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Ἔρως Erōs

Etymology · Phonology · Orthography · Cultural Legacy · Primary Sources

Tier 1 Erōs.com
Erōs — Love, Desire, Attraction
01

Quick Facts

Essential information about Erōs, Love, Desire, Attraction

Original Script
Ἔρως
Unicode Restoration
Erōs
Reconstructed Pronunciation
/eˈrɔːs/
Pantheon
Greek
Domain
Love, Desire, Attraction
Meaning
Love, desire (from ἔραμαι)
Classification
Tier 1
Primary Domain
Erōs.com
Sacred Symbols
Bow and arrows, Wings, Torch, Rose, Heart
02

Etymology & Word Family

From original script to Unicode restoration

Original Script Ἔρως Erōs — "Love, desire (from ἔραμαι)"
Unicode Restoration Erōs Restored stress, length, and script
Modern ASCII eros Plain-ASCII fallback

The name Erōs carries the orthographic signature of the greek tradition: Ἔρως. Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattens.

03

Unicode Character Breakdown

Character-by-character philological analysis

CharacterUnicodeNameBlockPhonetic Role
EU+0045Latin Capital Letter EBasic LatinEpsilon
rU+0072Latin Small Letter RBasic LatinRho
ōU+014DLatin Small Letter O with MacronLatin Extended-AOmega: long omicron
sU+0073Latin Small Letter SBasic LatinSigma

The Tier 1 classification reflects which ancient features stress, length, or script are preserved in this restoration.

04

Cultural Significance

From ancient cult to modern Unicode

Ancient Domain

Erōs is not merely romance. He is the attraction that makes things move toward each other: fire upward, water downward, god toward mortal, atom toward atom. In the earliest Greek cosmogonies, Erōs is a primordial power; only later does he become the mischievous child of Aphrodite.

Erōs in Later Traditions

The Roman Cupido inherited Erōs's arrows and wings but gradually shrank from a handsome youth into a plump, blindfolded infant — the Renaissance putto. In Plato's Symposium, Erōs is redefined as the longing for beauty and the ladder from physical desire to the Form of the Good. For the Stoics, Erōs was a natural affinity (oikeiōsis) that binds the cosmos. Freud divided the psyche into Eros and Thanatos, life-drive and death-drive, making the Greek god the name of everything in us that seeks connection, pleasure, and life.

Modern Legacy

Erōs is one of the most productive words in European languages: "erotic," "erogenous," "erosion" (via the wearing-away of desire). He appears on Valentine's cards, in pop songs, in perfume advertisements, and in psychoanalytic theory. The image of the winged child with a bow — Cupid — is one of the most recognizable figures in Western art. Yet the archaic Erōs was more formidable: a beautiful young man who could unmake kings and gods. To restore the name Erōs with its long omega is to remember that desire is not trivial; it is one of the forces that turns the world.

Unicode Restoration as Cultural Act

Restoring Erōs in a domain name is more than orthographic accuracy. It is a statement that the internet should recognize the full range of human writing — not only the ASCII keyboard.

05

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Erōs, Love, Desire, Attraction, and Unicode restoration

How do you pronounce Erōs?

In reconstructed pronunciation, Erōs is /eˈrɔːs/ — approximately "eh-ROSS" — with the second syllable held longer than English allows; the o is deep and sustained..

What does Erōs mean?

Erōs means Love, desire (from ἔραμαι) in the greek tradition.

What are the symbols of Erōs?

Erōs is associated with Bow and arrows (The sudden wound of desire), Wings (The speed and inconstancy of longing), Torch (Illumination and the burning of the heart), Rose (Beauty and the thorn of love), Heart (The seat of emotion and the target of the god).

Why restore Erōs in Unicode?

Plain ASCII eros strips the stress, length, and script that make the name specific. Unicode restoration returns the name to its original written dignity.

What is the most important myth about Erōs?

Hesiod places Erōs fourth in the procession of being: after Cháos, Gaia, and Tartarus, but before the children of Night. "He is the most beautiful among the immortal gods," Hesiod writes, "he makes the limbs go limp and overcomes the intelligence and prudent counsel in the breasts of all gods and men" (Theogony 120–122).

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Scholarly Sources

The philological foundations of this restoration

Every claim on this page is grounded in established scholarship. The orthographic restorations follow disciplinary convention. The etymological chain follows the best available reference works. This is not invention — it is resurrection through scholarship.

Lexicography & Philology

  • Liddell, H. G., Scott, R., & Jones, H. S. A Greek-English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 9th ed. 1996.
  • Pape, W., & Benseler, G. E. Wörterbuch der griechischen Eigennamen. Braunschweig: Vieweg, 1884.
  • Beekes, R. S. P. Etymological Dictionary of Greek. Leiden: Brill, 2010.

Primary Texts

  • Homer. Iliad and Odyssey; Hesiod. Theogony and Works and Days.

Archaeology & Art History

  • Material evidence — iconography, inscriptions, and temple archaeology — for Erōs and related cults.

Religious Studies

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The Surface Awaits

You have traced the name from its earliest attestation to its Unicode restoration. Now return to the myth. The story is where the name lives.

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