PuniCodex

The Authentic Orthography

Ἥρα Hēra

Marriage, Women, Queen of Gods · Lady, mistress (possibly related to ἥρως)

Tier 1 Hēra.com
Hēra — Marriage, Women, Queen of Gods
01

The Authentic Name

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison

Original Script

Ἥρα

The name in its original Greek form. Hēra (Ἥρα) is attested in the source tradition — “Lady, mistress (possibly related to ἥρως)”. Its acute accents carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

hera

Reduced to plain hera, 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.

Unicode Restoration

Hēra

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Hēra restores acute accents, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
Hēra.com → xn--hra-3qa.com

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

02

Original Script & Provenance

How Hēra travels from ancient script to the modern URL

Ἥρα
Greek
Hēra
Reading: /hɛːˈra/
Reconstruction: /hɛːˈra/
Greek alphabet (Classical / Attic) · left-to-right · Ancient Greek, c. 8th century BCE – present · Greece and the Greek-speaking Mediterranean
Greek letter Ἥ
Letter
Greek letter with its classical phonetic value; accents mark pitch and length.
ρ
Greek letter ρ
ρ
Letter
Greek letter with its classical phonetic value; accents mark pitch and length.
α
Greek letter α
α
Letter
Greek letter with its classical phonetic value; accents mark pitch and length.
Original Script
Ἥρα
Indigenous writing
Transliteration
Hēra
Scholarly reading
Unicode Restoration
Hēra
Registrable form
Punycode
xn--Hra-3qa.com
DNS encoding
ASCII Fallback
hera
Flattened spelling

Etymology

Greek Ἥρα; possibly related to ἥρως “hero, lord" or to a pre-Greek substrate; queen of the gods.

Meaning

Marriage, Women, Queen of Gods

From original to transliteration

  1. The Greek form Ἥρα is written in the Classical Greek alphabet.
  2. Letters with acute, grave, or circumflex accents preserve the pitch accent of Ancient Greek.
  3. Macrons and omegas (η, ω) mark long vowels, a feature lost in the plain ASCII form.
  4. The Unicode restoration Hēra encodes the scholarly spelling as a registrable domain name.
  • Ἥρα Original script
  • Hēra Unicode restoration
  • hera ASCII fallback
  • Hesiod, Theogony
    c. 700 BCE Greece Hesiod, Theogony 116–125
  • Homeric Hymns
    c. 700–500 BCE Greece Homeric Hymns, selected hymns
  • Homer, Iliad and Odyssey
    c. 750–650 BCE Greece Homer, Iliad and Odyssey, selected passages
Beekes, Etymological Dictionary of GreekTier 1
Chantraine, Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecqueTier 2
Liddell-Scott-Jones (LSJ)Tier 1
Pape-BenselerTier 1

DNS / IDN note

The Unicode restoration Hēra preserves Greek stress and length; the ASCII form hera loses these features.

  • !The exact phonetic realization of pitch accent in Classical Greek is reconstructed.
  • !Some letters (e.g., ζ) had dialectal pronunciations that remain debated.
  • !Classical Greek accents originally marked pitch, not stress; the later Byzantine stress pronunciation is conventional today.
  • !Some names may be pre-Greek loans, making purely Greek etymologies uncertain.
03

Pronunciation

How Hēra was spoken

/hɛ́.rā/ Attic Greek Reconstruction
Hē- Short epsilon with rough breathing, pitched high — the name exhales authority.
-rā Rho plus long alpha — the final syllable opens broadly, like a queen's gesture.
04

The Queen of Olympus

Marriage, Sovereignty, Women, and the Ritual Year

Hēra is the queen of the gods by marriage, not birth. Her power is inseparable from her status as Zeús's wife, and her mythology is dominated by the defense of legitimate marriage and royal order against every challenge — especially her husband's infidelities.

Marriage and Fidelity

Patron of the wedded state; the gamos, or sacred marriage, is her rite.

Royal Sovereignty

Queen of gods and men; kingship legitimized through her partnership with Zeús.

Childbirth

Eileithyia, goddess of childbirth, acts at her command; she protects women in labor.

The Peacock

The hundred-eyed Argos, her faithful watcher, set in the tail of her sacred bird.

Sacred Symbols

Peacock The transformed Argos Panoptês, whose eyes still watch
Pomegranate Fertility, marriage, and the blood of the underworld
Sceptre Queenship and authority
Crown or diadem Royal dignity
Cow The animal of Hēra, especially at Argos
Lily Purity and the bridal bed
05

Mythology

Stories of Hēra

Hēra's myths are almost all variations on one theme: the wronged wife defending her throne. She cannot overthrow Zeús, but she can punish his lovers and their children with relentless ingenuity.

The Marriage

The Sacred Wedding of Zeús and Hēra

Zeús and Hēra were married in a sacred ceremony on the island of Samos, one of her great cult centers. Their wedding night lasted three hundred years, according to one tradition, establishing the pattern of divine marriage. The hieros gamos, or sacred marriage, was reenacted in ritual across the Greek world to ensure fertility and cosmic order.

The Revenge

The Persecution of Hēraklēs

Hēra hated Hēraklēs because he was the son of Zeús and the mortal Alcmene — living proof of her husband's infidelity. She sent serpents to kill him in his cradle, drove him to madness, and imposed the Twelve Labors. Yet her persecution made him immortal: without Hēra's hatred, there is no Hēraklēs. The myth turns a queen's vengeance into the engine of heroism.

The Watchman

Argos Panoptês

When Zeús loved the nymph Io, Hēra set the hundred-eyed Argos to watch over her. Hermês slew Argos at Zeús's command, and Hēra placed his eyes in the tail of the peacock. The peacock thus carries her unceasing vigilance; nothing escapes the queen's notice.

The Revolt

The Binding of Zeús

In Iliad 1.396–406, Hēra mentions that she once joined Poseidôn and Athena in chaining Zeús. The Theban poet boasted that he could cast Hephaestus from heaven. The myth hints at an older stratum in which Hēra was not merely the wronged wife but a cosmic power in her own right.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Hēra is the goddess of the institution that survives passion. Her marriage to Zeús is not romantic; it is the pillar of cosmic order. Every affair threatens not just her dignity but the legitimacy of Olympus itself. That is why her vengeance is implacable: she is not merely jealous, she is defending the structure of things.

Enter Extended Lore
Hēra mascot