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Hera
The queen of the Olympian deities. She is a
daughter of Cronus
and Rhea, and wife and sister
of Zeus. Hera was mainly
worshipped as a goddess of marriage and birth. It is said that each year Hera's
virginity returns by bathing in the well Canathus. The children of Hera and
Zeus are the smith-god Hephaestus,
the goddess of youth Hebe,
and the god of war Ares.
According to some sources, however, her children were conceived without the
help of a man, either by slapping her hand on the ground or by eating lettuce:
thus they were born, not out of love but out of lust and hatred.
Writers represented Hera as constantly being
jealous of Zeus's various amorous affairs. She punished her rivals and their
children, among both goddesses and mortals, with implacable fury. She placed
two serpents in the cradle of Heracles;
she had Io guarded by a
hundred-eyed giant; she drove the foster-parents of Dionysus mad, and tried to
prevent the birth of Apollo
and Artemis. Even Zeus usually
could not stand up to her. Sometimes when he got angry, he chained her to the
mountain of Olympus by fastening anvils to her feet. However, most of the time
Zeus resorted to stratagems: he either hid his illegitimate children, or he
changed them into animals.
Hera's main sanctuary was at Argos in the
Peloponnesus, where she was worshipped as the town goddess. Also, in this town
the Heraia, public festivities, were celebrated. Other temples stood in
Olympia, Mycene, Sparta, Paestum, Corinth, Tiryns, Perachora, and on the
islands of Samos and Delos.
The peacock (the symbol of pride; her wagon was
pulled by peacocks) and the cow (she was also known as Bopis, meaning
"cow-eyed", which was later translated as "with big eyes")
are her sacred animals. The crow and the pomegranate (symbol of marriage) are
also dedicated to her. Other attributes include a diadem and a veil. Hera is
portrayed as a majestic, solemn woman.
Her Roman counterpart is Juno.