The Authentic Orthography
Hunt, Wilderness, Moon · Safe, unharmed (from ἀρτεμής)

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison
Ἄρτεμις
The name in its original Greek form. Ártemis (Ἄρτεμις) is attested in the source tradition — “Safe, unharmed (from ἀρτεμής)”. Its acute accents carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.
artemis
Reduced to plain artemis, the name loses everything that made it specific: acute accents. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.
Ártemis
The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Ártemis restores acute accents, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.
Ártemis.com → xn--rtemis-ota.com
The non-ASCII characters in Ártemis are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Ártemis.
How Ártemis travels from ancient script to the modern URL
Greek Ἄρτεμις; possibly related to ἀρτεμής “safe, unharmed" or to a pre-Greek Anatolian goddess.
Hunt, Wilderness, Moon
The Unicode restoration Ártemis preserves Greek stress and length; the ASCII form artemis loses these features.
How Ártemis was spoken
Hunt, Wilderness, the Moon, and Childbirth
Ártemis is Apóllōn's twin but his opposite. Where he imposes order, she preserves wildness. She is the huntress who protects the animals she kills, the virgin who oversees childbirth, the goddess of the liminal space between city and forest, child and adult, human and beast.
She ranges mountains and forests with her nymphs, bringing sudden death to prey and hunters alike.
Marshes, groves, and mountain passes are hers; she guards the boundary between the tamed and the untamed.
As Lochia and Kourotrophos, she eases birth and protects the young — despite her own eternal virginity.
Later tradition identifies her with Selene; her silver bow becomes the crescent moon.
Stories of Ártemis
Ártemis's myths are almost all about the protection of boundaries — between virgin and sexual, wild and civilized, mortal and divine. Those who cross them pay terribly.
Like her twin Apóllōn, Ártemis was born on Delos after Lētô wandered the earth under Hêra's curse. The Homeric Hymn to Apollo says she was born first and then helped deliver her brother — making her, paradoxically, the virgin goddess of childbirth. The island that sheltered the twins became one of the most sacred places in the Aegean.
The hunter Actaeon stumbled upon Ártemis bathing with her nymphs. In punishment, she transformed him into a stag, and his own hounds tore him apart. The myth is a stark boundary marker: the wild goddess cannot be seen by the male gaze. Some later writers blame Actaeon's hubris, others his bad luck; all agree the penalty is absolute.
Callisto was a nymph sworn to Ártemis's virginity whom Zeús seduced in disguise. When her pregnancy was discovered, Ártemis — in some versions, at Hêra's prompting — transformed her into a bear. Her son Arcas nearly killed her, and Zeús placed them both in the sky as the constellations Ursa Major and Arctophylax. The myth dramatizes the impossibility of maintaining virginity in a world ruled by Zeús's desire.
When the Greek fleet was becalmed at Aulis on its way to Troy, the seer Calchas declared that Ártemis demanded the sacrifice of Agamemnon's daughter Iphigenia. In some versions she dies; in others Ártemis substitutes a deer and carries Iphigenia to Tauris to serve as her priestess. The story makes Ártemis both the demander of blood and the merciful rescuer — the double face of the hunt.
Ártemis is the goddess of the untouched. Not the virginity of inexperience, but the virginity of self-possession. She hunts not because she lacks feeling but because she has chosen a boundary and will kill to defend it. The forest is not her prison; it is her chosen territory.
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