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It was the highest religious office in
Ancient Argos, and the person who held it enjoyed great prestige and played an official role. The Heraion of Argos was a Pan-Hellenic sanctuary, and her office was that of great status not only in Argos but in all Greece. A sign of her prestige was the fact that
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The
Priestess was likely selected from a family with inherited right to the office. She appears to have been a married woman, which would be logical to the cult of Hera as the goddess of marriage. Due to the fact that several priestesses served for a remarkable long time, it appears that the office
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composed a chronology of all priestesses of Hera at Argos, going back to about 1000 BC. There are several different legends about whom the first office holder was. The office likely predated the temple, as the cult was celebrated in the open long before the sanctuary was built.
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing
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She supervised the temple and the cult of Hera, and was the chief of the lesser officials of the cult.
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the time period of the office of each
Priestess was used as a time chronology in large parts of Greece.
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The office could not have survived the ban of all non-Christian priesthoods during the
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Classical Press, London, 1994
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The most known individual official of this position was
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