Vesta(roman)/Hestia(greek)
Hestia was the goddess of the hearth, home, domesticity, family, and the state
The Roman goddess of the hearth is Vesta. She is the virgin goddess of family and home in the Roman religion. Hestia is the nearest Greek equivalent as the goddess of hearth, home, domesticity, family, the state, and architecture.
Her prpose was to protect orphans and missing children. She also was the goddess of home, hearth, family, and domesticity.
Virginal Hestia, (Roman Vesta) daughter of Cronus and Rhea, (ancient Greek Ἑστία') is the goddess of the hearth, of the right ordering of domesticity and the family.
Daughter of Cronus and Rhea, sister and wife of Zeus, she was goddess of marriage and domesticity. Her matriarchal spirit ill fit the patriarchal rule of Zeus.
With her legendary skills in the kitchen, Mary's domesticity was not in question, but her fashion sense was.
The Cult of Domesticity meant that women needed to have 4 virtues. The four virtues were piety, purity, domesticity and pureness. This caused womens roles at home and work to be changed.
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Selling New York - 2010 Downtown Domesticity 6-3 was released on: USA: 2012
The antebellum South held traditional notions of domesticity. Women took care of the home, supervised the servants, and planned the meal. The men worked outside the home.
The Cult of Domesticity arose between 1820 and the Civil War when the middle-class family did not have to make what it needed to survive. Instead, men worked jobs to buy what they needed and the women stayed home with the children. So the Cult of Domesticity was a postindustrial middle-class society in the nineteenth-century.
Women weren't forced into the cult of domesticity but, at the same time, they had few ways to socially advance, so many of them simply had little alternative choice.