It is a ancient reasoning for the season of summer/spring and winter; that is if you refer to the myth of Demeter going in search of her daughter, Persephone. If not, please rephrase your question.
according to some myths Demeter only had one daughter, Persephone.Other myths say that she had 8 children:PersephoneAreionDespoineEubouleusKhrysothemisKorbasPhilomelosPloutos
Persephone and Demeter
The Greek myths have no calendar.
The Greek myths do not have an author.
greek myths she is known as Demeter. In roman she is known as Ceres.
FIRST OF ALL jerk demeter is a girl so sence you said that goodbye
Hades, Poisiedon, and Zeus. It is thought in some myths that Demeter was also her sister.
The Ancient Greeks created the religion in which Demeter was worshiped, the smaller stories of that religion (much like there are bible stories today) are what form now as "myths".
Yes, there are several myths surrounding Demeter, the Greek goddess of agriculture and the harvest. One of the most prominent is the myth of her daughter Persephone, who was abducted by Hades to the underworld. In her grief, Demeter caused the earth to become barren, leading to the changing seasons and the cycle of growth and decay. This myth symbolizes the connection between life, death, and rebirth in nature.
The ancient Egyptians believed in "myths" because they were a part of their religion.
No one knows. As far as the Greek myths go, Demeter, Persephone's mother, never had another child.
Mekon was mortal, but poppies represent the goddess Demeter as the bringer of sleep or death. Poppies were used in Greco-Roman myths as offerings to the dead: a second meaning of the depiction and use of poppies in the Greco-Roman myths is the symbolism of the bright scarlet colour as signifying the promise of resurrection after death.