Cybele the Phrygian goddess is known by such titles as "Great Mother" and "Earth Mother" and "Mountain Mother".
Electra, a cloud goddess, was the mother of the goddess Iris.
The Roman goddess Diana was the mother of no one, since she was a virgin goddess.
The goddess, Terra, was the Roman goddess of personifying the earth. In Greek Mythology, she is also known as Gaea, or Mother Earth. She is the oldest Greek Goddess, and is the mother of the Titans, and the Giants.
The Goddess of the mother of the muses is Mnemosyne. Mnemosyne is also the goddess of memory. She is very important and anyone with special memory's worshiped her and sacrificed things for her
Yes, the Great Mother Goddess, Rhea.
Cybele the Phrygian goddess is known by such titles as "Great Mother" and "Earth Mother" and "Mountain Mother".
When you say Goddess in Wicca, there is one single Goddess who is the earth mother Gaia. She is the Great mother of the Horned God.
In Sumerian mythology, Ninhursag was the earth-goddess and mother-goddess. She was one of the seven great deities of Sumer. She was principally considered a fertility goddess.
To be succinct, no. Zeus, for example, certainly isn't "mother goddess" or anything like it, and if you're of the flavor of pagan that has a "huntsman" type deity, he's pretty much guaranteed to be the antithesis of "mother goddess".
Mother Teresa was not a goddess and did not consider herself a goddess.
Electra, a cloud goddess, was the mother of the goddess Iris.
the mother of all the gods and goddess is rhea
The Roman goddess Diana was the mother of no one, since she was a virgin goddess.
Anabeth isn't a goddess mother is , though her mother is Athena.
The name of the mother goddess of Mesopotamia was Ninhursag also spelled Ninsun. In Inca mythology the mother goddess was named Pachamama.
In Babylonian mythology, Marduk's mother was the goddess Damkina. She was a mother goddess associated with fertility and the earth.