Persephone is the Goddess of Spring, as well as Goddess of the Underworld.
She is known for being kidnapped by Hades, the God of the Underworld.
Her mother, Demeter mourned her departure by refusing to let crops grow--essentially the creation of winter. Persephone returns every Spring, but is cursed to return to the Underworld once every year.
she has no kids because she was unable to have kids.
Persephone was Queen of the Underworld, wife of Hades (her uncle) passage to Elysium was granted through the Mysteries of Persephone and Demeter (her mother) a Spring goddess, she was associated with growing things and grain she was also Mistress of the Furies (her daughters) - so was a goddess of granting furies or giving punishment to those wronged or breaking divine laws - as a goddess of the Underworld both speech with ghosts and necromancy was granted though acknowledging her.
She has three kids. Zagreus, Melinoe, and Erinyes. The first two are Zeus' kids after he seduced her as a serpant.
Persephone is both Queen of the Underworld and Spring: a goddess who is immortal so she does not age or die, but every year spends duel time on Earth/Olympus or the Underworld.
Persephone was motivated by a desire for freedom and a chance to create her own destiny. She wanted to break away from her mother Demeter's control and explore the world on her own terms. This led her to willingly go to the Underworld with Hades and eventually become the queen of the realm.
Persephone was both goddess of spring (life) and goddess Queen of the Underworld.
Persephone goes on for spring and winter in the year, for justice in life and death, and for Demeter and Hades.
Persephone missed both her mother and the life she'd known on earth .
The number 4 symbolizes stability, order, structure, and balance in Greek mythology. Each of the main Greek gods and goddesses represents different aspects of life and nature, contributing to the overall harmony and balance of the universe. Demeter symbolizes fertility, harvest, and growth, while Persephone represents transformation, rebirth, and cycles of life and death. Together, they embody the interconnectedness of the natural world and the enduring cycle of seasons.
Persephone is both goddess of spring (life) and goddess who is Queen in the Underworld (death).
Persephone was a fertility goddess chiefly because she was a goddess of spring, the renewal of life after death (winter).
Loss and love: the loss of Persephone from the Earth goddess Demeter, the love of Hades for Persephone, the love of Demeter for Persephone.
She does not exist. Persephone was a ancient Greek deity, believed in, but believing in something does not make it fact, or "real".
Demeter and Zeus had a child together.
She was married to her uncle Hades!
Because as Hades' wife, Persephone is a Goddess of the Dead. All of the departed souls are her 'children', and death cannot create life.