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Hestia

In ancient Greek religion and mythology, Hestia (/ˈhɛstiə, ˈhɛsə/; Greek: Ἑστία, meaning "hearth" or "fireside") is the virgin goddess of the hearth, the right ordering of domesticity, the family, the home, and the state. In myth, she is the firstborn child of the Titans Cronus and Rhea, and one of the Twelve Olympians.[1]

Hestia
Goddess of the domestic and civic hearth, the home, sacred and sacrificial fire, virginity, family, and the state
Member of the Twelve Olympians
AbodeDelphi and Mount Olympus
AnimalsPig
SymbolThe hearth and its fire
Personal information
ParentsCronus and Rhea
SiblingsDemeter, Hera, Hades, Poseidon, Zeus, Chiron (half)
Equivalents
Roman equivalentVesta

According to ancient Greek tradition, Hestia, along with four of her five siblings, was devoured by her own father Cronus as an infant due to his fear of being overthrown by one of his offspring, and was only freed when her youngest brother Zeus forced their father to disgorge the children he had eaten. Cronus and the rest of the Titans were cast down, and Hestia then became one of the Olympian gods, the new rulers of the cosmos, alongside her brothers and sisters. After the establishment of the new order and in spite of her status, Hestia withdraws from prominence in mythology, with few and sparse appearances in tales. Like Athena and Artemis, Hestia elected to never marry and remain an eternal virgin goddess instead, forever tending to the hearth of Olympus.

Despite her limited mythology, Hestia remained a very important goddess in ancient Greek society. Greek custom required that as the goddess of sacrificial fire, Hestia should receive the first offering at every sacrifice in the household. In the public domain, the hearth of the prytaneum functioned as her official sanctuary. Whenever a new colony was established, a flame from Hestia's public hearth in the mother city would be carried to the new settlement. The goddess Vesta is her Roman equivalent.

Origins and etymology

Hestia's name means "hearth, fireplace, altar",[2] This stems from the PIE root *wes, "burn" (ultimately from *h₂wes- "dwell, pass the night, stay").[3][4][5] It thus refers to the oikos: domestic life, home, household, house, or family. Burkert states that an "early form of the temple is the hearth house; the early temples at Dreros and Prinias on Crete are of this type as indeed is the temple of Apollo at Delphi which always had its inner hestia".[6] The Mycenaean great hall (megaron), like Homer's hall of Odysseus at Ithaca, had a central hearth. Likewise, the hearth of the later Greek prytaneum was the community and government's ritual and secular focus.[7] Hestia's naming thus makes her a personification of the hearth and its fire, a symbol of society and family, also denoting authority and kingship.[8]

Mythology

Origin

 
Hestia holding a branch of a chaste-tree, red-figure kylix, attributed to Oltos, Tarquinia National Museum.

Hestia is a goddess of the first Olympian generation. She is the eldest daughter of the Titans Rhea and Cronus, and sister to Demeter, Hades, Hera, Poseidon, and Zeus. Immediately after their birth, Cronus swallowed all his children (Hestia was the first who was swallowed) except the last and youngest, Zeus, who was saved by Rhea. Instead, Zeus forced Cronus to disgorge his siblings and led them in a war against their father and the other Titans.[9] As "first to be devoured . . . and the last to be yielded up again", Hestia is thus both the eldest and youngest daughter; this mythic inversion is found in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite (700 BC).[10]

Zeus assigned Hestia a duty to feed and maintain the fires of the Olympian hearth with the fatty, combustible portions of animal sacrifices to the gods.[11] Wherever food was cooked, or an offering was burnt, she thus had her share of honor; also, in all the temples of the gods, she has a share of honor. "Among all mortals she was chief of the goddesses".[12]

Virgin goddess

The gods Poseidon and Apollo both (her brother and nephew respectively) fell in love with Hestia and vied for her hand in marriage. But Hestia would have neither of them, and went to Zeus instead, and swore a great oath, that she would remain a virgin for all time and never marry. In the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, Aphrodite is described as having "no power" over Hestia.[13]

Status and attributes

At Athens, "in Plato's time," notes Kenneth Dorter[14] "there was a discrepancy in the list of the twelve chief gods, as to whether Hestia or Dionysus was included with the other eleven. The altar to them at the agora, for example, included Hestia, but the east frieze of the Parthenon had Dionysus instead." However, the hearth was imovable, and "there is no story of Hestia's "ever having been removed from her fixed abode".[15] Burkert remarks that "Since the hearth is immovable Hestia is unable to take part even in the procession of the gods, let alone the other antics of the Olympians".[16]

 
Hestia (?) on the northern frieze of the Siphnian Treasury, 6th century BC, Delphi Archaeological Museum, Greece.

Traditionally, Hestia is absent from ancient depictions of the Gigantomachy as she is the one who must keep the home fires burning when the other gods are away.[17] Nevertheless her possible participation in the fight against the Giants is evidenced from an inscription on the northern frieze of the Siphnian Treasury in Delphi; Brinkmann (1985) suggests that the letter tracings of one of the two goddesses right next to Hephaestus be restored as "Hestia", although other possible candidates include Demeter and Persephone, or two of the three Fates.[18][19]

Her mythographic status as firstborn of Rhea and Cronus seems to justify the tradition in which a small offering is made to Hestia before any sacrifice ("Hestia comes first"), though this was not universal among the Greeks. In Odyssey 14, 432–436, the loyal swineherd Eumaeus begins the feast for his master Odysseus by plucking tufts from a boar's head and throwing them into the fire with a prayer addressed to all the powers, then carved the meat into seven equal portions: "one he set aside, lifting up a prayer to the forest nymphs and Hermes, Maia's son."[20]

Hestia is identified with the hearth as a physical object, and the abstractions of community and domesticity, in contrast to the fire of the forge employed in blacksmithing and metalworking, the province of the god Hephaestus. Portrayals of her are rare and seldom secure.[21] In classical Greek art, she is occasionally depicted as a woman simply and modestly cloaked in a head veil. At times, she is shown with a staff in hand or by a large fire. She sits on a plain wooden throne with a white woolen cushion and, Robert Graves declares, "did not trouble to choose an emblem for herself".[1] Her associated sacrificial animal was a domestic pig.[22]

Equivalence

 
Fragment of a Hellenistic relief (1st century BC–1st century AD) depicting the twelve Olympians carrying their attributes in procession; Hestia with scepter to the left, from the Walters Art Museum.[23]

Her Roman equivalent is Vesta;[24] Vesta has similar functions as a divine personification of Rome's "public", domestic, and colonial hearths, binding Romans together within a form of extended family. The similarity of names between Hestia and Vesta is, however, misleading: "The relationship hestia-histie-Vesta cannot be explained in terms of Indo-European linguistics; borrowings from a third language must also be involved," according to Walter Burkert.[25]Herodotus equates Hestia with the high ranking Scythian deity Tabiti.[26] Procopius equates her with the Zoroastrian holy fire (atar) of the Sasanians in Adhur Gushnasp.[27] To Vesta is attributed one more story not found in Greek tradition by the Roman poet Ovid in his poem Fasti, where during a feast of the gods Vesta is nearly raped in her sleep by the god Priapus, and only avoids this fate when a donkey cries out, alerting Vesta and prompting the other gods to attack Priapus in defense of the goddess. This story is an almost word-for-word repeat of the myth of Priapus and Lotis, recounted earlier in the same book, with the difference that Lotis had to transform into a lotus tree to escape Priapus, making some scholars suggest the account where Vesta supplants Lotis only exists in order to create some cult drama.[28]

Worship

 
Part of a marble altar with inscription ESTIAS ISTHMIAS, 5th – 4th century BC. The altar was dedicated to the goddess Hestia with the epithet Isthmia ("of the isthmus". Archaeological Museum of Paros.

The worship of Hestia was centered around the hearth, both domestic and civic. The hearth was essential for warmth, food preparation, and the completion of sacrificial offerings to deities. At feasts, Hestia was offered the first and last libations of wine.[29] Pausanias writes that the Eleans sacrifice first to Hestia and then to other gods.[30] Xenophon in Cyropaedia wrote that Cyrus the Great sacrificed first to Hestia, then to sovereign Zeus, and then to any other god that the magi suggested.[31]

The accidental or negligent extinction of a domestic hearth fire represented a failure of domestic and religious care for the family; failure to maintain Hestia's public fire in her temple or shrine was a breach of duty to the broad community. A hearth fire might be deliberately, ritually extinguished at need; but its lighting should be accompanied by rituals of completion, purification, and renewal, comparable with the rituals and connotations of an eternal flame and of sanctuary lamps. At the level of the polis, the hearths of Greek colonies and their mother cities were allied and sanctified through Hestia's cult. Athenaeus, in the Deipnosophistae, writes that in Naucratis the people dined in the Prytaneion on the birthday of Hestia Prytanitis.[32]

 
Dedication of an altar to Hestia in Karneades, Taormina (undated). The inscription states: "Beside these walls of Serapis the warden of the temple Karneades of Barke, son of Eukritos, o foreigner, and his spouse Pythias and his daughter Eraso placed to Hestia a pure altar, as a reward for this, o you that governs the marvelous dwellings of Zeus, grant to them a lovely auspiciousness of life."

Responsibility for Hestia's domestic cult usually fell to the leading woman of the household, although sometimes to a man. Hestia's rites at the hearths of public buildings were usually led by holders of civil office; Dionysius of Halicarnassus testifies that the prytaneum of a Greek state or community was sacred to Hestia, who was served by the most powerful state officials.[33] However, evidence of her dedicant priesthood is extremely rare. Most stems from the early Roman Imperial era, when Sparta offers several examples of women with the priestly title "Hestia"; Chalcis offers one, a daughter of the local elite. Existing civic cults to Hestia probably served as stock for the grafting of Greek ruler-cult to the Roman emperor, the Imperial family, and Rome itself. In Athens, a small seating section at the Theatre of Dionysus was reserved for priesthoods of "Hestia on the Acropolis, Livia, and Julia", and of "Hestia Romain" ("Roman Hestia", thus "The Roman Hearth" or Vesta). At Delos, a priest served "Hestia the Athenian Demos" (the people or state) "and Roma". An eminent citizen of Carian Stratoniceia described himself as a priest of Hestia and several other deities, as well as holding several civic offices. Hestia's political and civic functions are further evidenced by her very numerous privately funded dedications at civic sites, and the administrative rather than religious titles used by the lay-officials involved in her civic cults.[34]

Shrines, temples and colonies

Every private and public hearth was regarded as a sanctuary of the goddess, and a portion of the sacrifices, to whatever divinity they were offered, belonged to her. Aeschines, On the Embassy, declares that "the hearth of the Prytaneum was regarded as the common hearth of the state and a statue of Hestia was there, and in the senate-house there was an altar of the goddess."[35] A temple at Ephesus was dedicated to Hestia Boulaea - Hestia "of the senate", or boule. Pausanias reports a figurative statue of Hestia in the Athenian Prytaneum, together with one of the goddess Eirene ("Peace").[36] Hestia offered sanctuary from persecution to those who showed her respect and would punish those who offended her. Diodorus Siculus writes that Theramenes sought asylum directly from Hestia at the Council Chamber, leaping onto her hearth not to save himself, but in the hope that his slayers would demonstrate their impiety by killing him there".[37]

Very few free-standing temples were dedicated to Hestia. Pausanias mentions one in Ermioni and one in Sparta, the latter having an altar but no image.[38] Xenophon's Hellenica mentions fighting around and within Olympia's temple of Hestia, a building separate from the city's council hall and adjoining theatre:[39] A temple to Hestia was in Andros.[40]

Prospective founders of city-states and colonies sought approval and guidance not only of their "mother city" (represented by Hestia) but of Apollo, through one or another of his various oracles. He acted as consulting archegetes (founder) at Delphi. Among his various functions, he was patron god of colonies, architecture, constitutions and city planning. Additional patron deities might also be persuaded to support the new settlement, but without Hestia, her sacred hearth, an agora and prytaneum there could be no polis.[41]

Hymns, odes and oaths

Homeric Hymn 24, To Hestia, is an invocation of five lines, alluding to her role as an attendant to Apollo:

Hestia, you who tend the holy house of the lord Apollo, the Far-shooter at goodly Pytho, with soft oil dripping ever from your locks, come now into this house, come, having one mind with Zeus the all-wise: draw near, and withal bestow grace upon my song.[42]

Homeric Hymn 29, To Hestia invokes Hestia and Hermes:

Hestia, in the high dwellings of all, both deathless gods and men who walk on earth, you have gained an everlasting abode and highest honor: glorious is your portion and your right. For without you mortals hold no banquet, -- where one does not duly pour sweet wine in offering to Hestia both first and last. And you, slayer of Argus (an epithet of Hermes), Son of Zeus and Maia, the messenger of the blessed gods, bearer of the goldenrod, the giver of good, be favorable and help us, you and Hestia, the worshipful and dear. Come and dwell in this glorious house in friendship together; for you two, well knowing the noble actions of men, aid on their wisdom and their strength. Hail, Daughter of Cronos, and you also, Hermes, bearer of the goldenrod! Now I will remember you and another song also.[43]

Bacchylides Ode 14b, For Aristoteles of Larisa:

 
Hestia full of Blessings, Egypt, 6th century tapestry (Dumbarton Oaks Collection)

Golden-throned Hestia (Ἐστία χρυσόθρον᾽), you who increase the great prosperity of the rich Agathocleadae, seated in the midst of city streets near the fragrant river Peneius in the valleys of sheep-nurturing Thessaly. From there Aristoteles came to flourishing Cirrha, and was twice crowned, for the glory of horse-mastering Larisa ... (The rest of the ode is lost)[44]

Orphic Hymn 84 and Pindar's 11th Nemean ode are dedicated to Hestia.[45][46]

In one military oath found at Acharnai, from the Sanctuary of Ares and Athena Areia, dated 350-325 BC, Hestia is called, among many others, to bear witness.[47][48]

Hestia Tapestry

The Hestia tapestry is a Byzantine tapestry, made in Egypt during the 6th century AD. It is a late and very rare representation of the goddess, whom it identifies in Greek as Hestia Polyolbos; (Greek: Ἑστία Πολύολβος "Hestia full of Blessings"). Its history and symbolism are discussed in Friedlander (1945).[49]

Genealogy

See also

Citations

  1. ^ a b Graves, Robert (1960). "The Palace of Olympus". Greek Gods and Heroes. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday.
  2. ^ R. S. P. Beekes. Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009, p. 471.
  3. ^ Calvert Watkins, "wes-", in: The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Boston 1985 ().
  4. ^ Mallory, J. P.; Adams, D. Q. (2006-08-24). The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. OUP Oxford. p. 220. ISBN 978-0-19-928791-8.
  5. ^ West, p. 145.
  6. ^ Burkert, p. 61.
  7. ^ Herman-Hansen, Mogens and Tobias Fischer-Hansen. 1994. "Monumental Political Architecture in Archaic and Classical Greek Poleis. Evidence and Historical Significance." In D. Whitehead, ed., Historia Einzel-Schriften 87: From Political Architecture to Stephanus Byzantinus: Sources for the Ancient Greek Polis. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 30-37 ISBN 9783515065726
  8. ^ Nagy 1990, p. 143.
  9. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 453 ff.
  10. ^ Kerenyi, p. 91.
  11. ^ Kajava, pp. 1–2.
  12. ^ Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite (5) 32
  13. ^ Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite (5), 21–32
  14. ^ Dorter, K. (1971). "Imagery and Philosophy in Plato's Phaedrus". Journal of the History of Philosophy, 9 (3), 279–288 (July 1971).
  15. ^ Kerenyi, p. 92
  16. ^ Burkert, p. 170.
  17. ^ Smith, Tyler Jo; Plantzos, Dimitris (June 18, 2018). A Companion to Greek Art. Wiley Blackwell. p. 409. ISBN 978-1-4051-8604-9.
  18. ^ "Delphi, Siphnian Treasury Frieze--North (Sculpture)". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Tufts University. Retrieved December 25, 2022.
  19. ^ Schefold, Karl; Giulianipage, Luca (December 3, 1992). Gods and Heroes in Late Archaic Greek Art. Translated by Alan Griffiths. Cambridge University Press. p. 59. ISBN 0-521-32718-0.
  20. ^ Robert Fagles' translation
  21. ^ Kajava, p. 2.
  22. ^ , Bremmer, Jan. N., in Ogden, D. (ed.). (2010). A Companion to Greek Religion, Wiley-Blackwell, p. 134. ISBN 978-1-4443-3417-3.
  23. ^ Walters Art Museum, accession number 23.40.
  24. ^ Hughes, James. (1995). Larousse Desk Reference Encyclopedia, p. 215. Larousse/The Book People.
  25. ^ Burkert, p. 415, 3.3.1 n. 2.
  26. ^ Sulimirski, T. (1985). "The Scyths" in: Fisher, W. B. (Ed.) The Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. 2: The Median and Achaemenian Periods. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-20091-1. pp. 158–159, citing Herodotus, Book IV
  27. ^ Procopius, History of the Wars, Book II, XXIV.
  28. ^ Littlewood, R. Joy (2006). A Commentary on Ovid: Fasti book VI. Oxford; New York City: Oxford University Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-19927-134-4.
  29. ^ "Hymn 29 to Hestia, line 1". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  30. ^ Pausanias, 5.14.4
  31. ^ "Xenophon, Cyropaedia, *ku/rou *paidei/as *z, chapter 5, section 57". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  32. ^ "Athenaeus: Deipnosophists - Book 4". www.attalus.org. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  33. ^ Kajava, p. 5.
  34. ^ Kajava, pp. 1, 3, 5.
  35. ^ "Aeschines, On the Embassy, section 45". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  36. ^ Pausanias, 1.18.3
  37. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 14.4
  38. ^ Pausanias, 2.35.1 & 3.11.11
  39. ^ "Xenophon, Hellenica, *(ellhnikw=n *z, chapter 4, section 31". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  40. ^ "The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites, ANDROS One of the Cyclades, Greece". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  41. ^ Detienne, Marcel; Lloyd, Janet (2004). "The Gods of Politics in Early Greek Cities". Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics. 12 (2): 49–66. JSTOR 20163970. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023 – via JSTOR.
  42. ^ Hymn 24 to Hestia.
  43. ^ "Hymn 29 to Hestia, line 1". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  44. ^ "Bacchylides, Epinicians, Ode 14b *)aristotelei *larisai/w| *(/ippois !!] g?i?a". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  45. ^ Orphic Hymn 84 to Hestia (Athanassakis & Wolkow, pp. 64–65).
  46. ^ Pindar, Nemean Odes 11.1, EN
  47. ^ topostext, 2.1"...Witnesses the gods Aglauros, Hestia, Enyo, Enyalios, Ares and Athena Areia, Zeus, Thallo, Auxo, Hegemone, Herakles, and the boundaries of my fatherland, wheat, barley, vines, olives, figs."
  48. ^ "RO 88 Dedication from Acharnai with military oaths". www.atticinscriptions.com. Retrieved Jan 1, 2023.
  49. ^ Friedlander, Paul. (1945). Documents of Dying Paganism. University of California Press.
  50. ^ This chart is based upon Hesiod's Theogony, unless otherwise noted.
  51. ^ According to Homer, Iliad 1.570–579, 14.338, Odyssey 8.312, Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus, see Gantz, p. 74.
  52. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 927–929, Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone, with no father, see Gantz, p. 74.
  53. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 886–890, of Zeus' children by his seven wives, Athena was the first to be conceived, but the last to be born; Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her, later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena "from his head", see Gantz, pp. 51–52, 83–84.
  54. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 183–200, Aphrodite was born from Uranus' severed genitals, see Gantz, pp. 99–100.
  55. ^ According to Homer, Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus (Iliad 3.374, 20.105; Odyssey 8.308, 320) and Dione (Iliad 5.370–71), see Gantz, pp. 99–100.

General references

  • Burkert, Walter (1985). Greek Religion. Harvard University Press. Internet Archive.
  • Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca Historica. Vol 1-2. Immanel Bekker. Ludwig Dindorf. Friedrich Vogel. in aedibus B. G. Teubneri. Leipzig. 1888–1890. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Evelyn-White, Hugh, The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White. Homeric Hymns. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914.
  • Friedlander, Paul. (1945). Documents of Dying Paganism. University of California Press.
  • Gantz, Timothy, Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996, Two volumes: ISBN 978-0-8018-5360-9 (Vol. 1), ISBN 978-0-8018-5362-3 (Vol. 2).
  • Hesiod, Theogony, in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Cambridge, Massachusetts., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Homer, The Iliad with an English Translation by A. T. Murray, Ph.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, Massachusetts., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Homer; The Odyssey with an English Translation by A. T. Murray, PH.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, Massachusetts., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1919. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Kajava, Mika. "Hestia Hearth, Goddess, and Cult", Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 102 (2004): 1–20. JSTOR 4150030.
  • Kerényi, Karl, The Gods of the Greeks, Thames and Hudson, London, 1951. Internet Archive.
  • Nagy, Gregory (1990). Greek Mythology and Poetics. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-8048-5.
  • Ovid, Ovid's Fasti: With an English translation by Sir James George Frazer, London: W. Heinemann LTD; Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1959. Internet Archive.
  • Pausanias, Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Pindar, Odes, Diane Arnson Svarlien. 1990. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Stephenson, Hamish. (1985). The Gods of the Romans and Greeks. NYT Writer.
  • West, M. L., Indo-European Poetry and Myth, Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-19-928075-9. Google Books.

External links

  Media related to Hestia at Wikimedia Commons

  • HESTIA from Mythopedia
  • HESTIA from The Theoi Project
  • HESTIA from Greek Mythology Link

hestia, other, uses, disambiguation, ancient, greek, religion, mythology, greek, Ἑστία, meaning, hearth, fireside, virgin, goddess, hearth, right, ordering, domesticity, family, home, state, myth, firstborn, child, titans, cronus, rhea, twelve, olympians, godd. For other uses see Hestia disambiguation In ancient Greek religion and mythology Hestia ˈ h ɛ s t i e ˈ h ɛ s tʃ e Greek Ἑstia meaning hearth or fireside is the virgin goddess of the hearth the right ordering of domesticity the family the home and the state In myth she is the firstborn child of the Titans Cronus and Rhea and one of the Twelve Olympians 1 HestiaGoddess of the domestic and civic hearth the home sacred and sacrificial fire virginity family and the stateMember of the Twelve OlympiansThe Giustiniani HestiaAbodeDelphi and Mount OlympusAnimalsPigSymbolThe hearth and its firePersonal informationParentsCronus and RheaSiblingsDemeter Hera Hades Poseidon Zeus Chiron half EquivalentsRoman equivalentVestaAccording to ancient Greek tradition Hestia along with four of her five siblings was devoured by her own father Cronus as an infant due to his fear of being overthrown by one of his offspring and was only freed when her youngest brother Zeus forced their father to disgorge the children he had eaten Cronus and the rest of the Titans were cast down and Hestia then became one of the Olympian gods the new rulers of the cosmos alongside her brothers and sisters After the establishment of the new order and in spite of her status Hestia withdraws from prominence in mythology with few and sparse appearances in tales Like Athena and Artemis Hestia elected to never marry and remain an eternal virgin goddess instead forever tending to the hearth of Olympus Despite her limited mythology Hestia remained a very important goddess in ancient Greek society Greek custom required that as the goddess of sacrificial fire Hestia should receive the first offering at every sacrifice in the household In the public domain the hearth of the prytaneum functioned as her official sanctuary Whenever a new colony was established a flame from Hestia s public hearth in the mother city would be carried to the new settlement The goddess Vesta is her Roman equivalent Contents 1 Origins and etymology 2 Mythology 2 1 Origin 2 2 Virgin goddess 2 3 Status and attributes 2 4 Equivalence 3 Worship 3 1 Shrines temples and colonies 3 2 Hymns odes and oaths 3 3 Hestia Tapestry 4 Genealogy 5 See also 6 Citations 7 General references 8 External linksOrigins and etymology EditHestia s name means hearth fireplace altar 2 This stems from the PIE root wes burn ultimately from h wes dwell pass the night stay 3 4 5 It thus refers to the oikos domestic life home household house or family Burkert states that an early form of the temple is the hearth house the early temples at Dreros and Prinias on Crete are of this type as indeed is the temple of Apollo at Delphi which always had its inner hestia 6 The Mycenaean great hall megaron like Homer s hall of Odysseus at Ithaca had a central hearth Likewise the hearth of the later Greek prytaneum was the community and government s ritual and secular focus 7 Hestia s naming thus makes her a personification of the hearth and its fire a symbol of society and family also denoting authority and kingship 8 Mythology EditOrigin Edit Hestia holding a branch of a chaste tree red figure kylix attributed to Oltos Tarquinia National Museum Hestia is a goddess of the first Olympian generation She is the eldest daughter of the Titans Rhea and Cronus and sister to Demeter Hades Hera Poseidon and Zeus Immediately after their birth Cronus swallowed all his children Hestia was the first who was swallowed except the last and youngest Zeus who was saved by Rhea Instead Zeus forced Cronus to disgorge his siblings and led them in a war against their father and the other Titans 9 As first to be devoured and the last to be yielded up again Hestia is thus both the eldest and youngest daughter this mythic inversion is found in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite 700 BC 10 Zeus assigned Hestia a duty to feed and maintain the fires of the Olympian hearth with the fatty combustible portions of animal sacrifices to the gods 11 Wherever food was cooked or an offering was burnt she thus had her share of honor also in all the temples of the gods she has a share of honor Among all mortals she was chief of the goddesses 12 Virgin goddess Edit The gods Poseidon and Apollo both her brother and nephew respectively fell in love with Hestia and vied for her hand in marriage But Hestia would have neither of them and went to Zeus instead and swore a great oath that she would remain a virgin for all time and never marry In the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite Aphrodite is described as having no power over Hestia 13 Status and attributes Edit At Athens in Plato s time notes Kenneth Dorter 14 there was a discrepancy in the list of the twelve chief gods as to whether Hestia or Dionysus was included with the other eleven The altar to them at the agora for example included Hestia but the east frieze of the Parthenon had Dionysus instead However the hearth was imovable and there is no story of Hestia s ever having been removed from her fixed abode 15 Burkert remarks that Since the hearth is immovable Hestia is unable to take part even in the procession of the gods let alone the other antics of the Olympians 16 Hestia on the northern frieze of the Siphnian Treasury 6th century BC Delphi Archaeological Museum Greece Traditionally Hestia is absent from ancient depictions of the Gigantomachy as she is the one who must keep the home fires burning when the other gods are away 17 Nevertheless her possible participation in the fight against the Giants is evidenced from an inscription on the northern frieze of the Siphnian Treasury in Delphi Brinkmann 1985 suggests that the letter tracings of one of the two goddesses right next to Hephaestus be restored as Hestia although other possible candidates include Demeter and Persephone or two of the three Fates 18 19 Her mythographic status as firstborn of Rhea and Cronus seems to justify the tradition in which a small offering is made to Hestia before any sacrifice Hestia comes first though this was not universal among the Greeks In Odyssey 14 432 436 the loyal swineherd Eumaeus begins the feast for his master Odysseus by plucking tufts from a boar s head and throwing them into the fire with a prayer addressed to all the powers then carved the meat into seven equal portions one he set aside lifting up a prayer to the forest nymphs and Hermes Maia s son 20 Hestia is identified with the hearth as a physical object and the abstractions of community and domesticity in contrast to the fire of the forge employed in blacksmithing and metalworking the province of the god Hephaestus Portrayals of her are rare and seldom secure 21 In classical Greek art she is occasionally depicted as a woman simply and modestly cloaked in a head veil At times she is shown with a staff in hand or by a large fire She sits on a plain wooden throne with a white woolen cushion and Robert Graves declares did not trouble to choose an emblem for herself 1 Her associated sacrificial animal was a domestic pig 22 Equivalence Edit Fragment of a Hellenistic relief 1st century BC 1st century AD depicting the twelve Olympians carrying their attributes in procession Hestia with scepter to the left from the Walters Art Museum 23 Her Roman equivalent is Vesta 24 Vesta has similar functions as a divine personification of Rome s public domestic and colonial hearths binding Romans together within a form of extended family The similarity of names between Hestia and Vesta is however misleading The relationship hestia histie Vesta cannot be explained in terms of Indo European linguistics borrowings from a third language must also be involved according to Walter Burkert 25 Herodotus equates Hestia with the high ranking Scythian deity Tabiti 26 Procopius equates her with the Zoroastrian holy fire atar of the Sasanians in Adhur Gushnasp 27 To Vesta is attributed one more story not found in Greek tradition by the Roman poet Ovid in his poem Fasti where during a feast of the gods Vesta is nearly raped in her sleep by the god Priapus and only avoids this fate when a donkey cries out alerting Vesta and prompting the other gods to attack Priapus in defense of the goddess This story is an almost word for word repeat of the myth of Priapus and Lotis recounted earlier in the same book with the difference that Lotis had to transform into a lotus tree to escape Priapus making some scholars suggest the account where Vesta supplants Lotis only exists in order to create some cult drama 28 Worship Edit Part of a marble altar with inscription ESTIAS ISTHMIAS 5th 4th century BC The altar was dedicated to the goddess Hestia with the epithet Isthmia of the isthmus Archaeological Museum of Paros The worship of Hestia was centered around the hearth both domestic and civic The hearth was essential for warmth food preparation and the completion of sacrificial offerings to deities At feasts Hestia was offered the first and last libations of wine 29 Pausanias writes that the Eleans sacrifice first to Hestia and then to other gods 30 Xenophon in Cyropaedia wrote that Cyrus the Great sacrificed first to Hestia then to sovereign Zeus and then to any other god that the magi suggested 31 The accidental or negligent extinction of a domestic hearth fire represented a failure of domestic and religious care for the family failure to maintain Hestia s public fire in her temple or shrine was a breach of duty to the broad community A hearth fire might be deliberately ritually extinguished at need but its lighting should be accompanied by rituals of completion purification and renewal comparable with the rituals and connotations of an eternal flame and of sanctuary lamps At the level of the polis the hearths of Greek colonies and their mother cities were allied and sanctified through Hestia s cult Athenaeus in the Deipnosophistae writes that in Naucratis the people dined in the Prytaneion on the birthday of Hestia Prytanitis 32 Dedication of an altar to Hestia in Karneades Taormina undated The inscription states Beside these walls of Serapis the warden of the temple Karneades of Barke son of Eukritos o foreigner and his spouse Pythias and his daughter Eraso placed to Hestia a pure altar as a reward for this o you that governs the marvelous dwellings of Zeus grant to them a lovely auspiciousness of life Responsibility for Hestia s domestic cult usually fell to the leading woman of the household although sometimes to a man Hestia s rites at the hearths of public buildings were usually led by holders of civil office Dionysius of Halicarnassus testifies that the prytaneum of a Greek state or community was sacred to Hestia who was served by the most powerful state officials 33 However evidence of her dedicant priesthood is extremely rare Most stems from the early Roman Imperial era when Sparta offers several examples of women with the priestly title Hestia Chalcis offers one a daughter of the local elite Existing civic cults to Hestia probably served as stock for the grafting of Greek ruler cult to the Roman emperor the Imperial family and Rome itself In Athens a small seating section at the Theatre of Dionysus was reserved for priesthoods of Hestia on the Acropolis Livia and Julia and of Hestia Romain Roman Hestia thus The Roman Hearth or Vesta At Delos a priest served Hestia the Athenian Demos the people or state and Roma An eminent citizen of Carian Stratoniceia described himself as a priest of Hestia and several other deities as well as holding several civic offices Hestia s political and civic functions are further evidenced by her very numerous privately funded dedications at civic sites and the administrative rather than religious titles used by the lay officials involved in her civic cults 34 Shrines temples and colonies Edit Every private and public hearth was regarded as a sanctuary of the goddess and a portion of the sacrifices to whatever divinity they were offered belonged to her Aeschines On the Embassy declares that the hearth of the Prytaneum was regarded as the common hearth of the state and a statue of Hestia was there and in the senate house there was an altar of the goddess 35 A temple at Ephesus was dedicated to Hestia Boulaea Hestia of the senate or boule Pausanias reports a figurative statue of Hestia in the Athenian Prytaneum together with one of the goddess Eirene Peace 36 Hestia offered sanctuary from persecution to those who showed her respect and would punish those who offended her Diodorus Siculus writes that Theramenes sought asylum directly from Hestia at the Council Chamber leaping onto her hearth not to save himself but in the hope that his slayers would demonstrate their impiety by killing him there 37 Very few free standing temples were dedicated to Hestia Pausanias mentions one in Ermioni and one in Sparta the latter having an altar but no image 38 Xenophon s Hellenica mentions fighting around and within Olympia s temple of Hestia a building separate from the city s council hall and adjoining theatre 39 A temple to Hestia was in Andros 40 Prospective founders of city states and colonies sought approval and guidance not only of their mother city represented by Hestia but of Apollo through one or another of his various oracles He acted as consulting archegetes founder at Delphi Among his various functions he was patron god of colonies architecture constitutions and city planning Additional patron deities might also be persuaded to support the new settlement but without Hestia her sacred hearth an agora and prytaneum there could be no polis 41 Hymns odes and oaths Edit Homeric Hymn 24 To Hestia is an invocation of five lines alluding to her role as an attendant to Apollo Hestia you who tend the holy house of the lord Apollo the Far shooter at goodly Pytho with soft oil dripping ever from your locks come now into this house come having one mind with Zeus the all wise draw near and withal bestow grace upon my song 42 Homeric Hymn 29 To Hestia invokes Hestia and Hermes Hestia in the high dwellings of all both deathless gods and men who walk on earth you have gained an everlasting abode and highest honor glorious is your portion and your right For without you mortals hold no banquet where one does not duly pour sweet wine in offering to Hestia both first and last And you slayer of Argus an epithet of Hermes Son of Zeus and Maia the messenger of the blessed gods bearer of the goldenrod the giver of good be favorable and help us you and Hestia the worshipful and dear Come and dwell in this glorious house in friendship together for you two well knowing the noble actions of men aid on their wisdom and their strength Hail Daughter of Cronos and you also Hermes bearer of the goldenrod Now I will remember you and another song also 43 Bacchylides Ode 14b For Aristoteles of Larisa Hestia full of Blessings Egypt 6th century tapestry Dumbarton Oaks Collection Golden throned Hestia Ἐstia xryso8ron you who increase the great prosperity of the rich Agathocleadae seated in the midst of city streets near the fragrant river Peneius in the valleys of sheep nurturing Thessaly From there Aristoteles came to flourishing Cirrha and was twice crowned for the glory of horse mastering Larisa The rest of the ode is lost 44 Orphic Hymn 84 and Pindar s 11th Nemean ode are dedicated to Hestia 45 46 In one military oath found at Acharnai from the Sanctuary of Ares and Athena Areia dated 350 325 BC Hestia is called among many others to bear witness 47 48 Hestia Tapestry Edit Main article Hestia Tapestry The Hestia tapestry is a Byzantine tapestry made in Egypt during the 6th century AD It is a late and very rare representation of the goddess whom it identifies in Greek as Hestia Polyolbos Greek Ἑstia Polyolbos Hestia full of Blessings Its history and symbolism are discussed in Friedlander 1945 49 Genealogy EditHestia s family tree 50 UranusGaiaUranus genitalsCronusRheaZeusHeraPoseidonHadesDemeterHESTIA a 51 b 52 AresHephaestusMetisAthena 53 LetoApolloArtemisMaiaHermesSemeleDionysusDione a 54 b 55 AphroditeSee also Edit Ancient Greece portal Myths portal Religion portal46 Hestia asteroid named after the goddess Sacred fire of Vesta Vitex agnus castus Zalmoxis Estia daily broadsheet newspaper named after HestiaCitations Edit a b Graves Robert 1960 The Palace of Olympus Greek Gods and Heroes Garden City N Y Doubleday R S P Beekes Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill 2009 p 471 Calvert Watkins wes in The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo European Roots Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Boston 1985 web archive Mallory J P Adams D Q 2006 08 24 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World OUP Oxford p 220 ISBN 978 0 19 928791 8 West p 145 Burkert p 61 Herman Hansen Mogens and Tobias Fischer Hansen 1994 Monumental Political Architecture in Archaic and Classical Greek Poleis Evidence and Historical Significance In D Whitehead ed Historia Einzel Schriften 87 From Political Architecture to Stephanus Byzantinus Sources for the Ancient Greek Polis Stuttgart Franz Steiner 30 37 ISBN 9783515065726 Nagy 1990 p 143 Hesiod Theogony 453 ff Kerenyi p 91 Kajava pp 1 2 Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite 5 32 Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite 5 21 32 Dorter K 1971 Imagery and Philosophy in Plato s Phaedrus Journal of the History of Philosophy 9 3 279 288 July 1971 Kerenyi p 92 Burkert p 170 Smith Tyler Jo Plantzos Dimitris June 18 2018 A Companion to Greek Art Wiley Blackwell p 409 ISBN 978 1 4051 8604 9 Delphi Siphnian Treasury Frieze North Sculpture www perseus tufts edu Tufts University Retrieved December 25 2022 Schefold Karl Giulianipage Luca December 3 1992 Gods and Heroes in Late Archaic Greek Art Translated by Alan Griffiths Cambridge University Press p 59 ISBN 0 521 32718 0 Robert Fagles translation Kajava p 2 Bremmer Jan N in Ogden D ed 2010 A Companion to Greek Religion Wiley Blackwell p 134 ISBN 978 1 4443 3417 3 Walters Art Museum accession number 23 40 Hughes James 1995 Larousse Desk Reference Encyclopedia p 215 Larousse The Book People Burkert p 415 3 3 1 n 2 Sulimirski T 1985 The Scyths in Fisher W B Ed The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 2 The Median and Achaemenian Periods Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 20091 1 pp 158 159 citing Herodotus Book IV Procopius History of the Wars Book II XXIV Littlewood R Joy 2006 A Commentary on Ovid Fasti book VI Oxford New York City Oxford University Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 19927 134 4 Hymn 29 to Hestia line 1 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved Jan 1 2023 Pausanias 5 14 4 Xenophon Cyropaedia ku rou paidei as z chapter 5 section 57 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved Jan 1 2023 Athenaeus Deipnosophists Book 4 www attalus org Retrieved Jan 1 2023 Kajava p 5 Kajava pp 1 3 5 Aeschines On the Embassy section 45 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved Jan 1 2023 Pausanias 1 18 3 Diodorus Siculus 14 4 Pausanias 2 35 1 amp 3 11 11 Xenophon Hellenica ellhnikw n z chapter 4 section 31 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved Jan 1 2023 The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites ANDROS One of the Cyclades Greece www perseus tufts edu Retrieved Jan 1 2023 Detienne Marcel Lloyd Janet 2004 The Gods of Politics in Early Greek Cities Arion A Journal of Humanities and the Classics 12 2 49 66 JSTOR 20163970 Retrieved Jan 1 2023 via JSTOR Hymn 24 to Hestia Hymn 29 to Hestia line 1 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved Jan 1 2023 Bacchylides Epinicians Ode 14b aristotelei larisai w ippois g i a www perseus tufts edu Retrieved Jan 1 2023 Orphic Hymn 84 to Hestia Athanassakis amp Wolkow pp 64 65 Pindar Nemean Odes 11 1 EN topostext 2 1 Witnesses the gods Aglauros Hestia Enyo Enyalios Ares and Athena Areia Zeus Thallo Auxo Hegemone Herakles and the boundaries of my fatherland wheat barley vines olives figs RO 88 Dedication from Acharnai with military oaths www atticinscriptions com Retrieved Jan 1 2023 Friedlander Paul 1945 Documents of Dying Paganism University of California Press This chart is based upon Hesiod s Theogony unless otherwise noted According to Homer Iliad 1 570 579 14 338 Odyssey 8 312 Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus see Gantz p 74 According to Hesiod Theogony 927 929 Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone with no father see Gantz p 74 According to Hesiod Theogony 886 890 of Zeus children by his seven wives Athena was the first to be conceived but the last to be born Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena from his head see Gantz pp 51 52 83 84 According to Hesiod Theogony 183 200 Aphrodite was born from Uranus severed genitals see Gantz pp 99 100 According to Homer Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus Iliad 3 374 20 105 Odyssey 8 308 320 and Dione Iliad 5 370 71 see Gantz pp 99 100 General references EditBurkert Walter 1985 Greek Religion Harvard University Press Internet Archive Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica Vol 1 2 Immanel Bekker Ludwig Dindorf Friedrich Vogel in aedibus B G Teubneri Leipzig 1888 1890 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library Evelyn White Hugh The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Homeric Hymns Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Friedlander Paul 1945 Documents of Dying Paganism University of California Press Gantz Timothy Early Greek Myth A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources Johns Hopkins University Press 1996 Two volumes ISBN 978 0 8018 5360 9 Vol 1 ISBN 978 0 8018 5362 3 Vol 2 Hesiod Theogony in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Iliad with an English Translation by A T Murray Ph D in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Odyssey with an English Translation by A T Murray PH D in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1919 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Kajava Mika Hestia Hearth Goddess and Cult Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 102 2004 1 20 JSTOR 4150030 Kerenyi Karl The Gods of the Greeks Thames and Hudson London 1951 Internet Archive Nagy Gregory 1990 Greek Mythology and Poetics Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 8048 5 Ovid Ovid s Fasti With an English translation by Sir James George Frazer London W Heinemann LTD Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1959 Internet Archive Pausanias Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W H S Jones Litt D and H A Ormerod M A in 4 Volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1918 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Pindar Odes Diane Arnson Svarlien 1990 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Stephenson Hamish 1985 The Gods of the Romans and Greeks NYT Writer West M L Indo European Poetry and Myth Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 928075 9 Google Books External links Edit Media related to Hestia at Wikimedia Commons HESTIA from Mythopedia HESTIA from The Theoi Project HESTIA from Greek Mythology Link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hestia amp oldid 1152218319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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