PuniCodex

The Authentic Orthography

Ἀράχνη Arachnē

Weaver, Turned into Spider · Mythological weaver who was transformed into a spider

Tier 1 Arachnē.com
Arachnē — Weaver, Turned into Spider
01

The Authentic Name

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison

Original Script

Ἀράχνη

The name in its original Greek form. Arachnē (Ἀράχνη) is attested in the source tradition — “Mythological weaver who was transformed into a spider”. Its aspirated consonants, long vowels, and acute accents carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

arachne

Reduced to plain arachne, the name loses everything that made it specific: aspirated consonants, long vowels, and acute accents. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

Arachnē

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Arachnē restores aspirated consonants, long vowels, and acute accents, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
Arachnē.com → xn--arachn-u3a.com

The non-ASCII characters in Arachnē are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Arachnē.

02

Original Script & Provenance

How Arachnē is preserved in writing

Ἀράχνη
Original Script

A bespoke provenance study for Arachnē is being prepared by the PUNICODEX scholarly team.

Contribute scholarly provenance →
03

Pronunciation

How Arachnē was spoken

/a.rákʰ.nɛː/ Attic Greek Reconstruction
a- Short alpha [a], unstressed opening syllable.
-rá- Aspirated rho plus acute on short alpha [rákʰ] — the pitch peak and the root of 'spider'.
-knē Kappa-nu-eta [knɛː]; the -χνη ending is the same root seen in ἀράχνης, 'spider'.
04

The Weaver Transformed

Weaving, Hubris, Metamorphosis

Arachnē is the Lydian maiden whose weaving rivaled a goddess's and who was transformed into the first spider. Her myth is a meditation on skill, pride, and the dangerous boundary between human excellence and divine honor.

Master Weaver

Her tapestries were so fine that nymphs left their streams to watch her work.

Rival of Athena

She challenged Athena to a contest and wove the gods' scandals with flawless skill.

The Spider

Transformed into the first arachnid, she kept her gift but lost her human form.

Loom as Arena

The contest of weaving becomes a contest over who may speak truth about the gods.

Sacred Symbols

Loom The site of her contest with Athena and the instrument of her fame
Spider web The eternal trace of her transformed body and her unceasing craft
Hanging thread Arachne's attempted suicide by hanging, interrupted by Athena's metamorphosis
Tapestry of divine scandals Her impious but accurate portrayal of Zeus's seductions and deceptions
05

Mythology

Stories of Arachnē

Arachnē's myth turns on a contest of representation. She is not punished for bad weaving but for weaving too well — and for choosing a subject that shames the gods.

Ovid, Metamorphoses

The Challenge

Arachnē, a Lydian maiden, boasted that her skill surpassed Athena's. The goddess appeared as an old woman and warned her to repent. When Arachnē refused, Athena revealed herself and proposed a contest. Athena wove the glory of the gods; Arachnē wove their thefts and betrayals — Europa, Leda, Danaë, and others wronged by Olympian desire.

Ovid, Metamorphoses

The Transformation

Athena could find no flaw in Arachnē's work, yet its impiety enraged her. She struck the maiden, who hanged herself in shame. In pity or punishment, Athena sprinkled her with Hekate's herb and transformed her into a spider, condemning her and her descendants to weave forever.

Iconography

Weaving as Speech

The contest is one of the great myths about art itself. Arachnē's tapestry is 'true' but dangerous; Athena's is official but sanitized. The myth asks whether skill grants the right to tell forbidden truths, and whether divine power can tolerate accurate criticism.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Arachnē is the artist as transgressor. Her fingers knew what her tongue could not safely say. The loom became her printing press, her courtroom, her rebellion. Athena did not destroy the tapestry; she destroyed the weaver — a sign that the work itself could not be answered.

Enter Extended Lore
Arachnē mascot