2012 phenomenon
29 BC
Aaru
Achilles
Aeneid
Aes Sedai
Ages of Man
Alexander Pope
Alexandria
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Amazons
Amphidromia
Ancient Egyptian religion#Mythology
Ancient Greece
Anemoi
Aphrodite
Apollo
Arcadia
Arcadia (utopia)
Arda
Arda Healed
Arda Marred
Arda Unmarred
Ares
Argonauts
Artemis
Arthur Oncken Lovejoy
Asclepius
Asgard
Ashrams
Astraea (mythology)
Athena
Avalon
Baldr
Bharatanatyam
Brahma Kumaris
Buddhism
Caucasus
Celtic mythology
Centaur
Charon (mythology)
Chinese mythology
Christianity
Chthonic
Classical mythology
Concepts in the Wheel of Time series#Items of Power
Continental Germanic mythology
Cratylus
Cyclops
D. H. Lawrence
Dagor Dagorath
Daphnis
Degrees of glory#Celestial kingdom
Degrees of glory#Telestial kingdom
Degrees of glory#Terrestrial kingdom
Deism
Delos
Delphi
Demeter
Deva (Buddhism)
Dionysian Mysteries
Dionysus
Dodona
Dragons in Greek mythology
Dutch Golden Age
Easter
Eclogue
Eclogues
Eldar (Middle-earth)
Eleusinian Mysteries
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Elves in fantasy fiction and games
Elysium
Empedocles
Empyrean
Eos
Epic poetry
Epimetheus (mythology)
Erinyes
Eros
Erwin Panofsky
Eschatology
Et in Arcadia ego
Eusebius of Cesarea
Fólkvangr
Fantasy world
Fortunate Isles
Gaia (mythology)
Gaius Julius Hyginus
Garden of Eden
Georgics
Giants (Greek mythology)
Gimlé
Golden Age
Golden Age (disambiguation)
Golden Age of American animation
Golden Age of Comics
Golden Age of Hollywood
Golden Age of Piracy
Golden Age of Porn
29 BC
Aaru
Achilles
Aeneid
Aes Sedai
Ages of Man
Alexander Pope
Alexandria
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Amazons
Amphidromia
Ancient Egyptian religion#Mythology
Ancient Greece
Anemoi
Aphrodite
Apollo
Arcadia
Arcadia (utopia)
Arda
Arda Healed
Arda Marred
Arda Unmarred
Ares
Argonauts
Artemis
Arthur Oncken Lovejoy
Asclepius
Asgard
Ashrams
Astraea (mythology)
Athena
Avalon
Baldr
Bharatanatyam
Brahma Kumaris
Buddhism
Caucasus
Celtic mythology
Centaur
Charon (mythology)
Chinese mythology
Christianity
Chthonic
Classical mythology
Concepts in the Wheel of Time series#Items of Power
Continental Germanic mythology
Cratylus
Cyclops
D. H. Lawrence
Dagor Dagorath
Daphnis
Degrees of glory#Celestial kingdom
Degrees of glory#Telestial kingdom
Degrees of glory#Terrestrial kingdom
Deism
Delos
Delphi
Demeter
Deva (Buddhism)
Dionysian Mysteries
Dionysus
Dodona
Dragons in Greek mythology
Dutch Golden Age
Easter
Eclogue
Eclogues
Eldar (Middle-earth)
Eleusinian Mysteries
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Elves in fantasy fiction and games
Elysium
Empedocles
Empyrean
Eos
Epic poetry
Epimetheus (mythology)
Erinyes
Eros
Erwin Panofsky
Eschatology
Et in Arcadia ego
Eusebius of Cesarea
Fólkvangr
Fantasy world
Fortunate Isles
Gaia (mythology)
Gaius Julius Hyginus
Garden of Eden
Georgics
Giants (Greek mythology)
Gimlé
Golden Age
Golden Age (disambiguation)
Golden Age of American animation
Golden Age of Comics
Golden Age of Hollywood
Golden Age of Piracy
Golden Age of Porn
This article is about mythological Golden Age(s). For metaphorical uses, see Golden age (metaphor). For other uses, see Golden Age (disambiguation).
This article needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2007)
The Golden Age by Pietro da Cortona.
The term Golden Age (Χρυσόν Γένος) comes from Greek mythology and legend and refers to the first in a sequence of four or five (or more) Ages of Man, in which the Golden Age is first, followed in sequence, by the Silver, Bronze, and Iron Ages, and then the present, a period of decline. By extension "Golden Age" denotes a period of primordial peace, harmony, stability, and prosperity.
There are analogous concepts in the religious and philosophical traditions of the Central Asian subcontinent. For example, the Vedic or ancient Hindu culture saw history as cyclical, composed of yugas with alternating Dark and Golden Ages. The Kali yuga (Iron Age), Dwapara (Bronze Age), Treta yuga (Silver Age) and Satya yuga (Golden Age) correspond to the four Greek ages. Similar beliefs occur in the ancient Middle East and throughout the ancient world, as well.
In classical mythology the Golden Age was presided over by the deity Astraea, who was identified with Justice. She lived with men until the end of the Silver Age, but in the Brazen Age, when men became violent and greedy, fled to the stars, where she appears as the constellation Virgo, holding the scales of Justice, or Libra.1
European Pastoral literary and iconographic tradition often depicted nymphs and shepherds as living a life of rustic innocence and simplicity, untainted by the corruptions of civilization — a continuation of the Golden Age — set in an idealized Arcadia, a region of Greece that was the abode and center of worship of their tutelary deity, goat-footed Pan, who dwelt among them.2 This idealized and nostalgic vision of the simple life, however, was sometimes contested and even ridiculed, both in antiquity and later on.
Contents
1 The Golden Age in Europe: Greece
1.1 Arcadia
2 The Golden Age in Rome: Virgil and Ovid
3 Political significance of the Golden Age
4 "Soft" and "hard" primitivism in Arcadia
5 Death of Pan and the passing of the Golden Age
6 Other Golden Ages
6.1 Hindu
6.2 Norse
6.3 Fantasy
6.4 Present-day usage
7 See also
8 References
9 External links
The Golden Age in Europe: Greece
Golden Age Center: Seeking help to help others
From July of 2009 to June of 2010, Woodbine’s Golden Age Center served approximately 8,500 meals to either homebound citizens or those seeking fellowship and an affordable meal Monday through Friday. Unfortunately, that number is almost the same for their annual expenses – something the center has been struggling with.
Golden Age
Golden Age. 119 N Peoria St. #2D. Chicago, IL 60607 USA +1 312 288 8535. Visit: Wed - Sun, ... on Twitter. Email Address: * © Golden Age 2010 / Terms & Conditions ...
The European myth of the Ages of Man first appears in the late sixth and early 7th century BCE in the Greek poet Hesiod's Works and Days (109-126). Hesiod, a deteriorationist, identifies the Golden Age, the Silver Age, the Bronze Age, the Heroic Age, and the Iron Age. With the exception of the Heroic Age, each succeeding age was worse than the one that went before. Hesiod maintains that during the Golden Age, before the invention of the arts and of private property, primitive communism prevailed, and the earth produced food in such abundance that there was no need for agriculture:
[Men] lived like gods without sorrow of heart, remote and free from toil and grief: miserable age rested not on them; but with legs and arms never failing they made merry with feasting beyond the reach of all devils. When they died, it was as though they were overcome with sleep, and they had all good things; for the fruitful earth unforced bare them fruit abundantly and without stint. They dwelt in ease and peace.
Plato in his Cratylus referred to an age of golden men and also expounded at some length on Ages of Man from Hesiod's Works and Days. The Roman poet Ovid simplified the concept by reducing the number of Ages to four: Gold, Bronze, Silver, and Iron. Ovid's poetry, known to schoolboys from Antiquity through the Middle Ages and beyond, was likely a prime source for the transmission of the myth of the Golden Age during the period when Western Europe had lost direct contact with Greek literature.
The Golden Age by Lucas Cranach the Elder.
In Hesiod's version, the Golden Age ended when the Titan Prometheus conferred on mankind the gift of fire and all the other arts. For this, Zeus punished Prometheus by chaining him to a rock in the Caucasus, where an eagle eternally ate at his liver. Prometheus's brother Epimetheus received from the gods the gift of the beautiful maiden Pandora, whose uncontrollable curiosity caused her to open the box which she had been entrusted, unleashing all manner of evil in the world.
The Orphic school, a mystery cult that originated in Thrace and spread to Greece in the 5th century B. C. E., held similar beliefs about the early days of man, likewise denominating the ages with metals. In common with the many other mystery cults prevalent in the Graeco-Roman world (and their Indo-European religious antecedents), the world view of Orphism was cyclical. Initiation into its secret rites, together with ascetic practices, was supposed to guarantee the individual's soul eventual release from the "grievous circle" of mortality and also communion with god(s). Orphics sometimes identified the Golden Age with the era of the god Phanes, who was regent over the Olympus before Cronus. In classical mythology however, the Golden Age was associated with the reign of Saturn. In the 5th century B. C. E., the philosopher Empedocles, like Hesiod before him, emphasized the idea of primordial innocence and harmony in all of nature, including human society, from which he maintained there had been a steady deterioration until the present.
Arcadia
L. Ron Hubbard Stories from the Golden Age Surpass One Million Mark
L. Ron Hubbard books, Stories from the Golden Age, sell over a million copies. (PRWeb March 02, 2011) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/3/prweb8176533.htm
Golden Age of Comic Books - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Golden Age of Comic Books was a period in the history of American ... One event cited for the beginning of the Golden Age was the 1938 debut of Superman in Action Comics #1, ...
A tradition arose in Greece that the site of the original Golden Age had been Arcadia, an impoverished rural area of Greece where the herdsmen still lived on acorns and where the goat-footed god Pan had his home among the poplars on Mount Maenalus. However, in the 3rd century BCE, the Greek poet, Theocritus, writing in Alexandria, set his pastoral poetry in on the lushly fertile island of Sicily, where he had been born. The protagonist of Theocritus's first Idyll, the goat herder, Daphnis, is taught to play the Syrinx (panpipes) by Pan himself.
Sculpture of Pan teaching Daphnis to play the pipes; ca. 100 B.C. Found in Pompeii.
The Golden Age in Rome: Virgil and Ovid
Writing in Latin during the turbulent period of revolutionary change at the end of the Roman Republic (roughly between 44 and 38 BC), the poet Virgil moved the setting for his pastoral imitations of Theocritus back to an idealized Arcadia in Greece, thus initiating a rich and resonant tradition in subsequent European literature.
Virgil, moreover, introduced into his poetry the element of political allegory, which had been largely absent in Theocritus, even intimating in his fourth Eclogue that a new Golden Age of peace and justice was about to return:
Ultima Cumaei venit iam carminis aetas; magnus ab integro saeclorum nascitur ordo: iam redit et Virgo, redeunt Saturnia regna; iam nova progenies caelo demittitur alto.
Translation:
Now the last age by Cumae's Sibyl sung Has come and gone, and the majestic roll Of circling centuries begins anew: Astraea returns, Returns old Saturn's reign, With a new breed of men sent down from heaven.3
Somewhat later, shortly before he wrote his epic poem the Aeneid, which dealt with the establishment of Roman Imperial rule, Virgil composed his Georgics (29 BC), modeled directly on Hesiod's Works and Days and similar Greek works. Ostensibly about agriculture, the Georgics are in fact a complex allegory about how man's alterations of nature (through works) are related to good and bad government. Although Virgil does not mention the Golden Age by name in the Georgics, he does refer in them to a time of primitive communism before the reign of Jupiter, when:
Fields knew no taming hand of husbandmen To mark the plain or mete with boundary-line. Even this was impious; for the common stock They gathered, and the earth of her own will All things more freely, no man bidding, bore.
ante Iouem nulli subigebant arua coloni ne signare quidem aut partiri limite campum fas erat; in medium quaerebant, ipsaque tellus omnia liberius nullo poscente ferebat. (Georgics, Book 1: 125–28)
Golden Age Resources, Inc. (GDAR) Finalizes Acquisition of National Clinical Technology, Inc.
PALM BEACH GARDENS, FL--(Marketwire - March 2, 2011) - Golden Age Resources, Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : GDAR ) announced today that it has completed the requirements of the Letter of Intent to acquire 100% of the issued and outstanding stock of National Clinical Technology, Inc. (NCT) and its wholly owned subsidiary Spine & Muscle Rehabilitation, Inc. (SMR), and to acquire 100% of the medical related ...
golden age: Definition from Answers.com
golden age n. A period of great peace, prosperity, and happiness. Greek & Roman Mythology . The first age of the world, an untroubled and prosperous
This view, which identifies a State of Nature with the celestial harmony of which man's nature is (or should be, if properly regulated) a microcosm, reflects the Hellenistic cosmology that prevailed among literate classes of Virgil's era. It is seen again in Ovid's Metamorphoses (AD 7), in which the lost Golden Age is depicted as a place and time when, because nature and reason were harmoniously aligned, men were naturally good:
The Golden Age was first; when Man, yet new, No rule but uncorrupted Reason knew: And, with a native bent, did good pursue. Unforc'd by punishment, un-aw'd by fear.
His words were simple, and his soul sincere; Needless was written law, where none opprest: The law of Man was written in his breast.4
The Graeco-Roman concept of the "natural man" delineated by Ovid and many other classical writers, was especially popular during the Deistically inclined 18th century. It is often erroneously attributed to Rousseau, who did not share it.5
Political significance of the Golden Age
The political interpretation given the Golden Age by Virgil, who situated it in the future, resurfaced in subsequent eras of revolutionary change. The Protestant Queen Elizabeth I of England was frequently hailed by her supporters as the virgin goddess Astraea,6 and the famous lines of Virgil's fourth Eclogue quoted above are supposed to be the source of the motto Novus ordo seclorum (New Order of the Ages) that appears on the Great Seal of the United States. The British poet Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822) hailed the promise of the romantic and revolutionary era with these lines, which foretell the dissolution of empires and the advent of a new religion, superior even to Christianity:
The world's great age begins anew, The golden years return, The earth doth like a snake renew Her winter weeds outworn; Heaven smiles, and faiths and empires gleam Like wrecks of a dissolving dream.... Saturn and Love their long repose Shall burst, more bright and good Than all who fell, than One who rose, Than many unsubdued. Not gold, not blood, their altar dowers, But votive tears and symbol flowers.7
"Soft" and "hard" primitivism in Arcadia
In his famous essay, "Et in Arcadia ego: Poussin and the Elegaic Tradition",8 Erwin Panofsky remarks how in ancient times, "that particular not overly opulent, region of central Greece, Arcady, came to be universally accepted as an ideal realm of perfect bliss and beauty, a dream incarnate of ineffable happiness, surrounded nevertheless with a halo of 'sweetly sad' melancholy":
Golden Age Center menu
Wed., Mar. 2: Corned beef brisket, baby red potatoes, seasoned cabbage, rye bread/margarine, apricot halves.
Golden Age Heroes
AMAZING GOLDEN AGE ADVENTURE FUNNIES #2 is now available! Featuring ... I track most the hero's via Howard Keltner's Golden Age Comic Books Index 1935-1955 (an awesome index of ...
There had been, from the beginning of classical speculation, two contrasting opinions about the natural state of man, each of them, of course, a "Gegen-Konstruktion" to the conditions under which it was formed. One view, termed "soft" primitivism in an illuminating book by Lovejoy and Boas9 conceives of primitive life as a golden age of plenty, innocence, and happiness—in other words, as civilized life purged of its vices. The other, "hard" form of primitivism conceives of primitive life as an almost subhuman existence full of terrible hardships and devoid of all comforts—in other words, as civilized life stripped of its virtues.
Arcady, as we encounter it in all modern literature, and as we refer to it in our daily speech, falls under the heading of “soft" or golden-age primitivism. To be sure, this real Arcady was the domain of Pan, who could be heard playing the syrinx on Mount Maenalus; and its inhabitants were famous for their musical accomplishments as well as for their ancient lineage, rugged virtue, and rustic hospitality.
Death of Pan and the passing of the Golden Age
A story is recounted by Plutarch in his De Oraculorum Defectu (The Obsolescence of Oracles) that sailors heard a cry, "Great Pan is dead!" sweeping across the waves of the Mediterranean, and at that moment the pagan oracles suddenly ceased. Pan is the only pagan god whose death is thus recorded. Subsequently, a tradition grew up among Christian commentators, notably Eusebius of Cesarea, (263–339), in his Praeparatio Evangelica, that the death of Pan coincided with the advent of Jesus, occurring either on the occasion of his birth or of his crucifixion on the first Easter:
The Oracles are dumb, No voice or hideous hum Runs through the archèd roof in words deceiving. Apollo from his shrine Can no more divine, With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving. No nightly trance, or breathèd spell, Inspire's the pale-eyed Priest from the prophetic cell. The lonely mountains o're, And the resounding shore A voice of weeping heard and loud lament. From haunted spring, and dale Edg'd with poplar pale, The parting Genius is with sighing sent. With flowre-inwov'n tresses torn, The Nymphs in twilight shade of tangled thickets mourn.— John Milton, On the Morning of Christ's Nativity [XIX, XX, 1629]
This 17th-century passage, with its poignant evocation of the luminous world of Greek mythology (within a context, nevertheless, of Protestant devotion), greatly influenced 19th-century English Romantic poetry:
Golden Age Center menu
Wed., Feb. 23: Spaghetti and meat sauce, Italian vegetables, spinach side salad/dressing, Oroweat fiber bread/margarine, diced peaches.
Golden Age Comics
The #1 site for downloading FREE copyright free golden age comics. ... Comic Media was a late-comer to the Golden Age and relatively short-lived publisher, owned by Allen Hardy. ...
The Dead Pan
Gods of Hellas, gods of Hellas, Can ye listen in your silence? Can your mystic voices tell us Where ye hide? In floating islands, With a wind that evermore Keeps you out of sight of shore? Pan, Pan is dead.—Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806–61)
Later Victorian and Edwardian writers lamented the death of paganism and its replacement by Christianity as the passing of a former Golden Age of physical beauty and sexual and political freedom, which they contrasted with what they saw as the sexual and political repressiveness and crass materialism of the modern era, as in Oscar Wilde's invocation of Pan:10
Πάν
Pan
O goat-foot God of Arcady! This modern world is gray and old, And what remains to us of thee?....
Then blow some trumpet loud and free, And give thine oaten pipe away, Ah, leave the hills of Arcady ! This modern world hath need of thee!—Oscar Wilde (1854–1900)
While Algernon Charles Swinburne wrote:
Thou hast conquered, O pale Galilean; the world has grown grey from thy breath; We have drunken of things Lethean, and fed on the fullness of death.—"Hymn to Proserpine" (1866)
Other Golden Ages
Hindu
The Indian teachings differentiate the four world ages (Yugas) not according to metals, but according to quality depicted as colors, whereby the white color is the purest quality and belongs to the first, ideal age. These colors were originally assigned to the planet Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury and Mars just like the metals. After the world fall at the end of the fourth, worst age (the Kali yuga) the cycle should be continued, eventually culminating in a new golden age.
The Krita Yuga also known as the Satya yuga, the First and Perfect Age, as described in the Mahabharata, a Hindu epic:
Men neither bought nor sold; there were no poor and no rich; there was no need to labour, because all that men required was obtained by the power of will; the chief virtue was the abandonment of all worldly desires. The Krita Yuga was without disease; there was no lessening with the years; there was no hatred or vanity, or evil thought whatsoever; no sorrow, no fear. All mankind could attain to supreme blessedness.
The Hindus make reference to at least two overlapping yuga cycles, driven by celestial motions, that affect conditions on earth. One cycle, the Maha Yuga, is millions of years in length and therefore difficult to relate to human history or events. The shorter yuga cycle lasts 24,000 years, including an ascending age of 12,000 years (one daiva yuga) and a descending age of 12,000 years, for a total equal to one precession of the equinox. Both cycles are composed of the four eras, and the Satya Yuga is the first and the most significant age in each cycle. This Golden Age era lasts 7200 years (out of the 12,000 years in the ascending period) and another 7200 years (out of 12,000 years in the descending period) in the precessional cycle. Knowledge, meditation, and communion with Spirit hold special importance in this era. The average life expectancy of a human being in Satya Yuga is believed to be about 400 years. During Satya Yuga, most people engage only in good, sublime deeds and mankind lives in harmony with the earth. Ashrams become devoid of wickedness and deceit. Natyam (such as Bharatanatyam), according to Natya Shastra, did not exist in the Satya Yuga "because it was the time when all people were happy".
Golden Age Resources, Inc. (GDAR) Enters Into a Letter of Intent to Purchase National Clinical Technology Inc.
PALM BEACH GARDENS, FL--(Marketwire - March 1, 2011) - Golden Age Resources, Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : GDAR ) announced today that it has entered into a Letter of Intent to acquire 100% of the issued and outstanding stock of National Clinical Technology Inc. (NCT) and its wholly owned subsidiary Spine & Muscle Rehabilitation, Inc. (SMR), and to acquire 100% of the medical related assets of Westmont ...
Golden Age Cartoons
Central hub for seven dedicated classic cartoon historians who have banded their web sites together.
It is to be noted, that Brahma Kumaris make reference to four yuga cycles of 5000 years in which the Golden age(Satya)yuga is first and lasts for 1250 years. And also, the remaining three Thretha Yuga, Dwarpar Yuga and Kali Yuga lasts for 1250 years each.
Norse
The Old Norse word gullaldr (literally "Golden Age") was used in Völuspá to describe the period after Ragnarök where the surviving gods and their progeny build the city Gimlé on the ruins of Asgard. During that period, Baldr reigns.
Fantasy
In modern fantasy worlds whose background and setting sometime draw heavily on real-world myths, similar or compatible concepts of Golden Age exist in the said world's prehistory; when Deities or Elf-like creatures existed, before the coming of humans.
For example, a Golden Age exists in Middle-earth legendarium. Arda (the period of our world where The Lord of the Rings is set), was designed to be symmetrical and perfect. After the wars of the Gods, Arda lost its perfect shape (known as Arda Unmarred) and was called Arda Marred. Another kind of 'Golden Age' follows later, after the Elves awoke; the Eldar stay on Valinor, live with the Valar and advance in arts and knowledge, until the rebellion and the fall of the Noldor, reminiscent of the Fall of Man. Eventually, after the end of the world, the Silmarilli will be recovered and the light of the Two Trees of Valinor rekindled. Arda will be remade again as Arda Healed.
In The Wheel of Time universe, the Age of Legends is the name given to the previous Age: In this society, channelers were common and Aes Sedai - trained channelers - were extremely powerful, able to make angreal, sa'angreal, and ter'angreal, and holding important civic positions. The Age of Legends is seen as a utopian society without war or crime, and devoted to culture and learning. Aes Sedai were frequently devoted to academic endeavours, one of which inadvertently resulted in a hole - The Bore - being drilled in the Dark One's prison. The immediate effects were not realised, but the Dark One gradually asserted power over humanity, swaying many to become his followers. This resulted in the War of Power and eventually the Breaking of the World.
Another example is in the background of the Lands of Lore classic computer game, the history of the Lands is divided in Ages. One of them is also called Golden Age, where the Lands were ruled by the 'Ancients', no wars existed yet, until that age was over with the 'War of the Heretics'.
Present-day usage
See also: Golden age (metaphor)
Entering Marketing's Golden Age
There's a great Churchill quote, "Americans can always be counted on to do the right thing ... after they have exhausted all other possibilities," which I think applies to our long sojourn in the valley of social networking. Social networking is important and will be a major part of our future, but I can't help but think that the way we are approaching it is in the "all other possibilities ...
Golden Age Simulations
Designers of Golden Age aircraft to complement Microsoft's Flight Simulator 2004 (FS2004)
The term "Golden Age" is at present frequently used in the context of various fields, such as the "Dutch Golden Age", "Golden age of alpinism", "Golden Age of American animation", "Golden Age of Comics", "Golden Age of Science Fiction", "Golden Age of Hollywood", "Golden Age of Hip Hop" and even "Golden Age of Piracy" or "Golden Age of Porn". Invariably, the term "Golden Age" is bestowed retroactively, when the period in question has ended and is compared with what followed in the specific field discussed.
See also
Ages of Man
Arcadia (utopia)
Eschatology
Garden of Eden
Great year
Messianic Age
Merrie England
Millennialism
Paradise
Precession of the Equinoxes
Satya Yuga/Krita Yuga
Utopia
2012 Conspiracy
References
^ "Hesiod calls [Astraea] the daughter of Jove and Themis. Aratus says that she is thought to be daughter of Astraeus and Aurora, who lived at the time of the Golden Age of men and was their leader. On account of her carefulness and fairness she was called Justice, and at that time no foreign nations were attacked in war, nor did anyone sail over the seas, but they were wont to live their lives caring for their fields. But those born after their death began to be less observant of duty and more greedy, so that Justice associated more rarely with men. Finally the disease became so extreme that it was said the Brazen Race was born; then she could not endure more, and flew away to the stars." (Gaius Julius Hyginus, Astronomica 2).
^ Bridget Ann Henish, The Medieval Calendar Year (ISBN 0-271-01904-2), p. 96.
^ Eclogue (lines 5-8)
^ Ovid's Metamorphoses, Book the First, eighteenth century version, "Translated into English verse under the direction of Sir Samuel Garth by John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison, William Congreve, and other eminent hands.
^ See A. O. Lovejoy's essay on "The Supposed Primitivism of Rousseau's Discourse on Inequality" in Essays in the History of Ideas (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1948, 1960)
^ See Frances Amelia Yates, Astraea: The Imperial Theme in the Sixteenth Century (Routledge, 1999).
^ '"Hellas"
^ "Et in Arcadia ego: Poussin and the Elegaic Tradition," in Meaning in the Visual Arts (New York: Doubleday, 1955) pp. 297–98.
^ A. O, Lovejoy and G. Boas, Primitivism and Related Ideas in Antiquity (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1935).
^ Compare also D. H. Lawrence in a similar vein.
External links
http://www.maicar.com/GML/AgesOfMan.html#golden
http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/grecoromanmyth1/a/hesiodagesofman.htm
http://www.pantheon.org/articles/g/golden_age.html
v · d · eGreek religion and mythology
Religions and cults
Dionysian Mysteries · Eleusinian Mysteries · Platonism · Neoplatonism · Orphism · Hellenic Polytheistic Reconstructionism
Groups
Amazons · Anemoi · Centaurs · Chthonics · Cyclopes · Dragons · Erinyes · Gigantes · Harpies · Hekatonkheires · Moirae · Mortals · Muses · Nymphs · Protogenoi · Satyrs · Sea gods · Titans
Twelve Olympians
Aphrodite · Apollo · Ares · Artemis · Athena · Demeter · Dionysus · Hades · Hephaestus · Hera · Hermes · Hestia · Poseidon · Zeus
Other Deities
Asclepius · Charon · Eos · Eros · Gaia · Hebe · Hecate · Helios · Ouranos · Pan · Persephone · Selene
Heroes
Heracles and his labours · Achilles and the Trojan War · Odysseus and the Odyssey · Jason and the Argonauts · Perseus and Medusa · Oedipus and Thebes · Theseus and the Minotaur · Triptolemus
Rites and practices
Amphidromia · Hymns · Iatromantis · Pharmakos · Prayers · Sacrifices · Temples · Votive offerings
Sacred places
Delphi · Dodona · Delos · Olympia
v · d · eConcepts of Heaven
Buddhism:
Sagga
Celtic:
Tír na nÓg • Mag Mell
Christian:
Kingdom of God • Garden of Eden • Paradise • New Jerusalem • Pearly gates • Empyrean
Ancient Egyptian:
Aaru
Germanic:
Asgard • Fólkvangr • Valhalla • Neorxnawang • Gimlé
Ancient Greek:
Elysium • Hesperides • Myth of Er
Hindu:
Moksha • Svarga • Vaikunta
Indo-European:
Paradise • Svarga • Fortunate Isles
Islamic:
Jannah • Sidrat al-Muntaha
Jewish:
Garden of Eden • Olam Haba
Mesoamerican:
Tamoanchan • Tlalocan
Mormon:
Celestial Kingdom • Terrestrial Kingdom • Telestial Kingdom • Spirit world
Native American
Happy hunting ground
Taoist
Grotto-heavens
Chinese
Tian
Japanese
Takamagahara
Related concepts:
Millennialism • Utopianism • Great unity •Golden age • Arcadia • Avalon • The Guf • Well of Souls • Republic of Heaven • Existential planes • Underworld
United drops elegant advertising for functional campaign
A golden age in the annals of airline advertising officially ended Tuesday when the merged United Airlines unveiled its first ad campaign from the Kaplan Thaler/New York ad agency, best known for creating the iconic Aflac duck. Chicago-based United’s new campaign, the first to reflect last fall’s joining of United with Continental Airlines, does away with the elegant, illustration-centric print ...
Galaxy Press: Stories From the Golden Age
Retailer of pulp fiction by author L. Ron Hubbard. Site includes a blog, online games, and resources for educators.
Williamsburg Film Festival to celebrate classic Westerns
"Honoring the Golden Age of Hollywood" celebrates classic Westerns



















