Eunomia

deity sky Greek single tradition · 5

Eunomia, whose name means "order," is one of the three Horae in most accounts. She is the daughter of Zeus and Themis.

↻ synthesized from 5 sources

When

First attested
700 BCE
Attested period
-700 – 2020
Historical notes
One of the three Horae in most classical Greek accounts, daughter of Zeus and Themis.

Relationships

sibling of
Dike, Euphrosyne, Thalia, Eirene
allied with
Eucleia, Peitho, Harmonia
child of
Zeus, Horae, Themis

Expand to full subgraph →

Sources

Source passages

“in most other accounts their number is three; Eirene ("peace"), Eunomia ("order"), and Dike ("justice"), and their parents are Zeus and Themis instead.”

#19025 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5

“Eucleia is often shown (usually with Eunomia) among the several goddesses in the retinue of Aphrodite Pandemos (Aphrodite of all the People). These goddesses are a collection of personified abstractions representing virtues such as Eucleia (Good Repute), Eunomia (Good Order), Peitho (Persuasion), and Harmonia (Harmony)”

#28281 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“West describes these four sisters, as being among the several descendants of Zeus (such as Eunomia, Dike, Thalia, and Euphrosyne) who are "personified abstractions of an auspicious character."”

#28291 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5

“Eunomia (Εὐνομία, "Order", her Roman equivalent was Disciplina) was the goddess of law and legislation. The same or a different goddess may have been a daughter of Hermes and Aphrodite.”

#28637 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“with whom he has the Horae, listed as Eunomia, Dike and Eirene...”

#45288 · extracted by openai/gpt-oss-120b:free