Psyche was a daughter of mortals. She had two more sisters. Cupid, the god of love, fell in love with her. They had a daughter Hedone/ Pleasure.
Psyche, the soul of humans, was exploited by the philosophers of the ancient times as well as by all religions. The majority accept that Psyche is immortal.
AnswerSoul.
Supplementary answer
Psyche never was part of Greek mythology. The word is Greek for soul (as in psychology). Not until about about 160 AD does Psyche appear as a person, and it was in a piece of Roman fiction. The Roman philosopher and writer Lucius Apuleius wrote a long story called The Golden Ass. In this an old woman tells about Cupid and Psyche and in her tale Psyche is taken into the company of the Greek deities, or rather their Roman counterparts.
In Roman mythology, she is the girl whom Cupid fell in love with. She is said to be beautiful than Venus, Goddess of Love and Beauty herself. Since Venus wont stop in making Psyche suffer, Cupid ask Zeus for help and make Psyche as a Goddess. Goddess of soul.
I don't get why there's all these answers for where she came from. Psyche was the goddess of the soul, and that's the answer to the question.
"Psyche" was the Greek goddess of the soul. She was born a beautiful mortal. Zeus, however, made her a goddess when Psyche married Eros who was the god of love.
The Greek goddess Psyche, strictly speaking, wasn't a natural-born goddess . . . she got there by "marrying up". But talk about mother-in-law problems, not to mention having a "mama's boy" for a husband! You'd be hard pressed to come up with a story that tops that of the Greek goddess Psyche's. The goddess Psyche started out as a mortal, but one of exquisite grace and beauty. Fervently courted by numerous mortal men and gods, Psyche truly wasn't interested in romance and she wasn't just playing hard to get! This offended Aphrodite, the goddess of love, who decided to bring Psyche down a notch by sending her son Eros, the god of love, to shoot her with one of his magical arrows tipped in an aphrodisiac that would make her fall hopelessly in love with the first man she saw, no matter how wretched, unsuitable, or unappealing he might be. But as the Fates (the Greek goddesses responsible for luck and destiny) would have it, just as Eros had Psyche lined up in his sights, Eros stumbled and accidentally pricked himself with the arrow and fell madly in love with Psyche himself.
The goddess Psyche was known as the goddess of the soul and she was married to cupid, she disobeyed cupid by looking at him while he slept.
Psyche dies, Cupid revives her as a goddess and they marry.
Psyche was the personification of the passion of love in Greek and Roman mythology. In the story of Cupid/Eros and Psyche she started out as a human woman who insulted Venus/Aphrodite by claiming to be a greater beauty. One thing led to another - as Greek and Roman myths do - and Psyche was eventually made into a goddess by Zeus/Jupiter Answer 2: One might add that the story of Eros and Psyche is a very late addition to the myths. The story was written by the Roman author Apuleius about the middle of the 2nd century AD.
Psyche
"Psyche" was the Greek goddess of the soul. She was born a beautiful mortal. Zeus, however, made her a goddess when Psyche married Eros who was the god of love.
"Psyche" was the Greek goddess of the soul. She was born a beautiful mortal. Zeus, however, made her a goddess when Psyche married Eros who was the god of love.
Psyche was the Greek goddess of the soul, wife of Eros the god of love.
yes; to control gossip
Psyche was a Greek goddess who personified the soul.
Cupid and Psyche only have a single child. Her name is Voluptas (Hedone in Greek) and she was the goddess of sensual pleasures.
yes. a king and a Queen, she also had 2 sisters.
Nobody really knows. She was supposedly a beauty so mesmerising that people stopped worshipping Venus, who was also extremely good-looking.
Psyche, whose husband was Cupid had one child, a daughter whose name was Voluptas or Delight, the goddess of sensual pleasures, which in Latin means pleasure or bliss.
The Greek goddess Psyche, strictly speaking, wasn't a natural-born goddess . . . she got there by "marrying up". But talk about mother-in-law problems, not to mention having a "mama's boy" for a husband! You'd be hard pressed to come up with a story that tops that of the Greek goddess Psyche's. The goddess Psyche started out as a mortal, but one of exquisite grace and beauty. Fervently courted by numerous mortal men and gods, Psyche truly wasn't interested in romance and she wasn't just playing hard to get! This offended Aphrodite, the goddess of love, who decided to bring Psyche down a notch by sending her son Eros, the god of love, to shoot her with one of his magical arrows tipped in an aphrodisiac that would make her fall hopelessly in love with the first man she saw, no matter how wretched, unsuitable, or unappealing he might be. But as the Fates (the Greek goddesses responsible for luck and destiny) would have it, just as Eros had Psyche lined up in his sights, Eros stumbled and accidentally pricked himself with the arrow and fell madly in love with Psyche himself.
In Roman mythology, Fides was the goddess of trust. Her Greek counterpart was Pitis, who was the goddess of trust, good faith, and honesty.