Dictionary Definition
Artemis n : (Greek mythology) the virgin goddess
of the hunt and the moon; daughter of Leto and twin sister of
Apollo; identified with Roman Diana [syn: Cynthia]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Proper noun
Artemis- The daughter of Leto and Zeus, and twin sister of Apollo. The goddess of the hunt, wild animals, and wilderness, and healing, chastity, and childbirth.
Synonyms
- sense sister of Apollo Agrotora, Aphaea, Cynthia, Diana, Kourotrophos, Locheia, Phoebe, Potnia Theron
Translations
Greek goddess
- Finnish: Artemis
- French: Artémis
- German: Artemis
- Greek: Άρτεμις
- Italian: Artemide
References
Extensive Definition
In Greek
mythology, Artemis [(Greek:
(nominative) ,
(genitive) )] was the
daughter of Zeus and Leto, and the twin
sister of Apollo. She was the
Hellenic goddess of forests and hills, and was often depicted
carrying a bow and arrows. The deer and the cypress were
sacred to her. In later, Hellenistic times she even assumed the
ancient role of Eileithyia in
aiding childbirth.
Artemis was one of the most widely venerated of
the gods and one of the oldest (Burkert 1985, 149). Her later
association with the moon is a popular idea which has little
foundation. She later became identified with Selene, a Titaness
who was a Greek moon goddess, and she was sometimes depicted with a
crescent moon above her head. She also became identified with the
Roman goddess Diana
and with the Etruscan
goddess, Artume.
Etymology
There may be some connection with the Greek αρτεμης = "safe and sound" from the root αρ = "to fit".Birth
Various conflicting accounts are given in Greek
mythology of the birth of Artemis and her twin brother, Apollo. All
accounts agree, however, that she was the daughter of Zeus and Leto.
An account by Callimachus has
it that Hera forbade Leto to give birth on either terra firma (the
mainland) or on an island. Hera was angry with Zeus, her husband,
because he had impregnated Leto. But the island of Delos (or possibly
Ortygia)
disobeyed Hera, and Leto gave birth there.
The myths also differ as to whether Artemis was
born first, or Apollo. For further details, see Hera 5.2.
Childhood
The childhood of Artemis is not embodied in any
surviving myth: the Iliad reduced the
figure of the dread goddess to a girl, who, having been thrashed by
Hera, climbs
weeping into the lap of Zeus. A poem of Callimachus –
the goddess "who amuses herself on mountains with archery" –
imagines some charming vignettes: at three years old, Artemis asked
her father, Zeus, while sitting on his knee, to grant her six
wishes. Her first wish was to remain chaste for eternity, and never
to be confined by marriage. She then asked for lop-eared hounds,
stags to lead her chariot, and nymphs to be her hunting
companions, 60 from the river and 20 from the ocean. Also, she
asked for a silver bow like her brother Apollo. He granted
her wishes. All of her companions remained virgins, and Artemis
guarded her own chastity closely. Her symbol was the silver bow and
arrow.
Myths of Artemis
Artemis and Actaeon
She was once bathing in a vale on Mount Cithaeron, when
the Theban prince and hunter Actaeon stumbled
across her. One version of this story says that Actaeon hid in the
bushes and spied on her as she continued to bathe; she was enraged
to discover the spy, and turned him into a stag which was pursued
and killed by his own hounds. Alternatively, Actaeon boasted that
he was a better hunter than she and Artemis turned him into a stag
and he was eaten by his hounds.
Artemis and Adonis
In some versions of the story of Adonis, Artemis sent
a wild boar to
kill Adonis as punishment for his hubristic boast that he was a
better hunter than she.
In other versions, Artemis killed him for
revenge. Adonis had been a favorite of Aphrodite, and Aphrodite was
responsible for the death of
Hippolytus, who had been a favorite of Artemis. Therefore
Artemis killed Adonis to revenge Hippolytus’s death.
Orion
Orion was a hunting companion of the goddess Artemis. In some versions of his story he was killed by Artemis, while in others he was killed by a scorpion sent by Gaia. In some versions, Orion tried to rape Opis, one of her followers, and she killed him. In a version by Aratus, Orion took hold of Artemis' robe and she killed him in self-defense. In yet another version, Apollo sent the scorpion. According to Hyginus Artemis once loved Orion, but was tricked into killing him by her brother Apollo, who was protective of his sister's maidenhood.Other stories
Callisto
Daughter of Lycaon, King of Arcadia. She was one
of Artemis's hunting attendants. As a companion of Artemis,
Callisto took a vow of chastity. Zeus appeared to her disguised as
Artemis, or in some stories Apollo, gained her confidence, then
took advantage of her (or raped her, according to Ovid). As a result of
this encounter she conceived a son, Arcas. Enraged, Hera or Artemis
(some accounts say both) changed her into a bear. Arcas almost
killed the bear, but Zeus stopped him just in time. Out of pity,
Zeus placed Callisto the bear into the heavens, thus the origin of
Callisto the Bear as a constellation. Some stories say that he
placed both Arcas and Callisto into the heavens as bears, forming
the Ursa
Minor and Ursa Major
constellations.
Iphigenia and the Taurian Artemis
Artemis punished Agamemnon after he killed a sacred stag in a sacred grove and boasted that he was a better hunter. When the Greek fleet was preparing at Aulis to depart for Troy to begin the Trojan War, Artemis becalmed the winds. The seer Calchis advised Agamemnon that the only way to appease Artemis was to sacrifice his daughter Iphigenia. In some version, the sacrifice goes through as planned (with Agamemnon killing his daughter), and the act results in his own death at the hands of his wife Clytemnestra and her lover, Aegisthus. In another version, Artemis snatches Iphigenia from the altar and substitutes a deer. Iphigenia is then transported to the Crimea and appointed as priestess in the goddess's Tauric temple, where strangers were offered as human sacrifice.Niobe
A Queen of Thebes and wife of Amphion, Niobe boasted of her superiority to Leto because while she had fourteen children (Niobids), seven boys and seven girls, Leto had only one of each. When Artemis and Apollo heard this impiety, Apollo killed her sons as they practiced athletics, and Artemis shot her daughters, who died instantly without a sound. Apollo and Artemis used poisoned arrows to kill them, though according to some versions two of the Niobids were spared, one boy and one girl. Amphion, at the sight of his dead sons, killed himself. A devastated Niobe and her remaining children were turned to stone by Artemis as they wept. Some myths say that their tears, which still flowed from their stone eyes, formed the river Achelous. The gods themselves entombed them.Otus and Ephialtes
The Gigantes Otus and Ephialtes
were sons of Poseidon. They
were so strong that nothing could harm them. One night, as they
slept, Gaea whispered to them, that since they were so strong, they
should be the rulers of Olympus. They built a mountain as tall as
Mt.
Olympus, and then demanded that the gods surrender, and that
Artemis and Hera become their wives. The gods fought back, but
couldn't harm them. The sons even managed to kidnap Ares and hold
him in a jar for thirteen months. Artemis later changed herself
into a deer and ran between them. The Aloadae, not
wanting her to get away because they were eager huntsmen, each
threw their javelin and simultaneously killed each other.
The Meleagrids
After the death of Meleager, Artemis turned his grieving sisters, the Meleagrids into guineafowl that Artemis loved very much.Chione
Artemis killed Chione for becoming too proud and vain after having an affair with Apollo.Atalanta and Oeneus
Artemis saved the infant Atalanta from dying of exposure after her father abandoned her. She sent a female bear to suckle the baby, who was then raised by hunters. But she later sent a bear to hurt Atalanta because people said Atalanta was a better hunter. This is in some stories.Among other adventures, Atalanta participated in
the hunt for the Calydonian
Boar, which Artemis had sent to destroy Calydon because
King Oeneus
had forgotten her at the harvest sacrifices. In the hunt, Atalanta
drew the first blood, and was awarded the prize of the skin. She
hung it in a sacred grove at Tegea as a dedication
to Artemis.
Trojan War
Artemis may have been represented as a supporter of Troy because her brother Apollo was the patron god of the city and she herself was widely worshipped in western Anatolia in historical time. In the Iliad she came to blows with Hera, when the divine allies of the Greeks and Trojans engaged each other in conflict. Hera struck Artemis on the ears with her own quiver, causing the arrows to fall out. As Artemis fled crying to Zeus, Leto gathered up the bow and arrows which had fallen out of the quiver.Worship of Artemis
Artemis, the goddess of forests and hills, was
worshipped throughout ancient
Greece.. Her best known cults
were on the island of Delos (her
birthplace); in Attica at Brauron and
Mounikhia (near Piraeus); in
Sparta. She
was often depicted in paintings and statues in a forest setting,
carrying a bow and arrows, and accompanied by a deer.
As Aeginaea, she was worshiped in Sparta; the name
means either huntress of chamois, or the wielder of the
javelin (). She was worshipped at Naupactus as
Aetole; in her temple in that town there was a statue of white
marble representing her throwing a javelin. This "Aetolian Artemis"
would not have been introduced at Naupactus, anciently a place of
Ozolian
Locris, until it was awarded to the Aetolians by
Philip
II of Macedon. Strabo records another precinct of "Aetolian
Artemos" at the head of the Adriatic. As
Agrotera, she was especially associated as the patron goddess of
hunters. In Athens Artemis was often associated with the local
Aeginian
goddess, Aphaea. As Potnia
Theron, she was the patron of wild animals; Homer used this
title. As Kourotrophos, she was the nurse of youths. As Locheia,
she was the goddess of childbirth and midwives. She was sometimes
known as Cynthia, from her birthplace on Mount Cynthus on
Delos, or
Amarynthia from a festival in her honor originally held at
Amarynthus in Euboea. She was
sometimes identified by the name Phoebe, the feminine form of her
brother Apollo's solar epithet Phoebus.
The ancient Spartans used to sacrifice to her as
one of their patron goddesses before starting a new military
campaign.
Athenian festivals in honor of Artemis included
Elaphebolia,
Mounikhia,
Kharisteria, and Brauronia. The
festival of Artemis
Orthia was observed in Sparta.
Pre-pubescent Athenian girls and young Athenian
girls approaching marriageable age were sent to the sanctuary of
Artemis at Brauron to serve the Goddess for one year. During this
time the girls were known as arktoi, or little she-bears. A myth
explaining this servitude relates that a bear had formed the habit
of regularly visiting the town of Brauron, and the people there fed
it, so that over time the bear became tame. A young girl teased the
bear, and, in some versions of the myth it killed her, while in
other versions it clawed her eyes out. Either way, the girl's
brothers killed the bear, and Artemis was enraged. She demanded
that young girls "act the bear" at her sanctuary in atonement for
the bear's death.
Virginal Artemis was worshipped as a
fertility/childbirth goddess in some places, assimilating Ilithyia, since,
according to some myths, she assisted her mother in the delivery of
her twin. During the Classical
period in Athens, she was
identified with Hecate. Artemis also
assimilated Caryatis (Carya).
Artemis in art
The oldest representations of Artemis in Greek
Archaic art portray her as Potnia
Theron ("Queen of the Beasts"): a winged goddess holding a stag
and leopard in her hands, or sometimes a leopard and a lion. This
winged Artemis lingered in ex-votos as Artemis
Orthia, with a sanctuary close by Sparta.
In Greek classical art she is usually portrayed
as a maiden huntress clothed in a girl's short skirt, barefoot, with a quiver, a bow
and arrows. Often she is shown in the shooting pose, and is
accompanied by a hunting dog
or stag. Her darker side is revealed in some vase paintings, where
she is shown as the death-bringing goddess whose arrows fell young
maidens and women, such as the daughters of Niobe.
The attributes of the goddess were often varied:
bow and arrows were sometimes replaced by hunting spears; as a
goddess of maiden dances she held a lyre; as a goddess of light a pair
of flaming torches.
Only in post-Classical art do we find
representations of Artemis-Diana with the crown of the crescent moon, as Luna. In
the ancient world, although she was occasionally associated with
the moon, she was never portrayed as the moon itself. Ancient
statues of Artemis have been found with crescent moons, but these
moons are always Renaissance-era additions.
On June 7, 2007, a Roman era bronze sculpture of
“Artemis and the Stag” was sold at Sotheby’s
auction house in New York City by the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery for $25.5 million.
Artemis as the Lady of Ephesus
At Ephesus, her temple became one of the
Seven Wonders of the World. There the Lady whom Greeks
associated with Artemis through interpretatio
Graeca was worshiped primarily as a mother goddess, akin to the
Phrygian goddess Cybele, in an
ancient sanctuary where her cult image
depicted the "Lady of Ephesus" adorned with multiple rounded breast
like protuberances on her chest. They had been traditionally
interpreted as multiple accessory
breasts, or as sacrificed bull testes, as some newer scholars
claimed, until excavation at the site of the Artemision in 1987-88
identified the multitude of tear-shaped amber beads that had adorned her
ancient wooden xoanon.
In Ionia (Turkey), the
"Lady of Ephesus," a goddess whom the Anatolians
identified with Artemis, was a principal deity. Her temple at
Ephesus, an ancient Greek city located in the western part of
Turkey, was
one of the Seven Wonders of the World. It was probably the best
known center of her worship except for Delos. In Acts
of the Apostles, Ephesian metalsmiths who felt threatened by
Saint Paul's preaching of Christianity, jealously rioted in her
defense, shouting “Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!” (Acts 19:28,
KJV).
Artemis in Astronomy
A minor
planet, (105)
Artemis; a lunar
crater; the Artemis
Chasma and the Artemis
Corona (both on Venus) have all been named for her.
Artemis in Astrology
In the western zodiac, Artemis is the ruling
goddess of the sign of Cancer
due to her supposed association with the moon.
References
Sources
- Burkert, Walter, 1985. Greek Religion (Cambridge:Harvard University Press)
- Graves, Robert (1955) 1960. The Greek Myths (Penguin)
- Kerenyi, Karl, 1951. The Gods of the Greeks
- Telenius, Seppo (2005) 2006. Athena-Artemis (Helsinki: Kirja kerrallaan)
External links
- Encyclopedia Mythica's article on Artemis
- Theoi Project, Artemis, information on Artemis from original Greek and Roman sources, images from classical art.
- Hymn To Artemis - The Virgin Goddess of the Hunt
- A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890) (eds. G. E. Marindin, William Smith, LLD, William Wayte)
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