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  2. Lady Justice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Justice

    The origin of Lady Justice was Justitia (or Iustitia), the goddess of Justice within Roman mythology. Justitia was introduced by emperor Augustus , and was thus not a very old deity in the Roman pantheon .

  3. Clementia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clementia

    Yet, she was the Roman counterpart of Eleos, [citation needed] (not to be confused with Soteria), the Greek goddess of mercy and forgiveness who had a shrine in Athens. In traditional imagery, she is depicted holding a branch (possibly an olive tree branch ) and a scepter and may be leaning on a column.

  4. Providentia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Providentia

    Upon the death of Augustus, the emperor Tiberius established an altar to Providentia Augusta in recognition of "the godhead manifested in his father's provisions for the Roman state." The cult title Augusta was attached also to such goddesses as Pax, Justitia, and Concordia during the Imperial era. Traditional epithets invoked a deity within a ...

  5. Prudence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prudence

    Prudentia is an allegorical female personification of the virtue, whose attributes are a mirror and snake, and who is frequently depicted as a pair with Justitia, the Roman goddess of Justice. The word derives from the 14th-century Old French word prudence, which, in turn, derives from the Latin prudentia meaning "foresight, sagacity".

  6. List of Roman deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_deities

    Veritas, goddess and personification of the Roman virtue of veritas or truth. Verminus, god of cattle worms. Vertumnus, Vortumnus or Vertimnus, god of the seasons, and of gardens and fruit trees. Vesta, goddess of the hearth, the Roman state, and the sacred fire; one of the Dii Consentes. Vica Pota, goddess of victory and competitions.

  7. Libertas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertas

    Libertas, along with other Roman goddesses, has served as the inspiration for many modern-day personifications, including the Statue of Liberty on Liberty Island in the United States. According to the National Park Service , the Statue's Roman robe is the main feature that invokes Libertas and the symbol of Liberty from which the statue derives ...

  8. Dike (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dike_(mythology)

    'righteousness, justice'), is the goddess of justice and the spirit of moral order and fair judgement as a transcendent universal ideal or based on immemorial custom, in the sense of socially enforced norms and conventional rules. According to Hesiod (Theogony, l. 901), she was fathered by Zeus upon his second consort, Themis. She and her ...

  9. Veritas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veritas

    In Roman mythology, Veritas (Classical Latin: [ˈweː.rɪ.t̪aːs]), meaning Truth, is the Goddess of Truth, a daughter of Saturn (called Cronus by the Greeks, the Titan of Time, perhaps first by Plutarch), and the mother of Virtus. She is also sometimes considered the daughter of Jupiter (called Zeus by the Greeks), [2] or a creation of ...