Nectar and ambrosia.
No, she was daughter of the ancient sea deities Ketô and Phorkys.
Neither. He's a titan which is the second generation of divine beings, descending from the primordial deities and preceding the Olympian deities.
No. Apollo and Hera are not in Tartarus, they are Olympian deities, they dwell upon Olympus.
No, Hades is not considered one of the Olympian gods. He is the god of the underworld in Greek mythology. The Olympian gods are a group of twelve major deities who ruled over the world from Mount Olympus.
Ares was born immortal, his parents being the Olympian deities Zeus and Hera.
paganism worships lots of different deities including the Olympian gods and goddesses
There are not only twelve Olympian gods and goddesses; there are many other Greek deities.
Yes, Leto was a goddess though she was not one of the Olympian deities. Her children, Apollo and Artemis, were gods of Olympus.
Hera,the queen of the Olympian deities. She is a daughter of Cronus and Rhea, and wife and sister of Zeus
Aphrodite was considered one of the Olympian deities in Greek mythology. She is often associated with love, beauty, and desire and was revered as an essential figure among the twelve Olympian gods who resided on Mount Olympus. Although her origins are sometimes linked to the Titans, particularly through her birth from the sea foam, she is primarily classified as an Olympian.
The Titanomachy, the war between the Titans and the Olympian gods in Greek mythology, occurred before the rise of Zeus and the Olympian deities, when the Titans tried to maintain their power. It was a 10-year conflict that resulted in the Olympian gods emerging victorious and establishing their rule over the cosmos.
Relating to the Earth, in a purely physical sense. The opposite, Olympian deities, were wholly unconcerned with the Earth itself. You may think of the chthonic deities as being somewhat druidic in nature.