There are many goddesses of Earth, in many religions both ancient and modern.
Yes: through her mother's line, Demeter goddess of the harvest, Rhea goddess of the mountains, and Gaea goddess of the earth.
Earth is Old English and German in origin, related to the Old Saxon 'ertha', the Dutch 'aerde', and the German 'erda'. In Norse myth: Erda ("Earth") was the germanic earth-goddess, identified with the nordic goddess Jörd.
Gaea or Gaia was Mother Earth.
Gaea was the goddess of the Earth in Greek Mythology
Hestia is goddess of fire, and as the home/hearth is on earth, also a goddess of it as a granddaughter of Gaea, the Earth personified.
I believe the Greek Goddess's name is Gaia.
Yes, as most gods and goddess of the Greeks are. Persephone, through her mother Demeter (goddess of the harvest), is grand-daughter of Rhea the wild goddess of mountains, and great-granddaughter of Gaea the Earth itself in Greek myth.
The Greek Earth goddess was Gaia (also spelled Gaea). The Greek goddess of the home is Hestia.
Gaia is a goddess. She is the Earth or Mother Earth.
There is no goddess of the Earth. The Titaness Gaia is THE Earth.
Gaia in Celtic mythology and Tau in the real religion. Tau is our Goddess she made us from the dust of the moon and Earth and Pi is our Father the mathematical God who made the Earth round and created the heavens and the stars, planets.
The Greeks literally related their people, the kings and commoners alike, to the Greek gods and goddesses, but none more so than Gaia, the goddess who personified the Earth itself.