In ancient Greek religion, Hegemone (Ancient Greek : Ἡγεμόνη, from the feminine form of ἡγεμών, 'leader, guide') [1] was, according to the geographer Pausanias, the name given to one of the two Charites at Athens (the other being Auxo). [2] Hegemone, as the name of a Charis, can be understood to mean "she who leads" in the sense of "brings the plants forth from the earth". [3] Hegemone, along with Auxo, and several other deities including Ares, and Zeus, was invoked as witness to the civic oath sworn by the ephebes of Athens. [4]
Hegemone was also an epithet of the goddesses Artemis and Aphrodite. [5] As applied to Artemis, the name Hegemone is variously translated as "Leader", [6] "Queen", [7] or "Guide". [8] Pausanias reports that Artemis Hegemone had a temple at Lycosura in Arcadia, and a sanctuary at Sparta. [9] The third-century BC poet Callimachus seems to have applied the epithet to Artemis as the guide of the colonists who founded Miletus. [10] Inscriptions attest the presence of a cult of Aphrodite Hegemone, at Rhamnus. [11]