Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 2.djvu/706

644 mon belief being enlivened with the story of how she defeated the god of that in his passion for her , by leading the  Arethusa underground away to the island of  at. So far the various phases of her character are such as were more or less generally accepted in the times of and art. But there had also survived certain peculiarities in her worship from apparently very early times, though the fact of their being found only in certain localities renders it impossible to know whether they had been originally only local peculiarities or universally admitted. Of this kind was the Artemis, peculiar at first to the  and the shores of the. From the,, it was said, brought the of the goddess to , and with it her worship, the chief characteristic of which was the sacrifice of human beings which it required. At these sacrifices were afterwards commuted by  for the ceremony of flogging youths at her, but not till this barbarous phase of her worship had spread to several places in , , and. Her title at was Orthia or Orthosia. Again, originally peculiar to was Artemis Britomartis, or Dictynna, the latter name being interpreted by the legend that  had loved and pursued her till she leapt into the sea, and was saved by being caught in a fisherman's net. In this character she was chiefly the goddess of seafarers, and as such was widely worshipped on the islands and coasts of the. But nowhere was the worship of Artemis so non-Hellenic in character as among the Greeks at. It would seem as if the Greek colonists there had found among the native s and a form of the moon goddess, which, though widely different from their own, had the advantage of an image that had fallen from heaven (diopetes), and an established hold on the people with whom the colonists had to deal. Like theirs she was a goddess with power over wild animals, and identified with their productivity, as appears from her being represented with many s,—a characteristic of animals, and not necessarily to be understood as expressing her interest in maternity in the usual sense, which would have been strongly opposed to the Greek feeling towards their virgin goddess. Her worship was surrounded by and s. She was the goddess of the warlike, whose fondness of the chase presented another point of contact between the Asiatic and the Greek goddess. But however much of the Greek element may in time have become grafted upon her, Diana of Ephesus was only in rare instances accepted by the Greeks outside of Asia Minor. The wealth and splendour of the made Ephesus a powerful attraction for devotees in the neighbourhood. A figure of her similar to that at Ephesus existed near on the, where from the name of the spot she was called Λευκοφρηνή. The usual figure of the n Artemis, as preserved in works of art, is in the form of a female with many s, from the waist to the feet resembling a pillar, narrowing downwards, and sculptured all round with rows of animals. In archaic works, as on the chest of of, she appeared ed, and holding a with each hand. As to the original image, believed to have fallen from heaven, it is not impossible that it had been made to take the place of a. But the Greek Artemis was usually represented as a huntress with and, in face very like , her drapery flowing to her feet, or, more frequently, girt high for speed. She is accompanied often by a or a. Perhaps the finest existing statue of her is the Diana of. On the of, , , and , are to be seen varied and beautiful representations of her head as conceived by the Greek artists in the best times.  ARTEMISIA, daughter of Lygdamis, succeeded her husband in the kingdom of Halicarnassus, which was a dependency of the Persian empire. She took part in person in the expedition of Xerxes against the Greeks, and fitted out five ships, with which she distinguished herself in the sea-fight near Salamis, 480 B.C. When closely pursued by the Athenians she escaped by the stratagem of attacking one of the Persian vessels, whereupon the Athenians concluded that she was an ally, and gave up the pursuit. By her advice Xerxes did not attempt another battle, but at once retired from Greece. A story of her, in all probability entirely without foundation, is preserved by Photius. She is said to have loved a young man named Dardanus, of Abydos, and, enraged at his neglect of her, to have put out his eyes while he was asleep. The gods, as a punishment for this, ordered her, by an oracle, to take the famous but rather mythical lover's leap from the Leucadian promontory.  ARTEMISIA, the sister and wife of Mausolus, king of Caria, immortalised herself by the honours which she paid to the memory of her husband. She built for him, in Halicarnassus, a very magnificent tomb, called the Mausoleum, which was one of the seven wonders of the world, and from which the name of Mausoleum was afterwards given to all tombs remarkable for their grandeur ; but she died of regret and sorrow before it was finished. She appointed panegyrics to be made in honour of him, and proposed prizes of great value for the best oratorical and tragic compositions. She also erected a monument, or trophy, in Rhodes to commemorate her conquest of that island. When the Rhodians regained their freedom they built round this trophy so as to render it inaccessible, whence it was known as the ἄβατον. She died about 350 B.C.  ARTESIAN WELLS, the name applied to water-springs rising above the surface of the ground by natural hydro static pressure, on boring a small hole down through a series of strata to a water-carrying bed enclosed between two im pervious layers. In Europe this mode of well-boring was first practised in the French province of Artois, whence the name Artesian is derived. At Aire, in that province, there is a well from which the water has continued steadily to flow to a height of 1 1 feet above the ground for more than a century ; and there is, within the old Carthusian con vent at Lillers, another which dates from the 12th cen tury, and which still flows. But unmistakable traces of much more ancient bored springs appear in Lombardy, in Asia Minor, in Persia, in China, in Egypt, in Algeria, and even in the great desert of Sahara. In ordinary wells the water does not rise, but remains at the bottom of the trough dug for it in the soil, and to raise it we must use special apparatus or pumps. In Artesian wells, on the other hand, the water rises from a consider able depth to the surface of the ground, and usually spouts up to a greater or less height above it. The theoretical explanation of the phenomenon is easily understood. The secondary and tertiary geological formations, such as those underneath London and Paris, often present the appearance of immense basins, the boundary or rim of tlie basin having been formed by an upheaval of the subjacent strata. In these formations it often happens that a porous stratum, consisting of sand, sandstone, chalk, or other calcareous matter, is included between two impermeable layers of clay, so as to form a flat porous U tube, con tinuous from side to side of the valley, the outcrop on the surrounding hills forming the mouth of the tube. TLo rain filtering down through the porous layer to the bottom of the basin forms there a subterranean pool, which with the liquid or semi-liquid column pressing upon it constitutes a sort of huge natural hydrostatic bellows. Sometimes the pressure on the superincumbent crust is so great as to 