Maia Explained

Type:Greek
Member Of:the Pleiades
Consort:Zeus
Abode:Mount Cyllene, Arcadia
Children:Hermes
Siblings:(c) Hyas
Maia
Deity Of:The Arcadian Pleiad Nymph
Parents:Atlas and Pleione or Aethra

Maia (; Ancient Greek: Μαῖα; also spelled Maie, Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Μαίη; Latin: Maia),[1] in ancient Greek religion and mythology, is one of the Pleiades and the mother of Hermes, one of the major Greek gods, by Zeus, the king of Olympus.[2]

Family

Maia is the daughter of Atlas[3] [4] and Pleione the Oceanid, and is the oldest of the seven Pleiades.[5] They were born on Mount Cyllene in Arcadia, and are sometimes called mountain nymphs, oreads; Simonides of Ceos sang of "mountain Maia" (Maiados oureias) "of the lovely black eyes." Because they were daughters of Atlas, they were also called the Atlantides.[6]

Mythology

Birth of Hermes

According to the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, Zeus, in the dead of night, secretly made love to Maia,[7] who avoided the company of the gods, in a cave of Cyllene. She became pregnant with Hermes. After giving birth to the baby, Maia wrapped him in blankets and went to sleep. The rapidly maturing infant Hermes crawled away to Thessaly, where, by nightfall of his first day, he stole some of his half-brother Apollo's cattle and invented the lyre from a tortoise shell. Maia refused to believe Apollo when he claimed that Hermes was the thief, and Zeus then sided with Apollo. Finally, Apollo exchanged the cattle for the lyre, which became one of his identifying attributes.[8]

Although the Homeric Hymn has Maia as Hermes' caretaker and guardian, in Sophocles's now lost satyr play Ichneutae, Maia entrusted the infant Hermes to Cyllene (the local mountain goddess) to nurse and raise, and thus it is her that the satyrs and Apollo confront when looking for the god's missing cattle.[9]

As nurturer

Maia also raised the infant Arcas, the child of Callisto with Zeus. Wronged by the love affair, Zeus' wife Hera in a jealous rage had transformed Callisto into a bear.[10] Arcas is the eponym of Arcadia, where Maia was born. The story of Callisto and Arcas, like that of the Pleiades, is an aition for a stellar formation, the constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, the Great and Little Bear.

Her name is related to μαῖα (maia), an honorific term for older women related to μήτηρ (mētēr) 'mother', also meaning "midwife" in Greek.[11]

Roman Maia

In ancient Roman religion and myth, Maia embodied the concept of growth,[12] as her name was thought to be related to the comparative adjective maius, maior "larger, greater". Originally, she may have been a homonym independent of the Greek Maia, whose myths she absorbed through the Hellenization of Latin literature and culture.[13]

In an archaic Roman prayer,[14] Maia appears as an attribute of Vulcan, in an invocational list of male deities paired with female abstractions representing some aspect of their functionality. She was explicitly identified with Earth (Terra, the Roman counterpart of Gaia) and the Good Goddess (Bona Dea) in at least one tradition.[15] [16] Her identity became theologically intertwined also with the goddesses Fauna, Ops, Juno, Carna, and the Magna Mater ("Great Goddess", referring to the Roman form of Cybele but also a cult title for Maia), as discussed at some length by the late antiquarian writer Macrobius.[17] This treatment was probably influenced by the 1st-century BC scholar Varro, who tended to resolve a great number of goddesses into one original "Terra". The association with Juno, whose Etruscan counterpart was Uni, is suggested again by the inscription Uni Mae on the Piacenza Liver.[18]

The month of May (Latin Maius) was named for Maia,[19] though ancient etymologists also connected it to the maiores "ancestors", again from the adjective maius, maior, meaning those who are "greater" in terms of generational precedence.[20] On the first day of May, the Lares Praestites were honored as protectors of the city,[21] and the flamen of Vulcan sacrificed a pregnant sow to Maia, a customary offering to an earth goddess[22] that reiterates the link between Vulcan and Maia in the archaic prayer formula. In Roman myth, Mercury (Hermes), the son of Maia, was the father of the twin Lares, a genealogy that sheds light on the collocation of ceremonies on the Kalends of May.[23] On May 15, the Ides, Mercury was honored as a patron of merchants and increaser of profit (through an etymological connection with merx, merces, "goods, merchandise"), another possible connection with Maia his mother as a goddess who promoted growth.

See also

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. The alternate spelling Maja represents the intervocalic i as j, pronounced similarly to an initial y in English; hence Latin maior, "greater," in English became "major."
  2. [Homer]
  3. The alternate spelling Maja represents the intervocalic i as j, pronounced similarly to an initial y in English; hence Latin maior, "greater," in English became "major."
  4. [Hesiod]
  5. [Bibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus)|Apollodorus]
  6. [Simonides of Ceos|Simonides]
  7. Homeric Hymns 4.5
  8. [Bibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus)|Apollodorus]
  9. Book: A Companion to Sophocles . Kirk . Ormand . Wiley Blackwell . 978-1-119-02553-5 . 2012 . 163.
  10. [Bibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus)|Apollodorus]
  11. Book: Nutton, Vivian. Ancient Medicine. Routledge. 2005. 9780415086110. London. 101.
  12. Book: Turcan, Robert. The Gods of Ancient Rome - Religion in Everyday Life from Archaic to Imperial Times. Routledge. 2001. 9780415929745. London. 70.
  13. Book: Grimal, Pierre. The Dictionary of Classical Mythology. Blackwell. 1996. 270.
  14. [Aulus Gellius]
  15. By Cornelius Labeo, as recorded by Macrobius, Saturnalia 1.12.20
  16. Book: Brouwer, H.H.J.. Bona Dea: The Sources and a Description of the Cult. Brill. 1989. 9789004295773. 232, 354.
  17. Macrobius, Saturnalia 1.12.16–33
  18. In Mario Torelli's diagram of this haruspicial object, the names Uni and Mae appear together in a cell on the edge of the liver; see Nancy Thompson de Grummond, Etruscan Myth, Sacred History, and Legend, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology, 2006, p. 44 (online).
  19. Web site: What's in a name? Months of the year. British Museum. 29 December 2017. 8 May 2022.
  20. Ovid Fasti 5.73
  21. [Ovid]
  22. Macrobius, Saturnalia 1.12.20; Juvenal, Satires 2.86; Festus, 68
  23. Book: Wiseman, Timothy Peter. Remus: A Roman Myth. Cambridge University Press. 1995. 9780521483667. 71.