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Gods & Goddesses
Persephone
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![]() Copyright (C) Brigid Smallwood Image used with permission |
PersephoneQueen of the UnderworldPantheon: Olympian Element: Earth Sphere of Influence: Fertility and Renewal Preferred colors: Silver, Black, Green, Brown Associated symbol: Bat, Narcissus, Pomegranate Animals associated with: Serpent , Bat Best day to work with: Monday Strongest around Ostara Suitable offerings: pomegranate seeds Associated Planet: Pluto, Moon |
Persephone was the queen of the underworld and the Great Goddess of the Eleusinian Mysteries. In her youth Persephone was hidden away from the gods by her mother Demeter, but Zeus found her hiding place and seduced her in the form of a serpent. Zeus then promised her to Hades as his bride, and she was taken to the dark realms. Her mother Demeter was in despair at her disappearance and searched the world for her missing daughter with Hekate as companion. Upon discovering her whereabouts and Zeus' part in her rape, Demeter refused to let the crops grow until her daughter was returned to her. Zeus consented, but as Persephone had tasted the food of Hades - a handful of pomegranate seeds - she was forced to forever spend a part of the year with her husband in the underworld. |
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Additional Information on Persephone from WikipediaInformation is unedited and uncheckedalternateusesGreek myth (earth) In Greek mythology, Persephone ("per-SE-fo-neh") was the queen of the Underworld, the Kore or maiden, daughter of Demeter. Persephone ("she who destroys the light") is her name in the Ionic Greek of epic literature. In other dialects she was known under various other names: Persephassa, Persephatta, or simply Kore. The Rome|Romans first heard of her from the Aeolian and Dorian cities of Magna Graecia, who used the dialectal variant Proserpina. Hence, in Roman mythology she was called Proserpina, and as a revived Roman Proserpina she became a an emblematic figure of the Renaissance. ==Overview== The figure of Persephone is a well-known one today. Her story has great emotional power: an innocent maiden; a mothers grief at the abduction and return of her daughter. It is also cited frequently as a paradigm of myths that explain natural processes, with the descent and return of the goddess bringing about the change of seasons. But the Greeks knew another face of Persephone as well. She was also the terrible Queen of the dead, whose name was not safe to speak aloud. Her central myth, for all of its emotional familiarity, was also the back-story of the strange and secret rites at Eleusinian Mysteries|Eleusis, which promised immortality to their awe-struck participants - an immortality in her world beneath the soil, feasting with the Greek hero cult|heroes beneath her dread gaze. ==The Abduction Myth== In the Olympian pantheon, Persephone is given a father, and made the daughter of Zeus and Demeter. Unlike every other offspring of an Olympian pairing, however, Persephone has no stable position at Olympus. In the Homeric Hymn to Demeter and its many reworks, Persephone became the goddess of the underworld when Hades abducted her and brought her into the underworld. She was innocently picking flowers with some nymphs (or Leucippe, or Oceanids) in a field in Enna when he came, bursting up through a cleft in the earth; the nymphs were changed by Demeter into the Siren|Sirens for not having interfered. Life came to a standstill as the depressed Demeter (goddess of the Earth) searched for her lost daughter; Helios, the sun, who sees everything, eventually told her what had happened. Finally, Zeus could not put up with the dying earth and forced Hades to return Persephone. But before she was released, Hades tricked her into eating six pomegranate seeds, which forced her to return six months each year. In some versions, Ascalaphus informed the other gods that Persephone had eaten the pomegranate seeds. When Demeter and her daughter were together, the Earth flourished with vegetation, but for six months each year, when Persephone returned to the underworld, the earth once again became a barren realm. In alternate version, Hecate rescued Persephone. This myth can also be interpreted as an allegory for ancient Greek marriage rituals. The Greeks felt that marriage was a sort of abduction of the bride by the groom from the brides family, and this myth may have explained the origins of the marriage ritual. The more popular etiology|etiological explanation of the seasons may have been a later interpretation. Persephone, as Queen of Hades, only showed mercy once, because the music of Orpheus was so hauntingly sad. She allowed Orpheus to bring his wife Eurydice back to the land of the living as long as she walked behind him and he never tried to look at her face until they reached the surface. Orpheus agreed but failed and lost Eurydice forever. ||| Persephone also figures in the story of Adonis, the Syrian consort of Aphrodite. When Adonis was born, Aphrodite took him under her wing, seducing him with the help of Helene (mythology)|Helene, her friend, and was entranced by his unearthly beauty. She gave him to Persephone to watch over, but Persephone was also amazed at his beauty and refused to give him back. The argument between the two goddesses was settled either by Zeus or Calliope, with Adonis spending four months with Aphrodite, four months with Persephone and four months of the years with whomever he chose. He always chose Aphrodite because Persephone was the cold, unfeeling goddess of the underworld. When Hades pursued a nymph named Mintho, Persephone turned her into a mint plant. Persephone was the object of Pirithous affections. Pirithous and Theseus, his friend, pledged to marry daughters of Zeus. Theseus chose Helen and together they kidnapped her and decided to hold onto her until she was old enough to marry. Pirithous chose Persephone. They left Helen with Theseus mother, Aethra, and travelled to the underworld, domain of Persephone and her husband, Hades. Hades pretended to offer them hospitality and set a feast; as soon as the pair sat down, snakes coiled around their feet and held them there. Persephone and her mother Demeter were often referred to as aspects of the same goddess, and were called "the Demeters" or simply "the goddesses." The story of Persephones abduction was part of the initiation rites in the Eleusinian mysteries. ==Modern Scholarship on Persephone== === Persephone Before the Greeks?=== Many modern scholars have argued that Persephones cult was a continuation of Neolithic or Minoan goddess-worship. Among classicists, this thesis has been argued by Gunther Zuntz (Persephone, 1973) and cautiously included by Walter Burkert in his definitive Greek Religion. More daringly, the mythologist Karl Kerenyi has identified Persephone with the nameless "mistress of the labyrinth" at Knossos. On the other hand, the hypothesis of a universal cult of the Earth Mother has come under increasing criticism in recent years. For more on both sides of the controversy, see Mother Goddess. ===Life-Death-Rebirth=== Inspired by James Frazer, Jane Ellen Harrison and modern mythologers, some scholars have labeled Persephone a life-death-rebirth deity. ==Consorts/Children== * Unknown father (Some say Zeus) * Iacchus * Persephone and Hades are notable as the only divine couple who did not produce children, besides Aphrodite and Hephaestus. ==Other names== *Cora *Core *Despoina *Kore ==See also== *Proserpina ==References== Karl Kerenyi (Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter, 1960, in English 1967) Zuntz, Gunter (Persephone, 1973) This text is made available under the GNU Free Documentation License Agreement. 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