Themis
In
Greek mythology,
Hesiod mentions
Themis among the six sons and six daughters—of whom
Cronos was one—of
Gaia and
Ouranos, that is, of Earth with Sky. Among these
Titans of primordial myth, few were venerated at specific sanctuaries in classical times, and Themis was so ancient that the followers of Zeus claimed that it was with him she produced the
Three Fates themselves (Hesiod,
Theogony, 904). A fragment of
Pindar, however, tells that the Moerae were already present at the nuptials of Zeus and Themis, that in fact the Moerae rose with Themis from the springs of
Okeanos the encircling World-Ocean and accompanied her up the bright sun-path to meet Zeus at Olympus. With Zeus she more certainly bore the
Horae, those embodiments of the right moment— the rightness of Order unfolding in Time— and
Astraea. Themis was there at
Delos to witness the
birth of Apollo.
Themis (meaning "law of nature" rather than "human ordinance"), she "of good counsel," was the embodiment of divine order, law and custom. When Themis is disregarded,
Nemesis brings just and wrathful retribution, thus Themis shared the Nemesion at
Rhamnous (
illustration below). Themis is not wrathful: she, "of the lovely cheeks", was the first to offer Hera a cup when she returned to Olympus distraught over threats from Zeus (
Iliad xv.88). Themis presided over the proper relation between man and woman, the basis of the rightly ordered family (the family was seen as the pillar of the
deme), and judges were often referred to as "themistopoloi" (the servants of Themis). Such was the basis for order upon Olympus too. Hera addressed her as "Lady Themis."
|
Themis from the Temple of Nemesis, Rhamnous, Attica, signed by the sculptor Chairestratos, c. 300 BCE |
The name of Themis might be substituted for
Adrasteia in telling of the birth of Zeus on Crete. She built the
Oracle at Delphi and was herself oracular. According to another legend, Themis received the
Oracle at Delphi from
Gaia and later gave it to
Phoebe.
# With
Zeus##
Horae: the Hours### First Generation (other names are also known)####
Auxo (the Grower)####
Carpo (the Fruit-bringer)####
Thallo (the Plant-raiser)### Second Generation####
Dike (Trial), known as
Astraea in Roman mythology, the constellation Virgo####
Eirene (Peace)####
Eunomia (Rule of Law)##
Moirae: the Fates###
Atropos (the Inevitable)###
Clotho (the Weaver)###
Lachesis (the Lot-caster)
A
Roman equivalent of one aspect of Hellenic Themis, as the personification of the divine rightness of law, was
Iustitia (Anglicized as Justitia). Her origins are in civic abstractions of a Roman mindset, rather than archaic mythology, so drawing comparisons is not fruitful. Portrayed as an impassive woman, blindfolded and holding scales and a
cornucopia, the sculpted figure outside a county courthouse is
Iustitia, not Themis.