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Persephone

 

(European mythology)

Persephone of Greece, Proserpina of Italy—the queen of the underworld—was abducted by Hades, son of Kronos and Rhea. She was playing with the daughters of Oceanos, the circular ocean, picking flowers on a lush meadow, when she beheld the hundred-blossomed narcissus planted by the earth mother Gaia to please the god of death, Hades. As Persephone bent to pluck it with both hands, a chasm appeared in the ground, and from it rose Hades, who seized her and carried her down to his realm. Immediately the springs of fertility ran dry: vegetation languished, animals ceased to multiply, and the hand of death touched mankind. The mother of Persephone—Demeter to the Greeks, Ceres to the Romans—wandered upon the earth, with two burning torches in her hands. She would neither eat nor wash. Zeus finally intervened and ruled that his subterranean brother must give up the captured bride unless she had, by some word or deed, consented to her abduction. It happened that she had eaten a pomegranate seed at Hades' behest, which was adequate to ensure that henceforth she divided her time equally between her husband and her mother.

Persephone could have been a pre-Greek goddess of the underworld. As Kore, ‘the maiden’, she was the power of growth within the corn itself, an extension of the corn goddess Demeter, her mother. Her annual disappearance and the distress it caused was only matched by the joy of the gods on her return to Mount Olympus. The myth was in fact an account of the sacred drama performed at Eleusis, near Athens. During the summer heat, after the harvest was gathered in, the corn goddess vanished beneath the parched earth, like the corn stored in underground silos. The Eleusisian mysteries included a sacred marriage as well as other initiation rites common to the fertility cults of West Asia. In Athens‘Demeter's people’ was a euphemism for the dead.

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American Heritage Dictionary:

Per·seph·o·ne

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(pər-sĕf'ə-nē) pronunciation
n. Greek Mythology
The daughter of Demeter and Zeus who was abducted by Hades but rescued by her mother and thereafter spent six months of the year on earth and six months in the underworld.



Pluto and Proserpina, marble sculpture by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, …
(click to enlarge)
Pluto and Proserpina, marble sculpture by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, … (credit: Anderson — Alinari/Art Resource, New York)
In Greek mythology, daughter of Zeus and Demeter. She was gathering flowers when she was seized by Hades, who carried her off to the underworld to make her his wife. On learning of the abduction, Demeter was so distraught that she allowed barrenness and famine to spread over the earth. Zeus commanded Hades to allow Persephone to return to her mother, but because she had eaten some (or, in some versions, just one) pomegranate seeds in the underworld, she had to remain one-third of the year with Hades, spending the other two-thirds with Demeter. This myth accounts for the change of the seasons and the annual cycle of growth and decay.

For more information on Persephone, visit Britannica.com.

Melodrama in three scenes by Stravinsky to a libretto by André Gide for narrator, tenor, chorus, children's chorus and orchestra (1934, Paris).



Persephonē (Lat. Prōserpina), also known as Korē (‘daughter’), in Greek myth, the daughter of Zeus and Demeter, snatched away to be queen of the Underworld by Hadēs while she was picking flowers in the meadows of Enna in central Sicily. For Demeter's search for her daughter see DEMETER. Zeus yielded at length to her lamentations, but Persephone could not be entirely released from the Underworld because she had eaten some pomegranate seeds (as was revealed by Ascalaphus, son of Acheron, river of the Underworld, whom Demeter thereupon turned into an owl). It was arranged that she should spend eight (or six) months of the year on earth and the remainder with Hades. The myth is told in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, by Ovid in his Fasti and Metamorphoses, and by Claudian in De raptu Proserpinae. Persephone was understood in ancient times to symbolize the seed corn that must descend into the earth so that from seeming death new life may germinate; she later came to symbolize death. Cicero visited Enna and tells in his Verrine orations (see CICERO (I) 1) how he found the priestess and inhabitants griefstricken because Verres had stolen their statue of Demeter.

Columbia Encyclopedia:

Persephone

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Persephone (pərsĕf'ənē) or Proserpine (prōsûr'pənē), in Greek and Roman religion and mythology, goddess of fertility and queen of the underworld. She was the daughter of Zeus and Demeter. When she was still a beautiful maiden, Pluto seized her and held her captive in his underworld. Though Demeter eventually persuaded the gods to let her daughter return to her, Persephone was required to remain in the underworld for four months because Pluto had tricked her into eating a pomegranate (food of the dead) there. When Persephone left the earth, the flowers withered and the grain died, but when she returned, life blossomed anew. This story, which symbolizes the annual vegetation cycle, was celebrated in the Eleusinian Mysteries, in which Persephone appeared under the name Kore.


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Persephone

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Persephone
Goddess of Spring
Goddess of Spring
Goddess of Spring, Queen of the Underworld and Wife of Hades
Abode The Underworld
Symbol Jewels, Pomegranets
Consort Hades
Parents Zeus and Demeter
Children Melinoe, Zagreus
Roman equivalent Proserpina
The Eleusinian trio:Persephone, Triptolemus and Demeter on a marble bas-relief from Eleusis, 440-430 BC

In Greek mythology, Persephone /pərˈsɛfən/, also called Kore /ˈkɔər/,[1] is the daughter of Zeus and the harvest-goddess Demeter, and queen of the underworld; she was abducted by Hades, the god-king of the underworld.[2][3]

The myth of her abduction represents her function as the personification of vegetation which shoots forth in spring and withdraws into the earth after harvest; hence she is also associated with spring and with the seeds of the fruits of the fields. Persephone as a vegetation goddess (Kore) and her mother Demeter were the central figures of the Eleusinian mysteries that predated the Olympian pantheon. In the Linear B (Mycenean Greek) tablets dated 1400-1200 BC found at Pylos, the "two mistresses and the king" are mentioned; John Chadwick identifies these as Demeter, Persephone and Poseidon.[4]

In Classical Greek art, Persephone is invariably portrayed robed; often carrying a sheaf of grain. In Roman mythology, she is called Proserpina.

Contents

Greek mythology

Persephone's abduction is first mentioned in Hesiod's Theogony. In the Homeric Hymn to Demeter a great chasm opened up and Hades abducted her daughter. Demeter caused a terrible drought that forced Zeus to bring Persephone back, but she was obliged to spend half of the year in the underworld.[5] Demeter was also united with the hero Iasion in Crete and she bore Ploutos (πλούτος,plutos:wealth)[2] who represents the wealth of the corn that was stored in underground silos or ceramic jars (pithoi). Similar subterranean pithoi were used in ancient times for burials and Ploutos is fused with Hades, the King of the realm of the dead. During summer months, the Greek Corn-Maiden (Kore) is lying in the corn of the underground silos, in the realm of Hades and she is fused with Persephone, the Queen of the underworld. At the beginning of the autumn, when the seeds of the old crop are laid on the fields, she ascends and is reunited with her mother Demeter, for at that time the old crop and the new meet each other. For the initiated this union was the symbol of the eternity of human life that flows from the generations which spring from each other.[6]

Hesiod refers to the island of the "happy dead"[7] and it is the Elysion[8] which seems to be counterpart with Eleusis, the city of the Eleusinian mysteries. The Greeks believed that only the beloved of the gods could exist there.[9] In Odyssey Homer carries the old belief to the ideal island for mortals Scheria, the imaginary perfect world that was offered to the future emigrants. This island became the lost dream of the Greek world.[10]

The primitive myths of isolated Arcadia seem to be related with the first Greek-speaking people who came from the north-east during the bronze age. Despoina (Persephone) is the daughter of Demeter and Poseidon Hippios (horse), who represents the river spirit of the underworld that appears as a horse as often happens in northern-European folklore. He pursues the mare-Demeter and from the union she bears the horse Arion and a daughter who originally had the form or the shape of a mare. The two goddesses were not clearly separated and they were closely connected with the springs and the animals. They were related with the god of rivers and springs; Poseidon and especially with Artemis, the Mistress of the Animals who was the first nymph.[3] According to the Greek tradition a hunt-goddess preceded the harvest goddess.[11]

Her name

Etymology

Triptolemus, Demeter, and Persephone by the Triptolemos Painter,ca 470BC

In a Linear B (Mycenean Greek) inscription on a tablet found at Pylos dated 1400-1200 BC, John Chadwick reconstructs the name of a goddess *Preswa who could be identified with Persa, daughter of Oceanus and finds speculative the further identification with the first element of Persephone.[12] Persephonē (Greek: Περσεφόνη) is her name in the Ionic Greek of epic literature. The Homeric form of her name is Persephoneia (Περσεφονεία,[13] Persephonēia). In other dialects she was known under variant names: Persephassa (Περσεφάσσα), Persephatta (Περσεφάττα), or simply Korē (Κόρη, "girl, maiden").[14] Plato calls her Pherepapha (Φερέπαφα) in his Cratylus, "because she is wise and touches that which is in motion". There also the forms Perifona (Πηριφόνα) and Phersephassa (Φερσέφασσα). The existence of so many different forms shows how difficult it was for the Greeks to pronounce the word in their own language and suggests that the name has probably a pre-Greek origin.[15]

Persephone's name is commonly derived from φέρειν φόνον, pherein phonon, "to bring (or cause) death".[16]

Another mythical personage of the name of Persephione is called a daughter of Minyas and the mother of Chloris, a nymph of spring, flower and new growth.[16] The Minyans were a group considered autochthonous, but some scholars assert that they were the first wave of Proto-Greek speakers in the second milemnium BC.[17]

The Roman Proserpina

The Romans first heard of her from the Aeolian and Dorian cities of Magna Graecia, who used the dialectal variant Proserpinē (Προσερπινη). Hence, in Roman mythology she was called Proserpina, a name erroneously derived by the Romans from "proserpere", "to shoot forth"[18] and as such became an emblematic figure of the Renaissance.[citation needed]

At Locri, perhaps uniquely, Persephone was the protector of marriage, a role usually assumed by Hera; in the iconography of votive plaques at Locri, her abduction and marriage to Hades served as an emblem of the marital state, children at Locri were dedicated to Proserpina, and maidens about to be wed brought their peplos to be blessed.[19]

Nestis

In a Classical period text ascribed to Empedocles, c. 490–430 BC,[20] describing a correspondence among four deities and the classical elements, the name Nestis for water apparently refers to Persephone: "Now hear the fourfold roots of everything: enlivening Hera, Hades, shining Zeus. And Nestis, moistening mortal springs with tears."[21]

Greek underworld
Residents
Geography
Famous inmates
Visitors

Of the four deities of Empedocles's elements, it is the name of Persephone alone that is taboo—Nestis is a euphemistic cult title[22]—for she was also the terrible Queen of the Dead, whose name was not safe to speak aloud, who was euphemistically named simply as Kore or "the Maiden", a vestige of her archaic role as the deity ruling the underworld.

Queen of the Underworld

Seated goddess, probably Persephone on her throne in the underworld, Severe style ca 480–60, found at Tarentum, Magna Graecia (Pergamon Museum, Berlin)

There is an archaic role for Persephone as the dread queen of the Underworld, whose very name it was forbidden to speak.[citation needed] As goddess of death she is also called a daughter of Zeus and Styx,[23] the river that formed the boundary between Earth and the underworld. Homer describes her as the formidable, venerable majestic queen of the shades, who carries into effect the curses of men upon the souls of the dead, along with her husband Hades.[24] In the reformulation of Greek mythology expressed in the Orphic Hymns, Dionysus and Melinoe are separately called children of Zeus and Persephone.[25] Groves sacred to her are at the western extremity of the earth on the frontiers of the lower world, which itself is called "house of Persephone".[26]

Her central myth was the context of the secret rites of regeneration at Eleusis,[27] which promised immortality to initiates.

Abduction myth

The story of her abduction is traditionally referred to as the Rape of Persephone. The myth is absent in Homer and first appears in Hesiod's Theogony:[16] "Also he [Zeus] came to the bed of all-nourishing Demeter, and she bore white-armed Persephone whom Aidoneus (Hades) carried off from her mother; but wise Zeus gave her to him."[2] Unlike every other offspring of an Olympian pairing of deities, Persephone has no stable position at Olympus. Persephone used to live far away from the other deities, a goddess within Nature herself before the days of planting seeds and nurturing plants. In the Olympian telling,[28] the gods Hermes, Ares, Apollo, and Hephaestus had all wooed Persephone; but Demeter rejected all their gifts and hid her daughter away from the company of the Olympian deities.

Thus, beautiful Persephone lived a peaceful life until Hades, the Lord of the Underworld, fell in love with her. It is said that Zeus advised him to carry her off, as her mother Demeter was not likely to allow the match. She was innocently picking flowers with some nymphsAthena, and Artemis, the Homeric hymn says—or Leucippe, or Oceanids—in a field when Hades came to abduct her, bursting through a cleft in the earth. The place where Persephone was said to have been carried off is different in the various local traditions. The Sicilians believed that Hades found her in the meadows near Enna. The Eleusinians mentioned the Nysaean plain in Boeotia and said that Persephone had descended with Hades into the lower world at the entrance of the western Oceanus. Later accounts place the rape near Attica or at Erineus near Eleusis. The Cretans thought that their own island was the scene of the rape.[16] Demeter searched desperately with torches for her lost daughter all over the world. In some versions she forbids the earth to produce, or she neglects the earth and in the depth of her despair she causes nothing to grow. Helios, the sun, who sees everything, eventually told Demeter what had happened and at length she discovered the place of her abode.

The Return of Persephone by Frederic Leighton (1891)

Finally, Zeus, pressed by the cries of the hungry people and by the other deities who also heard their anguish, forced Hades to return Persephone. However, it was a rule of the Fates that whoever consumed food or drink in the Underworld was doomed to spend eternity there. Before Persephone was released to Hermes, who had been sent to retrieve her, Hades tricked her into eating pomegranate seeds, (four or six according to the telling) which forced her to return to the underworld for a period each year. The seeds correspond to the dry summer months in Greece, usually one third of the year (four months) when Persephone (Kore) is absent. In some versions, Ascalaphus informed the other deities that Persephone had eaten the pomegranate seeds. When Demeter and her daughter were reunited, the Earth flourished with vegetation and color, but for some months each year, when Persephone returned to the underworld, the earth once again became a barren realm. This is an origin story to explain the seasons.

In an earlier version, Hecate rescued Persephone. On an Attic red-figured bell krater of ca 440 BC in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Persephone is rising as if up stairs from a cleft in the earth, while Hermes stands aside; Hecate, holding two torches, looks back as she leads her to the enthroned Demeter.[29]

The tenth-century Byzantine encyclopedia Suda introduces a goddess of a blessed afterlife assured to Orphic mystery initiates. This Macaria is asserted to be the daughter of Hades, but no mother is mentioned.[30]

Titles and functions

The epithets of Persephone reveal her double function as chthonic and vegetation goddess. The surnames given to her by the poets refer to her character as Queen of the lower world and the dead, or her symbolic meaning of the power that shoots forth and withdraws into the earth. Her common name as a vegetation goddess is Kore and in Arcadia she was worshipped under the title Despoina "the mistress", a very old chthonic divinity. Plutarch identifies her with spring and Cicero calls her the seed of the fruits of the fields. In the Eleusinian mysteries her return is the symbol of immortality and hence she was frequently represented on sarcophagi.[16]

In the mystical theories of the Orphics and the Platonists, Kore is described as the all-pervading goddess of nature [31] who both produces and destroys everything and she is therefore mentioned along or identified with other mystic divinities such as Isis, Rhea, Ge, Hestia, Pandora, Artemis, and Hecate.[32] The mystic Persephone is further said to have become by Zeus the mother of Dionysos, Iacchus, or Zagreus.[16]

Demeter and Persephone were often referred to as "the two goddesses" or "the mistresses".[33] Cult of Demeter and the Maiden is found at:

  • Attica:
    • Athens: in the Thesmophoria. This was a festival of secret women-only rituals connected with marriage customs and commemorated the third of the year when Kore was abducted and Demeter abstained from her role as goddess of harvest and growth. The festival was celebrated in three days:The first was the "way up" to the sacred space, the second the day of festing when they ate pomegranate seeds and the third was a meat fest in celebration of "Kalligeneia" a goddess of beautiful birth. Zeus penetrated the festival as Zeus-Eubuleus.[34]
    • Eleusis: in the Eleusinian mysteries which were celebrated at the autumn sowing. Inscriptions are referring to "the two Goddesses" accompanied by the agricultural god Triptolemus probably son of Ge and Oceanus [35] and "the God and the Goddess" (Persephone and Ploutos) accompanied by Eubuleus who probably led the way back from the underworld.[36] The myth was represented in a cycle with three phases: the "descent", the "search", and the "ascent", with contrasted emotions from sorrow to joy which roused the mystae to exultation. The main theme was the ascent of Persephone and the reunion with her mother Demeter.[6]
  • Boeotia:
    • Thebes, which Zeus is said to have been given to her as an acknowledgement for a favour she had bestown to him.[37] Pausanias records a grove of Cabeirian Demeter and the Maid, three miles outside the gates of Thebes, where a ritual was performed, so called on the grounds that Demeter gave it to the Cabeiri, who established it at Thebes. The Thebans told Pausanias that some inhabitants of Naupactus had performed the same rituals there, and had met with divine vengeance.[38]
  • Peloponnesus:
  • Sicily
    • Syracuse: There was a harvest festival of Demeter and Persephone at Syracuse when the grain was ripe (about May).[40]
  • Magna Graecia
    • Epizephyrian Locri: A temple associated with childbirth; its treasure was looted by Pyrrhus.[41]
    • Archaeological finds suggest that worship of Demeter and Persephone was widespread in Sicily and Greek Italy.

Ancient literary references

  • Homer:
    • Iliad:
      • "the gods fulfilled his curse, even Zeus of the nether world and dread Persephone." (9, line 457; A. T. Murray, trans)
      • "Althea prayed instantly to the gods, being grieved for her brother's slaying; and furthermore instantly beat with her hands upon the all-nurturing earth, calling upon Hades and dread Persephone" (9, 569)
    • Odyssey:
      • "And come to the house of Hades and dread Persephoneia to seek sooth saying of the spirit of Theban Teiresias. To him even in death Persephoneia has granted reason that ..." (book 10, card 473)
  • Hymns to Demeter[42]
    • Hymn 2:
      • "Mistress Demeter goddess of heaven, which God or mortal man has rapt away Persephone and pierced with sorrow your dear heart?(hymn 2, card 40)
    • Hymn 13:
      • "I start to sing for Demeter the lovely-faced goddess, for her and her daughter the most beautiful Persephoneia. Hail goddess keep this city safe!" (hymn 13, card 1)
  • Pindar[42]
    • Olympian:
      • "Now go Echo, to the dark-walled home of Phersephona."(book O, poem 14)
    • Isthmean:
      • "Aecus showed them the way to the house of Phersephona and nymphs, one of them carrying a ball."(book 1, poem 8)
    • Nemean:
      • "Island which Zeus, the lord of Olympus gave to Phersephona;he nodded descent with his flowers hair."(book N, poem 1)
    • Pythian:
      • "You spendlor-loving city, most beautiful on earth, home of Phersephona. You who inhabit the hill of well-built dwellings."(book P, poem 12)
  • Aeschylus [42]
    • Libation bearers:
      • Electra:"O Phersephassa, grant us indeed a glorious victory!"(card 479)
  • Aristophanes [42]
    • Thesmophoriazusae:
      • Mnesilochos:"Thou Mistress Demeter, the most valuable friend and thou Pherephatta, grant that I may be able to offer you!" (card 266)
  • Euripides [42]
    • Alcestis:
      • "O' you brave and best hail, sitting as attendand Beside's Hades bride Phersephone!"(card 741)
    • Hecuba:
      • "It is said that any of the dead that stand beside Phersephone, that the Danaids have left the plains to Troy."(card 130)
  • Bacchylides [42]
    • Epinicians:
      • "Flushing thunderbolt went down to the halls of slender-ankled Phersephona to bring up into the light of Hades." (book Ep. poem 5)
  • Vergil[43]
    • The Aeneid:
      • "For since she had not died through fate, or by a well-earned death, but wretchedly, before her time, inflamed with sudden madness, Proserpine had not yet taken a lock of golden hair from her head, or condemned her soul to Stygian Orcus." (IV.696-99)

Modern reception

In 1934, Igor Stravinsky based his melodrama Perséphone on Persephone's story.

Persephone also appears many times in popular culture.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Cora, the Latinization of Kore, is not used in modern English.
  2. ^ a b c Hesiod, Theogony 914,
  3. ^ a b Martin Nilsson (1967). Die Geschichte der Griechische Religion Vol I pp 462-463, 479-480
  4. ^ John Chadwick (1976).The Mycenean World. Cambridge University Press
  5. ^ Karl Kerenyi(1951):The Gods of the Greeks. pp 238-241
  6. ^ a b Martin Nilsson, The Greek popular religion, The religion of Eleusis, pp 51-54
  7. ^ Hesiod. Work and days 166 ff
  8. ^ This was a land at the western extremity of the river that surrounded earth where sun rested at night in order to be reborn in the morning. The Egyptians believed that they would be reborn if they followed the course of the sun and later that they would spend there a happy eternity. —Jan Assmann (2001), Death and Salvation in Ancient Egypt Cornell University Press, p. 392
  9. ^ F. Schachermeyer (1964), Die Minoische Kultur des alten Kreta, W. Kohlhammer Stuttgart, pp. 141-146, 305
  10. ^ Odyssey 7.259, 7.297: Description of the island, 8.114-6: Magic garden that gives fruits in all seasons, 7.320: Connection with Rhadamanthus, judge of Elysion —Claude Mossé (1984), La Gréce archaϊque d'Homére á Eschyle, VIIIe-VIe av. J.C. Edition du Seuil, Paris, pp 68, 92-94, 96-98, 105
  11. ^ Pausanias 2.30.2
  12. ^ John Chadwick, Documents in Mycenaean Greek, Tablet Tn 316
  13. ^ Homer, The Odyssey 11.213
  14. ^ H.G. Liddell and R. Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon
  15. ^ Martin P. Nilsson (1967), Die Geschichte der Griechische Religion, Volume I, C.F. Beck Verlag, p. 474
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Smith, "Perse'phone"
  17. ^ Caskey John (1960), "The Early Helladic Period in Argolis", Hesperia 29(3) 285-303
  18. ^ Cicero. De Natura Deorum 2.26
  19. ^ Christiane Sourvinou-Inwood, "Persephone" The Journal of Hellenic Studies 98 (1978:101–121).
  20. ^ Empedocles was a Greek pre-Socratic philosopher who was a citizen of Agrigentum, a Greek colony in Sicily
  21. ^ Peter Kingsley, in Ancient Philosophy, Mystery, and Magic: Empedocles and Pythagorean Tradition (Oxford University Press, 1995).
  22. ^ Kingsley 1995 identifies Nestis as a cult title of Persephone.
  23. ^ Apollodorus, Library 1.3.
  24. ^ Homer. Odyssey, 10.494
  25. ^ Orphica, 26, 71
  26. ^ Odyssey 10.491, 10.509
  27. ^ Károly Kerényi, Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter, 1967, passim
  28. ^ Loves of Hermes : Greek mythology
  29. ^ The figures are unmistakable, as they are inscribed "Persophata, Hermes, Hekate, Demeter"; Gisela M. A. Richter, "An Athenian Vase with the Return of Persephone" The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 26.10 (October 1931:245–248)
  30. ^ Suidas s.v. Makariai, with English translation at Suda On Line, Adler number mu 51.[1]
  31. ^ Orphic Hymn 29.16
  32. ^ Schol. ad. Theocritus 2.12
  33. ^ Pausanias.Description of Greece 5.15.4, 5, 6
  34. ^ Burkert (1985), The Greek religion, pp. 242-243
  35. ^ . Pseudo Apollodorus Biblioteca IV.2
  36. ^ Kevin Klinton (1993), Greek Sanctuaries: New Approaches, Rootledge, p. 11
  37. ^ Scholia ad. Euripides Phoen. 487
  38. ^ Pausanias 9.25.5
  39. ^ For Mantinea, see Brill's New Pauly "Persephone", II D.
  40. ^ Brill's New Pauly, "Persephone", citing Diodorus 5.4
  41. ^ Livy: 29.8, 29.18
  42. ^ a b c d e f perseus tufts-persephone
  43. ^ http://www.poetryintranslation.com/PITBR/Latin/VirgilAeneidIV.htm#_Toc342020

References

  • Apollodorus, Apollodorus, The Library, with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S. in 2 Volumes, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1921.
  • Burket, Walter, Greek Religion 1985
  • Farnell, Lewis Richard, The Cults of the Greek States, Volume 3 (1906) (Chapters on: Demeter and Kore-Persephone; Cult-Monuments of Demeter-Kore; Ideal Types of Demeter-Kore).
  • Homer, The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, Ph.D. in two volumes, Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924.
  • Homer, The Odyssey with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PH.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1919.
  • Kerényi, Károly, Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter, 1960, in English 1967
  • Smith, William; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London (1873). "Perse'phone"
  • Zuntz, Günther, Persephone: Three Essays on Religion and Thought in Magna Graecia, 1973

External links


Greek deities series
Primordial deities | Titans | Aquatic deities | Chthonic deities
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Aphrodite | Apollo | Ares | Artemis | Athena | Demeter
Dionysus | Hephaestus | Hera | Hermes | Hestia | Poseidon | Zeus
Chthonic deities
Hades | Persephone | Gaia | Demeter | Hecate | Iacchus | Trophonius | Triptolemus | Erinyes

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Korē
Demeter (goddess of the harvest)
Zagreus (son of Zeus and Persephone)

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2012, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Random House Word Menu. © 2010 Write Brothers Inc. Word Menu is a registered trademark of the Estate of Stephen Glazier. Write Brothers Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
 Rhymes. Oxford University Press. © 2006, 2007 All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Persephone Read more

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