PUNYCODEX
Pantheon Lexicon Type Tiers

The Authentic Orthography

Ἥρα Hēra

Queen of the Gods · Guardian of Marriage · Sovereign of Olympus

Tier‑1 hēra.com
Hēra — Queen of the Gods, crowned in peacock feathers
01

The Authentic Name

Why hēra.com is the correct form

Greek Original

Ἥρα

The name in its original Greek form, with smooth breathing and the long vowel η (ēta). The alpha is long as well — a name of sustained, resonant power. It is not a sharp word. It is a word that holds.

ASCII Constraint

HERA

Reduced to four blunt letters. A constellation name, a NASA mission, a software package. The queen became an abbreviation. The long vowels — the very length of her authority — were erased.

Unicode Restoration

hēra

The macron on ē restores the long vowel length. The Greek Ἥρα carries an acute on the η, which is also long — stress and length fused into a single mark. Because the original has both features, hēra is Tier‑1: the full scholarly orthography. This is not incomplete. It is structurally perfect.

Punycode Encoding
hēra.com → xn--hera-w6a.com

The non-ASCII character ē (U+0113) is encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Hēra.

02

Pronunciation

How the Queen was truly spoken

/hɛː.ŕːː/ Attic Greek Reconstruction
h- Rough breathing — an initial [h] sound that smooths into the vowel. Present in the archaic form, though sometimes dropped in later dialects. It is the breath before the decree.
-ɛː- Long open-mid front unrounded vowel, held longer than a short epsilon. The macron in our transliteration marks this length — the sound of authority sustained.
-rː The rho is likely a tap or trill, and the following alpha is long. The word ends in open resonance — a name that does not cut off, but lingers.
03

The Queen

Domains, symbols, and divine sovereignty

Hēra is not the wife of the king. She is the institution that makes him king. Every Sacred Marriage (Hieros Gamos) in Greek cult reenacted her union with Zeús. Every legitimate ruler needed her blessing. She is the guardian of the threshold — the door between maidenhood and sovereignty, between chaos and household order. To dishonor Hēra was to unravel civilization itself.

Sacred Marriage

The Hieros Gamos — the template for all legitimate union. She does not merely bless marriage; she is its structural integrity.

Childbirth

As Eileithyia in her oldest aspect, she presides over birth itself — the threshold between womb and world, the most dangerous passage of all.

Royalty

The peacock throne, the golden scepter, the hundred eyes. She is the standard by which all queens are measured. Her vanity is sovereignty displayed.

Women

Protector of wives, mothers, and daughters. In a world where women held limited public power, Hēra was the divine authority who saw them.

Sacred Symbols

Peacock The hundred eyes of Argus, placed on its tail by Hēra — vigilance made beautiful
Golden Winged Scepter The queen's authority, divine right made material
Pomegranate Fertility, blood, and the sealed marriage — like Persephonē's, but claimed by consent
Crown of Peacock Feathers Majesty that watches in all directions — beauty as surveillance
Lily Purity and regal grace, the Argive flower sacred to her cult
Cow Ancient fertility symbol; Io's form when Hēra transformed her rival
04

The Myths

Stories of sovereignty and vengeance

The Sacred Marriage

Hieros Gamos

The marriage of Hēra and Zeús was the foundational ritual of Olympus. It was reenacted annually in Greek cities — most famously at Samos and Argos — to ensure the fertility of the land and the legitimacy of the social order. She was swallowed by no Titan and born from no skull. Her power came from institution: the throne, the crown, the marriage bed as the axis of civilization.

The Rival

Io and the Hundred Eyes

When Zeús fell for Io, Hēra did not weep — she acted. She turned Io into a heifer and set Argus Panoptes, the all-seeing giant, to watch her. When Hermēs slew Argus, Hēra took his hundred eyes and placed them on the tail of her sacred peacock. Vigilance, in her theology, is never wasted. It is simply redecorated.

The Vengeance

Heracles and the Madness

Heracles — the hero whose very name means "Glory of Hēra" — was her greatest torment. She drove him mad, made him kill his wife and children, then forced him to atone through the Twelve Labors. But look closer: every labor made him greater. Hēra did not destroy her husband's bastards out of mere jealousy. She forged them into legends, knowing that their glory would ultimately reflect on the house she ruled.

The War

The Judgment of Paris

When Paris of Troy was asked to choose the most beautiful goddess, Hēra offered him power — Asia itself. He chose Aphrodítē instead, and Hēra never forgave him. She became the Greeks' divine champion in the Trojan War, personally riding into battle, seducing Zeús to turn the tide, and ensuring Troy's fall. She does not lose gracefully. She does not lose at all.

The PUNYCODEX

The Throne Beside the Thunder

Zeús rules the sky. Hēra rules the meaning of that rule. Without her, he is merely power. With her, he is legitimacy. Across the encoded web, their counterparts wait — each deity restored to their true name, each domain a temple.

This is not a directory. This is a resurrection.

Enter the Codex
Hēra mascot

Experience the Name

See how Hēra behaves in the PUNYCODEX Type Tool — with predictive autocomplete, character-by-character breakdown, and scholarly constraint validation.

hera Hēra
Open in Type Tool

Name Variations

The many faces of Hēra across scripts and conventions.

Primary — Owned
Hēra
Macron-only form

Our active domain. Standard academic convention with macron on eta. The ideal combined form was unavailable.

hēra.com
Ideal — Unavailable
Hḗra
Macron + acute form

Fully accurate with both marks. Domain unavailable.

Unavailable
ASCII
Hera
Modern English form

Modern English form.

hera.com (taken)