PuniCodex

The Authentic Orthography

Ἠώς Ēōs

Dawn, Morning Red · Dawn (from ἠώς)

Tier 1 Ēōs
Ēōs — Dawn, Morning Red
01

The Authentic Name

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison

Original Script

Ἠώς

The name in its original Greek form. Ēōs (Ἠώς) is attested in the source tradition — “Dawn (from ἠώς)”. Its long vowels and acute accents carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

eos

Reduced to plain eos, the name loses everything that made it specific: 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

Ēōs

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Ēōs restores 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
Ēōs.com → xn--s-oia8o.com

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

02

Original Script & Provenance

How Ēōs is preserved in writing

Ἠώς
Original Script

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

Contribute scholarly provenance →
03

Pronunciation

How Ēōs was spoken

/ɛː.ɔ̌ːs/ Homeric/Attic Greek Reconstruction
Ē- Long eta [ɛː], the first syllable drawn out like the first pale light.
-ōs Long omega with acute or circumflex [ɔ̌ːs], the pitch peak and the root meaning 'dawn'.
04

The Rose-Fingered Goddess

Dawn, Morning Light, New Beginnings

Ēōs is the goddess of dawn, daughter of Hyperion and Theía, sister of Hēlios and Selēnē. Each morning she rises from the sea in a saffron robe and opens the gates of day, scattering light across the world.

Bringer of Day

She opens the gates of heaven so Hēlios can ride his chariot across the sky.

Rose-Fingered

The Homeric epithet rhododáktylos describes the red light of early morning touching the world.

Lover of Mortals

She abducted Tithonos, Kephalos, and Orion, loving mortals whose fates ended in grief.

Saffron Robe

She wears the golden-red robe of morning light across sea and mountain.

Sacred Symbols

Saffron or rosy light The color of the dawn sky and her garments
Wings or winged chariot Her swift passage across the horizon
The morning star The last star visible as she rises
Tithonos turning into a cicada The emblem of her failed request for his immortality without youth
05

Mythology

Stories of Ēōs

Ēōs is beautiful and inconsolable. Her myths turn on love for mortals and the tragedy of asking the gods for the wrong gift.

Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite

Tithonos and the Cicada

Ēōs loved the Trojan prince Tithonos and asked Zeus to grant him immortality. She forgot to ask for eternal youth. Tithonos aged endlessly, shrinking until he became a cicada, whose chirping is the sound of immortal old age. The myth is a meditation on the limits of divine gifts.

Odyssey

The Abduction of Kephalos

Ēōs abducted the handsome hunter Kephalos and bore him a son, Phaethon. In some versions she later restores him to his wife Prokris, but the damage is done: suspicion and a tragic hunting accident destroy the marriage.

Iliad

Dawn over Troy

Homer opens many books with the formula 'Dawn appeared, rosy-fingered.' Ēōs is the daily return of possibility: every battle, every journey, every reconciliation begins with her light. Her presence is so regular it becomes sacred.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Ēōs is persistence. She returns every morning whether we are ready or not. In that regularity there is mercy: no night is final, no darkness permanent. Yet she also carries the memory of Tithonos, the beloved who could not die and could not be young. Her dawn is therefore bittersweet.

Enter Extended Lore
Ēōs mascot