Dyssebeia

deity Greek single tradition · 3

In Greek mythology, Dyssebeia was the caco-daimon (evil goddess, spirit) and personification of impiety and ungodliness, as opposed to Eusebeia.

↻ synthesized from 3 sources

When

First attested
800 BCE
Attested period
-800 – 300
Historical notes
Attested in Greek mythology, including the writings of Aeschylus.

Relationships

parent of
Hybris
enemy of
Eusebeia
co occurs with
Nomos, Zeus, Themis, Dike, Pan
child of
Hybris

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Sources

Source passages

“In Greek mythology, Dyssebeia (pronounced [dyˈsːebeːa]; Ancient Greek: Δυσσέβεια) was the caco-daimon (evil goddess, spirit) and personification of impiety and ungodliness, as opposed to Eusebeia.”

#28151 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“Her opposite was Dyssebeia, daimon of impiety.”

#28312 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“Aeschylus says that Dyssebeia is the mother of Hybris.”

#28641 · extracted by deepseek/deepseek-chat