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HEBE , in See also: Greek See also: mythology, daughter of See also: Zeus and See also: Hera, the goddess of youth
.
In the Homeric poems she is the See also: female counterpart of See also: Ganymede, and acts as cupbearer to the gods (Iliad, iv
.
2)
.
She was the See also: special attendant of her See also: mother, whose horses she harnessed (Iliad, v
.
722)
.
When Heracles was received amongst the gods, Hebe was bestowed upon him in See also: marriage (Odyssey, xi
.
603)
.
When the See also: custom of the heroic age, which permitted female cupbearers, See also: fell into disuse, Hebe was replaced by Ganymede in the popular mythology
.
To account for her retirement from her office, it was said that she fell down in the presence of the gods while handing the See also: wine, and was so ashamed that she refused to appear before them again
.
Hebe exhibits many striking points of resemblance with the pure Greek goddess See also: Aphrodite
.
She is the daughter of Zeus and Hera, Aphrodite of Zeus and See also: Dione; but Dione and Hera are often identified
.
Hebe is called Dia, a See also: regular epithet of Aphrodite; at Phlius, a festival called Kiovorouot (the days of ivy-cutting) was annually celebrated in her honour (See also: Pausanias, ii
.
13); and ivy was sacred also to Aphrodite . The See also: apotheosis of Heracles and his marriage with Hebe became a favourite subject with poets and painters, and many instances occur on vases
.
In later See also: art she is often represented, like Ganymede, caressing the eagle
.
See R
.
Kekul6, Hebe (1867), mainly dealing with the representations of Hebe in art; and P
.
Decharme in Daremberg and Saglio's Dictionnaire See also: des antiquates
.
The meaning of the word Hebe tended to transform the goddess into a See also: mere personification of the eternal youth that belongs to the gods, and this conception is frequently met with
.
Then she becomes identical with the See also: Roman Juventas, who is simply an See also: abstraction of an attribute of See also: Jupiter Juventus, the See also: god of increase and blessing and youth
.
To Juventas, as personifying the eternal youth of the Roman See also: state, a See also: chapel was dedicated in very early times in the See also: cella of See also: Minerva in the See also: temple of Jupiter Capitolinus
.
With this temple is connected the See also: legend of Juventas and See also: Terminus, who alone of all the gods refused to give way when it was being built—an indication of the eternal solidity and youth of See also: Rome
.
The cult of Juventas did not, however, become firmly established until the See also: time of the second Punic war
.
In 218 the Sibylline books ordered a See also: lectisternium in honour of Juventas and a supplicatio in honour of Hercules, and in 191 a temple was dedicated in her honour in the Circus See also: Maximus
.
In later times Juventas became the personification, not of the Roman youth, but of the emperor, who assumed the attributes of a god (See also: Livy v
.
54, xxi
.
62, See also: xxxvi
.
36; See also: Dion
.
Halic. iii
.
69; G
.
Wissowa in Roscher's Lexikon der Mythologie)
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