Zeus, n, (Greek mythology) the supreme god of ancient Greek mythology; son of Rhea and Cronus whom he dethroned; husband and brother of Hera; brother of Poseidon and Hades; father of many gods; counterpart of Roman Jupiter
Word History:
Homer's Iliad calls him “Zeus who thunders on high” and Milton's Paradise Lost, “the Thunderer,” so it is surprising to learn that the Indo-European ancestor of Zeus was a god of the bright daytime sky. Zeus is a somewhat unusual noun in Greek, having both a stem Zn- (as in the philosopher Zeno's name) and a stem Di- (earlier Diw-). In the Iliad prayers to Zeus begin with the vocative form Zeu pater, “o father Zeus.” Father Zeus was the head of the Greek pantheon; another ancient Indo-European society, the Romans, called the head of their pantheon Ipiter or Iuppiter-Jupiter. The -piter part of his name is just a reduced form of pater, father and I- corresponds to the Zeu in Greek: Ipiter is therefore precisely equivalent to Zeu pater and could be translated “father Jove.” Jove itself is from Latin Iov-, the stem form of Ipiter, an older version of which in Latin was Diov-, showing that the word once had a d as in Greek Diw-. An exact parallel to Zeus and Jupiter is found in the Sanskrit god addressed as Dyau pitar: pitar is “father,” and dyau means “sky.”
We can equate Greek Zeu pater, Latin I-piter, and Sanskrit dyau pitar and reconstruct an Indo-European deity, *Dyus pter, who was associated with the sky and addressed as “father.” Comparative philology has revealed that the “sky” word refers specifically to the bright daytime sky, as it is derived from the root meaning “to shine.”
This root also shows up in Latin dis “day,” borrowed into English in words like diurnal. Closely related to these words is Indo-European *deiwos “god,” which shows up, among other places, in the name of the Old English god Tw in Modern English Tuesday, “Tiw's day.” *Deiwos is also the source of Latin dvus “pertaining to the gods,” whence English divine and the Italian operatic diva, and deus, “god,” whence deity.
(*Phew!* - that's enough gyan for the day!)
Friday, November 19, 2004
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10 comments:
Dyaus is the creator-god mentioned in pre-vedic times.Supposedly father of Indra and Indra seemed to have killed him by pulling his leg! :-)
Though that name is not well known in Indian mythology his spouse was the earth godess called "Prithvi" thats well known even today(equivalent of Hera!)
nice blog
Hey Geeta. Thanks for stopping by my blog. I am glad you enjoyed reading it. I was just going through yours and you really are imparting a lot of gyan. Etymology one of your strong points? It is always good to me a book-lover. Shall be visiting often.
Hii Geets, Wonderful post..I'm not well equipped to actually comment on this topic but it sure gave some good quality reading. Have a grrreat week !! :)
kewl,thats was a load of gyan,anyways,stumbled here through the pune blog..but good i did...nice work...
pankaj.
Mix the myth with your comments Geet, your blog will get still better. Cheers,
Mix the myth with your comments Geet, your blog will get still better. Cheers,
:-) That's plenty of comments!
Anonymous - glad you like my blog - it would be nice, if you left a name next time! :-)
Prabz - Venus/Aphrodite is the Goddess of Love(sexual love) and beauty - her son is Cupid/Eros and we all know what he does..might post something on them later, but if you scroll through the archives, I'd posted a piece on Eros and Psyche around a month ago...
Pankaj - Thanks! Did visit your blog, but it went whizzing past - Formula 1 isn't my scene! ;-)
Joshua Newton - I sometimes miz my own comments with the myth (as I did earlier in other pieces) - this one was an etymological search on the word "Zeus"...but thanks for the suggestion! Your blogs are cool - specially the photojournalist blog!
Parth - you've got a cool blog...will be visiting again. Thx for dropping by - etymology is a new interest for me. Despite having majored in Eng Lit, I never had the habit of looking up a dictionary - something I'm trying to change now...never too late to change!
I've been dying to say this so I will
"It all sounds greek to me" ..
No Seriously good post. I've always been interested in linguistics and ethymology..
You should listin to my maid speak she talks this strange khichdi of konkani,hindi,marathi and english... if she ever asks you
" Aap ka problen kai ahey" it means what is your program .. see what I mean.I should do a post on good ol' jaya, looks like your blog is simply inspiring.. Enough of this mutual admiration ...
Wow...so many smart people here!
After reading geet's post, i feel like renting a DVD of "Troy"...yeah i know it doesn't have anything to do with Zeus and Co, but come on...Brad Pitt AND Orlando Bloom? Can't pass that up! muhahaha
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