When Persephone is gone, the crops don't grow and it is winter. When Persephone is here, Demeter is happy and it is spring
By Zeus, Demeter's daughter is Persephone (Kore).By Poseidon, Demeter's daughter is Despoine.By Carmanor, Demeter's daughter is Khrysothemis.Artemis is also mentioned as a daughter of Demeter in some cases: (Aeschylus, Pausanias 8.37.3).
Because Persephone was Demeter's only daughter
Yes, Demeter is the daughter of Cronus and Rhea
Loss and love: the loss of Persephone from the Earth goddess Demeter, the love of Hades for Persephone, the love of Demeter for Persephone.
Demeter's most famous daughter is Persephone whom she had with Zeus. Demeter has other daughters, Despoine whose father is Poseidon and Chrysothemis who is the daughter of Karmano. Artemis is also called a daughter of Demeter and associated with Despoine.
Demeter was the most generous of the great Olympian goddesses.She is the goddess of the harvest. Demeter provides all the nutrients on earth and is the mother of the earth ..The earth can not live without Demeter allowing its seeds to grow . She is the goddess of the harvest. Demeter is particularly prominent in the Greek legend of the abduction of her daughter Persephone (Kore) by the underworld god Hades. Distraught at her loss, Demeter neglected her duties as a vegetation while she searched for her daughter.
No, Demeter never married.No, but she had a daughter by Zeus
Demeter was a daughter of Cronos and Rhea.
No she didnt. Demeter has a daughter named Persephone.
Demeter had one daughter with Zeus: Persephone.
Every year when Persephone returns to the Underworld, her mother Demeter mourns the loss of her daughter. Demeter causes the growth in the earth to stop for the duration of her daughter's absence. Autumn begins, and then Winter occurs. Spring and growth begins again when Persephone is returned to her mother's arms.
Edith Hamilton refers to Dionysus and Demeter as suffering gods because they both experienced significant hardship and pain in their mythological stories. Dionysus faced betrayal and dismemberment by Titans, while Demeter endured the loss and search for her daughter Persephone. Their experiences of suffering and resilience contribute to their characterizations as deities who understand human emotions and struggles.