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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: HAN-HEG |
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HECATE (Gr. 'EKa-rrl, " she who works from afar "1) , a goddess in Greek mythology. According to the generally accepted view, she is of Hellenic origin, but Farnell regards her as a foreign importation from Thrace, the home of Bendis, with whom Hecate has many points in common. She is not mentioned in the Iliad or the Odyssey, but in Hesiod (Theogony, 409) she is the daughter of the Titan Perses and Asterie, in a passage which may be a later interpolation by the Orphists (for other genealogies see Steuding in Roscher's Lexikon). She is there represented as a mighty goddess, having power over heaven, earth and sea; hence she is the bestower of wealth and all the blessings of daily life. The range of her influence is most varied, extending to war, athletic games, the tending of cattle, hunting, the assembly of the people and the law-courts. Hecate is frequently identified with Artemis, an identification usually justified by the assumption that both were moon-goddesses. Farnell, who regards Artemis as originally an earth-goddess, while recognizing a " genuine lunar element " in Hecate from the 5th century, considers her a chthonian rather than a lunar divinity (see also Warr in Classical Review, ix. 39o). He is of opinion that neither borrowed much from, nor exercised much influence on, the cult and character of the other.Hecate is the chief
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worship seems to have flourished. especially in the wilder parts of Greece, such as Samothrace and Thessaly, in Caria
In older times Hecate is represented as single-formed, clad in 1 J. B. Bury, in Classical Review, iii. p. 416, suggests that the name means " dog," against which see J. H. Vince, ib. iv. p. 47. G. C. Warr, ib. ix. 39o, takes the Hesiodic Hecate to be a moon-goddess, daughter of the sun-god Perseus. a long robe, holding burning torches; later she becomes triformis, " triple-formed," with three bodies standing
See H. Steuding in Roscher's Lexikon, where the functions of Hecate are systematically derived from the conception of her as a moon-goddess; L. R. Farnell, Cults of the Greek States, ii., where this view is examined; P. Paris in Daremberg and Saglio's Dictionnaire des antiquites; O. Gruppe, Griechische Mythologie, ii. (1906) p. 1288. End of Article: HECATE (Gr. 'EKa-rrl, " she who works from afar "1) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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