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Demeter

Demeter (In Rome Ceres)

She is one of the great Olympian Gods, and the Goddess of fertility and agriculture. She is seen as a part of the trinity, The Maiden, The Mother and The Crone. Demeter is seen as The Mother, and her daughter Persephone is seen is The Maiden. Hekate is Seen as The Crone. Demeter also gave grain to humans.

Her parents were the Titans Kronos and Rhea, who ruled everything before Zeus exiled them to Tartaros, a place in the underworld, and took the place of the ultimate ruler. The Titans were first-born children of the primordial couple Gaia (earth) and Ouranos (sky). Kronos swallowed Demeter, and her siblings, when they were born, because of a prophecy told by his parents, that said that he was destined to be overpowered by his son (Zeus). Rhea were able to hide Zeus, who after growing up, forced his father to vomit his siblings, including Demeter.

Demeter had an affair with Zeus (or in some stories Zeus raped her), and Persephone, also known as Kore, was born. One day when Persephone was outside gathering flowers without her mother, the ground opened and Hades, Demeter´s brother and God of the underworld, emerged in his golden chariots to take her with him to Hades, the Underworld, and to rule with him. Demeter became worried and searched for her everywhere. With two torches (Intuition and Reason) Demeter wandered around the world for nine days without eating or resting. In the ninth day she came across Hekate, who with Helios, had heard her daughters cries. Helios, sun God, who was able to see everything from the sky, told Demeter that Hades had taken Persephone with the connivance of Zeus. Demeter became so angry that she abandoned the company of the Gods and hid herself among mortals in the guise of an old woman.

As an old crone, she arrived in Eleusis. Daughters of the King Keleos saw her and said that she was welcome to stay in the town. Demeter, who let them believe that she was an old woman abducted from Crete by pirates, asked them for some work. The girls took her to their mother, queen Metaneira, who hired her as a nursemaid for her infant son Demophoon. To repay Mataneira for her kindness, Demeter decided to make her son immortal. The plan went well until Mateneira saw her holding her son over the fire one night, and cried out in dismay. Demeter became angry, and resumed her true form, and denied immortality from Mateneiras son. She said that there should be a temple built in her honor and each year there was to be a festival to honor her. When her demands had been obeyed, she would come to Eleusis and teach them in her sacred rites, which would be celebrated there in the future as the famous Eleusinian Mysteries.

As long as Demeter was away from Olympus, the earth was unfertile and nothing grew. Zeus sent the divine messenger Iris to tell her to return to Olympus, but Demeter refused. The Gods brought her gifts, but she said that the only thing she wanted was her daughter to come home, and only then she would let the earth become fertile again. Zeus did not have any choice, but to ask his brother to release Persephone. Hades promised to release her, but in secret asked Persephone to eat a Pomegranate seed before she left, to ensure that she would stay bound to the Underworld forever. Askalaphos, inhabitant of the underworld, told everybody that Persephone had eaten while staying in Hades. Because of this, Persephone had to spend one third of the year in the Underworld and two-thirds with Demeter. So while Persephone was with her mother the earth was fertile and when she was in the Underworld nothing would grow and there would be winter. Demeter punished Askalaphos, because he told about Persephone, by confining him under a heavy rock, and later when he was released, she turned him into an owl. When Persephone entered the Underworld, previous mistress of Hades, nymph Minthe boasted that she was more beautiful and would soon win the love of Hades back. When Demeter heard that, she turned the nymph into a mint-plant.

Demeter also had children with Poseidon, the God of sea. Their son was a divine horse called Areion or Arion, and a daughter whose name could be revealed to initiates alone. Demeter had also two sons with Iasion, son of Zeus and a mortal woman called Elektra. The sons names were Ploutos and Philomelos, who did not get along with each other, because Ploutos was richer than his brother. Philomelos bought two oxes and invented the plough to make his living from the land. Demeter was so impressed by his son that she placed him in the heaven as the constellation Boötes.

One time Thessalian hero Erysichthon wanted to build himself a new palace. He chose trees that were sacred to Demeter as material for his palace. After ignoring the warning of Demeter herself as a guise of her priestess Nikippe and killing the nymph that lived in one of the sacred trees, Demeter became so angry that she cursed him with a never ending hunger. The more Thessalian ate, the more hungrier and thinner he became. Once he had lost all his money to buy food, he sold his daughter Mestra to slavery. Mestra was a mistress of Poseidon, and he granted her power to transform into an animal at will. That way she was able to escape every time her father tried to sell her. Thessalians father, Triopas, had also been cursed by Demeter. Triopas destroyed Demeter´s temple, and the Goddess killed him by sending a huge serpent against him. After his death, she placed him among the stars where the serpent torments him forever.

Sacred Days :

Phases of the moon dedicated to her:
Days 13-15 Dedicated to Demeter, the nurturer.
Festivals:
Mabon (autumn equinox) about 23 September. Time of the greater Eleusinian mysteries in ancient Greece. Day is sacred to Demeter and Persephone.
August is dedicated to Demeter (Ceres).





List of Gods : "Demeter" - 43 records

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Name ▲▼Origin ▲▼Description ▲▼

"Plutus"
Greek Sometimes also called Pluton, the personification of wealth, is described as a son of Iasion and Demeter. Greek

"Proserpine"
Greek In Latin Proserpina, the daughter of Zeus and Demeter.

"Rharias"
Greek A surname of Demeter, which she derived from the Rharian plain in the neighbourhood of Eleusis, the principal seat of her worship. Greek
Goddess name
"Rhea"
Greek Pefa, Pea, Pefy, or Pe. The name as well as the nature of this divinity is one of the most difficult points in ancient mythology. Some consider 'Pea' to be merely another form of pa, the earth, while others connect it with pew, I flow; but thus much seems undeniable, that Rhea, like Demeter, was a goddess of the earth. According to the Hesiodic Theogony, Rhea was a daughter of Uråñuś and Ge, and accordingly a sister of Oceåñuś, Coeus, Hyperion, Crius, lapetus, Theia, Themis, and Mnemosyne. Greek

"Sito"
Greek A surname of Demeter, describing her as the giver of food or corn. Greek

"Triopas"
Greek Son of Poseidon and Canace, a daughter of Aeolus or of Helios and Rhodos, and the father of Iphimedeia and Erysichthon, he is also called the father of Pelasgus. He expelled the Pelasgians from the Dotian plain, but was himself obliged to emigrate, and went to Caria, where he founded Cnidus on the Triopian promontory. His son Erysichthon was punished by Demeter with insatiable hunger, because he had violated her sacred grove but others relate the same of Triopas himself. Greek
Goddess name
"Tyche"
Greco - Roman Goddess of fortune. She appears as a nereid in the Hymn to Demeter (Homer). According to Hesiod's Theogony she is the daughter of OKEANOS. Elsewhere she is identified as the daughter of ZEUS and HERA. She is depicted carrying a rudder or, alternatively, cornucopiae. Also mentioned as Agathe Tyche, the consort of Agathos Daemon. She became widely identified with the Asian mother goddess KYBELE but was replaced, in Roman times, by the goddess FORTUNA and åśśociated symbolically with a wheel device. She retained popularity for a long time. There is a record that the Emperor Julian sacrificed to Tyche at Antioch in AD 361-2 and her temple was still intact during the reign of Theodosius (379-95)....
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Sources:
Michael Jordan, Encyclopedia of gods 2002
Michael Senior, Who´s who in mythology 1985
Elizabeth Hallan, Mytologian Jumalat (Gods and Goddesses, 96) 1997
Nigel Pennick, the Pagan book of days 1992
Arthur Cotterell, Mytologia: Jumalia, Sankareita, Myyttejä 2005
Robin Hard, the Routledge handbook of Greek mythology 2004