Demeter
Demeter (sister of Zeus, mother of Persephone).
Likely her mother, as Demeter is a grain goddess.
If you mean Demeter, she is a Greek goddess of grain, fertility, and harvest and is the mother of Persephone.
Goddess of fertility, grain and harvest. Demeter is a sister of Zeus. Her daughter is Persephone, Hades' wife.
Persephone was usually depicted as a young goddess holding sheafs of grain and a flaming torch.
In the ancient Greek religion (or as we call it, Greek mythology), the goddess of agriculture, grains, plants, etc. was Demeter, mother of Persephone (goddess of springtime).
winter is when shes separated from her mother and stays with her 'husband' hades and her mother Demeter the goddess of grain is in mourning and summer is when Demeter is reunited with her daughter and rejoices
Persephone was usually depicted as a young goddess holding sheafs of grain and a flaming torch.
The goddess of grain, the harvest, and things that grew was Demeter. She was one of the daughters of Cronus and Rhea, sister of Zeus, Poseidon, Hades, Hera, and Hestia. She and Zeus had a daughter, Persephone, who Hades stole away and made Queen of the Underworld.
Demeter is the Greek goddess of agriculture (particularly grain), fertility, the seasons, and the harvest. She is daughter of Kronos and Rhea, and mother of Persephone. Her symbols are a torch, a sheaf of wheat, or barley.
She is both the Goddess of the Spring, and the Queen of the Underworld, Lady of the Dead. She is the goddess of birth, death and rebirth, and is concerned with the bounty of the Earth and the harvest, as well as the dying away. Her Mother is Demeter, the Goddess of the Earth and of the Harvest. Demeter's Roman name is Ceres. This is where the word "Cereal" comes from as She is the Goddess of the Grain. Demeter's younger brother, Zeus, the King of Gods, is Persephone's Father. Zeus' older brother, Hades, is Persephone's husband.
Persephone was usually depicted as a young goddess holding sheafs of grain and a flaming torch. Sometimes she was shown in the company of her mother Demeter, and the hero Triptolemos, the teacher of agriculture. At other times she appears enthroned beside Hades.