored robe is embroidered or woven with flowers;[35] while the singer in the Homeric Hymn to Helios calls her ῥοδόπηχυν (ACC), "rosy-armed" as does Sappho,[36] who also describes her as having golden arms[37] and golden sandals;[38] rosy-fingered and with golden arms, she is pictured on Attic vases as a beautiful woman, crowned with a tiara or diadem and with the large white-feathered wings of a bird. Mesomedes of Crete used χιονοβλέφαρος for her, "she who has snow-white eyelids",[39] while Ovid described her as "golden".[40] The delicate and fragile beauty of her appearance seems to be in total contrast with the carnal nature that was often attributed to her in myth and literature.[41]

Family

Parents

 
Eos in front of the chariot of the Sun, Wiesbaden Kurhaus.

According to Greek cosmogony, Eos is the daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia: Hyperion, a bringer of light, the One Above, Who Travels High Above the Earth and Theia, The Divine,[42] also called Euryphaessa, "wide-shining"[43] and Aethra, "bright sky".[44] Eos is the sister of Helios, the god of the sun, and Selene, the goddess of the moon, "who shine upon all that are on earth and upon the deathless gods who live in the wide heaven".[45] Out of the four authors that give her and her siblings a birth order, two make her the oldest child, the other two the youngest.[c] In some accounts, Eos's father was called Pallas,[46][47] who is also confirmed to the be father of Eos' sister Selene in some rare traditions;[48] even though the two goddesses are still connected as sisters in the traditions going with lineage from Pallas, their brother Helios is never included with them in those versions, being consistently the son of Hyperion. Mesomedes made her the daughter of Helios, who is usually her brother, by an unnamed mother.[39] Some authors made her the child of Nyx, the personification of the night,[49] who is the mother of Hemera in the Theogony.

Offspring

Eos married the Titan Astraeus ("of the Stars") and became the mother of the Anemoi ("winds") namely Zephyrus, Boreas, Notus and Eurus;[50] of the Morning Star, Eosphoros (Venus);[51] the Astra ("stars")[52] and of the virgin goddess of justice, Astraea ("starry one").[53] Her other notable offspring were Memnon[54] and Emathion[55] by the Trojan prince, Tithonus. Sometimes, Hesperus,[56] Phaethon[57] and Tithonus[58] (different from her lover) were called the children of Eos by the Athenian prince, Cephalus.

Mythology

Goddess of the dawn

 
Eos in her four horse-drawn chariot, terracotta red-figure lekanis vase, late 300s BC, Canosa, Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Each morning, the dawn goddess Eos would get up and open the gates so that her brother the Sun would pass and rise, bringing the new day. Although often her job seems to be done once she announces Helios' coming, in the Homeric epics she accompanies him throughout the whole day, and does not leave him until the sunset; hence "Eos" might be used in texts where one would have expected to see "Helios" instead.[59] In Musaeus's rendition of the story of Hero and Leander in the sixth century AD, Eos is mentioned during both sunrise and sunset.[60]

Homer and Hesiod

From The Iliad:

Now when Dawn in robe of saffron was hastening from the streams of Oceanus, to bring light to mortals and immortals, Thetis reached the ships with the armor that the god had given her.[61]

And then later:

But soon as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, then gathered the folk about the pyre of glorious Hector.[62]

 
Aurora Taking Leave of Tithonus by Francesco Solimena, oil on canvas, 1704, J. Paul Getty Museum.

She is most often associated with her Homeric epithet "rosy-fingered" Eos Rhododactylos (Ancient Greek: Ἠὼς Ῥοδοδάκτυλος), but Homer also calls her Eos Erigeneia:

That brightest of stars appeared, Eosphoros, that most often heralds the light of early-rising Dawn (Eos Erigeneia).[63]

Near the end of the Odyssey, Athena, wanting to buy Odysseus some time with his wife Penelope after they have reunited with each other, orders Eos not to yoke her two horses, thus delaying the coming of the new day:

And rose-fingered Dawn would have shone for the weepers had not bright-eyed goddess Athena thought of other things. She checked the long night in its passage, and further, held golden-throned Dawn over Ocean and didn't let her yoke her swift-footed horses, that bring daylight to men, Lampus and Phaethon, the colts that carry Dawn.[64]

In the Theogony, Hesiod wrote "[a]nd after these Erigeneia ["Early-born"] bore the star Eosphoros ("Dawn-bringer"), and the gleaming stars with which heaven is crowned".[65] Thus Eos is preceded by the Morning Star, and is thus seen as the genetrix of all the stars and planets; her tears are considered to have created the morning dew, personified as Ersa or Herse,[66] who is otherwise the daughter of her sister Selene by Zeus.[67]

Orphic literature

 
Eos pouring the morning dew dressed in a starsprinkled robe, from an antique vase

Eos is addressed by the singer in one of the Orphic Hymns, as the bringer of the new day:

Hear, O goddess, you bring the light of day to mortals
resplendent Dawn, you blush throughout the world
messenger of the great, the illustrious Titan.

— Orphic Hymn 78 to the Dawn.[68]

The position of the hymn in the collection at number 78 is odd, far from the Hymns to the Night (3), the Sun (8) and the Moon (9), where it would be expected to be grouped.[69] While many of the Orphic hymns describe the divinities in terms on light, the hymn to Eos is the only one that calls upon the divinity to provide light to the initiates.[69]

Divine horses

Eos's team of horses pull her chariot across the sky and are named in the Odyssey as "Firebright" and "Daybright". Quintus described her exulting in her heart over the radiant horses (Lampus and Phaëton) that drew her chariot, amidst the bright-haired Horae, the feminine Hours, the daughters of Zeus and Themis who are responsible for the changing of the seasons, climbing the arc of heaven and scattering sparks of fire.[70]

Lovers

In spite of the goddess already having a husband in the face of her first cousin Astraeus, Eos is presented as a goddess who fell in love several times. According to Pseudo-Apollodorus, it was the jealous Aphrodite who cursed her to be perpetually in love and have an insatiable sexual desire because Eos had once lain with Aphrodite's sweetheart Ares, the god of war.[71] The curse caused her to abduct a number of handsome young men. This explanatory myth was the reason offered for Eos' ravenous sexual desires, as this pattern of behavior was noticed by the ancient Greeks.[69]

In the Odyssey, Calypso complains to Hermes about the male gods taking many mortal women as lovers, but not allowing goddesses to do the same. She brings up as example Eos’s love for the hunter Orion, who was killed by Artemis on the island of Ortygia.[72] Apollodorus also mentions Eos’s love for Orion, and adds that she brought him to Delos, where he met Artemis and was subsequently slain by her.[71] The good-looking Cleitus was snatched and made immortal by her.[73]

Eos fell in love and abducted Cephalus, a son of Hermes, who is sometimes the same as or distinct from the Cephalus that was the husband of Procris, whom she also abducted.[74]

Tithonus

 
Eos and Tithonus, by Julien Simon, 1783, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Caen.

The myth of Eos and Tithonus is very old, known as early as Homer, who in the Odyssey described the coming of the new morning as Eos rising from the bed she shares with Tithonus to bring her light to the world.[75] The earliest (and fullest) account survives in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, where Aphrodite herself narrates the story to her own lover Anchises. Additionally, the myth is also the subject of one of the very few substantially complete works of Sappho, pieced together from different fragments discovered over a period of more than a hundred years,[d] known as the Tithonus poem or the Old Age poem:[76]

...but what could I do?
] not possible to become (ageless?)
] rosy-armed Dawn [...]
carrying (to) the ends of the earth
] yet (age) seized (him)
] (immortal?) wife.

— Sappho, fragment 58.[76]

The myth goes that Eos fell in love with and abducted Tithonus, a handsome prince from Troy, either the brother or the son of King Laomedon (the father of Priam).[77] She went with a request to Zeus, asking him to make Tithonus immortal for her sake. Zeus agreed and granted her wish, but Eos foolishly forgot to ask for eternal youth as well for her beloved. So for a while the two lived happily in her palace, but their happiness eventually came to an end when Tithonus’ hair started turning grey as he aged, and Eos ceased to visit him in their bed. Despite that, the goddess kept him around and nourished him with food and ambrosia; Tithonus never died as he had gained immortality as Zeus promised, but he kept aging and shrivelling, and was soon unable to even move. In the end, Eos locked him up in a chamber, where he withered away alone, forever a helpless old man.[78][79] Out of pity, she turned him into a small bug, a cicada (Greek τέττιξ, tettix).[80][81]

In the account of Hieronymus of Rhodes from the third century BC, the blame is shifted from Eos and onto Tithonus, who asked for immortality but not agelessness from his lover, who was then unable to help him otherwise and turned him into a cicada.[82] Propertius wrote that Eos did not forsake Tithonus, old and aged as he was, and would still embrace him and hold him in her arms rather than leaving him deserted in his cold chamber, while cursing the gods for his cruel fate.[83]

This myth might have been used to explain why cicadas were particularly noisy during the early hours of the morning, when the dawn appears in the sky.[84] Sir James George Frazer notes that there was a widespread notion among the ancient Greeks and other ancient peoples that the creatures that shed their skin renew their youth and get to live forever.[85] It could also be a reference to the fact that the high-pitched talk of old men was compared to a cicada's singing, as evidenced in a passage from the Iliad.[86] The ancient Greeks would use a cicada, the most musical of insects, sitting on a harp as an emblem of music.[87] Cicadas were also believed to be able to survive off of dew alone, a substance closely associated with Eos.[86]

Cephalus

 
The rape of Cephalus by Eos, Apulian red-figure Loutrophoros, ca. 330 BC

The abduction of Cephalus had special appeal for an Athenian audience because Cephalus was a local boy,[88] and so this myth element appeared frequently in Attic vase-paintings and was exported with them. In the literary myths, Eos snatched Cephalus against his will when he was hunting and took him to Syria.[89] Although Cephalus was already married to Procris, Eos bore him three sons, including Phaethon and Hesperus, and in some versions the little-attested Aoos who went on to become king of Cyprus,[32] but he then began pining for Procris, causing a disgruntled Eos to return him to Procris, but not before sowing the seeds of doubt in his mind, telling him that it was highly unlikely that Procris had stayed faithful to him this entire time.

 
Cephalus and Aurora, John Flaxman, 1789-90, Lady Lever Art Gallery.

Cephalus, troubled by her words, asked Eos to change his form into that of a stranger's, in order to secretly put Procris’s love for him to the test. Cephalus, now disguised, propositioned Procris, who at first declined but eventually gave in when he offered her money. He was hurt by her betrayal, and she left him in shame, but eventually they got back together. This time however it was Procris’s turn to doubt her husband’s fidelity; while hunting, he would often call upon the breeze ('Aura' in Latin, sounding similar to Eos’s Roman equivalent Aurora) to refresh his body. Upon hearing that, Procris followed and spied on him. Cephalus, mistaking her for some wild animal, threw his spear at her, killing his wife.[90] The second-century CE traveller Pausanias knew of the story of Cephalus’s abduction too, though he calls Eos by the name of Hemera, goddess of day.[91]

Hyginus omits the kidnapping from the story, and has Cephalus reject Eos out of fidelity to Procris when she begs him to have sex with her. Eos then says to Cephalus that she would not want him to break his vows if Procris herself has not either, and alters his appearance and gives him gifts to trick Procris. Cephalus then goes to Procris as a stranger, and she agrees to lay with him, thereupon Eos removes the enchantment from Cephalus, revealing his identity. Procris, knowing she has been deceived by Eos, flees; she is eventually reunited with Cephalus, but still fearful of Eos, follows him when he goes out hunting, and ends up being accidentally killed by him.[92]

Antoninus Liberalis also largely follows the same tradition in his rendition of the myth, though his text contains a lacuna, jumping from Eos' abduction of Cephalus to him having doubts over Procris.[93] The oldest extant account of the myth is attributed to Pherecydes, and the elements it contains were all kept by later poets; in his account however Eos plays no role in the myth.[94] That being said, artistic evidence of Eos abducting a man that can be identified as Cephalus go as back as the early fifth century BC.[95]

Role in wars

 
Eos and the slain Memnon on an Attic red-figure cup, ca. 490–480 BCE, the so-called "Memnon Pietà" found at Capua (Louvre).

Gigantomachy

 
Eos riding sidesaddle, detail of the Gigantomachy frieze, Pergamon Altar, Pergamon museum, Berlin

Eos played a small role in the battle of the earthborn Giants against the gods, known as the Gigantomachy, who rose in rebellion. When their mother, the earth goddess Gaia learned of a prophecy that the giants would perish at the hand of a mortal, Gaia sought to find a herb that would protect them from all harm; thus Zeus ordered Eos, as well as her siblings Selene (Moon) and Helios (Sun) not to shine so that she would not be able to seek for it, and harvested all of the plant for himself, denying Gaia the chance to make the Giants indestructible.[96] Moreover, Eos is seen fighting against the Giants in the south frieze of the Pergamon Altar,[97] which depicts the Gigantomachy, where she rides hither on either a horse or a mule[98] right ahead of Helios, swinging herself on the back of her mount while a Giant already lies on the ground underneath her; a robe wound around her hips serves as her saddle-cloth.[99] She is joined in fight against the Giants by her siblings, her mother Theia, and possibly, conjectured due to the disembodied wing to the right of Eos's shoulder, the goddess Hemera.[98]

Trojan War

According to Hesiod, by her lover Tithonus, Eos had two sons, Memnon and Emathion.[55] Memnon, king of Aethiopia, joined the Trojans in the Trojan War and fought against Achilles in battle. Much like Thetis, the mother of Achilles, did before her, Eos asked the smithing god Hephaestus with tears in her eyes to forge an armor for Memnon, and he, moved, did as told.[100][101] Pausanias mentions images of Thetis and Eos both begging Zeus on behalf of their sons.[102] In the end, it was Achilles who triumphed and slew Memnon in battle. Mourning greatly over the death of her son, Eos made the light of her brother, Helios the god of the sun, to fade, and begged Nyx, the goddess of the night, to come out earlier, so she could be able to freely steal her son's body undetected by the armies.[103] After his death, Eos, perhaps with the help of Hypnos (Sleep) and Thanatos (Death), transported Memnon's dead body back to Aethiopia;[104] she also asked Zeus to make her son immortal, and he granted her wish.[100] Eos' role in the Trojan War saga mirrors that of Thetis herself; both are goddesses married to aging old men, both see their mortal sons die on the battlefield, and both arrange an afterlife/immortality of sorts for said sons.[105]

Iconography

 
The fight of Achilles and Memnon, in the presence of their mothers Thetis and Eos, late Corinthian Black-Figure hydria, circa 575-550 BC, now in the Walters Art Museum.

Eos was imagined as a woman wearing a saffron mantle as she spread dew from an upturned urn, or with a torch in hand, riding a chariot.[106] Greek and Italian vases show Eos/Aurora on a chariot preceding Helios, as the morning star Eosphorus flies with her; she is winged, wearing a fine pleated tunic and mantle.[107] Eos is not an uncommon figure, especially on red-figure vases; as a single figure she appears rising from the sea in, or driving, a four-horse chariot like her brother Helios, sometimes carrying two hydriae from which she pours morning dew.[108] Because Hermes' rod had the power to both induce sleep to mortals and wake them up, some times he is seen preceding the chariot of Eos (and that of Helios) as the new day breaks.[109]

 
Eos in her chariot, red-figure pot

Although the romantic adventures of Eos is a common subject in pottery, so far as it is known, no vase depicts her with Orion or Cleitus, known lovers of hers, instead those vases fall into groups; those that depict Eos with a young hunter identified as Cephalus, and those that depict Eos with a youth holding a lyre, identified as Tithonus.[110] Sometimes those vases bear inscriptions, and on a few the hunter is identified as Tithonus, while the lyre-player is Cephalus.[110] Perhaps the earliest representation of this theme is found on a red-figure rhyton, a statuette-vase, from circa 480-470 BC in which Eos is depicted carrying of a naked boy, perhaps Cephalus, her wings spread and her feet barely touching the ground.[95] The image of Eos pursuing Tithonus was eerily repetitive in ancient art, as was that of erotic pursuit in general; Tithonus was drawn running off to the right in terror, or trying to clobber with a lyre or a spear the pursuing Eos, indicating the terrifying aspect of a mortal man being taken by a goddess.[111] The image of Zeus, the active erastes, pursuing Ganymede, the passive eromenos, was also common, but in the case of Eos, the female figure was put in the dominant position.[112]

Other depictions of mythological scenes that include Eos are Memnon's battle with Achilles and Eos' pleading of Zeus for his safety, her seizing of Memnon's dead body, and the apotheosis of Alcmene (the mother of Heracles).[113] Among Theia and Hyperion's children, she is the only one depicted with wings, as neither her brother nor her sister ever sport some in art.[114]

Cult and temples

 
Eos with two young men, red-figure stamnos, ca 470–460 BC, now in the Walters Art Museum.

Eos, along with her brother and sister, is a Proto-Indo-European deity, that was side-lined by the non-PIE newcomers to the pantheon;[16][115] James Davidson argues that apparently persisting on the sidelines was a primary function for them, to be the minor gods that the major gods were juxtaposed to, thus helping to keep the Greek religion Greek.[115] However, whereas her brother and sister did receive minor cults, and in Helios' case even major ones, Eos does not seem to have been the focus of any worship at all.[22] Thus there are no known temples, shrines, or altars to Eos. That being said, Ovid seems to allude to the existence of at least two shrines of Eos, as he describes them in plural, albeit few, in the lines:

‘Least I may be of all the goddesses the golden heavens hold – in all the world my shrines are rarest.’

Although this could simply be an understated way for Eos to say that she has no temples or shrines whatsoever, nevertheless Ovid may therefore have known of at least two such shrines.[69] However if Eos did indeed have a handful of shrines and altars in ancient Greece or Rome, no knowledge of them remains.

The only traces of the goddess's worship can be found at Athens, where wineless offerings (or nephalia) were made to Eos, along with other celestial gods and goddesses, including Eos's siblings Helios and Selene, as well as Aphrodite Urania, Mnemosyne, the Muses, and the nymphs.[22][117] It is possible that the goddess addressed as Orthria and Aotis in a fragment by Alcman is Eos; this is highly debated, but if true, it could mean that Eos was worshipped in some capacity in Sparta during the Archaic period.[118][69]

Identifications

Etruscan

 
Eos the Morn, engraving by John Flaxman.

Among the Etruscans, the generative dawn-goddess was Thesan. Depictions of the dawn-goddess with a young lover became popular in Etruria in the fifth century, probably inspired by imported Greek vase-painting.[119] Though Etruscans preferred to show the goddess as a nurturer (Kourotrophos) rather than an abductor of young men, the late Archaic sculptural acroterion from Etruscan Cære, now in Berlin, showing the goddess in archaic running pose adapted from the Greeks, and bearing a boy in her arms, has commonly been identified as Eos and Cephalus.[120] On an Etruscan mirror Thesan is shown carrying off a young man, whose name is inscribed as Tinthu.[121]

Roman

The Roman equivalent of Eos is Aurora, also a cognate showing the characteristic Latin rhotacism. Dawn became associated in Roman cult with Matuta, later known as Mater Matuta. She was also associated with the sea harbors and ports, and had a temple on the Forum Boarium. On June 11, the Matralia was celebrated at that temple in honor of Mater Matuta; this festival was only for women during their first marriage.

Hemera

 
Eos in her chariot flying over the sea, red-figure krater from Southern Italy, 430–420 BC, Staatliche Antikensammlungen

Although distinct deities in early works such as Hesiod's Theogony, later the tragic poets completely identified Eos with Hemera, the primordial goddess of the day;[59][114] each of the three great Athenian tragedians, Euripides, Aeschylus and Sophocles, used "Hemera" for the goddess who abducts Tithonus or drives a chariot drawn by white horses at daybreak in some work.[122] Both goddesses were said to be daughters of Nyx (Night), albeit Eos was much more commonly the daughter of Hyperion by his wife. Pausanias, when describing depictions of Eos's myths at Athens and Amyclae, he calls Eos by the name of Hemera.[91] A scholion on the Odyssey mentions the abduction of the hunter Orion by "Hemera" (Eos in Homer).[123][124] Eos, in contrast to Helios and Selene and more similarly to Hemera and Hemera's mother Nyx, embodies a part of the day and night cycle, instead of a celestial body.[122] The Greek word "eos", meaning dawn, was some times used by writers to refer to the entire duration of the day, not just the morning.[13]

Likewise, Eos was often referred to as Tito, another archaic word meaning day, and feminine equivalent to Titan, which is a common epithet of her brother Helios denoting his role as the creator of the day.[15] Unlike Eos however, Hemera is little more than a name in Greek literature, with few and far between refences about her and with no unique mythology outside of her parentage and the few stories appropriated from Eos.[125]

In culture

Gallery

Genealogy

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Foreign scholars interpret this name as "matinal", "matutino", "mañanero", meaning "of the early morning", "of the dawn".[6]
  2. ^ Also found on the KN Dv 1462 tablet from Heraklion.
  3. ^ Hesiod and Hyginus both give their birth order as first Helios/Sol, then Selene/Luna and lastly Eos/Aurora.[45][44] Pseudo-Apollodorus makes her the oldest child (with Selene as the youngest)[42] as does the author of Helios' Homeric Hymn (with Helios as the youngest).[43]
  4. ^ The first modern printing of the complete poem was published in two sections by Michael Gronewald and Robert W. Daniel in Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik vol. 147, pp. 1–8, and vol. 149, pp. 1–4 (2004); an English translation by Martin West is printed in the Times Literary Supplement, 21 or 24 June 2005. The right half of this poem was previously found in fragment 58 L-P. The fully restored version can be found in M. L. West, "The New Sappho", in Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, vol. 151, pp. 1–9 (2005).

References

  1. ^ a b c Mallory, J.P.; Adams, D.Q. (2006). The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 432. ISBN 978-0-19-929668-2.
  2. ^ a b Witzel, Michael (2005). Vala and Iwato: The Myth of the Hidden Sun in India, Japan, and beyond (PDF).
  3. ^ a b c d R. S. P. Beekes, Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009, p. 492.
  4. ^ a b West, Martin L. (2007-05-24). Indo-European Poetry and Myth. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780199280759.
  5. ^ Miller 2014, pp. 219–220.
  6. ^ Bernabé, Alberto; Luján, Eugenio R. Introducción al Griego Micénico: Gramática, selección de textos y glosario. Monografías de Filología Grega Vol. 30. Zaragoza: Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza. 2020. p. 234.
  7. ^ Luján, Eugénio R. "Los temas en -s en micénico". In: Donum Mycenologicum: Mycenaean Studies in Honour of Francisco Aura Jorro. Edited by Alberto Bernabé and Eugenio R. Luján. Bibliothèque des cahiers de L'Institut de Linguistique de Louvain Vol. 131. Louvain-la-Neuve; Walpole, MA: Peeters. 2014. p. 68.
  8. ^ Lejeune, Michel. "Une présentation du Mycénien". In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 69, 1967, n° 3–4. p. 281. [DOI: https://doi.org/10.3406/rea.1967.3800]; www.persee.fr/doc/rea_0035-2004_1967_num_69_3_3800
  9. ^ Nakassis, Dimitri. "Labor and Individuals in Late Bronze Age Pylos". In: Labor in the Ancient World. Edited by Piotr Steinkeller and Michael Hudson. Dresden: ISLET-Verlag. 2015 [2005]. p. 605. ISBN 978-3-9814842-3-6.
  10. ^ Davies, Anna Morpurgo (1972). "Greek and Indo-European semiconsonants: Mycenaean u and w". In: Acta Mycenaea, vol. 2 (M.S. Ruipérez, ed.). Salamanca: Universidad de Salamanca. p. 93.
  11. ^ Jorro, Francisco Aura. "Reflexiones sobre el léxico micénico" In: Conuentus Classicorum: temas y formas del Mundo Clásico. Coord. por Jesús de la Villa, Emma Falque Rey, José Francisco González Castro, María José Muñoz Jiménez, Vol. 1, 2017, pp. 307. ISBN 978-84-697-8214-9.
  12. ^ Chadwick, John, and Lydia Baumbach. "The Mycenaean Greek Vocabulary". In: Glotta 41, no. 3/4 (1963): 198. Accessed March 12, 2021. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40265918.
  13. ^ a b Stoll, p. 62
  14. ^ See "τιτώ" on A Greek-English Lexicon.
  15. ^ a b Kerenyi 1951, p. 199, note 637.
  16. ^ a b c Burkert, p. 17
  17. ^ Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 149; Jackson 2002, p. 79
  18. ^ West, p. 186
  19. ^ a b Kölligan 2007, p. 107.
  20. ^ Mallory & Adams 1997, pp. 148–149, 161.
  21. ^ Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 149.
  22. ^ a b c Scheer, Tanja (2006). "Eos". In Cancik, Hubert; Schneider, Helmuth (eds.). Brill’s New Pauly. Translated by Christine F. Salazar. Rome: Brill Reference Online. doi:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e330980. S2CID 246274316. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  23. ^ Dumézil, 1934.
  24. ^ Cyrino, p. 24
  25. ^ a b Janda 2010, p. 65.
  26. ^ West 2000, pp. 134–38.
  27. ^ Dickmann-Boedeker 1974, p. 15.
  28. ^ Ferrari, p. 54
  29. ^ Nagy, p. 248
  30. ^ Greene and Paxton, pp 47-52
  31. ^ Kölligan 2007, pp. 107–108.
  32. ^ a b Dickmann-Boedeker 1974, pp. 66-67.
  33. ^ Nonnus: "Eos had just shaken off the wing of carefree sleep (Hypnos) and opened the gates of sunrise, leaving the lightbringing couch of Kephalos." (Dionysiaca 27. 1f, in A.L. Rouse's translation).
  34. ^ Homer, Iliad viii.1 & xxiv.695
  35. ^ Homer, Odyssey vi:48 etc
  36. ^ Homeric Hymn 31 to the Sun 5-6; Sappho P.Köln Inv. Nr. 21351.17. Sappho uses the Aeolic form βροδόπαχυς, brodópakhus.
  37. ^ Sappho, fragment 6 (trans. David A. Campbell, Vol. Greek Lyric I) [=Oxy. 2289 fr. 1 (a) + (b)].
  38. ^ Sappho fragment 103 [= P. Oxy. 2294].
  39. ^ a b Mesomedes, Hymn to the Sun 1
  40. ^ Ovid; Metamorphoses 7.700 ff, Fasti 4.713 ff
  41. ^ Bell, s.v. Eos
  42. ^ a b Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 1.2.2
  43. ^ a b Homeric Hymn 31 to Helios, 4–7.
  44. ^ a b Hyginus, Fabulae Preface
  45. ^ a b Hesiod, Theogony 371–374
  46. ^ Ovid, Fasti 4.373 ff.
  47. ^ Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica 2.72 ff.
  48. ^ Homeric Hymn 4 to Hermes 99–100
  49. ^ Quintus of Smyrna, Posthomerica 2.625–26; cf. Aeschylus, Agamemnon 265
  50. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae Preface; Nonnus, Dionysiaca 6.18; 37.70, 47.340
  51. ^ Cicero wrote: Stella Veneris, quae Φωσφόρος Graece, Latine dicitur Lucifer, cum antegreditur solem, cum subsequitur autem Hesperos; The star of Venus, called Φωσφόρος in Greek and Lucifer in Latin when it precedes, Hesperos when it follows the sun – De Natura Deorum 2, 20, 53.
    Pliny the Elder: Sidus appellatum Veneris … ante matutinum exoriens Luciferi nomen accipit … contra ab occasu refulgens nuncupatur Vesper (The star called Venus … when it rises in the morning is given the name Lucifer … but when it shines at sunset it is called Vesper) Natural History 2, 36
  52. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 378–82; Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 1.2.4
  53. ^ Aratus, Phaenomena 97–128; Hyginus, Astronomica 2.25.1
  54. ^ Quintus Smyrnaeus, Posthomerica 2.549; Pindar, Nemean Odes 6.54; Diodorus Siculus, Historic Library 4.75.4; Callistratus, Statuaram Descriptiones 9; Ovid, Fasti 4.713
  55. ^ a b Hesiod, Theogony 985; Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.12.4
  56. ^ Hyginus, Astronomica 2.42.4
  57. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 1.3.1; Hesiod, Theogony 986
  58. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.14.3
  59. ^ a b Smith, s.v. Eos
  60. ^ Musaeus, Hero and Leander 4; 110
  61. ^ Homer, Iliad xix.1
  62. ^ Homer, Iliad xxiv.776
  63. ^ Homer, Odyssey xiii.93
  64. ^ Homer, Odyssey 13.241–246
  65. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 378–382
  66. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 13.621–2
  67. ^ Hard, p. 46; Keightley, p. 55; Alcman fr. 57 Campbell.
  68. ^ Orphic Hymn 78 to the Dawn 1–3, (Athanassakis & Wolkow, p. 61).
  69. ^ a b c d e Athanassakis and Wolkow, p. 181
  70. ^ Quintus Smyrnaeus, Posthomerica 1.48
  71. ^ a b Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 1.4.4
  72. ^ Homer, Odyssey 5.121–124
  73. ^ Homer, Odyssey 15.250–251
  74. ^ Smith, s.v. Cephalus 1, Cephalus 2; Hard, p. 47; see also Frazer's note on Apollodorus 1.9.4
  75. ^ Homer, Odyssey 5.1: "And now, as Dawn rose from her couch beside Tithonos - harbinger of light alike to mortals and immortals." Trans. Samuel Butler.
  76. ^ a b Sappho, fragment 58 [= Oxy. 1787 fr. 1. 4–25, fr. 2. 1 + fr. nov. (Lobel Σ. μ. p. 26)].
  77. ^ Hansen, p. 48
  78. ^ Homeric Hymn 5 to Aphrodite, lines 220–318; cf. Sappho, fr. 58 Campbell; Mimnermus, fr. 4 Gerber.
  79. ^ Clearchus of Soli fragment 20 [= Zenobius 4.18.]
  80. ^ Keightley, p. 63; Suda, s.v "Old Man Tithonus".
  81. ^ Hellanicus fragment 142 (FGrH) [= Scholia on Homer's Iliad 3.151; scholia on the Odyssey 5.1.
  82. ^ Tsagalis and Markantonatos, p. 297
  83. ^ Propertius, Elegies 2.18b
  84. ^ Loeb Classical Library, Homeric Hymns, Homeric Apocrypha, Lives of Homer, 2003, p. 177, note 48
  85. ^ See Frazer's note on Apollodorus 3.12.4
  86. ^ a b Hard, p. 47
  87. ^ "The Cicada". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 21 January 1928. p. 21. Retrieved 7 June 2013.
  88. ^ Mary R. Lefkowitz, "'Predatory' Goddesses" Hesperia 71.4 (October 2002, pp. 325-344) p. 326.
  89. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.14.3; Pausanias, Description of Greece 1.3.1; Hyginus, Fabulae 189; Ovid, Metamorphoses 7.703; Antoninus Liberalis, Collection of Transformations 41
  90. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 7.700-722
  91. ^ a b Pausanias remarking on the subjects shown in the Royal Stoa, Athens (1.3.1) and on the throne of Apollo at Amyclae (3.18.12).
  92. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 189
  93. ^ Antoninus Liberalis, Collection of Transformations 41
  94. ^ Pherecydes of Athens FGrHist 3F 34 [= Scholia on Homer's Odyssey 1.320.]
  95. ^ a b Cohen 2006, pp. 280–281.
  96. ^ Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 1.6.2
  97. ^ Picón and Hemingway, p. 47; LIMC 617 Eos 45
  98. ^ a b Honan, Mary McMahon (1904). Guide to the Pergamon Museum. De Gruyter. pp. 20-21. ISBN 9783112399330.
  99. ^ Schmidt, p. 22
  100. ^ a b Arctinus of Miletus, Aethiopis
  101. ^ Virgil, Aeneid 8.384
  102. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 5.22.2
  103. ^ Philostratus of Lemnos, Imagines 1.7.2
  104. ^ Currie, p. 51
  105. ^ Price and Zelnick-Abramovitz, p. 94, "The two mothers, Thetis and Eos, are alike as well."
  106. ^ Roberts, p. 567
  107. ^ Collignon, p. 176
  108. ^ Walters, p. 79
  109. ^ Savignoni, p. 272
  110. ^ a b Pache, p. 131
  111. ^ Reitzammer, p. 41
  112. ^ Reitzammer, p. 122
  113. ^ Walters, p. 80
  114. ^ a b Hard, p. 46
  115. ^ a b Davidson in Ogden, p. 205
  116. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 13.587 ff (translated by Melville)
  117. ^ Meagher, p. 142 n. 137; scholia on Sophocles Oedipus at Colonus 91.
  118. ^ Alcman, PMGF 1.
  119. ^ Marilyn Y. Goldberg, "The 'Eos and Kephalos' from Cære: Its Subject and Date" American Journal of Archæology 91.4 (October 1987, pp. 605-614) p 607.
  120. ^ Goldberg 1987:605-614 casts doubt on the boy's identification, in the context of Etruscan and Greek abduction motifs.
  121. ^ Noted by Goldberg 1987: in I. Mayer-Prokop, Die gravierten etruskischen Griffspiegel archaischen Stils (Heidelberg) 1966, fig. 61.
  122. ^ a b Oakley and Palagia, p. 47
  123. ^ Euphorion fr. 66 Lightfoot [= fr. 103 Powell].
  124. ^ Hard, p. 562
  125. ^ Bell 1991, s.v. Hemera.
  126. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 132–138, 337–411, 453–520, 901–906, 915–920; Caldwell, pp. 8–11, tables 11–14.
  127. ^ Although usually the daughter of Hyperion and Theia, as in Hesiod, Theogony 371–374, in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes (4), 99–100, Selene is instead made the daughter of Pallas the son of Megamedes.
  128. ^ Astraea is not mentioned by Hesiod, instead she is given as a daughter of Eos and Astraeus in Hyginus Astronomica 2.25.1.
  129. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 507–511, Clymene, one of the Oceanids, the daughters of Oceanus and Tethys, at Hesiod, Theogony 351, was the mother by Iapetus of Atlas, Menoetius, Prometheus, and Epimetheus, while according to Apollodorus, 1.2.3, another Oceanid, Asia was their mother by Iapetus.
  130. ^ According to Plato, Critias, 113d–114a, Atlas was the son of Poseidon and the mortal Cleito.
  131. ^ In Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound 18, 211, 873 (Sommerstein, pp. 444–445 n. 2, 446–447 n. 24, 538–539 n. 113) Prometheus is made to be the son of Themis.

Bibliography

Primary sources

  • Antoninus Liberalis, The Metamorphoses of Antoninus Liberalis translated by Francis Celoria (Routledge 1992). Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Aratus Solensis, Phaenomena translated by G. R. Mair. Loeb Classical Library Volume 129. London: William Heinemann, 1921. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Aratus Solensis, Phaenomena. G. R. Mair. London: William Heinemann; New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1921. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Diodorus Siculus, The Library of History translated by Charles Henry Oldfather. Twelve volumes. Loeb Classical Library. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. 1989. Vol. 3. Books 4.59–8. Online version at Bill Thayer's Web Site
  • Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca Historica. Vol 1-2. Immanel Bekker. Ludwig Dindorf. Friedrich Vogel. in aedibus B. G. Teubneri. Leipzig. 1888-1890. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Gaius Julius Hyginus, Astronomica from The Myths of Hyginus translated and edited by Mary Grant. University of Kansas Publications in Humanistic Studies. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Gaius Julius Hyginus, Fabulae from The Myths of Hyginus translated and edited by Mary Grant. University of Kansas Publications in Humanistic Studies. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Gaius Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica translated by Mozley, J H. Loeb Classical Library Volume 286. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1928. Online version at theoi.com.
  • Gaius Valerius Flaccus, Argonauticon. Otto Kramer. Leipzig. Teubner. 1913. Latin text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Hesiod, Theogony from The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library. Greek text available from the same website.
  • Homer, The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, Ph.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Homer, Homeri Opera in five volumes. Oxford, Oxford University Press. 1920. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Homer, The Odyssey with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PH.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1919. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library. Greek text available from the same website.
  • Homeric Hymns, Homeric Apocrypha, Lives of Homer, edited and translated by Martin L. West, the Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard University Press, 2003, London, England, ISBN 0-674-99606-2.
  • Mimnermus in Greek Elegiac Poetry: From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC, edited and translated by Douglas E. Gerber, Loeb Classical Library No. 258, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1999. ISBN 978-0-674-99582-6. Online version at Harvard University Press.
  • Nonnus of Panopolis, Dionysiaca translated by William Henry Denham Rouse (1863-1950), from the Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1940. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Nonnus of Panopolis, Dionysiaca. 3 Vols. W.H.D. Rouse. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1940-1942. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Pausanias, Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
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Secondary sources

Further reading

  • Hatto, Arthur. T., Eos: An Enquiry into the Theme of Lovers' Meetings and Partings at Dawn in Poetry, 1965, Mouton & Co., the Hague. Google books.
  • Jackson, Peter. "Πότνια Αὔως: The Greek Dawn-Goddess and Her Antecedent." Glotta 81 (2005): 116-23. Accessed May 10, 2020. JSTOR 40267187.
  • Lefkowitz, Mary R. ""Predatory" Goddesses." Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 71 (2002): 325-344. Accessed March 31, 2022. JSTOR 3182040.

External links

  • EOS from The Theoi Project
  • EOS from Greek Mythology Link
  • EOS from greekmythology.com
  • EOS from Mythopedia

this, article, about, greek, goddess, other, uses, disambiguation, ancient, greek, mythology, religion, ionic, homeric, greek, Ἠώς, Ēṓs, attic, Ἕως, héōs, dawn, pronounced, ɛːɔ, héɔːs, aeolic, Αὔως, aúōs, doric, Ἀώς, Āṓs, goddess, personification, dawn, rose, . This article is about the Greek goddess For other uses see Eos disambiguation In ancient Greek mythology and religion Eos ˈ iː ɒ s Ionic and Homeric Greek Ἠws Eṓs Attic Ἕws Heōs dawn pronounced ɛːɔ ːs or heɔːs Aeolic Aὔws Auōs Doric Ἀws Aṓs 3 is the goddess and personification of the dawn who rose each morning from her home at the edge of the river Oceanus to deliver light and disperse the night In Greek tradition and poetry she is characterized as a goddess with a great sexual appetite who took numerous lovers for her own satisfaction and bore them several children Like her Roman counterpart Aurora and Rigvedic Ushas Eos continues the name of an earlier Indo European dawn goddess Hausos Eos or her earlier Proto Indo European PIE ancestor also shares several elements with the love goddess Aphrodite perhaps signifying Eos s influence on her or otherwise a common origin for the two goddesses In surviving tradition Aphrodite is the culprit behind Eos numerous love affairs having cursed the goddess with insatiable lust for mortal men EosPersonification of the DawnThe Gates of Dawn by Herbert James DraperAncient GreekἨwsAbodeSkyAnimalsCicada horseSymbolSaffron cloak roses tiaraColorRed white pink gold saffronMountA chariot drawn by two horsesPersonal informationParentsHyperion and TheiaSiblingsHelios and SeleneConsortAstraeus Orion Cephalus Cleitus Ares TithonusChildrenThe Anemoi Boreas Eurus Notus and Zephyrus the Stars Memnon Emathion and AstraeaEquivalentsRoman equivalentAuroraMatutaEtruscan equivalentThesanSlavic equivalentZoryaHinduism equivalentUshas 1 Indo European equivalentHausōsJapanese equivalentAme no Uzume 2 Nuristani equivalentDisani 2 Germanic equivalentEostreThis article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols In Greek literature Eos is presented as a daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia the sister of the sun god Helios and the moon goddess Selene In rarer traditions she is the daughter of the Titan Pallas Each day she drives her two horse chariot heralding the breaking of the new day and her brother s arrival Thus her most common epithet of the goddess in the Homeric epics is Rhododactylos or rosy fingered a reference to the sky s colours at dawn and Erigeneia early born Although primarily associated with the dawn and early morning sometimes Eos would accompany Helios for the entire duration of his journey and thus she is even seen during dusk Eos fell in love with mortal men several times and would abduct them in similar manner to how male gods did mortal women Her most notable mortal lover is the Trojan prince Tithonus for whom she ensured the gift of immortality but not eternal youth leading to him aging without dying for an eternity In another story she carried off the Athenian Cephalus against his will but eventually let him go for he ardently wished to be returned to his wife though not before she denigrated her to him leading to the couple parting ways Several other lovers and romances with both mortal men and gods were attributed to the goddess by various poets throughout the centuries Eos figures in many works of ancient literature and poetry but despite her Proto Indo European origins there is little evidence of Eos having received any cult or being the centre of worship during classical times Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 2 1 Proto Indo European dawn goddess 2 2 Connection to Aphrodite 3 Description 4 Family 4 1 Parents 4 2 Offspring 5 Mythology 5 1 Goddess of the dawn 5 1 1 Homer and Hesiod 5 1 2 Orphic literature 5 1 3 Divine horses 5 2 Lovers 5 2 1 Tithonus 5 2 2 Cephalus 5 3 Role in wars 5 3 1 Gigantomachy 5 3 2 Trojan War 6 Iconography 7 Cult and temples 8 Identifications 8 1 Etruscan 8 2 Roman 8 3 Hemera 9 In culture 10 Gallery 11 Genealogy 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Bibliography 15 1 Primary sources 15 2 Secondary sources 16 Further reading 17 External linksEtymology EditThe Proto Greek form of Ἠws Eṓs has been reconstructed as ἀyhws auhṓs 3 4 It is cognate to the Vedic goddess Ushas Lithuanian goddess Ausrine and Roman goddess Aurora Old Latin Ausosa all three of whom are also goddesses of the dawn 1 Beekes notes that the Proto Greek form ἇϝos hawos is identical with the Sanskrit relative yavat meaning as long as 3 Meissner 2006 suggested an awwɔ s gt aṷwɔ s gt aὔws lengthening for Aeolic and aṷwɔ s gt awɔ s gt ǣwɔ s gt ǣɔ s for Attic Ionic Greek 5 In Mycenaean Greek her name is also attested in the form 𐀀𐀺𐀂𐀍 in Linear B a wo i jo Aw ʰ oʰios Ἀϝohios a 7 found in a tablet from Pylos b it has been interpreted as a shepherd s personal name related to dawn 8 9 10 11 or dative form Awōiōi 12 Heinrich Wilhelm Stoll offered a different now rejected etymology for ἠὼs linking it to the verb aὔw meaning to blow to breathe 13 Lycophron calls her by an archaic name Tito meaning day and perhaps etymologically linked to Titan 14 Karl Kerenyi observes that Tito shares a linguistic origin with Eos s lover Tithonus which belonged to an older pre Greek language 15 Origins EditProto Indo European dawn goddess Edit Main article h2ewsōs Eos by Evelyn De Morgan 1895 All four of the aforementioned goddesses sharing a linguistic connection with Eos are considered derivatives of the Proto Indo European stem h ewsṓs later Ausṓs dawn The root also gave rise to Proto Germanic Austrō Old High German Ōstara and Old English Eostre Eastre These and other cognates led to the reconstruction of a Proto Indo European dawn goddess h ewsōs 1 3 In the Greek pantheon Eos Helios and Zeus are the three gods that are of impeccable Indo European lineage in both etymology and status although the former two were sidelined in the pantheon by non PIE newcomers 16 A common epithet associated with this dawn goddess is Diwos Dhuǵh2tḗr the Daughter of Dyeus the sky god 17 In Homeric tradition however Eos is never stated to be the daughter of Zeus Diὸs 8ygathr Dios thugater as she is instead the daughter of the Titan Hyperion who plays little role in mythology or religion Rather a commonly occurring epithet of hers is dῖa dia meaning divine from earlier diw ya which would have translated into belonging to Zeus or heavenly 18 L Aurore 1693 bronze statue of Eos by Philippe Magnier 1647 1715 on display at Louvre Museum France Eos s characterization as a lovestruck sexual being who took many lovers is directly inherited from her PIE precursor 19 A common and widespread theme among Hausos s descendants is their reluctance to bring the light of the new day 20 4 Eos and Aurora is sometimes seen as unwilling to leave her bed in the morning while Uṣas is punished by Indra for attempting to forestall the day and the Latvian Auseklis was said to be locked up in a golden chamber so she could not always rise in the morning 21 This probably of Proto Indo European origin goddess of the dawn was often conflated and equated with Hemera the goddess of the day and daylight 22 Eos might have also played a role in Proto Indo European poetry 16 Connection to Aphrodite Edit Eos also shares some characteristics with the love goddess Aphrodite connoting perhaps a semi shared origin or influence of Eos Haeusōs on Aphrodite who otherwise has a Near Eastern origin 23 both goddesses were known for their erotic beauty and aggressive sexuality both had relationships with mortal lovers and both were associated with the colors red white and gold 24 Michael Janda etymologizes Aphrodite s name as an epithet of Eos meaning she who rises from the foam of the ocean 25 and points to Hesiod s Theogony account of Aphrodite s birth as an archaic reflex of Indo European myth 25 On the other hand however it is generally accepted that Aphrodite s name etymology is Semitic in origin and its exact meaning and derivation cannot be determined 26 Evidence is also provided by an Italic red figure krater in which Aphrodite is shown holding a mirror beneath a solar disc while the Theban hero Cadmus slays the dragon with a female figure nearly identical to Aphrodite being depicted on another krater labelled AWS or Aṓs the dawn this shows that although Aphrodite is assimilated to Astarte Inanna in Greek artistic tradition she is sometimes presented in a similar matter to Eos 27 Aphrodite like Eos is predator and not prey as no tales of men assaulting Aphrodite exist but there are many where she abducts mortal men reversing the traditional theme of gods and men pursuing maidens in the same fashion as Eos 28 Not only does Aphrodite abduct or seduce mortal men as Eos does but even cites Eos own adventures with Tithonus when she seduces Anchises 19 29 The two goddesses are presented as both maleficent and beneficent abductors as they confer both death maleficent and preservation beneficent to their mortal lovers 30 The two goddesses exist almost side by side in the myth of Phaethon of Syria with Eos as his mother and Aphrodite as his lover and abductor 31 Moreover another telling point is how the name Aoos is recorded as both a name for Adonis Aphrodite s East originating lover and a son of Eos by Cephalus like Phaethon who became king of Cyprus an island that was regarded as Aphrodite s birthplace This suggest a mixture of Mycenaean and Phoenician religions on the island it is possible that Aoos was originally a generic name used for Eos son or lover which was then attached to Aphrodite in the form of a consort of the same name as she developed from Eos 32 Description Edit Eos Sig Guglielmi s drawing of a statue of Aurora by John Gibson 1790 1866 Eos was almost always described with rosy fingers or rosy forearms as she opened the gates of heaven for the Sun to rise 33 In Homer 34 her saffron colored robe is embroidered or woven with flowers 35 while the singer in the Homeric Hymn to Helios calls her ῥodophxyn ACC rosy armed as does Sappho 36 who also describes her as having golden arms 37 and golden sandals 38 rosy fingered and with golden arms she is pictured on Attic vases as a beautiful woman crowned with a tiara or diadem and with the large white feathered wings of a bird Mesomedes of Crete used xionoblefaros for her she who has snow white eyelids 39 while Ovid described her as golden 40 The delicate and fragile beauty of her appearance seems to be in total contrast with the carnal nature that was often attributed to her in myth and literature 41 Family EditParents Edit Eos in front of the chariot of the Sun Wiesbaden Kurhaus According to Greek cosmogony Eos is the daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia Hyperion a bringer of light the One Above Who Travels High Above the Earth and Theia The Divine 42 also called Euryphaessa wide shining 43 and Aethra bright sky 44 Eos is the sister of Helios the god of the sun and Selene the goddess of the moon who shine upon all that are on earth and upon the deathless gods who live in the wide heaven 45 Out of the four authors that give her and her siblings a birth order two make her the oldest child the other two the youngest c In some accounts Eos s father was called Pallas 46 47 who is also confirmed to the be father of Eos sister Selene in some rare traditions 48 even though the two goddesses are still connected as sisters in the traditions going with lineage from Pallas their brother Helios is never included with them in those versions being consistently the son of Hyperion Mesomedes made her the daughter of Helios who is usually her brother by an unnamed mother 39 Some authors made her the child of Nyx the personification of the night 49 who is the mother of Hemera in the Theogony Offspring Edit Eos married the Titan Astraeus of the Stars and became the mother of the Anemoi winds namely Zephyrus Boreas Notus and Eurus 50 of the Morning Star Eosphoros Venus 51 the Astra stars 52 and of the virgin goddess of justice Astraea starry one 53 Her other notable offspring were Memnon 54 and Emathion 55 by the Trojan prince Tithonus Sometimes Hesperus 56 Phaethon 57 and Tithonus 58 different from her lover were called the children of Eos by the Athenian prince Cephalus Mythology EditGoddess of the dawn Edit Eos in her four horse drawn chariot terracotta red figure lekanis vase late 300s BC Canosa Metropolitan Museum of Art Each morning the dawn goddess Eos would get up and open the gates so that her brother the Sun would pass and rise bringing the new day Although often her job seems to be done once she announces Helios coming in the Homeric epics she accompanies him throughout the whole day and does not leave him until the sunset hence Eos might be used in texts where one would have expected to see Helios instead 59 In Musaeus s rendition of the story of Hero and Leander in the sixth century AD Eos is mentioned during both sunrise and sunset 60 Homer and Hesiod Edit From The Iliad Now when Dawn in robe of saffron was hastening from the streams of Oceanus to bring light to mortals and immortals Thetis reached the ships with the armor that the god had given her 61 And then later But soon as early Dawn appeared the rosy fingered then gathered the folk about the pyre of glorious Hector 62 Aurora Taking Leave of Tithonus by Francesco Solimena oil on canvas 1704 J Paul Getty Museum She is most often associated with her Homeric epithet rosy fingered Eos Rhododactylos Ancient Greek Ἠὼs Ῥododaktylos but Homer also calls her Eos Erigeneia That brightest of stars appeared Eosphoros that most often heralds the light of early rising Dawn Eos Erigeneia 63 Near the end of the Odyssey Athena wanting to buy Odysseus some time with his wife Penelope after they have reunited with each other orders Eos not to yoke her two horses thus delaying the coming of the new day And rose fingered Dawn would have shone for the weepers had not bright eyed goddess Athena thought of other things She checked the long night in its passage and further held golden throned Dawn over Ocean and didn t let her yoke her swift footed horses that bring daylight to men Lampus and Phaethon the colts that carry Dawn 64 In the Theogony Hesiod wrote a nd after these Erigeneia Early born bore the star Eosphoros Dawn bringer and the gleaming stars with which heaven is crowned 65 Thus Eos is preceded by the Morning Star and is thus seen as the genetrix of all the stars and planets her tears are considered to have created the morning dew personified as Ersa or Herse 66 who is otherwise the daughter of her sister Selene by Zeus 67 Orphic literature Edit Eos pouring the morning dew dressed in a starsprinkled robe from an antique vaseEos is addressed by the singer in one of the Orphic Hymns as the bringer of the new day Hear O goddess you bring the light of day to mortals resplendent Dawn you blush throughout the world messenger of the great the illustrious Titan Orphic Hymn 78 to the Dawn 68 The position of the hymn in the collection at number 78 is odd far from the Hymns to the Night 3 the Sun 8 and the Moon 9 where it would be expected to be grouped 69 While many of the Orphic hymns describe the divinities in terms on light the hymn to Eos is the only one that calls upon the divinity to provide light to the initiates 69 Divine horses Edit Eos s team of horses pull her chariot across the sky and are named in the Odyssey as Firebright and Daybright Quintus described her exulting in her heart over the radiant horses Lampus and Phaeton that drew her chariot amidst the bright haired Horae the feminine Hours the daughters of Zeus and Themis who are responsible for the changing of the seasons climbing the arc of heaven and scattering sparks of fire 70 Lovers Edit In spite of the goddess already having a husband in the face of her first cousin Astraeus Eos is presented as a goddess who fell in love several times According to Pseudo Apollodorus it was the jealous Aphrodite who cursed her to be perpetually in love and have an insatiable sexual desire because Eos had once lain with Aphrodite s sweetheart Ares the god of war 71 The curse caused her to abduct a number of handsome young men This explanatory myth was the reason offered for Eos ravenous sexual desires as this pattern of behavior was noticed by the ancient Greeks 69 In the Odyssey Calypso complains to Hermes about the male gods taking many mortal women as lovers but not allowing goddesses to do the same She brings up as example Eos s love for the hunter Orion who was killed by Artemis on the island of Ortygia 72 Apollodorus also mentions Eos s love for Orion and adds that she brought him to Delos where he met Artemis and was subsequently slain by her 71 The good looking Cleitus was snatched and made immortal by her 73 Eos fell in love and abducted Cephalus a son of Hermes who is sometimes the same as or distinct from the Cephalus that was the husband of Procris whom she also abducted 74 Tithonus Edit Eos and Tithonus by Julien Simon 1783 Musee des Beaux Arts de Caen The myth of Eos and Tithonus is very old known as early as Homer who in the Odyssey described the coming of the new morning as Eos rising from the bed she shares with Tithonus to bring her light to the world 75 The earliest and fullest account survives in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite where Aphrodite herself narrates the story to her own lover Anchises Additionally the myth is also the subject of one of the very few substantially complete works of Sappho pieced together from different fragments discovered over a period of more than a hundred years d known as the Tithonus poem or the Old Age poem 76 but what could I do not possible to become ageless rosy armed Dawn carrying to the ends of the earth yet age seized him immortal wife Sappho fragment 58 76 The myth goes that Eos fell in love with and abducted Tithonus a handsome prince from Troy either the brother or the son of King Laomedon the father of Priam 77 She went with a request to Zeus asking him to make Tithonus immortal for her sake Zeus agreed and granted her wish but Eos foolishly forgot to ask for eternal youth as well for her beloved So for a while the two lived happily in her palace but their happiness eventually came to an end when Tithonus hair started turning grey as he aged and Eos ceased to visit him in their bed Despite that the goddess kept him around and nourished him with food and ambrosia Tithonus never died as he had gained immortality as Zeus promised but he kept aging and shrivelling and was soon unable to even move In the end Eos locked him up in a chamber where he withered away alone forever a helpless old man 78 79 Out of pity she turned him into a small bug a cicada Greek tetti3 tettix 80 81 In the account of Hieronymus of Rhodes from the third century BC the blame is shifted from Eos and onto Tithonus who asked for immortality but not agelessness from his lover who was then unable to help him otherwise and turned him into a cicada 82 Propertius wrote that Eos did not forsake Tithonus old and aged as he was and would still embrace him and hold him in her arms rather than leaving him deserted in his cold chamber while cursing the gods for his cruel fate 83 This myth might have been used to explain why cicadas were particularly noisy during the early hours of the morning when the dawn appears in the sky 84 Sir James George Frazer notes that there was a widespread notion among the ancient Greeks and other ancient peoples that the creatures that shed their skin renew their youth and get to live forever 85 It could also be a reference to the fact that the high pitched talk of old men was compared to a cicada s singing as evidenced in a passage from the Iliad 86 The ancient Greeks would use a cicada the most musical of insects sitting on a harp as an emblem of music 87 Cicadas were also believed to be able to survive off of dew alone a substance closely associated with Eos 86 Cephalus Edit The rape of Cephalus by Eos Apulian red figure Loutrophoros ca 330 BCThe abduction of Cephalus had special appeal for an Athenian audience because Cephalus was a local boy 88 and so this myth element appeared frequently in Attic vase paintings and was exported with them In the literary myths Eos snatched Cephalus against his will when he was hunting and took him to Syria 89 Although Cephalus was already married to Procris Eos bore him three sons including Phaethon and Hesperus and in some versions the little attested Aoos who went on to become king of Cyprus 32 but he then began pining for Procris causing a disgruntled Eos to return him to Procris but not before sowing the seeds of doubt in his mind telling him that it was highly unlikely that Procris had stayed faithful to him this entire time Cephalus and Aurora John Flaxman 1789 90 Lady Lever Art Gallery Cephalus troubled by her words asked Eos to change his form into that of a stranger s in order to secretly put Procris s love for him to the test Cephalus now disguised propositioned Procris who at first declined but eventually gave in when he offered her money He was hurt by her betrayal and she left him in shame but eventually they got back together This time however it was Procris s turn to doubt her husband s fidelity while hunting he would often call upon the breeze Aura in Latin sounding similar to Eos s Roman equivalent Aurora to refresh his body Upon hearing that Procris followed and spied on him Cephalus mistaking her for some wild animal threw his spear at her killing his wife 90 The second century CE traveller Pausanias knew of the story of Cephalus s abduction too though he calls Eos by the name of Hemera goddess of day 91 Hyginus omits the kidnapping from the story and has Cephalus reject Eos out of fidelity to Procris when she begs him to have sex with her Eos then says to Cephalus that she would not want him to break his vows if Procris herself has not either and alters his appearance and gives him gifts to trick Procris Cephalus then goes to Procris as a stranger and she agrees to lay with him thereupon Eos removes the enchantment from Cephalus revealing his identity Procris knowing she has been deceived by Eos flees she is eventually reunited with Cephalus but still fearful of Eos follows him when he goes out hunting and ends up being accidentally killed by him 92 Antoninus Liberalis also largely follows the same tradition in his rendition of the myth though his text contains a lacuna jumping from Eos abduction of Cephalus to him having doubts over Procris 93 The oldest extant account of the myth is attributed to Pherecydes and the elements it contains were all kept by later poets in his account however Eos plays no role in the myth 94 That being said artistic evidence of Eos abducting a man that can be identified as Cephalus go as back as the early fifth century BC 95 Role in wars Edit Eos and the slain Memnon on an Attic red figure cup ca 490 480 BCE the so called Memnon Pieta found at Capua Louvre Gigantomachy Edit Eos riding sidesaddle detail of the Gigantomachy frieze Pergamon Altar Pergamon museum BerlinEos played a small role in the battle of the earthborn Giants against the gods known as the Gigantomachy who rose in rebellion When their mother the earth goddess Gaia learned of a prophecy that the giants would perish at the hand of a mortal Gaia sought to find a herb that would protect them from all harm thus Zeus ordered Eos as well as her siblings Selene Moon and Helios Sun not to shine so that she would not be able to seek for it and harvested all of the plant for himself denying Gaia the chance to make the Giants indestructible 96 Moreover Eos is seen fighting against the Giants in the south frieze of the Pergamon Altar 97 which depicts the Gigantomachy where she rides hither on either a horse or a mule 98 right ahead of Helios swinging herself on the back of her mount while a Giant already lies on the ground underneath her a robe wound around her hips serves as her saddle cloth 99 She is joined in fight against the Giants by her siblings her mother Theia and possibly conjectured due to the disembodied wing to the right of Eos s shoulder the goddess Hemera 98 Trojan War Edit According to Hesiod by her lover Tithonus Eos had two sons Memnon and Emathion 55 Memnon king of Aethiopia joined the Trojans in the Trojan War and fought against Achilles in battle Much like Thetis the mother of Achilles did before her Eos asked the smithing god Hephaestus with tears in her eyes to forge an armor for Memnon and he moved did as told 100 101 Pausanias mentions images of Thetis and Eos both begging Zeus on behalf of their sons 102 In the end it was Achilles who triumphed and slew Memnon in battle Mourning greatly over the death of her son Eos made the light of her brother Helios the god of the sun to fade and begged Nyx the goddess of the night to come out earlier so she could be able to freely steal her son s body undetected by the armies 103 After his death Eos perhaps with the help of Hypnos Sleep and Thanatos Death transported Memnon s dead body back to Aethiopia 104 she also asked Zeus to make her son immortal and he granted her wish 100 Eos role in the Trojan War saga mirrors that of Thetis herself both are goddesses married to aging old men both see their mortal sons die on the battlefield and both arrange an afterlife immortality of sorts for said sons 105 Iconography Edit The fight of Achilles and Memnon in the presence of their mothers Thetis and Eos late Corinthian Black Figure hydria circa 575 550 BC now in the Walters Art Museum Eos was imagined as a woman wearing a saffron mantle as she spread dew from an upturned urn or with a torch in hand riding a chariot 106 Greek and Italian vases show Eos Aurora on a chariot preceding Helios as the morning star Eosphorus flies with her she is winged wearing a fine pleated tunic and mantle 107 Eos is not an uncommon figure especially on red figure vases as a single figure she appears rising from the sea in or driving a four horse chariot like her brother Helios sometimes carrying two hydriae from which she pours morning dew 108 Because Hermes rod had the power to both induce sleep to mortals and wake them up some times he is seen preceding the chariot of Eos and that of Helios as the new day breaks 109 Eos in her chariot red figure potAlthough the romantic adventures of Eos is a common subject in pottery so far as it is known no vase depicts her with Orion or Cleitus known lovers of hers instead those vases fall into groups those that depict Eos with a young hunter identified as Cephalus and those that depict Eos with a youth holding a lyre identified as Tithonus 110 Sometimes those vases bear inscriptions and on a few the hunter is identified as Tithonus while the lyre player is Cephalus 110 Perhaps the earliest representation of this theme is found on a red figure rhyton a statuette vase from circa 480 470 BC in which Eos is depicted carrying of a naked boy perhaps Cephalus her wings spread and her feet barely touching the ground 95 The image of Eos pursuing Tithonus was eerily repetitive in ancient art as was that of erotic pursuit in general Tithonus was drawn running off to the right in terror or trying to clobber with a lyre or a spear the pursuing Eos indicating the terrifying aspect of a mortal man being taken by a goddess 111 The image of Zeus the active erastes pursuing Ganymede the passive eromenos was also common but in the case of Eos the female figure was put in the dominant position 112 Other depictions of mythological scenes that include Eos are Memnon s battle with Achilles and Eos pleading of Zeus for his safety her seizing of Memnon s dead body and the apotheosis of Alcmene the mother of Heracles 113 Among Theia and Hyperion s children she is the only one depicted with wings as neither her brother nor her sister ever sport some in art 114 Cult and temples Edit Eos with two young men red figure stamnos ca 470 460 BC now in the Walters Art Museum Eos along with her brother and sister is a Proto Indo European deity that was side lined by the non PIE newcomers to the pantheon 16 115 James Davidson argues that apparently persisting on the sidelines was a primary function for them to be the minor gods that the major gods were juxtaposed to thus helping to keep the Greek religion Greek 115 However whereas her brother and sister did receive minor cults and in Helios case even major ones Eos does not seem to have been the focus of any worship at all 22 Thus there are no known temples shrines or altars to Eos That being said Ovid seems to allude to the existence of at least two shrines of Eos as he describes them in plural albeit few in the lines Least I may be of all the goddesses the golden heavens hold in all the world my shrines are rarest Aurora to Jupiter 116 Although this could simply be an understated way for Eos to say that she has no temples or shrines whatsoever nevertheless Ovid may therefore have known of at least two such shrines 69 However if Eos did indeed have a handful of shrines and altars in ancient Greece or Rome no knowledge of them remains The only traces of the goddess s worship can be found at Athens where wineless offerings or nephalia were made to Eos along with other celestial gods and goddesses including Eos s siblings Helios and Selene as well as Aphrodite Urania Mnemosyne the Muses and the nymphs 22 117 It is possible that the goddess addressed as Orthria and Aotis in a fragment by Alcman is Eos this is highly debated but if true it could mean that Eos was worshipped in some capacity in Sparta during the Archaic period 118 69 Identifications EditEtruscan Edit Eos the Morn engraving by John Flaxman Among the Etruscans the generative dawn goddess was Thesan Depictions of the dawn goddess with a young lover became popular in Etruria in the fifth century probably inspired by imported Greek vase painting 119 Though Etruscans preferred to show the goddess as a nurturer Kourotrophos rather than an abductor of young men the late Archaic sculptural acroterion from Etruscan Caere now in Berlin showing the goddess in archaic running pose adapted from the Greeks and bearing a boy in her arms has commonly been identified as Eos and Cephalus 120 On an Etruscan mirror Thesan is shown carrying off a young man whose name is inscribed as Tinthu 121 Roman Edit The Roman equivalent of Eos is Aurora also a cognate showing the characteristic Latin rhotacism Dawn became associated in Roman cult with Matuta later known as Mater Matuta She was also associated with the sea harbors and ports and had a temple on the Forum Boarium On June 11 the Matralia was celebrated at that temple in honor of Mater Matuta this festival was only for women during their first marriage Hemera Edit Eos in her chariot flying over the sea red figure krater from Southern Italy 430 420 BC Staatliche AntikensammlungenAlthough distinct deities in early works such as Hesiod s Theogony later the tragic poets completely identified Eos with Hemera the primordial goddess of the day 59 114 each of the three great Athenian tragedians Euripides Aeschylus and Sophocles used Hemera for the goddess who abducts Tithonus or drives a chariot drawn by white horses at daybreak in some work 122 Both goddesses were said to be daughters of Nyx Night albeit Eos was much more commonly the daughter of Hyperion by his wife Pausanias when describing depictions of Eos s myths at Athens and Amyclae he calls Eos by the name of Hemera 91 A scholion on the Odyssey mentions the abduction of the hunter Orion by Hemera Eos in Homer 123 124 Eos in contrast to Helios and Selene and more similarly to Hemera and Hemera s mother Nyx embodies a part of the day and night cycle instead of a celestial body 122 The Greek word eos meaning dawn was some times used by writers to refer to the entire duration of the day not just the morning 13 Likewise Eos was often referred to as Tito another archaic word meaning day and feminine equivalent to Titan which is a common epithet of her brother Helios denoting his role as the creator of the day 15 Unlike Eos however Hemera is little more than a name in Greek literature with few and far between refences about her and with no unique mythology outside of her parentage and the few stories appropriated from Eos 125 In culture Edit221 Eos a large main belt asteroid was named after this goddess The acidic compound Eosin was indirectly named after Eos Gallery EditEos in art Aurora and Cephalus from The Loves of the Gods fresco Eos driving a four horse chariot from an antique vase Eos in the sarcophagus of Selene and Endymion Fragments of Eos carrying off Cephalus from Delos Eos abducts Tithonus Archaeological Museum of Florence Eos and Tithonus by Sebastiano Ricci Cephale and Aurore Francois Boucher Eos carrying off a man in a relief from Milos A French clock with Eos Eos watches the battle between Memnon and Achilles Eos and Tithonus by Sebastiano Ricci Etruscan vase of Thesan abducting Tinthu circa 525 500 BC Goddess of Dawn Jorgen Dreyer 1932 Pocket watch with silver case with Eos and Cephalus detail 18th cent Genealogy EditSee also Family tree of the Greek gods Eos s family tree 126 UranusGaiaPontusOceanusTethysHyperionTheiaCriusEurybiaThe RiversThe OceanidsHeliosSelene 127 EOSAstraeusPallasPersesThe AnemoiAstraea 128 The StarsCronusRheaCoeusPhoebeHestiaHeraHadesZeusLetoAsteriaDemeterPoseidonIapetusClymene or Asia 129 Mnemosyne Zeus ThemisAtlas 130 MenoetiusPrometheus 131 EpimetheusThe MusesThe HoraeSee also Edit Ancient Greece portal Myths portal Religion portalAquarius Cumaean Sibyl a mortal who was granted an extended lifetime but not eternal youth List of solar deitiesNotes Edit Foreign scholars interpret this name as matinal matutino mananero meaning of the early morning of the dawn 6 Also found on the KN Dv 1462 tablet from Heraklion Hesiod and Hyginus both give their birth order as first Helios Sol then Selene Luna and lastly Eos Aurora 45 44 Pseudo Apollodorus makes her the oldest child with Selene as the youngest 42 as does the author of Helios Homeric Hymn with Helios as the youngest 43 The first modern printing of the complete poem was published in two sections by Michael Gronewald and Robert W Daniel in Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik vol 147 pp 1 8 and vol 149 pp 1 4 2004 an English translation by Martin West is printed in the Times Literary Supplement 21 or 24 June 2005 The right half of this poem was previously found in fragment 58 L P The fully restored version can be found in M L West The New Sappho in Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik vol 151 pp 1 9 2005 References Edit a b c Mallory J P Adams D Q 2006 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World Oxford England Oxford University Press p 432 ISBN 978 0 19 929668 2 a b Witzel Michael 2005 Vala and Iwato The Myth of the Hidden Sun in India Japan and beyond PDF a b c d R S P Beekes Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill 2009 p 492 a b West Martin L 2007 05 24 Indo European Poetry and Myth OUP Oxford ISBN 9780199280759 Miller 2014 pp 219 220 Bernabe Alberto Lujan Eugenio R Introduccion al Griego Micenico Gramatica seleccion de textos y glosario Monografias de Filologia Grega Vol 30 Zaragoza Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza 2020 p 234 Lujan Eugenio R Los temas en s en micenico In Donum Mycenologicum Mycenaean Studies in Honour of Francisco Aura Jorro Edited by Alberto Bernabe and Eugenio R Lujan Bibliotheque des cahiers de L Institut de Linguistique de Louvain Vol 131 Louvain la Neuve Walpole MA Peeters 2014 p 68 Lejeune Michel Une presentation du Mycenien In Revue des Etudes Anciennes Tome 69 1967 n 3 4 p 281 DOI https doi org 10 3406 rea 1967 3800 www persee fr doc rea 0035 2004 1967 num 69 3 3800 Nakassis Dimitri Labor and Individuals in Late Bronze Age Pylos In Labor in the Ancient World Edited by Piotr Steinkeller and Michael Hudson Dresden ISLET Verlag 2015 2005 p 605 ISBN 978 3 9814842 3 6 Davies Anna Morpurgo 1972 Greek and Indo European semiconsonants Mycenaean u and w In Acta Mycenaea vol 2 M S Ruiperez ed Salamanca Universidad de Salamanca p 93 Jorro Francisco Aura Reflexiones sobre el lexico micenico In Conuentus Classicorum temas y formas del Mundo Clasico Coord por Jesus de la Villa Emma Falque Rey Jose Francisco Gonzalez Castro Maria Jose Munoz Jimenez Vol 1 2017 pp 307 ISBN 978 84 697 8214 9 Chadwick John and Lydia Baumbach The Mycenaean Greek Vocabulary In Glotta 41 no 3 4 1963 198 Accessed March 12 2021 http www jstor org stable 40265918 a b Stoll p 62 See titw on A Greek English Lexicon a b Kerenyi 1951 p 199 note 637 a b c Burkert p 17 Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 149 Jackson 2002 p 79 West p 186 a b Kolligan 2007 p 107 Mallory amp Adams 1997 pp 148 149 161 Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 149 a b c Scheer Tanja 2006 Eos In Cancik Hubert Schneider Helmuth eds Brill s New Pauly Translated by Christine F Salazar Rome Brill Reference Online doi 10 1163 1574 9347 bnp e330980 S2CID 246274316 Retrieved December 22 2021 Dumezil 1934 Cyrino p 24 a b Janda 2010 p 65 West 2000 pp 134 38 Dickmann Boedeker 1974 p 15 Ferrari p 54 Nagy p 248 Greene and Paxton pp 47 52 Kolligan 2007 pp 107 108 a b Dickmann Boedeker 1974 pp 66 67 Nonnus Eos had just shaken off the wing of carefree sleep Hypnos and opened the gates of sunrise leaving the lightbringing couch of Kephalos Dionysiaca 27 1f in A L Rouse s translation Homer Iliad viii 1 amp xxiv 695 Homer Odyssey vi 48 etc Homeric Hymn 31 to the Sun 5 6 Sappho P Koln Inv Nr 21351 17 Sappho uses the Aeolic form brodopaxys brodopakhus Sappho fragment 6 trans David A Campbell Vol Greek Lyric I Oxy 2289 fr 1 a b Sappho fragment 103 P Oxy 2294 a b Mesomedes Hymn to the Sun 1 Ovid Metamorphoses 7 700 ff Fasti 4 713 ff Bell s v Eos a b Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 1 2 2 a b Homeric Hymn 31 to Helios 4 7 a b Hyginus Fabulae Preface a b Hesiod Theogony 371 374 Ovid Fasti 4 373 ff Valerius Flaccus Argonautica 2 72 ff Homeric Hymn 4 to Hermes 99 100 Quintus of Smyrna Posthomerica 2 625 26 cf Aeschylus Agamemnon 265 Hyginus Fabulae Preface Nonnus Dionysiaca 6 18 37 70 47 340 Cicero wrote Stella Veneris quae Fwsforos Graece Latine dicitur Lucifer cum antegreditur solem cum subsequitur autem Hesperos The star of Venus called Fwsforos in Greek and Lucifer in Latin when it precedes Hesperos when it follows the sun De Natura Deorum 2 20 53 Pliny the Elder Sidus appellatum Veneris ante matutinum exoriens Luciferi nomen accipit contra ab occasu refulgens nuncupatur Vesper The star called Venus when it rises in the morning is given the name Lucifer but when it shines at sunset it is called Vesper Natural History 2 36 Hesiod Theogony 378 82 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 1 2 4 Aratus Phaenomena 97 128 Hyginus Astronomica 2 25 1 Quintus Smyrnaeus Posthomerica 2 549 Pindar Nemean Odes 6 54 Diodorus Siculus Historic Library 4 75 4 Callistratus Statuaram Descriptiones 9 Ovid Fasti 4 713 a b Hesiod Theogony 985 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 12 4 Hyginus Astronomica 2 42 4 Pausanias Description of Greece 1 3 1 Hesiod Theogony 986 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 14 3 a b Smith s v Eos Musaeus Hero and Leander 4 110 Homer Iliad xix 1 Homer Iliad xxiv 776 Homer Odyssey xiii 93 Homer Odyssey 13 241 246 Hesiod Theogony 378 382 Ovid Metamorphoses 13 621 2 Hard p 46 Keightley p 55 Alcman fr 57 Campbell Orphic Hymn 78 to the Dawn 1 3 Athanassakis amp Wolkow p 61 a b c d e Athanassakis and Wolkow p 181 Quintus Smyrnaeus Posthomerica 1 48 a b Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 1 4 4 Homer Odyssey 5 121 124 Homer Odyssey 15 250 251 Smith s v Cephalus 1 Cephalus 2 Hard p 47 see also Frazer s note on Apollodorus 1 9 4 Homer Odyssey 5 1 And now as Dawn rose from her couch beside Tithonos harbinger of light alike to mortals and immortals Trans Samuel Butler a b Sappho fragment 58 Oxy 1787 fr 1 4 25 fr 2 1 fr nov Lobel S m p 26 Hansen p 48 Homeric Hymn 5 to Aphrodite lines 220 318 cf Sappho fr 58 Campbell Mimnermus fr 4 Gerber Clearchus of Soli fragment 20 Zenobius 4 18 Keightley p 63 Suda s v Old Man Tithonus Hellanicus fragment 142 FGrH Scholia on Homer s Iliad 3 151 scholia on the Odyssey 5 1 Tsagalis and Markantonatos p 297 Propertius Elegies 2 18b Loeb Classical Library Homeric Hymns Homeric Apocrypha Lives of Homer 2003 p 177 note 48 See Frazer s note on Apollodorus 3 12 4 a b Hard p 47 The Cicada The Sydney Morning Herald National Library of Australia 21 January 1928 p 21 Retrieved 7 June 2013 Mary R Lefkowitz Predatory Goddesses Hesperia 71 4 October 2002 pp 325 344 p 326 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 14 3 Pausanias Description of Greece 1 3 1 Hyginus Fabulae 189 Ovid Metamorphoses 7 703 Antoninus Liberalis Collection of Transformations 41 Ovid Metamorphoses 7 700 722 a b Pausanias remarking on the subjects shown in the Royal Stoa Athens 1 3 1 and on the throne of Apollo at Amyclae 3 18 12 Hyginus Fabulae 189 Antoninus Liberalis Collection of Transformations 41 Pherecydes of Athens FGrHist 3F 34 Scholia on Homer s Odyssey 1 320 a b Cohen 2006 pp 280 281 Apollodorus Bibliotheca 1 6 2 Picon and Hemingway p 47 LIMC 617 Eos 45 a b Honan Mary McMahon 1904 Guide to the Pergamon Museum De Gruyter pp 20 21 ISBN 9783112399330 Schmidt p 22 a b Arctinus of Miletus Aethiopis summary Virgil Aeneid 8 384 Pausanias Description of Greece 5 22 2 Philostratus of Lemnos Imagines 1 7 2 Currie p 51 Price and Zelnick Abramovitz p 94 The two mothers Thetis and Eos are alike as well Roberts p 567 Collignon p 176 Walters p 79 Savignoni p 272 a b Pache p 131 Reitzammer p 41 Reitzammer p 122 Walters p 80 a b Hard p 46 a b Davidson in Ogden p 205 Ovid Metamorphoses 13 587 ff translated by Melville Meagher p 142 n 137 scholia on Sophocles Oedipus at Colonus 91 Alcman PMGF 1 Marilyn Y Goldberg The Eos and Kephalos from Caere Its Subject and Date American Journal of Archaeology 91 4 October 1987 pp 605 614 p 607 Goldberg 1987 605 614 casts doubt on the boy s identification in the context of Etruscan and Greek abduction motifs Noted by Goldberg 1987 in I Mayer Prokop Die gravierten etruskischen Griffspiegel archaischen Stils Heidelberg 1966 fig 61 a b Oakley and Palagia p 47 Euphorion fr 66 Lightfoot fr 103 Powell Hard p 562 Bell 1991 s v Hemera Hesiod Theogony 132 138 337 411 453 520 901 906 915 920 Caldwell pp 8 11 tables 11 14 Although usually the daughter of Hyperion and Theia as in Hesiod Theogony 371 374 in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes 4 99 100 Selene is instead made the daughter of Pallas the son of Megamedes Astraea is not mentioned by Hesiod instead she is given as a daughter of Eos and Astraeus in Hyginus Astronomica 2 25 1 According to Hesiod Theogony 507 511 Clymene one of the Oceanids the daughters of Oceanus and Tethys at Hesiod Theogony 351 was the mother by Iapetus of Atlas Menoetius Prometheus and Epimetheus while according to Apollodorus 1 2 3 another Oceanid Asia was their mother by Iapetus According to Plato Critias 113d 114a Atlas was the son of Poseidon and the mortal Cleito In Aeschylus Prometheus Bound 18 211 873 Sommerstein pp 444 445 n 2 446 447 n 24 538 539 n 113 Prometheus is made to be the son of Themis Bibliography EditPrimary sources Edit Antoninus Liberalis The Metamorphoses of Antoninus Liberalis translated by Francis Celoria Routledge 1992 Online version at the Topos Text Project Aratus Solensis Phaenomena translated by G R Mair Loeb Classical Library Volume 129 London William Heinemann 1921 Online version at the Topos Text Project Aratus Solensis Phaenomena G R Mair London William Heinemann New York G P Putnam s Sons 1921 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library Diodorus Siculus The Library of History translated by Charles Henry Oldfather Twelve volumes Loeb Classical Library Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1989 Vol 3 Books 4 59 8 Online version at Bill Thayer s Web Site Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica Vol 1 2 Immanel Bekker Ludwig Dindorf Friedrich Vogel in aedibus B G Teubneri Leipzig 1888 1890 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library Gaius Julius Hyginus Astronomica from The Myths of Hyginus translated and edited by Mary Grant University of Kansas Publications in Humanistic Studies Online version at the Topos Text Project Gaius Julius Hyginus Fabulae from The Myths of Hyginus translated and edited by Mary Grant University of Kansas Publications in Humanistic Studies Online version at the Topos Text Project Gaius Valerius Flaccus Argonautica translated by Mozley J H Loeb Classical Library Volume 286 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1928 Online version at theoi com Gaius Valerius Flaccus Argonauticon Otto Kramer Leipzig Teubner 1913 Latin text available at the Perseus Digital Library Hesiod Theogony from The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Greek text available from the same website Homer The Iliad with an English Translation by A T Murray Ph D in two volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer Homeri Opera in five volumes Oxford Oxford University Press 1920 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Odyssey with an English Translation by A T Murray PH D in two volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1919 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Greek text available from the same website Homeric Hymns Homeric Apocrypha Lives of Homer edited and translated by Martin L West the Loeb Classical Library 496 Harvard University Press 2003 London England ISBN 0 674 99606 2 Mimnermus in Greek Elegiac Poetry From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC edited and translated by Douglas E Gerber Loeb Classical Library No 258 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 674 99582 6 Online version at Harvard University Press Nonnus of Panopolis Dionysiaca translated by William Henry Denham Rouse 1863 1950 from the Loeb Classical Library Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1940 Online version at the Topos Text Project Nonnus of Panopolis Dionysiaca 3 Vols W H D Rouse Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1940 1942 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W H S Jones Litt D and H A Ormerod M A in 4 Volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1918 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Pausanias Graeciae Descriptio 3 vols Leipzig Teubner 1903 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library Pindar Odes translated by Diane Arnson Svarlien 1990 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Pindar The Odes of Pindar including the Principal Fragments with an Introduction and an English Translation by Sir John Sandys Litt D FBA Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1937 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library Pseudo Apollodorus The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer F B A F R S in 2 Volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1921 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Greek text available from the same website Propertius Elegies in Roman Erotic Elegy Selections from Tibullus Propertius Ovid and Sulpicia translated with an Introduction Notes and Glossary by Jon Corelis Salzburg Studies in English Literature Poetic Drama amp Poetic Theory 128 Full text available online at romanelegyonline Publius Ovidius Naso Fasti translated by James G Frazer Online version at the Topos Text Project Publius Ovidius Naso Fasti Sir James George Frazer London Cambridge MA William Heinemann Ltd Harvard University Press 1933 Latin text available at the Perseus Digital Library Publius Ovidius Naso Metamorphoses translated by Brookes More 1859 1942 Boston Cornhill Publishing Co 1922 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Publius Ovidius Naso Metamorphoses Hugo Magnus Gotha Germany Friedr Andr Perthes 1892 Latin text available at the Perseus Digital Library Quintus Smyrnaeus The Fall of Troy translated by Way A S Loeb Classical Library Volume 19 London William Heinemann 1913 Online version at theoi com Quintus Smyrnaeus The Fall of Troy Arthur S Way London William Heinemann New York G P Putnam s Sons 1913 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Homeric Hymns Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Greek text available from the same website Secondary sources Edit Athanassakis Apostolos N and Benjamin M Wolkow The Orphic Hymns Johns Hopkins University Press owlerirst Printing edition May 29 2013 ISBN 978 1 4214 0882 8 Google Books Bell Robert E 1991 Women of Classical Mythology A Biographical Dictionary ABC Clio ISBN 9780874365818 Burkert Walter 1982 Greek Religion Cohen Beth 2006 Outline as a Special Technique in Black and Red figure Vase painting The Colors of Clay Special Techniques in Athenian Vases Getty Publications ISBN 978 0 89236 942 3 Campbell David A Greek Lyric Volume I Sappho and Alcaeus Loeb Classical Library No 142 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1990 ISBN 0 674 99157 5 Online version at Harvard University Press Corinne Ondine Pache A Moment s Ornament The Poetics of Nympholepsy in Ancient Greece Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 19 533936 9 Currie Bruno Pindar and the Cult of Heroes Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 927724 7 Google books Cyrino Monica S 2010 Aphrodite Gods and Heroes of the Ancient World New York and London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 77523 6 Google books Davidson James Time and Greek Religion in A Companion to Greek Religion edited by Daniel Ogden John Wiley amp Sons 2010 ISBN 9781444334173 Dickmann Boedeker Deborah 1974 Aphrodite s Entry Into Greek Epic Leiden the Netherlands Brill Publications ISBN 90 04 03946 5 Dumezil Georges 1934 Ouranos Varuna Etude de mythologie comparee indo europeene Paris Maisonneuve Ferrari Gloria Alcman and the Cosmos of Sparta University of Chicago Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 226 66867 3 Grimal Pierre The Dictionary of Classical Mythology Wiley Blackwell 1996 ISBN 978 0 631 20102 1 Eos p 146 Greene Ellen Paxton Joseph Reading Sappho Contemporary Approaches University of California Press 1996 ISBN 0 520 20195 7 Hansen William Handbook of Classical Mythology ABC CLIO 2004 ISBN 978 1576072264 Jackson Peter 2002 Light from Distant Asterisks Towards a Description of the Indo European Religious Heritage Numen 49 1 61 102 doi 10 1163 15685270252772777 ISSN 0029 5973 JSTOR 3270472 Janda Michael 2010 Die Musik nach dem Chaos der Schopfungsmythos der europaischen Vorzeit Innsbruck Institut fur Sprachen und Literaturen ISBN 978 3851242270 Keightley Thomas The Mythology of Ancient Greece and Italy G Bell and Sons 1877 Kerenyi Karl 1951 The Gods of the Greeks Thames and Hudson Kolligan Daniel 2007 Aphrodite of the Dawn Indo European Heritage in Greek Divine Epithets and Theonyms Letras Classicas 11 11 105 34 doi 10 11606 issn 2358 3150 v0i11p105 134 Mallory James P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture London Routledge ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Meagher Robert E The Meaning of Helen In Search of an Ancient Icon Bolchazy Carducci Publishers 2002 ISBN 9780865165106 Miller Gary 2014 Ancient Greek Dialects and Early Authors Introduction to the Dialect Mixture in Homer with Notes on Lyric and Herodotus De Gruyter ISBN 978 1 61451 493 0 Nagy Gregory Greek Mythology and Poetics Cornell University Press 1990 ISBN 0 8014 8048 5 Oakley John H Palagia Olga Athenian Potters and Painters Volume II Oxbow Books 2009 ISBN 978 1 84217 350 3 Google books Picon Carlos A Hemingway Sean Pergamon and the Hellenistic Kingdoms of the Ancient World Yale University Press 2016 ISBN 978 1 58839 587 0 Price Jonathan J Zelnick Abramovitz Rachel Text and Intertext in Greek Epic and Drama Essays in Honor of Margalit Finkelberg Routledge 2021 ISBN 978 0 367 11063 5 Google books Reitzammer Laurialan The Athenian Adonia in Context The Adonis Festival as Cultural Practice University of Wisconsin Press 2016 ISBN 9780299308209 Roberts Helene E Encyclopedia of Comparative Iconography Themes Depicted in Works of Art Volume I and II Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers London Chicago 1998 ISBN 1 57958 009 2 Savignoni L 1899 On Representations of Helios and of Selene The Journal of Hellenic Studies 19 pp 265 272 Schmidt Evamaria The Great Altar of Pergamon 1962 Edition Leipzig Smith William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology London 1873 John Murray printed by Spottiswoode and Co New Street Square and Parliament Street Stoll Heinrich Wilhelm Handbook of the religion and mythology of the Greeks With a Short Account of The Religious System of the Romans tr by R B Paul and ed by T K Arnold London Francis amp John Rivington 1852 Tsagalis Christos Markantonatos Andreas The Winnowing Oar New Perspectives in Homeric Studies De Gruyter German National Library 2017 ISBN 978 3 11 054335 3 Walters Henry Beauchamp History of ancient pottery Greek Etruscan and Roman volume II based on the work of Samuel Birch 1905 London J Murray New York West M L 2000 The Name of Aphrodite Glotta Gottingen Germany Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht GmbH amp Co KG 76 1 2 H 134 38 JSTOR 40267103Further reading EditHatto Arthur T Eos An Enquiry into the Theme of Lovers Meetings and Partings at Dawn in Poetry 1965 Mouton amp Co the Hague Google books Jackson Peter Potnia Aὔws The Greek Dawn Goddess and Her Antecedent Glotta 81 2005 116 23 Accessed May 10 2020 JSTOR 40267187 Lefkowitz Mary R Predatory Goddesses Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 71 2002 325 344 Accessed March 31 2022 JSTOR 3182040 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eos Look up Ἠws in Wiktionary the free dictionary EOS from The Theoi Project EOS from Greek Mythology Link EOS from greekmythology com EOS from Mythopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eos amp oldid 1165547118, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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