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=== Hemera === [[File:Eos chariot 430-420 BC Staatliche Antikensammlungen.jpg|thumb|Eos in her chariot flying over the sea, red-figure [[krater]] from [[Southern Italy]], 430β420 BC, [[Staatliche Antikensammlungen]]]] Although distinct deities in early works such as [[Hesiod]]'s ''[[Theogony]]'', later the tragic poets completely identified Eos with Hemera, the primordial goddess of the [[day]];<ref name=":smith">Smith, s.v. [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0104%3Aalphabetic+letter%3DE%3Aentry+group%3D4%3Aentry%3Deos-bio-1 Eos]</ref><ref name=":hr46">Hard, [https://books.google.com/books?id=r1Y3xZWVlnIC&pg=PA46 p. 46]</ref> each of the three great Athenian tragedians, [[Euripides]], [[Aeschylus]] and [[Sophocles]], used "Hemera" for the goddess who abducts Tithonus or drives a chariot drawn by white horses at daybreak in some work.<ref name=":opal">Oakley and Palagia, p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=QqymAwAAQBAJ&pg=RA2-PA47 47]</ref> Both goddesses were said to be daughters of Nyx ([[Night]]), albeit Eos was much more commonly the daughter of Hyperion by his wife. Pausanias, when describing depictions of Eos's myths at [[Classical Athens|Athens]] and Amyclae, he calls Eos by the name of Hemera.<ref name=":pausn"/> A scholion on the ''[[Odyssey]]'' mentions the abduction of the hunter Orion by "Hemera" (Eos in [[Homer]]).<ref>[[Euphorion of Chalcis|Euphorion]] [https://www.loebclassics.com/view/euphorion_chalcis-poetic_fragments/2010/pb_LCL508.297.xml fr. 66] Lightfoot [= fr. 103 Powell].</ref><ref>Hard, [https://books.google.com/books?id=r1Y3xZWVlnIC&pg=PA562 p. 562]</ref> Eos, in contrast to Helios and Selene and more similarly to Hemera and Hemera's mother Nyx, embodies a part of the day and night cycle, instead of a celestial body.<ref name=":opal"/> The Greek word "eos", meaning dawn, was some times used by writers to refer to the entire duration of the day, not just the morning.<ref name=":stoll"/> Likewise, Eos was often referred to as ''Tito'', another archaic word meaning day, and feminine equivalent to ''Titan'', which is a common epithet of her brother Helios denoting his role as the creator of the day.{{sfn|Kerenyi|1951|page=[https://archive.org/details/in.gov.ignca.7346/page/n225/mode/2up?view=theater 199, note 637]}} Unlike Eos however, Hemera is little more than a name in Greek literature, with few and far between references about her and with no unique mythology outside of her parentage and the few stories appropriated from Eos.{{sfn|Bell|1991|loc=s.v. [https://archive.org/details/womenofclassical00bell/page/230/mode/2up?view=theater Hemera]}}
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