|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: NAN-NEW |
|
|
NEMESIS , the personification of divine justice. This is the only sense in which the word is used in Homer , while Hesiod
interpolation ); she appears in a still more concrete form in a fragment of the Cypria. The word Nemesis originally meant the distributor (Gr. ;4gal') of fortune, whether good or bad, in due proportion to each man according to his deserts; then, the resentment caused by any disturbance of this proportion, the sense of justice that could not allow it to pass unpunished. Gruppe and others prefer to connect the name with vela aav, veev4'eaOat (" to feel just resentment "). In the tragedians Nemesis appears chiefly as the avenger of crime and the punisher of arrogance, and as such is akin to Ate and the Erinyes. She was sometimes called Adrasteia, probably meaning " one from whom there is no escape "; the epithet is specially applied to the Phrygian Cybele, with whom, as with Aphrodite and Artemis, her cult shows certain affinities. She was specially honoured in the district
Electra
malignant , or the goddesses of the old and the new city. Nemesis was also worshipped at Rome by victorious generals, and in imperial times was the patroness of gladiators
drawn
Sec C. \Valz, De Nemesi Graecorum (Tubingen, 1852) ; E. Tournier, Nemesis (1863), and H. Posnansky, " Nemesis and Adrasteia," in Breslauer philologische Abhandlungen, v. heft 2 (1890), both exhaustive monographs; an essay, ` Nemesis, or the Divine Envy," by P. E. More, in The New World (N. Y., Dec. 1899) ; L. R. Farnell, Cults of the Greek States, ii.; and A. Legrand in Daremberg and Saglio's Dictionnaire des antiquites. For the Roman Nemesis, see G. Wissowa, Religion and Kultus der Romer ( Munich
End of Article: NEMESIS If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/NAN_NEW/NEMESIS.html"> NEMESIS </a> |
|
|
(Previous) NEMESIANUS, MARCUS AURELIUS OLYMPIUS |
(Next) NEMESIUS (fl. c. A.D. 390) |
|
Sponsored Advertisements