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Selene

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An ancient Roman fresco from Pompeii showing the mythological scene of Selene, goddess of the moon, descending to visit Endymion, a handsome hunter, in a peaceful landscape.

Selene

In ancient Greek mythology and religion, Selene is the goddess of the Moon. She is known as a beautiful goddess who rides a silver chariot across the night sky, lighting the world.

Selene is the daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia. She has two important siblings: the sun god Helios and the dawn goddess Eos.

Many stories tell of Selene’s love for different people. She loved Zeus, the king of the gods, and Pan, a god of the wild. Later, during Roman times, Selene was often thought to be the same as the Roman goddess Luna. Together with Artemis and Hecate, Selene was seen as a powerful figure connected to the moon.

Etymology and origins

Names

The name "Selene" comes from the Greek word selas, meaning "light" or "brightness". In some Greek dialects, her name was also spelled Selána or Selánna.

Selene was also known as Mene, a word that means the moon and the moon's month. The word mene has roots in very old languages, linking back to words for the moon and measuring time. Though we don't have clear proof of Selene herself in very old writings, we do find the word for "month" in ancient scripts.

Selene was sometimes called Phoebe, a name she shared with the goddess Artemis, and also "Cynthia", referring to her connection to Mount Cynthus, where Artemis was born.

Detail of a sarcophagus depicting Endymion and Selene, shown with her characteristic attributes of lunate crown, billowing veil (velificatio) and heavenly chariot, from 3rd century AD, Roman Empire period.

Origin

Selene, along with her brother Helios and sister Eos, comes from very old beliefs that many different cultures shared. Though these figures were important, later Greek gods and goddesses became more famous, and Selene and her family became like background characters in the stories.

In the oldest beliefs, the moon was thought of as a male god who was paired with a female sun goddess. But in Greek stories, the moon is a female goddess because the Greek word for moon is feminine. Even though the moon didn't play a big role in the oldest stories, it still had its place in the family of gods and goddesses.

Some people tried to link Selene to Helen of Troy because their names sound similar, but this doesn't seem right. The name "Helen" is more likely connected to the sun god Helios, and both may come from a shared ancient ancestor called the Sun Maiden.

Descriptions

In stories from ancient Greece, Selene is the goddess of the Moon. She is the daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia, and the sister of Helios, the sun god, and Eos, the goddess of dawn. Selene drives a chariot across the sky, pulling the Moon behind her.

One old poem says Selene has a beautiful, shining light that glows in the dark. It says she wears a golden crown and drives her horses quickly across the sky. Other poems call her "lovely-haired" and say she looks bright and silvery.

Family

Parents

Detail of Selene from a Roman sarcophagus

Selene, the goddess of the Moon, has many different stories about her parents in old Greek tales. Most often, she is the daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia. She is also the sister of Helios, the sun god, and Eos, the goddess of dawn. Some stories say she had different parents, like Pallas or Helios himself.

Offspring

Selene is known for having many children in these stories. She is said to have a daughter named Pandia with Zeus. With her lover Endymion, she was believed to have fifty daughters. These daughters stood for the months in a Greek Olympic cycle. She was also thought to be the mother of other famous people like Narcissus, the Horae (goddesses of the seasons), and the poet Musaeus.

Mythology

Goddess of the Moon

Like her brother Helios, the Sun god, Selene is said to drive a chariot across the sky. The oldest picture of Selene driving her chariot is on a cup from around 5th century BC. In old stories, people thought witches could make the Moon disappear using magic. One famous story tells of Aglaonice, who could predict when the Moon would seem to disappear.

Statue of Selene, shown wearing the crescent on her forehead and holding a torch in her right hand, while her veil billows over her head.

Endymion

Selene is best known for her story with a beautiful man named Endymion. Different tales say how Endymion fell into a never-ending sleep, and Selene would visit him every night. Some stories say the Moon goddess fell in love with him because of his beauty.

Gigantomachy

Endymion as hunter (with dog), sitting on rocks in a landscape, holding two spears, looking at Selene who descends to him. Antique fresco from Pompeii.

When the Giants tried to attack the gods, Selene fought alongside her family. She is shown in pictures from ancient times battling the Giants with her siblings.

Fight with Typhon

In one story, a huge monster named Typhon tried to attack the sky. Selene fought back against him, and their battle left marks on the Moon.

Ampelus

A beautiful youth named Ampelus, loved by the god Dionysus, once compared himself to Selene. This made Selene angry, and she sent a fly to cause his death.

Heracles

Selene helped when Zeus wanted to spend time with a mortal woman to have a son named Heracles. She also had a small part in one of Heracles' tasks, connected to a lion that was said to have come from the Moon.

Pan

The god Pan once tricked Selene with a piece of wool, and their story was told by ancient poets.

Other accounts

Different stories tell of Selene’s life and her family. One tale says she asked her mother to make her clothes, but her size changed too much. Another story tells of her turning a faithful follower into a mountain to protect him.

Iconography

Selene and Endymion, antique fresco in Pompeii

In ancient times, artists showed Selene, the Moon goddess, in many ways. Early pictures on pots only showed her face or part of her body. Later, she was often shown riding across the sky in a chariot or on a horse, sometimes even on an ox, mule, or ram.

Selene was frequently shown with her brother Helios, the sun god. They both appeared on important buildings like the Parthenon, where Selene rode her chariot down into the sea while Helios rode his up from the ocean. Selene is usually pictured with a crescent moon or stars, and sometimes she wears a glowing circle around her head.

Cult

Selene, the goddess of the Moon, was not as well known as her brother, Helios, the sun god. She was mostly linked to important goddesses like Artemis and Hecate, and her worship often included them.

People believed Selene helped with childbirth, especially during the full moon. She was also called upon for love magic and was honored in places like Gytheum and Epidaurus. The day we now call Monday was named after her, as the "day of the Moon."

Selene from an altar piece, flanked by either the Dioscuri, or by Phosphorus and Hesperus.

Orphic literature

In some old stories, there were three Fates who were part of Selene. They stood for the three phases of the moon: the crescent moon, the full moon, and the dark moon. These phases match the way we divide months in our calendar.

Namesakes

Selene is the Greek name for the Moon. An object in space called 580 Selene is named after her. Scientists who study the Moon use the word "selenology" for their work.

The chemical element Selenium was named for Selene by a scientist named Jöns Jacob Berzelius. A Japanese spacecraft called SELENE, also known as Kaguya, carried her name too. Other things like a British submarine and a special car also used Selene's name.

Genealogy

In old stories from Greece, Selene is the goddess of the Moon. She is the daughter of two important figures named Titans, Hyperion and Theia. Selene has two siblings: Helios, the god of the Sun, and Eos, the goddess of the Dawn. They are all part of a special family in these stories.

Images

The Western side of the Parthenon, an ancient Greek temple located in Athens.
A beautiful Roman statuette from the 1st century BC representing Selene, the goddess of the moon.
A sculpture of Selene, the moon goddess, in the courtyard of Palazzo Gerini in Florence.
Marble statue of Selene, the Greek goddess of the moon, on display at Antalya Museum.
Ancient Greek art showing Selene, the goddess of the moon, on a red-figure drinking cup from around 450 BC.

Related articles

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

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