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HERMAE , in See also: Greek antiquities, quadrangular pillars, broader above than at the See also: base, surmounted by a See also: head or bust, so called either because the head of See also: Hermes was most See also: common or from their etymological connexion with the Greek word iipµara (blocks of See also: stone), which originally had no reference to Hermes at all
.
In the
See also: oldest times Hermes, like other divinities, was worshipped in the See also: form of a heap of stones or of an amorphous See also: block of See also: wood or stone, which afterwards took the shape of a phallus, the See also: symbol of productivity
.
The next step was the addition of a head to this phallic See also: column which became quadrangular (the number 4 was sacred to Hermes, who was See also: born on the See also: fourth See also: day of the See also: month), with the significant indication of sex still prominent
.
In this shape the number of herms rapidly increased, especially those of Hermes, for which the distinctive name of Hermhermae has been suggested
.
In Athens they were found at the corners of streets; before the See also: gates and in the courtyards of houses, where they were worshipped by See also: women as having the power to make them prolific; before the temples; in the gymnasia and palaestrae
.
On each See also: side of the road leading from the See also: Stoa Poikile to the Stoa Basileios, rows of Hermae were set up in such numbers by the piety of private individuals or public corporations, that the Stoa Basileios was called the Stoa of the Hermae
.
The See also: function of Hermes as See also: protector of the roads, of merchants and of commerce, explains the number of Hermae that served the purpose of sign-posts on the roads outside the city
.
It is stated in the pseudo-Platonic See also: Hipparchus that the son. of See also: Peisistratus had set up marble pillars at suitable places on the roads leading from the different country districts to Athens, having the places connected with the roads inscribed on the one side in a See also: hexameter verse, and on the other a See also: pentameter containing a See also: short proverb or moral precept for the edification of travellers
.
Sometimes they See also: bore inscriptions celebrating the valour of those who had fought for their country
.
Just as it was customary for the passer-by to show respect to the rudest form of the See also: god (the heap of stones) by contributing a stone to the heap or See also: anointing it with oil, in like manner small offerings, generally of dried See also: figs, were deposited near the Herniae, to appease the See also: hunger of the necessitous wayfarer
.
Garlands of See also: flowers were also suspended on the two arm-like tenons projecting from either side of the column at the top (for the See also: oracle at Pharae see HERMES)
.
These pillars were also used to mark the frontier boundaries or the limits of different estates
.
The See also: great respect attaching to them is shown by the excitement caused in Athens by the " Mutilation of the Hermae
just before the departure of the Sicilian expedition (May 415 B.c.)
.
They formed the See also: object of a See also: special industry, the makers of them being called Hermoglyphi
.
The surmounting heads were not, however, confined to those of Hermes; those of other gods and heroes, and even of distinguished mortals, were of frequent occurrence
.
In this See also: case a compound was formed: Hermathena (a herm of Athena), Hermares, Hermaphroditus, Hermanubis, Hermalcibiades, and so on
.
In the case of these compounds it is disputed whether they indicated a herm with the head of Athena, or with a See also: Janus-like head of both Hermes and Athena, or a figure compounded of both deities
.
The See also: Romans not only borrowed the Hermes pillars for their deities which at an early See also: period they assimilated to those of the Greeks (as Heracles—Hercules) but also for the indigenous gods who preserved their individuality
.
Thus herms of See also: Jupiter Terminalis (the hermae being identified with the See also: Roman termini) and of See also: Silvanus occur
.
Under the See also: empire, the function of the hermae was rather architectural than religious
.
They were used to keep up the draperies in the interior of a See also: house, and in the Circus See also: Maximus they were used to support the barriers
.
See the article with bibliography by See also: Pierre See also: Paris in Daremberg and Saglio's Diclionnaire See also: des antiquates; for the mutilation of the Hermae, See also: Thucydides vi
.
27; See also: Andocides, De mysteriis; See also: Grote, Hist. of See also: Greece, ch
.
58; H
.
Weil, Etudes sur l'antiquite grecque (1900); Burolt, Griech . Gesch . (ed . 1904), III. ii. p . 1287 . |
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