Euthenia
deity earth Greek single tradition · 2
Euthenia is one of four daughters of Hephaestus and Aglaia according to the fifth-century AD Greek Neoplatonist philosopher Proclus. She and her sisters render the corporeal-formed nature decorated with beauty. She is described as a personified abstraction of an auspicious character and a descendant of Zeus.
↻ synthesized from 2 sources
When
- First attested
- 400 CE
- Attested period
- 400 – 500
- Historical notes
- Attested in fifth-century AD writings of Proclus; included in West's reconstruction of the Orphic Rhapsodies.
Relationships
- sibling of
- Eupheme, Philophrosyne, Eucleia
- child of
- Hephaestus, Aglaia
Mentioned by
Sources
wikipedia (2)
Source passages
“Eucleia, Euthenia, Eupheme, and Philophrosyne were, according to the fifth-century AD Greek Neoplatonist philosopher Proclus, the four daughters of Hephaestus and Aglaia: ... who render the corporeal-formed nature decorated with beauty.”
#28285 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5
“Her opposites were Euthenia and Ploutos.”
#45696 · extracted by openai/gpt-oss-20b:free