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Eos

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A beautiful mural painting of Eos, the goddess of dawn, in the Kurhaus Wiesbaden.

In ancient Greek mythology and religion, Eos is the goddess of the dawn. Each morning, she would rise to bring light and end the night. She is often shown driving a two-horse chariot, bringing the sun god Helios with her. She is called "rosy-fingered" because of the beautiful colors of the sky at dawn.

Eos is known for her many love stories. She fell in love with many men and sometimes took them away from their homes. One famous story is about a prince named Tithonus. Eos asked for him to live forever, but he would never stay young, so he kept growing old without ever dying.

Like the Roman goddess Aurora and the Rigvedic goddess Ushas, Eos is part of a long tradition of dawn goddesses from ancient times. She is the sister of the sun god Helios and the moon goddess Selene. Although Eos appears in many poems and stories, there is little proof that people built temples or worshipped her in ancient times.

Etymology

The name Eos comes from ancient Greek and means "dawn". It is connected to other dawn goddesses from different cultures, like the Vedic goddess Ushas, the Lithuanian goddess Aušrinė, and the Roman goddess Aurora.

In different Greek dialects, Eos was known by various names. For example, in Mycenaean Greek, her name appeared in tablets from Pylos as a personal name linked to the idea of "dawn".

Some older ideas about the meaning of Eos’s name have been changed or rejected by scholars over time.

Origins

Proto-Indo-European dawn goddess

Main article: h2éwsōs

Eos by Evelyn De Morgan (1895)

All these goddesses are linked to Eos through a common word from old Proto-Indo-European language *h₂ewsṓs, meaning "dawn". This word also led to words in other languages, such as *Austrō in Proto-Germanic and *Ōstara in Old High German.

In Greek stories, Eos, Helios, and Zeus all come from very old Proto-Indo-European beliefs. Eos is sometimes called the "Daughter of Dyēus", the sky god. But in older Greek poems, Eos is the daughter of the Titan Hyperion.

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

Sometimes Eos is shown as not wanting to get out of bed in the morning, much like other dawn goddesses in various cultures. This goddess of dawn was often connected with Hemera, the goddess of the day and daylight. Eos might have also appeared in old Proto-Indo-European poems.

Connection to Aphrodite

Eos has some similarities with the love goddess Aphrodite, which might mean they share an old connection or influence. Both goddesses were famous for their beauty and their relationships with mortal men. They were also linked with the colors red, white, and gold.

Even though Aphrodite's name likely comes from a Semitic language, there are links between her and Eos in Greek art and stories. In some tales, Aphrodite takes or charms mortal men, just as Eos does. The two goddesses appear together in the story of Phaethon of Syria, where Eos is his mother and Aphrodite is his lover. This mixing of stories shows how different religious traditions blended together.

Description

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

Eos is the goddess of dawn. She is often shown with rosy fingers or arms as she opens the gates of heaven for the Sun to rise. Ancient poets like the singer in the Homeric Hymn to Helios and Sappho described her with beautiful, golden arms and sandals. Artwork often shows her as a lovely woman with large white-feathered wings, wearing a crown or tiara. In stories, her robe was a special saffron color, woven with flowers. Writers like Mesomedes of Crete and Ovid praised her delicate and graceful appearance.

Family

Parents

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

In Greek stories, Eos, the goddess of dawn, is the daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia. Eos has two famous siblings: Helios, the god of the sun, and Selene, the goddess of the moon. Some stories say Eos was born first, while others say she was born last.

Offspring

Eos married the Titan Astraeus. Together, they had children including the Anemoi, the winds: Zephyrus, Boreas, Notus, and Eurus. They also had the Morning Star, called Eosphoros or Venus, as well as many stars and the goddess of justice, Astraea. Eos also had two famous sons, Memnon and Emathion, with a prince named Tithonus from Troy. Some stories also mention other children like Hesperus, Phaethon, and another Tithonus.

Mythology

Goddess of the dawn

Each morning, the dawn goddess Eos rises to let her brother, Helios, shine and bring light to the world. In some stories, she stays with Helios all day until sunset. She is often called "rosy-fingered" and is known for her beauty.

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

Homer and Hesiod

From ancient poems like the Iliad and Odyssey, Eos is described as bringing light each day. In one story, the goddess Athena asked Eos to delay the sunrise to give someone more time. Eos is also linked to the stars and the morning dew.

Orphic literature

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

In special hymns, Eos is praised as the goddess who brings daylight to everyone.

Divine horses

Eos travels across the sky in a chariot pulled by two special horses named Lampus and Phaëton.

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

Lovers

Eos loved many people. One famous story is about Tithonus, whom she asked Zeus to make immortal.

Role in wars

Gigantomachy

Eos helped the gods fight against giant rebels called the Giants. She and her family worked together in the battle.

Trojan War

Eos had a son named Memnon who fought in the Trojan War. After he died, Eos asked Zeus to make him immortal, and he agreed. She brought his body back to their home far away.

Iconography

Eos was shown as a woman in a bright saffron robe. She was often seen spreading morning dew from a container or holding a torch while riding in a chariot. On old Greek and Italian pots, Eos flies with the morning star Eosphorus, wearing a delicate pleated robe and a cloak. She often has wings and drives a chariot pulled by four horses, like her brother Helios. Sometimes she carries two containers from which she pours the morning dew. The messenger god Hermes is sometimes shown guiding Eos’s chariot as the day starts.

While stories of Eos’s adventures appear often in artwork, no known pots show her with the hunters Orion or Cleitus. Instead, pots usually show her with a young hunter named Cephalus or a youth with a musical instrument, called Tithonus. Some of these pots have writing on them, helping us know who is shown. One of the oldest images is from around 480-470 BC, showing Eos carrying a young boy, possibly Cephalus, with her wings spread. Other scenes with Eos include her asking Zeus to help the hero Memnon, and the moment when the goddess Alcmene, mother of Heracles, rises to the heavens. Among the children of the gods Theia and Hyperion, Eos is the only one usually shown with wings in artwork.

Cult and temples

Eos, the goddess of dawn, is part of an ancient group of gods. Eos did not have many places where people honored her. There are no known temples just for her. However, a writer named Ovid hinted that she might have had a couple of small shrines.

We know that in Athens, people made special offerings to Eos and other sky-related gods and goddesses. Some think she might also have been honored in Sparta long ago, but this is not certain.

Identifications

Etruscan

The Etruscans had a dawn-goddess named Thesan. Artists in Etruria showed the dawn-goddess with a young man, likely from Greek art. A famous old sculpture from Etruscan Cære, now in Berlin, shows the goddess running with a boy. Many think it shows Eos with her companion Cephalus. On an Etruscan mirror, Thesan is shown carrying a young man named Tinthu.

Roman

The Romans called the dawn-goddess Aurora. In Roman traditions, dawn was also linked to a goddess named Matuta, later known as Mater Matuta. She was connected to sea harbors and ports and had a temple in the Forum Boarium. Every year on June 11, a festival called the Matralia was held at her temple. Only women who were married for the first time could attend.

Hemera

Early stories, like those by Hesiod in his Theogony, kept Eos and Hemera as separate goddesses. Later writers often used the names interchangeably. The three great Athenian playwrights—Euripides, Aeschylus, and Sophocles—used “Hemera” when describing the goddess.

Both Eos and Hemera were said to be children of Nyx, the goddess of Night, though Eos was more often described as the daughter of Hyperion. When the writer Pausanias described statues of Eos’s stories in Athens and Amyclae, he used the name Hemera. An old note on the Odyssey talks about the hunter Orion being taken away by “Hemera,” which really means Eos from Homer’s poems.

Eos stands for part of the day and night cycle, not a star like the sun or moon. The Greek word for dawn, “eos,” was sometimes used to mean the whole day, not just the morning. Eos was also called Tito, an old word for day, much like her brother Helios, the sun god. But Hemera appears mostly just as a name in stories, with very few unique tales of her own.

Genealogy

See also: Family tree of the Greek gods

Eos, the goddess of dawn, had children with many partners in old Greek tales. Her family is one part of the bigger group of Greek gods and their stories.

Images

The Western side of the Parthenon, an ancient Greek temple located in Athens.
A classical sculpture titled 'Cephalus and Aurora' by John Flaxman, displayed at the Lady Lever Art Gallery. This artwork represents a mythological scene and is an example of historical art education.
An ancient Greek cup painting showing the goddess Eos lifting her son Memnon, from around 490–480 BC.
A depiction of Eos, the Greek goddess of dawn, symbolizing the beauty of morning light.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Eos, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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