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Demeter

In ancient Greek religion and mythology, Demeter (/dɪˈmtər/; Attic: Δημήτηρ Dēmḗtēr [dɛːmɛ́ːtɛːr]; Doric: Δαμάτηρ Dāmā́tēr) is the Olympian goddess of the harvest and agriculture, presiding over crops, grains, food, and the fertility of the earth. Although she is mostly known as a grain goddess, she also appeared as a goddess of health, birth, and marriage, and had connections to the Underworld.[1] She is also called Deo (Δηώ).[2] In Greek tradition, Demeter is the second child of the Titans Rhea and Cronus, and sister to Hestia, Hera, Hades, Poseidon, and Zeus. Like her other siblings but Zeus, she was swallowed by her father as an infant and rescued by Zeus.

Demeter
Goddess of the harvest, agriculture, fertility, and sacred law
Member of the Twelve Olympians
A marble statue of Demeter, National Roman Museum
AbodeMount Olympus
AnimalsPig, serpent, gecko, turtledove, crane, screech owl
SymbolCornucopia, wheat, torch, poppy, bread
FestivalsThesmophoria, Eleusinian Mysteries
Personal information
ParentsCronus and Rhea
SiblingsHestia, Hera, Hades, Poseidon, Zeus
ConsortZeus, Poseidon, Iasion, Karmanor, Mecon
ChildrenPersephone, Despoina, Eubuleus, Arion, Plutus, Philomelus, Iacchus, Acheron, Hecate (Orphic)
Equivalents
Roman equivalentCeres
Egyptian equivalentIsis

Through her brother Zeus, she became the mother of Persephone, a fertility goddess. One of the most notable Homeric Hymns, the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, tells the story of Persephone's abduction by Hades and Demeter's search for her. When Hades, the King of the Underworld, wished to make Persephone his wife, he abducted her from a field while she was picking flowers, with Zeus' leave. Demeter searched everywhere to find her missing daughter to no avail until she was informed that Hades had taken her to the Underworld. In response, Demeter neglected her duties as goddess of agriculture, plunging the earth into a deadly famine where nothing would grow, causing mortals to die. Zeus ordered Hades to return Persephone to her mother to avert the disaster. However, because Persephone had eaten food from the Underworld, she could not stay with Demeter forever but had to divide the year between her mother and her husband, explaining the seasonal cycle, as Demeter does not let plants grow while Persephone is gone.

Her cult titles include Sito (Σιτώ), "she of the Grain",[3] as the giver of food or grain,[4] and Thesmophoros (θεσμός, thesmos: divine order, unwritten law; φόρος, phoros: bringer, bearer), "giver of customs" or "legislator", in association with the secret female-only festival called the Thesmophoria.[5] Though Demeter is often described simply as the goddess of the harvest, she presided also over the sacred law, and the cycle of life and death. She and her daughter Persephone were the central figures of the Eleusinian Mysteries, a religious tradition that predated the Olympian pantheon and which may have its roots in the Mycenaean period c. 1400–1200 BC.[6]

Demeter was often considered to be the same figure as the Anatolian goddess Cybele, and she was identified with the Roman goddess Ceres.

Etymology edit

Demeter may appear in Linear A as da-ma-te on three documents (AR Zf 1 and 2, and KY Za 2), all three dedicated to religious situations and all three bearing just the name (i-da-ma-te on AR Zf 1 and 2).[7] It is unlikely that Demeter appears as da-ma-te in a Linear B (Mycenean Greek) inscription (PY En 609); the word 𐀅𐀔𐀳, da-ma-te, probably refers to "households".[8][9] On the other hand, 𐀯𐀵𐀡𐀴𐀛𐀊, si-to-po-ti-ni-ja, "Potnia of the Grain", is regarded as referring to her Bronze Age predecessor or to one of her epithets.[10]

Demeter's character as mother-goddess is identified in the second element of her name meter (μήτηρ) derived from Proto-Indo-European (PIE) *méh₂tēr (mother).[11] In antiquity, different explanations were already proffered for the first element of her name. It is possible that Da (Δᾶ),[12] a word which corresponds to (Γῆ) in Attic, is the Doric form of De (Δῆ), "earth", the old name of the chthonic earth-goddess, and that Demeter is "Mother-Earth".[13] Liddell & Scott find this "improbable" and Beekes writes, "there is no indication that [da] means "earth", although it has also been assumed in the name of Poseidon found in the Linear B inscription E-ne-si-da-o-ne, "earth-shaker".[14][15][16] John Chadwick also argues that the element in the name of Demeter is not so simply equated with "earth".[17]

M. L. West has proposed that the word Demeter, initially Damater, could be a borrowing from an Illyrian deity attested in the Messapic goddess Damatura, with a form dā- ("earth", from PIE *dʰǵʰ(e)m-) attached to -matura ("mother"), akin to the Illyrian god Dei-paturos (dei-, "sky", attached to -paturos, "father"). The Lesbian form Dō- may simply reflect a different colloquial pronunciation of the non-Greek name.[18]

Another theory suggests that the element De- might be connected with Deo, an epithet of Demeter[19] and it could derive from the Cretan word dea (δηά), Ionic zeia (ζειά)—variously identified with emmer, spelt, rye, or other grains by modern scholars—so that she is the mother and the giver of food generally.[20][21] This view is shared by British scholar Jane Ellen Harrison, who suggests that Démeter's name means Grain-Mother, instead of Earth-Mother.[22] R. S. P. Beekes rejects a Greek interpretation, but not necessarily an Indo-European one.[15]

Wanax (wa-na-ka) was her male companion (Greek: Πάρεδρος, Paredros) in Mycenaean cult.[23] The Arcadian cult links her to the god Poseidon, who probably substituted the male companion of the Great Goddess; Demeter may therefore be related to a Minoan Great Goddess (Cybele).[24]

An alternative Proto-Indo-European etymology comes through Potnia and Despoina, where Des- represents a derivative of PIE *dem (house, dome), and Demeter is "mother of the house" (from PIE *dems-méh₂tēr).[25]

Iconography edit

 
Demeter on a Didrachme from Paros island, struck at the Cyclades.

Demeter was frequently associated with images of the harvest, including flowers, fruit, and grain. She was also sometimes pictured with her daughter Persephone. However, Demeter is not generally portrayed with any of her consorts; the exception is Iasion, the youth of Crete who lay with her in a thrice-ploughed field and was killed afterward by a jealous Zeus with a thunderbolt.

Demeter is assigned the zodiac constellation Virgo, the Virgin, by Marcus Manilius in his 1st-century Roman work Astronomicon. In art, the constellation Virgo holds Spica, a sheaf of wheat in her hand and sits beside constellation Leo the Lion.[26]

In Arcadia, she was known as "Black Demeter". She was said to have taken the form of a mare to escape the pursuit of her younger brother, Poseidon, and having been raped by him despite her disguise, she dressed all in black and retreated into a cave to mourn and to purify herself. She was consequently depicted with the head of a horse in this region.[27]

A sculpture of the Black Demeter was made by Onatas.[28]

Description edit

In the earliest conceptions of Demeter she is the goddess of grain and threshing, however her functions were extended beyond the fields and she was often identified with the earth goddess (Gaia). Some of the epithets of Gaia and Demeter are similar showing the identity of their nature. In most of her myths and cults, Demeter is the "Grain-Mother" or the "Earth-Mother". In the older chthonic cults the earth goddess was related to the Underworld and in the secret rites (mysteries) Demeter and Persephone share the double function of death and fertility. Demeter is the giver of the secret rites and the giver of the laws of cereal agriculture. She was occasionally identified with the Great Mother RheaCybele who was worshipped in Crete and Asia Minor with the music of cymbals and violent rites. It seems that poppies were connected with the cult of the Great Mother.

As an agricultural goddess edit

 
Demeter, enthroned and extending her hand in a benediction toward the kneeling Metaneira, who offers the triune wheat (c. 340 BC)
 
The Eleusinian trio: Persephone, Triptolemus and Demeter (Roman copy dating to the Early Imperial period and hosted by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, of the Great Eleusinian relief in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens [el] marble bas-relief from Eleusis, 440–430 BC.)

In epic poetry and Hesiod's Theogony, Demeter is the Grain-Mother, the goddess of cereals who provides grain for bread and blesses its harvesters. In Homer's Iliad, the blond Demeter with the help of the wind separates the grain from the chaff.[29] Homer mentions the Thalysia a Greek harvest-festival of first fruits in honour of Demeter .[30] In Hesiod, prayers to Zeus-Chthonios (chthonic Zeus) and Demeter help the crops grow full and strong.[31] This was her main function at Eleusis, and she became panhellenic. In Cyprus, "grain-harvesting" was damatrizein. Demeter was the zeidoros arοura, the Homeric "Mother Earth arοura" who gave the gift of cereals (zeai or deai).[32][33]

Most of the epithets of Demeter describe her as a goddess of grain. Her name Deo in literature [34] probably relates her with deai a Cretan word for cereals. In Attica she was called Haloas (of the threshing floor) according to the earliest conception of Demeter as the Corn-Mother. She was sometimes called Chloe (ripe-grain or fresh-green) and sometimes Ioulo (ioulos : grain sheaf). Chloe was the goddess of young corn and young vegetation and "Iouloi" were harvest songs in honour of the goddess. The reapers called Demeter Amallophoros (bringer of sheaves) and Amaia (reaper). The goddess was the giver of abundance of food and she was known as Sito (of the grain) and Himalis (of abundance ).[35] The bread from the first harvest-fruits was called thalysian bread (Thalysia) in honour of Demeter.[36] The sacrificial cakes burned on the altar were called "ompniai" and in Attica the goddess was known as Ompnia (related to corns). These cakes were oferred to all gods.

In some fests big loafs (artoi) were oferred to the goddess and in Boeotia she was known as Megalartos (of the big loaf) and Megalomazos (of the big mass, or big porridge). Her function was extended to vegetation generally and to all fruits and she had the epithets eukarpos (of good crop),karpophoros (bringer of fruits), malophoros (apple bearer) and sometimes Oria (all the fruits of the season). These epithets show an identity in nature with the earth goddess.[37][38][35][39]

The central theme in the Eleusinian Mysteries was the reunion of Persephone with her mother, Demeter when new crops were reunited with the old seed, a form of eternity.

According to the Athenian rhetorician Isocrates, Demeter's greatest gifts to humankind were agriculture which gave to men a civilized way of life, and the Mysteries which give the initiate higher hopes in this life and the afterlife.[40]

These two gifts were intimately connected in Demeter's myths and mystery cults. Demeter is the giver of mystic rites and the giver of the civilized way of life (teaching the laws of agriculture). Her epithet Eleusinia relates her with the Eleusinian mysteries, however at Sparta Eleusinia had an early use, and it was probably a name rather than an epithet.[41] Demeter Thesmophoros (law-giving) is closely associated to the laws of cereal agriculture. The festival Thesmophoria was celebrated throughout Greece and was connected to a form of agrarian magic.[42] Near Pheneus in Arcadia she was known as Demeter-Thesmia (lawfull), and she received rites according to the local version.[43]

Demeter's emblem is the poppy, a bright red flower that grows among the barley.

As an earth and underworld goddess edit

In addition to her role as an agricultural goddess, Demeter was often worshipped more generally as a goddess of the earth, from which crops spring up. Her individuality was rooted to the less developed personality of Gaia (earth). In Arcadia Demeter- Melaina (the black Demeter) was represented as snake-haired with a horse's head holding a dove and dolphin, perhaps to symbolize her power over the Underworld, the air, and the water.[44][45] The cult of Demeter in the region was related to Despoina, a very old chthonic divinity. Demeter shares the double function of death and fertility with her daughter Persephone. Demeter and Persephone were called Despoinai (the mistresses) and Demeters. This duality was also used in the classical period (Thesmophoroi, Double named goddesses) and particularly in an oath: "By the two goddesses".[46]

In the cult of Phlya she was worshipped as Anesidora who sends up gifts from the Underworld.[47][48][49]

In Sparta, she was known as Demeter-Chthonia (chthonic Demeter). After each death the mourning should end with a sacrifice to the goddess. Pausanias believes that her cult was introduced from Hermione, where Demeter was associated with Hades. In a local legend a hollow in the earth was the entrance to the underworld, by which the souls could pass easily.[50] In Elis she was called Demeter-Chamyne (goddess of the ground),[35] in an old chthonic cult associated with the descent to Hades. At Levadia the goddess was known as Demeter-Europa and she was associated with Trophonius, an old divinity of the underworld. The oracle of Trophonius was famous in the antiquity.[51]

Pindar uses the rare epithet Chalkokrotos (bronze sounding). Brazen musical instruments were used in the mysteries of Demeter and the Great-Mother Rhea-Cybele was also worshipped with the music of cymbals.[52]

In central Greece Demeter was known as Amphictyonis (of the dwellers-round), in a cult of the goddess at Anthele near Thermopylae (hot gates). She was the patron goddess of an ancient Amphictyony. Thermopylae is the place of hot springs considered to be entrances to Hades, since Demeter was a chthonic goddess in the older local cults.[53]

The Athenians called the dead "Demetrioi",[54] and this may reflect a link between Demeter and the ancient cult of the dead, linked to the agrarian belief that a new life would sprout from the dead body, as a new plant arises from buried seed. This was most likely a belief shared by initiates in Demeter's mysteries, as interpreted by Pindar: "Blessed is he who has seen before he goes under the earth; for he knows the end of life and knows also its divine beginning."[55]

In Arcadia Demeter had the epithets Erinys (fury) and Melaina (black) which are associated with the myth of Demeter's rape by Poseidon. The epithets stress the darker side of her character and her relation to the dark underworld, in an old chthonic cult associated with wooden structures (xoana).[39][35] Erinys had a similar function with the avenging Dike (Justice).[56] In the mysteries of Pheneus the goddess was known as Cidaria.[57] Her priest would put on the mask of Demeter, which was kept secret. The cult may have been connected with both the Underworld and a form of agrarian magic.[58]

As a poppy goddess edit

 
Drawing of a gold ring found at Mycenae showing a seated goddess bearing three poppy seedcases

Theocritus described one of Demeter's earlier roles as that of a goddess of poppies:

For the Greeks, Demeter was still a poppy goddess
Bearing sheaves and poppies in both hands.

— Idyll vii.157

Karl Kerényi asserted that poppies were connected with a Cretan cult which was eventually carried to the Eleusinian Mysteries in Classical Greece. In a clay statuette from Gazi,[59] the Minoan poppy goddess wears the seed capsules, sources of nourishment and narcosis, in her diadem. According to Kerényi, "It seems probable that the Great Mother Goddess who bore the names Rhea and Demeter, brought the poppy with her from her Cretan cult to Eleusis and it is almost certain that in the Cretan cult sphere opium was prepared from poppies."[60]

Worship edit

 
Terracotta Demeter figurine, Sanctuary of the Underworld Divinities, Akragas, 550–500 BC

In Crete edit

In an older tradition in Crete the vegetation cult was related with the deity of the cave.[61] During the Bronze Age, a goddess of nature dominated both in Minoan and Mycenean cults. In the Linear B inscriptions po-ti-ni-ja (potnia) refers to the goddess of nature who was concerned with birth and vegetation and had certain chthonic apects. Some scholars believe that she was the universal mother goddess.[62] A Linear B inscription at Knossos mentions the potnia of the labyrinth da-pu-ri-to-jo po-ti-ni-ja. Poseidon was often given the title wa-na-ka (wanax) in Linear B inscriptions in his role as King of the Underworld, and his title E-ne-si-da-o-ne indicates his chthonic nature. He was the male companion (paredros) of the goddess in the Minoan and propably Mycenean cult.[62] In the cave of Amnisos, Enesidaon is associated with the cult of Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth, who was involved with the annual birth of the divine child.[63] Elements of this early form of worship survived in the Eleusinian cult, where the following words were uttered: "the mighty Potnia had born a strong son."

On the Greek mainland edit

 
Demeter of Knidos, Hellenistic marble sculpture, around 350 BC

Tablets from Pylos of c. 1400 – c. 1200 BC record sacrificial goods destined for "the Two Queens and Poseidon" ("to the Two Queens and the King":wa-na-ssoi, wa-na-ka-te). The "Two Queens" may be related to Demeter and Persephone or their precursors, goddesses who were no longer associated with Poseidon in later periods.[64] In Pylos potnia (mistress) is the major goddess of the city and "wanax " in the tablets has a similar nature with her male consort in the Minoan cult.[62] Potnia retained some chthonic cults, and in popular religion these were related to the goddess Demeter. In Greek religion potniai(mistresses) appear in plural (like the Erinyes) and are closely related to the Eleusinian Demeter.[65]

Major cults to Demeter are known at Eleusis in Attica, Hermion (in Crete), Megara, Celeae, Lerna, Aegila, Munychia, Corinth, Delos, Priene, Akragas, Iasos, Pergamon, Selinus, Tegea, Thoricus, Dion (in Macedonia)[66] Lykosoura, Mesembria, Enna, and Samothrace.

Probably the earliest Amphictyony centred on the cult of Demeter at Anthele (Ἀνθήλη), lay on the coast of Malis south of Thessaly, near Thermopylae.[67][68]

Mysian Demeter had a seven-day festival at Pellené in Arcadia. The geographer Pausanias passed the shrine to Mysian Demeter on the road from Mycenae to Argos and reports that according to Argive tradition, the shrine was founded by an Argive named Mysius who venerated Demeter.[69]

 
Azes coin in India, with Demeter and Hermes, 1st century BC

"Saint Demetra" edit

 
Statue of Saint Demetra, Fitzwilliam Museum

Even after Theodosius I issued the Edict of Thessalonica and banned paganism throughout the Roman Empire, people throughout Greece continued to pray to Demeter as "Saint Demetra", patron saint of agriculture.[70] Around 1765–1766, the antiquary Richard Chandler, alongside the architect Nicholas Revett and the painter William Pars, visited Eleusis and mentioned a statue of a caryatid as well as the folklore that surrounded it, they stated that it was considered sacred by the locals because it protected their crops. They called the statue "Saint Demetra", a saint whose story had many similarities to the myth of Demeter and Persephone, except that her daughter had been abducted by the Turks and not by Hades.[71] The locals covered the statue with flowers to ensure the fertility of their fields.[72] This tradition continued until the 19th century,[70] when the statue was forcibly removed by Edward Daniel Clarke who presented it to the University of Cambridge.[71][72]

Festivals edit

Demeter's two major festivals were sacred mysteries. Her Thesmophoria festival (11–13 October) was women-only.[73] Her Eleusinian mysteries were open to initiates of any gender or social class. At the heart of both festivals were myths concerning Demeter as the mother and Persephone as her daughter.

Conflation with other goddesses edit

In the Roman period, Demeter became conflated with the Roman agricultural goddess Ceres through interpretatio romana.[74] The worship of Demeter has formally merged with that of Ceres around 205 BC, along with the ritus graecia cereris, a Greek-inspired form of cult, as part of Rome's general religious recruitment of deities as allies against Carthage, towards the end of the Second Punic War. The cult originated in southern Italy (part of Magna Graecia) and was probably based on the Thesmophoria, a mystery cult dedicated to Demeter and Persephone as "Mother and Maiden". It arrived along with its Greek priestesses, who were granted Roman citizenship so that they could pray to the gods "with a foreign and external knowledge, but with a domestic and civil intention".[75] The new cult was installed in the already ancient Temple of Ceres, Liber and Libera, Rome's Aventine patrons of the plebs; from the end of the 3rd century BC, Demeter's temple at Enna, in Sicily, was acknowledged as Ceres' oldest, most authoritative cult centre, and Libera was recognized as Proserpina, Roman equivalent to Persephone.[76] Their joint cult recalls Demeter's search for Persephone after the latter's abduction into the Underworld by Hades. At the Aventine, the new cult took its place alongside the old. It did not refer to Liber, whose open and gender-mixed cult played a central role in plebeian culture as a patron and protector of plebeian rights, freedoms and values. The exclusively female initiates and priestesses of the new "greek style" mysteries of Ceres and Proserpina were expected to uphold Rome's traditional, patrician-dominated social hierarchy and traditional morality. Unmarried girls should emulate the chastity of Proserpina, the maiden; married women should seek to emulate Ceres, the devoted and fruitful mother. Their rites were intended to secure a good harvest and increase the fertility of those who partook in the mysteries.[77]

Beginning in the 5th century BCE in Asia Minor, Demeter was also considered equivalent to the Phrygian goddess Cybele.[78] Demeter's festival of Thesmophoria was popular throughout Asia Minor, and the myth of Persephone and Adonis in many ways mirrors the myth of Cybele and Attis.[79]

Some late antique sources syncretized several "great goddess" figures into a single deity. For example, the Platonist philosopher Apuleius, writing in the late 2nd century, identified Ceres (Demeter) with Isis, having her declare:

I, mother of the universe, mistress of all the elements, first-born of the ages, highest of the gods, queen of the shades, first of those who dwell in heaven, representing in one shape all gods and goddesses. My will controls the shining heights of heaven, the health-giving sea winds, and the mournful silences of hell; the entire world worships my single godhead in a thousand shapes, with divers rites, and under many a different name. The Phrygians, first-born of mankind, call me the Pessinuntian Mother of the gods; ... the ancient Eleusinians Actaean Ceres; ... and the Egyptians who excel in ancient learning, honour me with the worship which is truly mine and call me by my true name: Queen Isis.

--Apuleius, translated by E. J. Kenny. The Golden Ass[80]

Mythology edit

Lineage, consorts, and offspring edit

 
Triptolemus, Demeter and Persephone by the Triptolemos-painter, c. 470 BC, Louvre
 
Pompeiian relief of Demeter in her aspects of mother goddess and goddess of agriculture

Hesiod's Theogony (c. 700 BC) describes Demeter as the second daughter of Cronus and Rhea, and the sister of Hestia, Hera, Hades, Poseidon, and Zeus.[81] Alongside the rest of her siblings, with the exception of her youngest brother Zeus, she was swallowed as a newborn by her father due to his fear of being overthrown by one of his children; she was later freed when Zeus made Cronus disgorge all of his children by giving him a special potion.[82]

Demeter is notable as the mother of Persephone, described by both Hesiod and in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter as the result of a union with her younger brother Zeus.[83] An alternate recounting of the matter appears in a fragment of the lost Orphic theogony, which preserves part of a myth in which Zeus mates with his mother, Rhea, in the form of a snake, explaining the origin of the symbol on Hermes' staff. Their daughter is said to be Persephone, whom Zeus, in turn, mates with to conceive Dionysus. According to the Orphic fragments, "After becoming the mother of Zeus, she who was formerly Rhea became Demeter."[84][85]

Before her abduction by Hades, Persephone was known as Kore ("maiden"), and there is some evidence that the figures of Persephone, Queen of the Underworld and Kore, daughter of Demeter, were initially considered separate goddesses.[86] However, they must have become conflated by the time of Hesiod in the 7th century BC.[79] Demeter and Persephone were often worshipped together and were often referred to by joint cultic titles. In their cult at Eleusis, they were referred to simply as "the goddesses", usually distinguished as "the older" and "the younger"; in Rhodes and Sparta, they were worshipped as "the Demeters"; in the Thesmophoria, they were known as "the thesmophoroi" ("the legislators").[87] In Arcadia they were known as "the Great Goddesses" and "the mistresses".[88] In Mycenaean Pylos, Demeter and Persephone were probably called the "queens" (wa-na-ssoi).[64]

Both Homer and Hesiod, writing c. 700 BC, described Demeter making love with the agricultural hero Iasion in a ploughed field during the marriage of Cadmus and Harmonia.[89] According to Hesiod, this union resulted in the birth of Plutus.

According to Diodorus Siculus, in his Bibliotheca historica written in the 1st century BC, Demeter and Zeus were also the parents of Dionysus. Diodorus described the myth of Dionysus' double birth (once from the earth, i.e. Demeter, when the plant sprouts) and once from the vine (when the fruit sprouts from the plant). Diodorus also related a version of the myth of Dionysus' destruction by the Titans ("sons of Gaia"), who boiled him, and how Demeter gathered up his remains so that he could be born a third time (Diod. iii.62). Diodorus states that Dionysus' birth from Zeus and his older sister Demeter was somewhat of a minority belief, possibly via conflation of Demeter with her daughter, as most sources state that the parents of Dionysus were Zeus and Persephone, and later Zeus and Semele.[90]

 
Dionysus (Bacchus) and Demeter (Ceres), antique fresco in Stabiae, 1st century

In Arcadia, a major Arcadian deity known as Despoina ("Mistress") was said to be the daughter of Demeter and Poseidon. According to Pausanias, a Thelpusian tradition said that during Demeter's search for Persephone, Poseidon pursued her. Demeter turned into a horse to avoid her younger brother's advances. However, he turned into a stallion and mated with the goddess, resulting in the birth of the horse god Arion and a daughter "whose name they are not wont to divulge to the uninitiated".[91] Elsewhere, he says that the Phigalians assert that the offspring of Poseidon and Demeter was not a horse, but Despoina, "as the Arcadians call her".[92]

In Orphic literature, Demeter seems to be the mother of the witchcraft goddess Hecate.[93]

The goddess took Mecon, a young Athenian, as a lover; he was at some point transformed into a poppy flower.[94]

Abduction of Persephone edit

 
Demeter drives her horse-drawn chariot containing her daughter Persephone-Kore at Selinunte, Sicily, 6th century BC.

Demeter's daughter Persephone was abducted to the Underworld by Hades, who received permission from her father Zeus to take her as his bride. Demeter searched for her ceaselessly for nine days, preoccupied with her grief. Hecate then approached her and said that while she had not seen what happened to Persephone, she heard her screams. Together the two goddesses went to Helios, the sun god, who witnessed everything that happened on earth thanks to his lofty position. Helios then revealed to Demeter that Hades had snatched a screaming Persephone to make her his wife with the permission of Zeus, the girl's father. Demeter then filled with anger. The seasons halted; living things ceased their growth and began to die.[102] Faced with the extinction of all life on earth, Zeus sent his messenger Hermes to the Underworld to bring Persephone back. Hades agreed to release her if she had eaten nothing while in his realm, but Persephone had eaten a small number of pomegranate seeds. This bound her to Hades and the Underworld for certain months of every year, most likely the dry Mediterranean summer, when plant life is threatened by drought,[103] despite the popular belief that it is autumn or winter.[104] There are several variations on the basic myth; the earliest account, the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, relates that Persephone is secretly slipped a pomegranate seed by Hades[105] and in Ovid's version,[106] Persephone willingly and secretly eats the pomegranate seeds, thinking to deceive Hades, but is discovered and made to stay. Contrary to popular perception, Persephone's time in the Underworld does not correspond with the unfruitful seasons of the ancient Greek calendar, nor her return to the upper world with springtime.[107] Demeter's descent to retrieve Persephone from the Underworld is connected to the Eleusinian Mysteries.[108]

 
Demeter rejoiced, for her daughter was by her side.

The myth of the capture of Persephone seems to be pre-Greek. In the Greek version, Ploutos (πλούτος, wealth) represents the wealth of the corn that was stored in underground silos or ceramic jars (pithoi). Similar subterranean pithoi were used in ancient times for funerary practices. At the beginning of the autumn, when the corn of the old crop is laid on the fields, she ascends and is reunited with her mother, Demeter, for at this time, the old crop and the new meet each other.[109]

 
A Greek terracotta figurine of Baubo, of the face-in-torso type

In the Orphic tradition, while she was searching for her daughter, a mortal woman named Baubo received Demeter as her guest and offered her a meal and wine. Demeter declined them both because she mourned the loss of Persephone. Baubo then, thinking she had displeased the goddess, lifted her skirt and showed her genitalia to the goddess, simultaneously revealing Iacchus, Demeter's son. Demeter was most pleased with the sight and delighted she accepted the food and wine.[110][111] This tale survives in the account of Clement of Alexandria, a Christian who tried to discredit pagan practices and mythology. However, several Baubo figurines (figurines of women revealing their vulvas) have been discovered, supporting the story.

Demeter at Eleusis edit

 
Demeter in mourning, marble relief from Knossos, Archaeological Museum of Heraklion.

Demeter's search for her daughter Persephone took her to the palace of Celeus, the King of Eleusis in Attica. She assumed the form of an old woman and asked him for shelter. He took her in, to nurse Demophon and Triptolemus, his sons by Metanira. To reward his kindness, she planned to make Demophon immortal; she secretly anointed the boy with ambrosia and laid him in the hearth's flames to gradually burn away his mortal self. But Metanira walked in, saw her son in the fire and screamed in fright. Demeter abandoned the attempt. Instead, she taught Triptolemus the secrets of agriculture, and he, in turn, taught them to any who wished to learn them. Thus, humanity learned how to plant, grow and harvest grain. The myth has several versions; some are linked to figures such as Eleusis, Rarus and Trochilus. The Demophon element may be based on an earlier folk tale.[112]

Demeter and Iasion edit

Homer's Odyssey (c. late 8th century BC) contains perhaps the earliest direct references to the myth of Demeter and her consort Iasion, a Samothracian hero whose name may refer to bindweed, a small white flower that frequently grows in wheat fields. In the Odyssey, Calypso describes how Demeter, "without disguise", made love to Iasion. "So it was when Demeter of the braided tresses followed her heart and lay in love with Iasion in the triple-furrowed field; Zeus was aware of it soon enough and hurled the bright thunderbolt and killed him."[113] However, Ovid states that Iasion lived up to old age as the husband of Demeter.[114] In ancient Greek culture, part of the opening of each agricultural year involved the cutting of three furrows in the field to ensure its fertility.[115]

Hesiod expanded on the basics of this myth. According to him, the liaison between Demeter and Iasion took place at the wedding of Cadmus and Harmonia in Crete. Demeter, in this version, had lured Iasion away from the other revellers. Hesiod says that Demeter subsequently gave birth to Plutus.[116]

Demeter and Poseidon edit

 
Roman copy of 4th century BC Greek bust (National Roman Museum)

In Arcadia, located in what is now southern Greece, the major goddess Despoina was considered the daughter of Demeter and Poseidon Hippios ("Horse-Poseidon"). In the associated myths, Poseidon represents the river spirit of the Underworld, and he appears as a horse, as often happens in northern European folklore. The myth describes how he pursued his older sister, Demeter, who hid from him among the horses of the king Onkios, but even in the form of a mare, she could not conceal her divinity. Poseidon caught and raped his older sister in the form of a stallion. Demeter was furious at Poseidon's assault; in this furious form, she became known as Demeter Erinys. Her anger at Poseidon drove her to dress all in black and retreat into a cave to purify herself, an act which was the cause of a universal famine. Demeter's absence caused the death of crops, livestock, and eventually of the people who depended on them (later Arcadian tradition held that it was both her rage at Poseidon and her loss of her daughter caused the famine, merging the two myths).[27] Demeter washed away her anger in the River Ladon, becoming Demeter Lousia, the "bathed Demeter".[117]

"In her alliance with Poseidon," Kerényi noted,[118] "she was Earth, who bears plants and beasts, and could therefore assume the shape of an ear of grain or a mare." Moreover, she bore a daughter Despoina (Δέσποινα: the "Mistress"), whose name should not be uttered outside the Arcadian Mysteries,[119] and a horse named Arion, with a black mane and tail.

At Phigaleia, a xoanon (wood-carved statue) of Demeter was erected in a cave which, tradition held, was the cave into which Black Demeter retreated. The statue depicted a Medusa-like figure with a horse's head and snake-like hair, holding a dove and a dolphin, which probably represented her power over air and water:[120]

The second mountain, Mount Elaius, is some thirty stades away from Phigalia, and has a cave sacred to Demeter surnamed Black ... the Phigalians say, they concluded that this cavern was sacred to Demeter and set up in it a wooden image. The image, they say, was made after this fashion. It was seated on a rock, like to a woman in all respects save the head. She had the head and hair of a horse, and there grew out of her head images of serpents and other beasts. Her tunic reached right to her feet; on one of her hands was a dolphin, on the other a dove. Now why they had the image made after this fashion is plain to any intelligent man who is learned in traditions. They say that they named her Black because the goddess had black apparel. They cannot relate either who made this wooden image or how it caught fire. But the old image was destroyed, and the Phigalians gave the goddess no fresh image, while they neglected for the most part her festivals and sacrifices, until the barrenness fell on the land.

— Pausanias, 8.42.1–4.

Demeter and Erysichthon edit

 
Demeter orders Famine to strike Erysichthon, Elisha Whittelsey Collection

Another myth involving Demeter's rage resulting in famine is that of Erysichthon, king of Thessaly.[27] The myth tells of Erysichthon ordering all of the trees in one of Demeter's sacred groves to be cut down, as he wanted to build an extension of his palace and hold feasts there. One tree, a huge oak, was covered with votive wreaths, symbols of the prayers Demeter had granted, so Erysichthon's men refused to cut it down. The king used an axe to cut it down, killing a dryad nymph in the process. The nymph's dying words were a curse on Erysichthon. Demeter punished the king by calling upon Limos, the spirit of unrelenting and insatiable hunger, to enter his stomach. The more the king ate, the hungrier he became. Erysichthon sold all his possessions to buy food but was still hungry. Finally, he sold his daughter, Mestra, into slavery. Mestra was freed from slavery by her former lover, Poseidon, who gave her the gift of shape-shifting into any creature to escape her bonds. Erysichthon used her shape-shifting ability to sell her numerous times to make more money to feed himself, but no amount of food was enough. Eventually, Erysichthon ate himself.[121]

In a variation, Erysichthon tore down a temple of Demeter, wishing to build a roof for his house; she punished him the same way, and near the end of his life, she sent a snake to plague him. Afterwards, Demeter put him among the stars (the constellation Ophiuchus), as she did the snake, to continue to inflict its punishment on Erysichthon.[122]

In the Pergamon Altar, which depicts the battle of the gods against the Giants (Gigantomachy), survive remains of what seems to have been Demeter fighting a Giant labelled "Erysichthon."[123] Demeter is also depicted fighting against the Giants next to Hermes in the Suessula Gigantomachy vase, now housed in the Louvre Museum.[124] Usually, ancient depictions of the Gigantomachy tend to exclude Demeter due to her non-martial nature.[125]

Wrath myths edit

 
Demeter in an ancient Greek fresco from Panticapaeum, 1st century Crimea.

While travelling far and wide looking for her daughter, Demeter arrived exhausted in Attica. A woman named Misme took her in and offered her a cup of water with pennyroyal and barley groats, for it was a hot day. Demeter, in her thirst, swallowed the drink clumsily. Witnessing that, Misme's son Ascalabus laughed, mocked her, and asked her if she would like a deep jar of that drink.[126] Demeter then poured her drink over him and turned him into a gecko, hated by both men and gods. It was said that Demeter showed her favour to those who killed geckos.[127]

Before Hades abducted her daughter, he had kept the nymph Minthe as his mistress. But after he married Persephone, he set Minthe aside. Minthe would often brag about being lovelier than Persephone and say Hades would soon come back to her and kick Persephone out of his halls. Demeter, hearing that, grew angry and trampled Minthe; from the earth then sprang a lovely-smelling herb named after the nymph.[128] In other versions, Persephone herself is the one who kills and turns Minthe into a plant for sleeping with Hades.[129][130][131]

In an Argive myth, when Demeter arrived in Argolis, a man named Colontas refused to receive her in his house, whereas his daughter Chthonia disapproved of his actions. Colontas was punished by being burnt along with his house, while Demeter took Chthonia to Hermione, where she built a sanctuary for the goddess.[132]

Demeter pinned Ascalaphus under a rock for reporting, as sole witness, to Hades that Persephone had consumed some pomegranate seeds.[133] Later, after Heracles rolled the stone off Ascalaphus, Demeter turned him into a short-eared owl instead.[134]

Demeter also turned the Sirens into half-bird monsters for not helping her daughter Persephone when she was abducted by Hades.[135]

Once, the Colchian princess Medea ended a famine that plagued Corinth by making sacrifices to Demeter and the nymphs.[136]

Favour myths edit

 
Head of a statue of Demeter, marble, Roman imperial period, 2nd century CE

Demeter gave Triptolemus her serpent-drawn chariot and seed and bade him scatter it across the earth (teach humankind the knowledge of agriculture). Triptolemus rode through Europe and Asia until he came to the land of Lyncus, a Scythian king. Lyncus pretended to offer what's accustomed of hospitality to him, but once Triptolemus fell asleep, he attacked him with a dagger, wanting to take credit for his work. Demeter then saved Triptolemus by turning Lyncus into a lynx and ordered Triptolemus to return home airborne.[137] Hyginus records a very similar myth, in which Demeter saves Triptolemus from an evil king named Carnabon who additionally seized Triptolemus' chariot and killed one of the dragons, so he might not escape; Demeter restored the chariot to Triptolemus, substituted the dead dragon with another one, and punished Carnabon by putting him among the stars holding a dragon as if to kill it.[138]

During her wanderings, Demeter came upon the town of Pheneus; to the Pheneates that received her warmly and offered her shelter, she gave all sorts of pulse, except for beans, deeming it impure.[139] Two of the Pheneates, Trisaules and Damithales, had a temple of Demeter built for her.[140] Demeter also gifted a fig tree to Phytalus, an Eleusinian man, for welcoming her in his home.[141]

 
Statue of Demeter in the façade of the Academy of Athens, Greece.

In the tale of Eros and Psyche, Demeter, along with her sister Hera, visited Aphrodite, raging with fury about the girl who had married her son. Aphrodite asks the two to search for her; the two try to talk sense into her, arguing that her son is not a little boy, although he might appear as one, and there's no harm in him falling in love with Psyche. Aphrodite took offence at their words.[142] Sometime later, Psyche in her wanderings came across an abandoned shrine of Demeter, and sorted out the neglected sickles and harvest implements she found there. As she was doing so, Demeter appeared to her and called from afar; she warned the girl of Aphrodite's great wrath and her plan to take revenge on her. Then Psyche begged the goddess to help her, but Demeter answered that she could not interfere and incur Aphrodite's anger at her, and for that reason, Psyche had to leave the shrine or else be kept as a captive of hers.[143]

When her son Philomelus invented the plough and used it to cultivate the fields, Demeter was so impressed by his good work that she immortalized him in the sky by turning him into a constellation, the Boötes.[144]

Hierax, a man of justice and distinction, set up sanctuaries for Demeter and received plenteous harvests from her in return. When the tribe neglected Poseidon favour of Demeter, the sea god destroyed all of her crops, so Hierax sent them instead his own food and was transformed into a hawk by Poseidon.[145]

Besides giving gifts to those who were welcoming to her, Demeter was also a goddess who nursed the young; all of Plemaeus's children born by his first wife died in a cradle; Demeter took pity on him and reared herself his son Orthopolis.[146] Plemaeus built a temple to her to thank her.[147] Demeter also raised Trophonius, the prophetic son of either Apollo or Erginus.[148]

Other accounts edit

Demeter seems to have accompanied Dionysus when he descended into the Underworld to retrieve his mother Semele in order to visit her now married daughter, and perhaps lead her back to the land of the living for the remainder of the year.[149][150] In many vases from Athens Dionysus is seen in the company of mother and daughter.[151]

Once Tantalus, a son of Zeus, invited the gods over for dinner. Tantalus, wanting to test them, cut his son Pelops, cooked him and offered him as a meal to them. They all saw through Tantalus' crime except Demeter, who ate Pelops' shoulder before the gods brought him back to life.[152]

Genealogy edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature. Merriam-Webster. 1995. p. 314. ISBN 9780877790426.
  2. ^ Δηώ
  3. ^ Σιτώ. Cf. σῖτος. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  4. ^ Eustathius of Thessalonica, scholia on Homer, 265.
  5. ^ The Broadview Anthology of Social and Political Thought: Volume 2: The Twentieth Century and Beyond. Broadview Press. p. 643.
  6. ^ John Chadwick, The Mycenean World. Cambridge University Press, 1976.
  7. ^ Y. Duhoux, "LA > B da-ma-te=Déméter? Sur la langue du linéaire A," Minos 29/30 (1994–1995): 289–294.
  8. ^ Y. Duhoux and A. Morpurgo-Davies, Companion to Linear B, vol. 2 (2011), p. 26. But see Ventris/Chadwick,Documents in Mycenean Greek p.242: B.Dietriech (2004):The origins of the Greek religion Bristol Phoenix Press. p.172
  9. ^ . Deaditerranean. Minoan Linear A & Mycenaean Linear B. Archived from the original on 18 March 2016. Retrieved 13 March 2014. "PY 609 En (1)". DĀMOS: Database of Mycenaean at Oslo. University of Oslo.
  10. ^ Inscription MY Oi 701. . Deaditerranean. Minoan Linear A & Mycenaean Linear B. Archived from the original on 20 March 2016. Retrieved 13 March 2014. "The Linear B word si-to". Palaeolexicon. Word study tool of Ancient languages. "MY 701 Oi (63)". DĀMOS: Database of Mycenaean atOslo. University of Oslo. Cf. σῖτος, Σιτώ.
  11. ^ "mother | Origin and meaning of mother by Online Etymology Dictionary". www.etymonline.com.
  12. ^ Δᾶ in Liddell and Scott.
  13. ^ "demeter | Origin and meaning of the name demeter by Online Etymology Dictionary". www.etymonline.com.
  14. ^ Δημήτηρ. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; An Intermediate Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  15. ^ a b R. S. P. Beekes. Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009, p. 324.
  16. ^ Adams, John Paul, Mycenean divinities – List of handouts for California State University Classics 315. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  17. ^ Chadwick, The Mycenaean World, Cambridge University Press, 1976, p. 87) "Every Greek was aware of the maternal functions of Demeter; if her name bore the slightest resemblance to the Greek word for 'mother', it would inevitably have been deformed to emphasize that resemblance. [...] How did it escape transformation into *Gāmātēr, a name transparent to any Greek speaker?" Compare the Latin transformation Iuppiter and Diespiter vis-a-vis *Deus pater.
  18. ^ West 2007, p. 176: "The ∆α-, however, cannot be explained from Greek. But there is a Messapic Damatura or Damatira, and she need not be dismissed as borrowing from Greek; she matches the Illyrian Deipaturos both in the agglutination and in the transfer to the thematic declension (-os, -a). (It is noteworthy that sporadic examples of a thematically declined ∆ημήτρα are found in inscriptions.) Damater/Demeter could therefore be borrowing from Illyrian. An Illyrian Dā- may be derived from *Dʰǵʰ(e)m-"
  19. ^ Orphic Hymn 40 to Demeter (translated by Thomas Taylor: "O universal mother Deo famed, august, the source of wealth and various names".
  20. ^ Compare sanskr. yava, lit. yavai, Δά is probably derived from δέFα :Martin Nilsson, Geschichte der Griechischen Religion, vol. I (Verlag C.H.Beck) pp 461–462.
  21. ^ Harrison, Jane Ellen (5 September 1908). "Prolegomena to the study of Greek religion". Cambridge [Eng.] : The University press – via Internet Archive.
  22. ^ "Harrison, Jane Ellen. Myths of Greece and Rome. 1928. pp. 63–64".
  23. ^ Dietrich, p.181.
  24. ^ Nilsson, 1967:444
  25. ^ Frisk, Griechisches Etymological Woerterbuch. Entry 1271
  26. ^ Stott, Carole (1 August 2019). Planisphere and Starfinder, pp. 69. Dorling Kindersley Limited. ISBN 978-0-241-42169-7.
  27. ^ a b c Simon Hornblower, Antony Spawforth, Esther Eidinow, eds. The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization. OUP Oxford, 2014; Pausanias, 8.42.1–4.
  28. ^ Pausainias, 8.42.7.
  29. ^ Homer Iliad 5.499
  30. ^ Iliad 9.534
  31. ^ Hesiod Works and Days, 465
  32. ^ Nilsson, (1967), Geschichte Vol I, 461-466
  33. ^ ζείδωρος
  34. ^ Soph.Antigone 1120
  35. ^ a b c d Stalmith in GRBS48 (2008), 116-117
  36. ^ Nilsson, (1967), Geschichte Vol I, 468
  37. ^ Farnell Cults III,33-38
  38. ^ Nilsson(1967) Geschichte Vol I, ,412,467-478
  39. ^ a b Cole(1994) in Placing the gods 201-202
  40. ^ Isocrates, Panegyricus 4.28: "When Demeter came to our land, in her wandering after the rape of Kore, and, being moved to kindness towards our ancestors by services which may not be told save to her initiates, gave these two gifts, the greatest in the world – the fruits of the earth, which have enabled us to rise above the life of the beasts, and the holy rite, which inspires in those who partake of it sweeter hopes regarding both the end of life and all eternity".
  41. ^ Robertson in GRBS37(1996), pp. 351, 377-378
  42. ^ Burkert(1985), 244
  43. ^ Stalmith in GRBS48 (2008), 127
  44. ^ Jeffery (1976), 23
  45. ^ Pausanias|8.42.1–4
  46. ^ Stalmith in GRBS48(2008) 118-119
  47. ^ Anesidora: inscribed against her figure on a white-ground kylix in the British Museum, B.M. 1881,0528.1, from Nola, painted by the Tarquinia painter, ca 470–460 BC (British Museum on-line catalogue entry)
  48. ^ Hesychius of Alexandria s.v.
  49. ^ Scholiast, On Theocritus ii. 12.
  50. ^ Farnell Cults III,48-49 Farnell III,48
  51. ^ Farnell Cults III,30-31 Farnell III,30
  52. ^ Raubitschek-Jane Biers, in MVSE vol. 31-32 (1997-1998), 53. MVSE (1997-1998), 53
  53. ^ Jeffery (1976), The city states, 72-73
  54. ^ "Harrison, Jane Ellen. Myths of Greece and Rome. 1928. pp. 65–66".
  55. ^ John Ernest Leonard Oulton (1954). Alexandrian Christianity The Library Of Christian Classics; Volume II. Westminster Press. p. 48: And Pindar speaks of the Eleusinian mysteries as follows: "Blessed is he who has seen before he goes under the earth; for he knows the end of life and knows also its divine beginning."
  56. ^ C.M. Bowra (1957), 87, 169
  57. ^ Pausanias 8.15.3
  58. ^ Nilsson, Geschichte Vol I p. 477-478
  59. ^ Heraklion Museum, Kerényi 1976, fig. 15.
  60. ^ Kerényi 1976, p. 25.
  61. ^ Dietrich p. 169.
  62. ^ a b c Dietrich, pp. 181–185.
  63. ^ Dietrich, p. 141.
  64. ^ a b "Wa-na-ssoi, wa-na-ka-te, (to the two queens and the king). Wanax is best suited to Poseidon, the special divinity of Pylos. The identity of the two divinities addressed as wanassoi, is uncertain ": George Mylonas (1966) Mycenae and the Mycenean age" p. 159 :Princeton University Press
  65. ^ Dietrich, pp. 189-190.
  66. ^ Cohen, A, Art in the Era of Alexander the Great: Paradigms of Manhood and Their Cultural Traditions, Cambridge University Press, 2010, p. 213. Google book preview
  67. ^ L. H. Jeffery (1976) Archaic Greece: The City States c. 700–500 BC. Ernest Benn Ltd., London & Tonbridge pp. 72, 73, 78 ISBN 0-510-03271-0
  68. ^ The Parian marble. Entry No 5: "When Amphictyon son of Hellen became king of Thermopylae brought together those living round the temple and named them Amphictyones; [1]
  69. ^ Pausanias, 7.27.9.
  70. ^ a b Keller, Mara Lynn (1988). "The Eleusinian Mysteries of Demeter and Persephone: Fertility, Sexuality, and Rebirth". Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion. 4 (1): 27–54. ISSN 8755-4178. JSTOR 25002068.
  71. ^ a b Cosmopoulos, Michael B. (2015). Bronze Age Eleusis and the Origins of the Eleusinian Mysteries. Cambridge University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-316-36823-7.
  72. ^ a b Sharma, Arvind (2005). Goddesses And Women In The Indic Religious Tradition. BRILL. p. 47. ISBN 978-90-04-12466-0.
  73. ^ Benko, Stephen, The virgin goddess: studies in the pagan and Christian roots of mariology, BRILL, 2004, note 111 on pp. 63 – 4, and p. 175.
  74. ^ Larousse Desk Reference Encyclopedia, The Book People, Haydock, 1995, p. 215.
  75. ^ Spaeth, Barbette Stanley, The Roman goddess Ceres, University of Texas Press, 1996, pp. 4, 6–13, citing Arnobius, who mistakes this as the first Roman cult to Ceres. His belief may reflect its high profile and ubiquity during the later Imperial period and possibly the fading of older, distinctively Aventine forms of her cult.
  76. ^ Scheid, John, "Graeco Ritu: A Typically Roman Way of Honoring the Gods," Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, 97, Greece in Rome: Influence, Integration, Resistance, 1995, p.23.
  77. ^ Spaeth, Barbette Stanley, The Roman goddess Ceres, University of Texas Press, 1996, pp. 13, 15, 60, 94–97.
  78. ^ Eur.Hel.1301–45 and Melanippid.764PMG.
  79. ^ a b Kore / Persephone. Encyclopedia of the Hellenic World: Asia Minor. http://asiaminor.ehw.gr/Forms/fLemmaBody.aspx?lemmaId=10541#noteendNote_11
  80. ^ Apuleius (1998). The Golden Ass. Penguin classics.
  81. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 453–455; Hard, p. 67.
  82. ^ Grimal, s.v. Cronus.
  83. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 912; Homeric Hymn to Demeter (2).
  84. ^ Proclus, Commentary on Plato's Cratylus 403 e (90, 28 Pasqu.) [=Orphic fr. 145 Kern]; West 1983, p. 217.
  85. ^ Kerényi 1976, p. 112.
  86. ^ Zuntz, G., Persephone. Three essays in religion and thought in Magna Graecia (Oxford, 1971), p. 75-83.
  87. ^ Martin Nilsson (1967) Die Geschichte der Griechische Religion pp.463, 477
  88. ^ Martin Nilsson (1967) Die Geschichte der Griechische Religion pp. 463–465
  89. ^ Homer, Odyssey 5.125; Hesiod, Theogony 969–974.
  90. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Book III.
  91. ^ Pausanias, 8.28.5–7.
  92. ^ Pausanias, 8.42.1.
  93. ^ Orphic frr. 400 I (I p. 334) [= fr. 41 Kern = Scholia on Apollonius of Rhodes, 3.467], 400 II (I p. 334) Bernabé [= fr. 42 Kern = Scholia on Theocritus, 2.12].
  94. ^ Smith, s.v. Mecon; Servius on Virgil's Georgics 1.212
  95. ^ Scholiast on Pindar, Pythian Odes 3.177; Hesychius
  96. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 5.48.2.
  97. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 969—974; Morford, p. 339.
  98. ^ Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.4.7.
  99. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 5.76.3; Pausanias, 2.30.3.
  100. ^ Pausanias, 10.7.2, 10.16.5.
  101. ^ Natalis Comes, Mythologiae 3.1; Smith s.v. Acheron
  102. ^ Kerényi 1951, pp. 232–241 and notes 784–798.
  103. ^ As in Burkert, Greek Religion (Harvard, 1985) p. 160.
  104. ^ "Martin Nilsson, The Greek popular religion, The religion of Eleusis, pp 51–54". Sacred-texts.com.
  105. ^ "HOMERIC HYMN TO DEMETER". www.uh.edu.
  106. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses (Book V, ln. 533–571)
  107. ^ Graf, "Demeter" in Brill's New Pauly
  108. ^ "The Eleusinian Mysteries: The Rites of Demeter". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 27 April 2019.
  109. ^ Martin Nilsson, Greek Popular Religion. pp 48–50
  110. ^ Clement of Alexandria, Exhortation to the Greeks 2.11; Grimal, s.v. Baubo.
  111. ^ Graves, p. 92.
  112. ^ Nilsson (1940), p. 50: "The Demophon story in Eleusis is based on an older folk-tale motif which has nothing to do with the Eleusinian Cult. It is introduced to let Demeter reveal herself in her divine shape".
  113. ^ Homer, Odyssey 5.125 ff (trans. Shewring)
  114. ^ Smith, s.v. Iasion; Ovid, Metamorphoses 9.421
  115. ^ "IASION - Greek Demi-God of the Samothracian Mysteries".
  116. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 969—974; Gantz, p. 64; Tripp, s.v. Iasion; Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. Iasion.
  117. ^ Other ritually bathed goddesses were Argive Hera and Cybele; Aphrodite renewed her own powers bathing herself in the sea.
  118. ^ Kerényi 1951, p. 185.
  119. ^ "In Arcadia, she was also a second goddess in the Mysteries of her daughter, the unnameable, who was invoked only as 'Despoina', the 'Mistress'" (Kerényi 1967, pp. 31ff., citing Pausanias, 8.37.9.
  120. ^ L. H. Jeffery (1976). Archaic Greece: The Greek city states c. 800-500 B.C. (Ernest Benn Limited) p 23 ISBN 0-510-03271-0
  121. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 8.738–878; Callimachus, Hymn VI to Demeter 34 ff..
  122. ^ Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.14.4
  123. ^ McKay, p. 93
  124. ^ "Louvre S 1677 (Vase)". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Tufts University. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  125. ^ Smith & Plantzos 2018, p. 409.
  126. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 5.446-461; Antoninus Liberalis, Metamorphoses 24; Tripp, s.v. Ascalabus.
  127. ^ Antoninus Liberalis, Metamorphoses 24.
  128. ^ Oppian, Halieutica 3.485 ff
  129. ^ Strabo, Geographica 8.3.14.
  130. ^ Scholia ad Nicandri Alexipharmaca 375
  131. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 10.728
  132. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.35.4
  133. ^ Apollodorus, 1.5.3.
  134. ^ Apollodorus, 2.5.12.
  135. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 141
  136. ^ Scholia on Pindar's Olympian Odes 13.74
  137. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 5.642-678
  138. ^ Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.14.2.
  139. ^ Pausanias, 8.15.3.
  140. ^ Pausanias, 8.15.4.
  141. ^ Pausanias, 1.37.2; Grimal, s.v. Phytalus, p. 373.
  142. ^ Apuleius, The Golden Ass 5.28-31
  143. ^ Apuleius, The Golden Ass 6.1-4
  144. ^ Hyginus, De Astronomica 2.4.7; Grimal, s.v. Philomelus, p. 366.
  145. ^ Antoninus Liberalis, Collection of Transformations 3
  146. ^ Pausanias, 2.5.8.
  147. ^ Pausanias, 2.11.2.
  148. ^ Pausanias, 9.39.5; Grimal, s.v. Trophonius, pp. 459–460.
  149. ^ Kerenyi 1967, pp. 42-43.
  150. ^ J. Paul Getty Museum 1983, p. 31, especially note 58.
  151. ^ J. Paul Getty Museum 1983, p. 30.
  152. ^ Lycophron, Alexandra 152-155; Hyginus, Fabulae 83; Grimal, s.v. Pelops.
  153. ^ This chart is based upon Hesiod's Theogony, unless otherwise noted.
  154. ^ According to Homer, Iliad 1.570–579, 14.338, Odyssey 8.312, Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus, see Gantz, p. 74.
  155. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 927–929, Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone, with no father, see Gantz, p. 74.
  156. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 886–890, of Zeus' children by his seven wives, Athena was the first to be conceived, but the last to be born; Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her, later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena "from his head", see Gantz, pp. 51–52, 83–84.
  157. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 183–200, Aphrodite was born from Uranus' severed genitals, see Gantz, pp. 99–100.
  158. ^ According to Homer, Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus (Iliad 3.374, 20.105; Odyssey 8.308, 320) and Dione (Iliad 5.370–71), see Gantz, pp. 99–100.

References edit

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  • Kerenyi, Karl (1967). Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter. Translated by Ralph Manheim. New York City, New York: Pantheon Books.
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External links edit

  • Foley P. Helene, The Homeric hymn to Demeter: translation, commentary, and interpretive essays, Princeton Univers. Press, 1994. with Ancient Greek text and English translation.
  • Text of Homeric Hymn to Demeter
  • Online book of Martin P. Nilsson, Greek Popular Religion
  • "The Political Cosmology of the Homeric Hymn to Demeter"
  • "The Sophian Prayer to Demeter"
  • The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (images of Demeter)

demeter, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, . For other uses see Demeter disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Demeter news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Demeter news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In ancient Greek religion and mythology Demeter d ɪ ˈ m iː t er Attic Dhmhthr Demḗter dɛːmɛ ːtɛːr Doric Damathr Dama ter is the Olympian goddess of the harvest and agriculture presiding over crops grains food and the fertility of the earth Although she is mostly known as a grain goddess she also appeared as a goddess of health birth and marriage and had connections to the Underworld 1 She is also called Deo Dhw 2 In Greek tradition Demeter is the second child of the Titans Rhea and Cronus and sister to Hestia Hera Hades Poseidon and Zeus Like her other siblings but Zeus she was swallowed by her father as an infant and rescued by Zeus DemeterGoddess of the harvest agriculture fertility and sacred lawMember of the Twelve OlympiansA marble statue of Demeter National Roman MuseumAbodeMount OlympusAnimalsPig serpent gecko turtledove crane screech owlSymbolCornucopia wheat torch poppy breadFestivalsThesmophoria Eleusinian MysteriesPersonal informationParentsCronus and RheaSiblingsHestia Hera Hades Poseidon ZeusConsortZeus Poseidon Iasion Karmanor MeconChildrenPersephone Despoina Eubuleus Arion Plutus Philomelus Iacchus Acheron Hecate Orphic EquivalentsRoman equivalentCeresEgyptian equivalentIsisThis article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Through her brother Zeus she became the mother of Persephone a fertility goddess One of the most notable Homeric Hymns the Homeric Hymn to Demeter tells the story of Persephone s abduction by Hades and Demeter s search for her When Hades the King of the Underworld wished to make Persephone his wife he abducted her from a field while she was picking flowers with Zeus leave Demeter searched everywhere to find her missing daughter to no avail until she was informed that Hades had taken her to the Underworld In response Demeter neglected her duties as goddess of agriculture plunging the earth into a deadly famine where nothing would grow causing mortals to die Zeus ordered Hades to return Persephone to her mother to avert the disaster However because Persephone had eaten food from the Underworld she could not stay with Demeter forever but had to divide the year between her mother and her husband explaining the seasonal cycle as Demeter does not let plants grow while Persephone is gone Her cult titles include Sito Sitw she of the Grain 3 as the giver of food or grain 4 and Thesmophoros 8esmos thesmos divine order unwritten law foros phoros bringer bearer giver of customs or legislator in association with the secret female only festival called the Thesmophoria 5 Though Demeter is often described simply as the goddess of the harvest she presided also over the sacred law and the cycle of life and death She and her daughter Persephone were the central figures of the Eleusinian Mysteries a religious tradition that predated the Olympian pantheon and which may have its roots in the Mycenaean period c 1400 1200 BC 6 Demeter was often considered to be the same figure as the Anatolian goddess Cybele and she was identified with the Roman goddess Ceres Contents 1 Etymology 2 Iconography 3 Description 3 1 As an agricultural goddess 3 2 As an earth and underworld goddess 3 3 As a poppy goddess 4 Worship 4 1 In Crete 4 2 On the Greek mainland 4 2 1 Saint Demetra 4 3 Festivals 4 4 Conflation with other goddesses 5 Mythology 5 1 Lineage consorts and offspring 5 2 Abduction of Persephone 5 3 Demeter at Eleusis 5 4 Demeter and Iasion 5 5 Demeter and Poseidon 5 6 Demeter and Erysichthon 5 7 Wrath myths 5 8 Favour myths 5 9 Other accounts 6 Genealogy 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEtymology editDemeter may appear in Linear A as da ma te on three documents AR Zf 1 and 2 and KY Za 2 all three dedicated to religious situations and all three bearing just the name i da ma te on AR Zf 1 and 2 7 It is unlikely that Demeter appears as da ma te in a Linear B Mycenean Greek inscription PY En 609 the word 𐀅𐀔𐀳 da ma te probably refers to households 8 9 On the other hand 𐀯𐀵𐀡𐀴𐀛𐀊 si to po ti ni ja Potnia of the Grain is regarded as referring to her Bronze Age predecessor or to one of her epithets 10 Demeter s character as mother goddess is identified in the second element of her name meter mhthr derived from Proto Indo European PIE meh ter mother 11 In antiquity different explanations were already proffered for the first element of her name It is possible that Da Dᾶ 12 a word which corresponds to Ge Gῆ in Attic is the Doric form of De Dῆ earth the old name of the chthonic earth goddess and that Demeter is Mother Earth 13 Liddell amp Scott find this improbable and Beekes writes there is no indication that da means earth although it has also been assumed in the name of Poseidon found in the Linear B inscription E ne si da o ne earth shaker 14 15 16 John Chadwick also argues that the da element in the name of Demeter is not so simply equated with earth 17 M L West has proposed that the word Demeter initially Damater could be a borrowing from an Illyrian deity attested in the Messapic goddess Damatura with a form da earth from PIE dʰǵʰ e m attached to matura mother akin to the Illyrian god Dei paturos dei sky attached to paturos father The Lesbian form Dō may simply reflect a different colloquial pronunciation of the non Greek name 18 Another theory suggests that the element De might be connected with Deo an epithet of Demeter 19 and it could derive from the Cretan word dea dha Ionic zeia zeia variously identified with emmer spelt rye or other grains by modern scholars so that she is the mother and the giver of food generally 20 21 This view is shared by British scholar Jane Ellen Harrison who suggests that Demeter s name means Grain Mother instead of Earth Mother 22 R S P Beekes rejects a Greek interpretation but not necessarily an Indo European one 15 Wanax wa na ka was her male companion Greek Paredros Paredros in Mycenaean cult 23 The Arcadian cult links her to the god Poseidon who probably substituted the male companion of the Great Goddess Demeter may therefore be related to a Minoan Great Goddess Cybele 24 An alternative Proto Indo European etymology comes through Potnia and Despoina where Des represents a derivative of PIE dem house dome and Demeter is mother of the house from PIE dems meh ter 25 Iconography edit nbsp Demeter on a Didrachme from Paros island struck at the Cyclades Demeter was frequently associated with images of the harvest including flowers fruit and grain She was also sometimes pictured with her daughter Persephone However Demeter is not generally portrayed with any of her consorts the exception is Iasion the youth of Crete who lay with her in a thrice ploughed field and was killed afterward by a jealous Zeus with a thunderbolt Demeter is assigned the zodiac constellation Virgo the Virgin by Marcus Manilius in his 1st century Roman work Astronomicon In art the constellation Virgo holds Spica a sheaf of wheat in her hand and sits beside constellation Leo the Lion 26 In Arcadia she was known as Black Demeter She was said to have taken the form of a mare to escape the pursuit of her younger brother Poseidon and having been raped by him despite her disguise she dressed all in black and retreated into a cave to mourn and to purify herself She was consequently depicted with the head of a horse in this region 27 A sculpture of the Black Demeter was made by Onatas 28 Description editIn the earliest conceptions of Demeter she is the goddess of grain and threshing however her functions were extended beyond the fields and she was often identified with the earth goddess Gaia Some of the epithets of Gaia and Demeter are similar showing the identity of their nature In most of her myths and cults Demeter is the Grain Mother or the Earth Mother In the older chthonic cults the earth goddess was related to the Underworld and in the secret rites mysteries Demeter and Persephone share the double function of death and fertility Demeter is the giver of the secret rites and the giver of the laws of cereal agriculture She was occasionally identified with the Great Mother RheaCybele who was worshipped in Crete and Asia Minor with the music of cymbals and violent rites It seems that poppies were connected with the cult of the Great Mother As an agricultural goddess edit nbsp Demeter enthroned and extending her hand in a benediction toward the kneeling Metaneira who offers the triune wheat c 340 BC nbsp The Eleusinian trio Persephone Triptolemus and Demeter Roman copy dating to the Early Imperial period and hosted by the Metropolitan Museum of Art of the Great Eleusinian relief in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens el marble bas relief from Eleusis 440 430 BC In epic poetry and Hesiod s Theogony Demeter is the Grain Mother the goddess of cereals who provides grain for bread and blesses its harvesters In Homer s Iliad the blond Demeter with the help of the wind separates the grain from the chaff 29 Homer mentions the Thalysia a Greek harvest festival of first fruits in honour of Demeter 30 In Hesiod prayers to Zeus Chthonios chthonic Zeus and Demeter help the crops grow full and strong 31 This was her main function at Eleusis and she became panhellenic In Cyprus grain harvesting was damatrizein Demeter was the zeidoros aroura the Homeric Mother Earth aroura who gave the gift of cereals zeai or deai 32 33 Most of the epithets of Demeter describe her as a goddess of grain Her name Deo in literature 34 probably relates her with deai a Cretan word for cereals In Attica she was called Haloas of the threshing floor according to the earliest conception of Demeter as the Corn Mother She was sometimes called Chloe ripe grain or fresh green and sometimes Ioulo ioulos grain sheaf Chloe was the goddess of young corn and young vegetation and Iouloi were harvest songs in honour of the goddess The reapers called Demeter Amallophoros bringer of sheaves and Amaia reaper The goddess was the giver of abundance of food and she was known as Sito of the grain and Himalis of abundance 35 The bread from the first harvest fruits was called thalysian bread Thalysia in honour of Demeter 36 The sacrificial cakes burned on the altar were called ompniai and in Attica the goddess was known as Ompnia related to corns These cakes were oferred to all gods In some fests big loafs artoi were oferred to the goddess and in Boeotia she was known as Megalartos of the big loaf and Megalomazos of the big mass or big porridge Her function was extended to vegetation generally and to all fruits and she had the epithets eukarpos of good crop karpophoros bringer of fruits malophoros apple bearer and sometimes Oria all the fruits of the season These epithets show an identity in nature with the earth goddess 37 38 35 39 The central theme in the Eleusinian Mysteries was the reunion of Persephone with her mother Demeter when new crops were reunited with the old seed a form of eternity According to the Athenian rhetorician Isocrates Demeter s greatest gifts to humankind were agriculture which gave to men a civilized way of life and the Mysteries which give the initiate higher hopes in this life and the afterlife 40 These two gifts were intimately connected in Demeter s myths and mystery cults Demeter is the giver of mystic rites and the giver of the civilized way of life teaching the laws of agriculture Her epithet Eleusinia relates her with the Eleusinian mysteries however at Sparta Eleusinia had an early use and it was probably a name rather than an epithet 41 Demeter Thesmophoros law giving is closely associated to the laws of cereal agriculture The festival Thesmophoria was celebrated throughout Greece and was connected to a form of agrarian magic 42 Near Pheneus in Arcadia she was known as Demeter Thesmia lawfull and she received rites according to the local version 43 Demeter s emblem is the poppy a bright red flower that grows among the barley As an earth and underworld goddess edit In addition to her role as an agricultural goddess Demeter was often worshipped more generally as a goddess of the earth from which crops spring up Her individuality was rooted to the less developed personality of Gaia earth In Arcadia Demeter Melaina the black Demeter was represented as snake haired with a horse s head holding a dove and dolphin perhaps to symbolize her power over the Underworld the air and the water 44 45 The cult of Demeter in the region was related to Despoina a very old chthonic divinity Demeter shares the double function of death and fertility with her daughter Persephone Demeter and Persephone were called Despoinai the mistresses and Demeters This duality was also used in the classical period Thesmophoroi Double named goddesses and particularly in an oath By the two goddesses 46 In the cult of Phlya she was worshipped as Anesidora who sends up gifts from the Underworld 47 48 49 In Sparta she was known as Demeter Chthonia chthonic Demeter After each death the mourning should end with a sacrifice to the goddess Pausanias believes that her cult was introduced from Hermione where Demeter was associated with Hades In a local legend a hollow in the earth was the entrance to the underworld by which the souls could pass easily 50 In Elis she was called Demeter Chamyne goddess of the ground 35 in an old chthonic cult associated with the descent to Hades At Levadia the goddess was known as Demeter Europa and she was associated with Trophonius an old divinity of the underworld The oracle of Trophonius was famous in the antiquity 51 Pindar uses the rare epithet Chalkokrotos bronze sounding Brazen musical instruments were used in the mysteries of Demeter and the Great Mother Rhea Cybele was also worshipped with the music of cymbals 52 In central Greece Demeter was known as Amphictyonis of the dwellers round in a cult of the goddess at Anthele near Thermopylae hot gates She was the patron goddess of an ancient Amphictyony Thermopylae is the place of hot springs considered to be entrances to Hades since Demeter was a chthonic goddess in the older local cults 53 The Athenians called the dead Demetrioi 54 and this may reflect a link between Demeter and the ancient cult of the dead linked to the agrarian belief that a new life would sprout from the dead body as a new plant arises from buried seed This was most likely a belief shared by initiates in Demeter s mysteries as interpreted by Pindar Blessed is he who has seen before he goes under the earth for he knows the end of life and knows also its divine beginning 55 In Arcadia Demeter had the epithets Erinys fury and Melaina black which are associated with the myth of Demeter s rape by Poseidon The epithets stress the darker side of her character and her relation to the dark underworld in an old chthonic cult associated with wooden structures xoana 39 35 Erinys had a similar function with the avenging Dike Justice 56 In the mysteries of Pheneus the goddess was known as Cidaria 57 Her priest would put on the mask of Demeter which was kept secret The cult may have been connected with both the Underworld and a form of agrarian magic 58 As a poppy goddess edit nbsp Drawing of a gold ring found at Mycenae showing a seated goddess bearing three poppy seedcasesTheocritus described one of Demeter s earlier roles as that of a goddess of poppies For the Greeks Demeter was still a poppy goddess Bearing sheaves and poppies in both hands Idyll vii 157 Karl Kerenyi asserted that poppies were connected with a Cretan cult which was eventually carried to the Eleusinian Mysteries in Classical Greece In a clay statuette from Gazi 59 the Minoan poppy goddess wears the seed capsules sources of nourishment and narcosis in her diadem According to Kerenyi It seems probable that the Great Mother Goddess who bore the names Rhea and Demeter brought the poppy with her from her Cretan cult to Eleusis and it is almost certain that in the Cretan cult sphere opium was prepared from poppies 60 Worship edit nbsp Terracotta Demeter figurine Sanctuary of the Underworld Divinities Akragas 550 500 BCIn Crete edit In an older tradition in Crete the vegetation cult was related with the deity of the cave 61 During the Bronze Age a goddess of nature dominated both in Minoan and Mycenean cults In the Linear B inscriptions po ti ni ja potnia refers to the goddess of nature who was concerned with birth and vegetation and had certain chthonic apects Some scholars believe that she was the universal mother goddess 62 A Linear B inscription at Knossos mentions the potnia of the labyrinth da pu ri to jo po ti ni ja Poseidon was often given the title wa na ka wanax in Linear B inscriptions in his role as King of the Underworld and his title E ne si da o ne indicates his chthonic nature He was the male companion paredros of the goddess in the Minoan and propably Mycenean cult 62 In the cave of Amnisos Enesidaon is associated with the cult of Eileithyia the goddess of childbirth who was involved with the annual birth of the divine child 63 Elements of this early form of worship survived in the Eleusinian cult where the following words were uttered the mighty Potnia had born a strong son On the Greek mainland edit nbsp Demeter of Knidos Hellenistic marble sculpture around 350 BCTablets from Pylos of c 1400 c 1200 BC record sacrificial goods destined for the Two Queens and Poseidon to the Two Queens and the King wa na ssoi wa na ka te The Two Queens may be related to Demeter and Persephone or their precursors goddesses who were no longer associated with Poseidon in later periods 64 In Pylos potnia mistress is the major goddess of the city and wanax in the tablets has a similar nature with her male consort in the Minoan cult 62 Potnia retained some chthonic cults and in popular religion these were related to the goddess Demeter In Greek religion potniai mistresses appear in plural like the Erinyes and are closely related to the Eleusinian Demeter 65 Major cults to Demeter are known at Eleusis in Attica Hermion in Crete Megara Celeae Lerna Aegila Munychia Corinth Delos Priene Akragas Iasos Pergamon Selinus Tegea Thoricus Dion in Macedonia 66 Lykosoura Mesembria Enna and Samothrace Probably the earliest Amphictyony centred on the cult of Demeter at Anthele Ἀn8hlh lay on the coast of Malis south of Thessaly near Thermopylae 67 68 Mysian Demeter had a seven day festival at Pellene in Arcadia The geographer Pausanias passed the shrine to Mysian Demeter on the road from Mycenae to Argos and reports that according to Argive tradition the shrine was founded by an Argive named Mysius who venerated Demeter 69 nbsp Azes coin in India with Demeter and Hermes 1st century BC Saint Demetra edit nbsp Statue of Saint Demetra Fitzwilliam MuseumEven after Theodosius I issued the Edict of Thessalonica and banned paganism throughout the Roman Empire people throughout Greece continued to pray to Demeter as Saint Demetra patron saint of agriculture 70 Around 1765 1766 the antiquary Richard Chandler alongside the architect Nicholas Revett and the painter William Pars visited Eleusis and mentioned a statue of a caryatid as well as the folklore that surrounded it they stated that it was considered sacred by the locals because it protected their crops They called the statue Saint Demetra a saint whose story had many similarities to the myth of Demeter and Persephone except that her daughter had been abducted by the Turks and not by Hades 71 The locals covered the statue with flowers to ensure the fertility of their fields 72 This tradition continued until the 19th century 70 when the statue was forcibly removed by Edward Daniel Clarke who presented it to the University of Cambridge 71 72 Festivals edit Main articles Eleusinian Mysteries and Thesmophoria Demeter s two major festivals were sacred mysteries Her Thesmophoria festival 11 13 October was women only 73 Her Eleusinian mysteries were open to initiates of any gender or social class At the heart of both festivals were myths concerning Demeter as the mother and Persephone as her daughter Conflation with other goddesses edit In the Roman period Demeter became conflated with the Roman agricultural goddess Ceres through interpretatio romana 74 The worship of Demeter has formally merged with that of Ceres around 205 BC along with the ritus graecia cereris a Greek inspired form of cult as part of Rome s general religious recruitment of deities as allies against Carthage towards the end of the Second Punic War The cult originated in southern Italy part of Magna Graecia and was probably based on the Thesmophoria a mystery cult dedicated to Demeter and Persephone as Mother and Maiden It arrived along with its Greek priestesses who were granted Roman citizenship so that they could pray to the gods with a foreign and external knowledge but with a domestic and civil intention 75 The new cult was installed in the already ancient Temple of Ceres Liber and Libera Rome s Aventine patrons of the plebs from the end of the 3rd century BC Demeter s temple at Enna in Sicily was acknowledged as Ceres oldest most authoritative cult centre and Libera was recognized as Proserpina Roman equivalent to Persephone 76 Their joint cult recalls Demeter s search for Persephone after the latter s abduction into the Underworld by Hades At the Aventine the new cult took its place alongside the old It did not refer to Liber whose open and gender mixed cult played a central role in plebeian culture as a patron and protector of plebeian rights freedoms and values The exclusively female initiates and priestesses of the new greek style mysteries of Ceres and Proserpina were expected to uphold Rome s traditional patrician dominated social hierarchy and traditional morality Unmarried girls should emulate the chastity of Proserpina the maiden married women should seek to emulate Ceres the devoted and fruitful mother Their rites were intended to secure a good harvest and increase the fertility of those who partook in the mysteries 77 Beginning in the 5th century BCE in Asia Minor Demeter was also considered equivalent to the Phrygian goddess Cybele 78 Demeter s festival of Thesmophoria was popular throughout Asia Minor and the myth of Persephone and Adonis in many ways mirrors the myth of Cybele and Attis 79 Some late antique sources syncretized several great goddess figures into a single deity For example the Platonist philosopher Apuleius writing in the late 2nd century identified Ceres Demeter with Isis having her declare I mother of the universe mistress of all the elements first born of the ages highest of the gods queen of the shades first of those who dwell in heaven representing in one shape all gods and goddesses My will controls the shining heights of heaven the health giving sea winds and the mournful silences of hell the entire world worships my single godhead in a thousand shapes with divers rites and under many a different name The Phrygians first born of mankind call me the Pessinuntian Mother of the gods the ancient Eleusinians Actaean Ceres and the Egyptians who excel in ancient learning honour me with the worship which is truly mine and call me by my true name Queen Isis Apuleius translated by E J Kenny The Golden Ass 80 Mythology editLineage consorts and offspring edit nbsp Triptolemus Demeter and Persephone by the Triptolemos painter c 470 BC Louvre nbsp Pompeiian relief of Demeter in her aspects of mother goddess and goddess of agricultureHesiod s Theogony c 700 BC describes Demeter as the second daughter of Cronus and Rhea and the sister of Hestia Hera Hades Poseidon and Zeus 81 Alongside the rest of her siblings with the exception of her youngest brother Zeus she was swallowed as a newborn by her father due to his fear of being overthrown by one of his children she was later freed when Zeus made Cronus disgorge all of his children by giving him a special potion 82 Demeter is notable as the mother of Persephone described by both Hesiod and in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter as the result of a union with her younger brother Zeus 83 An alternate recounting of the matter appears in a fragment of the lost Orphic theogony which preserves part of a myth in which Zeus mates with his mother Rhea in the form of a snake explaining the origin of the symbol on Hermes staff Their daughter is said to be Persephone whom Zeus in turn mates with to conceive Dionysus According to the Orphic fragments After becoming the mother of Zeus she who was formerly Rhea became Demeter 84 85 Before her abduction by Hades Persephone was known as Kore maiden and there is some evidence that the figures of Persephone Queen of the Underworld and Kore daughter of Demeter were initially considered separate goddesses 86 However they must have become conflated by the time of Hesiod in the 7th century BC 79 Demeter and Persephone were often worshipped together and were often referred to by joint cultic titles In their cult at Eleusis they were referred to simply as the goddesses usually distinguished as the older and the younger in Rhodes and Sparta they were worshipped as the Demeters in the Thesmophoria they were known as the thesmophoroi the legislators 87 In Arcadia they were known as the Great Goddesses and the mistresses 88 In Mycenaean Pylos Demeter and Persephone were probably called the queens wa na ssoi 64 Both Homer and Hesiod writing c 700 BC described Demeter making love with the agricultural hero Iasion in a ploughed field during the marriage of Cadmus and Harmonia 89 According to Hesiod this union resulted in the birth of Plutus According to Diodorus Siculus in his Bibliotheca historica written in the 1st century BC Demeter and Zeus were also the parents of Dionysus Diodorus described the myth of Dionysus double birth once from the earth i e Demeter when the plant sprouts and once from the vine when the fruit sprouts from the plant Diodorus also related a version of the myth of Dionysus destruction by the Titans sons of Gaia who boiled him and how Demeter gathered up his remains so that he could be born a third time Diod iii 62 Diodorus states that Dionysus birth from Zeus and his older sister Demeter was somewhat of a minority belief possibly via conflation of Demeter with her daughter as most sources state that the parents of Dionysus were Zeus and Persephone and later Zeus and Semele 90 nbsp Dionysus Bacchus and Demeter Ceres antique fresco in Stabiae 1st centuryIn Arcadia a major Arcadian deity known as Despoina Mistress was said to be the daughter of Demeter and Poseidon According to Pausanias a Thelpusian tradition said that during Demeter s search for Persephone Poseidon pursued her Demeter turned into a horse to avoid her younger brother s advances However he turned into a stallion and mated with the goddess resulting in the birth of the horse god Arion and a daughter whose name they are not wont to divulge to the uninitiated 91 Elsewhere he says that the Phigalians assert that the offspring of Poseidon and Demeter was not a horse but Despoina as the Arcadians call her 92 In Orphic literature Demeter seems to be the mother of the witchcraft goddess Hecate 93 The goddess took Mecon a young Athenian as a lover he was at some point transformed into a poppy flower 94 Offspring and their fathers Offspring FatherPersephone Dionysus minority belief 95 ZeusArion Despoina PoseidonCorybas 96 Plutus 97 Philomelus 98 IasionEubuleus 99 Chrysothemis 100 CarmanorAcheron 101 HeliosHecate unknownAbduction of Persephone edit Main article Rape of Persephone nbsp Demeter drives her horse drawn chariot containing her daughter Persephone Kore at Selinunte Sicily 6th century BC Demeter s daughter Persephone was abducted to the Underworld by Hades who received permission from her father Zeus to take her as his bride Demeter searched for her ceaselessly for nine days preoccupied with her grief Hecate then approached her and said that while she had not seen what happened to Persephone she heard her screams Together the two goddesses went to Helios the sun god who witnessed everything that happened on earth thanks to his lofty position Helios then revealed to Demeter that Hades had snatched a screaming Persephone to make her his wife with the permission of Zeus the girl s father Demeter then filled with anger The seasons halted living things ceased their growth and began to die 102 Faced with the extinction of all life on earth Zeus sent his messenger Hermes to the Underworld to bring Persephone back Hades agreed to release her if she had eaten nothing while in his realm but Persephone had eaten a small number of pomegranate seeds This bound her to Hades and the Underworld for certain months of every year most likely the dry Mediterranean summer when plant life is threatened by drought 103 despite the popular belief that it is autumn or winter 104 There are several variations on the basic myth the earliest account the Homeric Hymn to Demeter relates that Persephone is secretly slipped a pomegranate seed by Hades 105 and in Ovid s version 106 Persephone willingly and secretly eats the pomegranate seeds thinking to deceive Hades but is discovered and made to stay Contrary to popular perception Persephone s time in the Underworld does not correspond with the unfruitful seasons of the ancient Greek calendar nor her return to the upper world with springtime 107 Demeter s descent to retrieve Persephone from the Underworld is connected to the Eleusinian Mysteries 108 nbsp Demeter rejoiced for her daughter was by her side The myth of the capture of Persephone seems to be pre Greek In the Greek version Ploutos ploytos wealth represents the wealth of the corn that was stored in underground silos or ceramic jars pithoi Similar subterranean pithoi were used in ancient times for funerary practices At the beginning of the autumn when the corn of the old crop is laid on the fields she ascends and is reunited with her mother Demeter for at this time the old crop and the new meet each other 109 nbsp A Greek terracotta figurine of Baubo of the face in torso typeIn the Orphic tradition while she was searching for her daughter a mortal woman named Baubo received Demeter as her guest and offered her a meal and wine Demeter declined them both because she mourned the loss of Persephone Baubo then thinking she had displeased the goddess lifted her skirt and showed her genitalia to the goddess simultaneously revealing Iacchus Demeter s son Demeter was most pleased with the sight and delighted she accepted the food and wine 110 111 This tale survives in the account of Clement of Alexandria a Christian who tried to discredit pagan practices and mythology However several Baubo figurines figurines of women revealing their vulvas have been discovered supporting the story Demeter at Eleusis edit nbsp Demeter in mourning marble relief from Knossos Archaeological Museum of Heraklion Demeter s search for her daughter Persephone took her to the palace of Celeus the King of Eleusis in Attica She assumed the form of an old woman and asked him for shelter He took her in to nurse Demophon and Triptolemus his sons by Metanira To reward his kindness she planned to make Demophon immortal she secretly anointed the boy with ambrosia and laid him in the hearth s flames to gradually burn away his mortal self But Metanira walked in saw her son in the fire and screamed in fright Demeter abandoned the attempt Instead she taught Triptolemus the secrets of agriculture and he in turn taught them to any who wished to learn them Thus humanity learned how to plant grow and harvest grain The myth has several versions some are linked to figures such as Eleusis Rarus and Trochilus The Demophon element may be based on an earlier folk tale 112 Demeter and Iasion edit Homer s Odyssey c late 8th century BC contains perhaps the earliest direct references to the myth of Demeter and her consort Iasion a Samothracian hero whose name may refer to bindweed a small white flower that frequently grows in wheat fields In the Odyssey Calypso describes how Demeter without disguise made love to Iasion So it was when Demeter of the braided tresses followed her heart and lay in love with Iasion in the triple furrowed field Zeus was aware of it soon enough and hurled the bright thunderbolt and killed him 113 However Ovid states that Iasion lived up to old age as the husband of Demeter 114 In ancient Greek culture part of the opening of each agricultural year involved the cutting of three furrows in the field to ensure its fertility 115 Hesiod expanded on the basics of this myth According to him the liaison between Demeter and Iasion took place at the wedding of Cadmus and Harmonia in Crete Demeter in this version had lured Iasion away from the other revellers Hesiod says that Demeter subsequently gave birth to Plutus 116 Demeter and Poseidon edit nbsp Roman copy of 4th century BC Greek bust National Roman Museum In Arcadia located in what is now southern Greece the major goddess Despoina was considered the daughter of Demeter and Poseidon Hippios Horse Poseidon In the associated myths Poseidon represents the river spirit of the Underworld and he appears as a horse as often happens in northern European folklore The myth describes how he pursued his older sister Demeter who hid from him among the horses of the king Onkios but even in the form of a mare she could not conceal her divinity Poseidon caught and raped his older sister in the form of a stallion Demeter was furious at Poseidon s assault in this furious form she became known as Demeter Erinys Her anger at Poseidon drove her to dress all in black and retreat into a cave to purify herself an act which was the cause of a universal famine Demeter s absence caused the death of crops livestock and eventually of the people who depended on them later Arcadian tradition held that it was both her rage at Poseidon and her loss of her daughter caused the famine merging the two myths 27 Demeter washed away her anger in the River Ladon becoming Demeter Lousia the bathed Demeter 117 In her alliance with Poseidon Kerenyi noted 118 she was Earth who bears plants and beasts and could therefore assume the shape of an ear of grain or a mare Moreover she bore a daughter Despoina Despoina the Mistress whose name should not be uttered outside the Arcadian Mysteries 119 and a horse named Arion with a black mane and tail At Phigaleia a xoanon wood carved statue of Demeter was erected in a cave which tradition held was the cave into which Black Demeter retreated The statue depicted a Medusa like figure with a horse s head and snake like hair holding a dove and a dolphin which probably represented her power over air and water 120 The second mountain Mount Elaius is some thirty stades away from Phigalia and has a cave sacred to Demeter surnamed Black the Phigalians say they concluded that this cavern was sacred to Demeter and set up in it a wooden image The image they say was made after this fashion It was seated on a rock like to a woman in all respects save the head She had the head and hair of a horse and there grew out of her head images of serpents and other beasts Her tunic reached right to her feet on one of her hands was a dolphin on the other a dove Now why they had the image made after this fashion is plain to any intelligent man who is learned in traditions They say that they named her Black because the goddess had black apparel They cannot relate either who made this wooden image or how it caught fire But the old image was destroyed and the Phigalians gave the goddess no fresh image while they neglected for the most part her festivals and sacrifices until the barrenness fell on the land Pausanias 8 42 1 4 Demeter and Erysichthon edit nbsp Demeter orders Famine to strike Erysichthon Elisha Whittelsey CollectionAnother myth involving Demeter s rage resulting in famine is that of Erysichthon king of Thessaly 27 The myth tells of Erysichthon ordering all of the trees in one of Demeter s sacred groves to be cut down as he wanted to build an extension of his palace and hold feasts there One tree a huge oak was covered with votive wreaths symbols of the prayers Demeter had granted so Erysichthon s men refused to cut it down The king used an axe to cut it down killing a dryad nymph in the process The nymph s dying words were a curse on Erysichthon Demeter punished the king by calling upon Limos the spirit of unrelenting and insatiable hunger to enter his stomach The more the king ate the hungrier he became Erysichthon sold all his possessions to buy food but was still hungry Finally he sold his daughter Mestra into slavery Mestra was freed from slavery by her former lover Poseidon who gave her the gift of shape shifting into any creature to escape her bonds Erysichthon used her shape shifting ability to sell her numerous times to make more money to feed himself but no amount of food was enough Eventually Erysichthon ate himself 121 In a variation Erysichthon tore down a temple of Demeter wishing to build a roof for his house she punished him the same way and near the end of his life she sent a snake to plague him Afterwards Demeter put him among the stars the constellation Ophiuchus as she did the snake to continue to inflict its punishment on Erysichthon 122 In the Pergamon Altar which depicts the battle of the gods against the Giants Gigantomachy survive remains of what seems to have been Demeter fighting a Giant labelled Erysichthon 123 Demeter is also depicted fighting against the Giants next to Hermes in the Suessula Gigantomachy vase now housed in the Louvre Museum 124 Usually ancient depictions of the Gigantomachy tend to exclude Demeter due to her non martial nature 125 Wrath myths edit nbsp Demeter in an ancient Greek fresco from Panticapaeum 1st century Crimea While travelling far and wide looking for her daughter Demeter arrived exhausted in Attica A woman named Misme took her in and offered her a cup of water with pennyroyal and barley groats for it was a hot day Demeter in her thirst swallowed the drink clumsily Witnessing that Misme s son Ascalabus laughed mocked her and asked her if she would like a deep jar of that drink 126 Demeter then poured her drink over him and turned him into a gecko hated by both men and gods It was said that Demeter showed her favour to those who killed geckos 127 Before Hades abducted her daughter he had kept the nymph Minthe as his mistress But after he married Persephone he set Minthe aside Minthe would often brag about being lovelier than Persephone and say Hades would soon come back to her and kick Persephone out of his halls Demeter hearing that grew angry and trampled Minthe from the earth then sprang a lovely smelling herb named after the nymph 128 In other versions Persephone herself is the one who kills and turns Minthe into a plant for sleeping with Hades 129 130 131 In an Argive myth when Demeter arrived in Argolis a man named Colontas refused to receive her in his house whereas his daughter Chthonia disapproved of his actions Colontas was punished by being burnt along with his house while Demeter took Chthonia to Hermione where she built a sanctuary for the goddess 132 Demeter pinned Ascalaphus under a rock for reporting as sole witness to Hades that Persephone had consumed some pomegranate seeds 133 Later after Heracles rolled the stone off Ascalaphus Demeter turned him into a short eared owl instead 134 Demeter also turned the Sirens into half bird monsters for not helping her daughter Persephone when she was abducted by Hades 135 Once the Colchian princess Medea ended a famine that plagued Corinth by making sacrifices to Demeter and the nymphs 136 Favour myths edit nbsp Head of a statue of Demeter marble Roman imperial period 2nd century CEDemeter gave Triptolemus her serpent drawn chariot and seed and bade him scatter it across the earth teach humankind the knowledge of agriculture Triptolemus rode through Europe and Asia until he came to the land of Lyncus a Scythian king Lyncus pretended to offer what s accustomed of hospitality to him but once Triptolemus fell asleep he attacked him with a dagger wanting to take credit for his work Demeter then saved Triptolemus by turning Lyncus into a lynx and ordered Triptolemus to return home airborne 137 Hyginus records a very similar myth in which Demeter saves Triptolemus from an evil king named Carnabon who additionally seized Triptolemus chariot and killed one of the dragons so he might not escape Demeter restored the chariot to Triptolemus substituted the dead dragon with another one and punished Carnabon by putting him among the stars holding a dragon as if to kill it 138 During her wanderings Demeter came upon the town of Pheneus to the Pheneates that received her warmly and offered her shelter she gave all sorts of pulse except for beans deeming it impure 139 Two of the Pheneates Trisaules and Damithales had a temple of Demeter built for her 140 Demeter also gifted a fig tree to Phytalus an Eleusinian man for welcoming her in his home 141 nbsp Statue of Demeter in the facade of the Academy of Athens Greece In the tale of Eros and Psyche Demeter along with her sister Hera visited Aphrodite raging with fury about the girl who had married her son Aphrodite asks the two to search for her the two try to talk sense into her arguing that her son is not a little boy although he might appear as one and there s no harm in him falling in love with Psyche Aphrodite took offence at their words 142 Sometime later Psyche in her wanderings came across an abandoned shrine of Demeter and sorted out the neglected sickles and harvest implements she found there As she was doing so Demeter appeared to her and called from afar she warned the girl of Aphrodite s great wrath and her plan to take revenge on her Then Psyche begged the goddess to help her but Demeter answered that she could not interfere and incur Aphrodite s anger at her and for that reason Psyche had to leave the shrine or else be kept as a captive of hers 143 When her son Philomelus invented the plough and used it to cultivate the fields Demeter was so impressed by his good work that she immortalized him in the sky by turning him into a constellation the Bootes 144 Hierax a man of justice and distinction set up sanctuaries for Demeter and received plenteous harvests from her in return When the tribe neglected Poseidon favour of Demeter the sea god destroyed all of her crops so Hierax sent them instead his own food and was transformed into a hawk by Poseidon 145 Besides giving gifts to those who were welcoming to her Demeter was also a goddess who nursed the young all of Plemaeus s children born by his first wife died in a cradle Demeter took pity on him and reared herself his son Orthopolis 146 Plemaeus built a temple to her to thank her 147 Demeter also raised Trophonius the prophetic son of either Apollo or Erginus 148 Other accounts edit Demeter seems to have accompanied Dionysus when he descended into the Underworld to retrieve his mother Semele in order to visit her now married daughter and perhaps lead her back to the land of the living for the remainder of the year 149 150 In many vases from Athens Dionysus is seen in the company of mother and daughter 151 Once Tantalus a son of Zeus invited the gods over for dinner Tantalus wanting to test them cut his son Pelops cooked him and offered him as a meal to them They all saw through Tantalus crime except Demeter who ate Pelops shoulder before the gods brought him back to life 152 Genealogy editDemeter s family tree 153 UranusGaiaUranus genitalsCronusRheaZeusHeraPoseidonHadesDEMETERHestia a 154 b 155 AresHephaestusMetisAthena 156 LetoApolloArtemisMaiaHermesSemeleDionysusDione a 157 b 158 AphroditeSee also edit nbsp Ancient Greece portal nbsp Myths portal nbsp Religion portalFamily tree of the Greek gods 1 Ceres the first asteroid and dwarf planet discovered named after Demeter s Roman equivalent and called Demeter in Greek 1108 Demeter a main belt asteroid 26 km in diameter which was discovered in 1929 by Karl Wilhelm Reinmuth at Heidelberg Greek mythology in popular culture Isis and Osiris Law of Demeter a software design guideline named in honour of Demeter Demophon of EleusisNotes edit Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of Literature Merriam Webster 1995 p 314 ISBN 9780877790426 Dhw Sitw Cf sῖtos Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Eustathius of Thessalonica scholia on Homer 265 The Broadview Anthology of Social and Political Thought Volume 2 The Twentieth Century and Beyond Broadview Press p 643 John Chadwick The Mycenean World Cambridge University Press 1976 Y Duhoux LA gt B da ma te Demeter Sur la langue du lineaire A Minos 29 30 1994 1995 289 294 Y Duhoux and A Morpurgo Davies Companion to Linear B vol 2 2011 p 26 But see Ventris Chadwick Documents in Mycenean Greek p 242 B Dietriech 2004 The origins of the Greek religion Bristol Phoenix Press p 172 da ma te Deaditerranean Minoan Linear A amp Mycenaean Linear B Archived from the original on 18 March 2016 Retrieved 13 March 2014 PY 609 En 1 DAMOS Database of Mycenaean at Oslo University of Oslo Inscription MY Oi 701 si to po ti ni ja Deaditerranean Minoan Linear A amp Mycenaean Linear B Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 13 March 2014 The Linear B word si to Palaeolexicon Word study tool of Ancient languages MY 701 Oi 63 DAMOS Database of Mycenaean atOslo University of Oslo Cf sῖtos Sitw mother Origin and meaning of mother by Online Etymology Dictionary www etymonline com Dᾶ in Liddell and Scott demeter Origin and meaning of the name demeter by Online Etymology Dictionary www etymonline com Dhmhthr Liddell Henry George Scott Robert An Intermediate Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project a b R S P Beekes Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill 2009 p 324 Adams John Paul Mycenean divinities List of handouts for California State University Classics 315 Retrieved 7 March 2011 Chadwick The Mycenaean World Cambridge University Press 1976 p 87 Every Greek was aware of the maternal functions of Demeter if her name bore the slightest resemblance to the Greek word for mother it would inevitably have been deformed to emphasize that resemblance How did it escape transformation into Gamater a name transparent to any Greek speaker Compare the Latin transformation Iuppiter and Diespiter vis a vis Deus pater West 2007 p 176 The a however cannot be explained from Greek But there is a Messapic Damatura or Damatira and she need not be dismissed as borrowing from Greek she matches the Illyrian Deipaturos both in the agglutination and in the transfer to the thematic declension os a It is noteworthy that sporadic examples of a thematically declined hmhtra are found in inscriptions Damater Demeter could therefore be borrowing from Illyrian An Illyrian Da may be derived from Dʰǵʰ e m Orphic Hymn 40 to Demeter translated by Thomas Taylor O universal mother Deo famed august the source of wealth and various names Compare sanskr yava lit yavai Da is probably derived from deFa Martin Nilsson Geschichte der Griechischen Religion vol I Verlag C H Beck pp 461 462 Harrison Jane Ellen 5 September 1908 Prolegomena to the study of Greek religion Cambridge Eng The University press via Internet Archive Harrison Jane Ellen Myths of Greece and Rome 1928 pp 63 64 Dietrich p 181 Nilsson 1967 444 Frisk Griechisches Etymological Woerterbuch Entry 1271 Stott Carole 1 August 2019 Planisphere and Starfinder pp 69 Dorling Kindersley Limited ISBN 978 0 241 42169 7 a b c Simon Hornblower Antony Spawforth Esther Eidinow eds The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization OUP Oxford 2014 Pausanias 8 42 1 4 Pausainias 8 42 7 Homer Iliad 5 499 Iliad 9 534 Hesiod Works and Days 465 Nilsson 1967 Geschichte Vol I 461 466 zeidwros Soph Antigone 1120 a b c d Stalmith in GRBS48 2008 116 117 Nilsson 1967 Geschichte Vol I 468 Farnell Cults III 33 38 Nilsson 1967 Geschichte Vol I 412 467 478 a b Cole 1994 in Placing the gods 201 202 Isocrates Panegyricus 4 28 When Demeter came to our land in her wandering after the rape of Kore and being moved to kindness towards our ancestors by services which may not be told save to her initiates gave these two gifts the greatest in the world the fruits of the earth which have enabled us to rise above the life of the beasts and the holy rite which inspires in those who partake of it sweeter hopes regarding both the end of life and all eternity Robertson in GRBS37 1996 pp 351 377 378 Burkert 1985 244 Stalmith in GRBS48 2008 127 Jeffery 1976 23 Pausanias 8 42 1 4 Stalmith in GRBS48 2008 118 119 Anesidora inscribed against her figure on a white ground kylix in the British Museum B M 1881 0528 1 from Nola painted by the Tarquinia painter ca 470 460 BC British Museum on line catalogue entry Hesychius of Alexandria s v Scholiast On Theocritus ii 12 Farnell Cults III 48 49 Farnell III 48 Farnell Cults III 30 31 Farnell III 30 Raubitschek Jane Biers in MVSE vol 31 32 1997 1998 53 MVSE 1997 1998 53 Jeffery 1976 The city states 72 73 Harrison Jane Ellen Myths of Greece and Rome 1928 pp 65 66 John Ernest Leonard Oulton 1954 Alexandrian Christianity The Library Of Christian Classics Volume II Westminster Press p 48 And Pindar speaks of the Eleusinian mysteries as follows Blessed is he who has seen before he goes under the earth for he knows the end of life and knows also its divine beginning C M Bowra 1957 87 169 Pausanias 8 15 3 Nilsson Geschichte Vol I p 477 478 Heraklion Museum Kerenyi 1976 fig 15 Kerenyi 1976 p 25 Dietrich p 169 a b c Dietrich pp 181 185 Dietrich p 141 a b Wa na ssoi wa na ka te to the two queens and the king Wanax is best suited to Poseidon the special divinity of Pylos The identity of the two divinities addressed as wanassoi is uncertain George Mylonas 1966 Mycenae and the Mycenean age p 159 Princeton University Press Dietrich pp 189 190 Cohen A Art in the Era of Alexander the Great Paradigms of Manhood and Their Cultural Traditions Cambridge University Press 2010 p 213 Google book preview L H Jeffery 1976 Archaic Greece The City States c 700 500 BC Ernest Benn Ltd London amp Tonbridge pp 72 73 78 ISBN 0 510 03271 0 The Parian marble Entry No 5 When Amphictyon son of Hellen became king of Thermopylae brought together those living round the temple and named them Amphictyones 1 Pausanias 7 27 9 a b Keller Mara Lynn 1988 The Eleusinian Mysteries of Demeter and Persephone Fertility Sexuality and Rebirth Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 4 1 27 54 ISSN 8755 4178 JSTOR 25002068 a b Cosmopoulos Michael B 2015 Bronze Age Eleusis and the Origins of the Eleusinian Mysteries Cambridge University Press p 35 ISBN 978 1 316 36823 7 a b Sharma Arvind 2005 Goddesses And Women In The Indic Religious Tradition BRILL p 47 ISBN 978 90 04 12466 0 Benko Stephen The virgin goddess studies in the pagan and Christian roots of mariology BRILL 2004 note 111 on pp 63 4 and p 175 Larousse Desk Reference Encyclopedia The Book People Haydock 1995 p 215 Spaeth Barbette Stanley The Roman goddess Ceres University of Texas Press 1996 pp 4 6 13 citing Arnobius who mistakes this as the first Roman cult to Ceres His belief may reflect its high profile and ubiquity during the later Imperial period and possibly the fading of older distinctively Aventine forms of her cult Scheid John Graeco Ritu A Typically Roman Way of Honoring the Gods Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 97 Greece in Rome Influence Integration Resistance 1995 p 23 Spaeth Barbette Stanley The Roman goddess Ceres University of Texas Press 1996 pp 13 15 60 94 97 Eur Hel 1301 45 and Melanippid 764PMG a b Kore Persephone Encyclopedia of the Hellenic World Asia Minor http asiaminor ehw gr Forms fLemmaBody aspx lemmaId 10541 noteendNote 11 Apuleius 1998 The Golden Ass Penguin classics Hesiod Theogony 453 455 Hard p 67 Grimal s v Cronus Hesiod Theogony 912 Homeric Hymn to Demeter 2 Proclus Commentary on Plato s Cratylus 403 e 90 28 Pasqu Orphic fr 145 Kern West 1983 p 217 Kerenyi 1976 p 112 Zuntz G Persephone Three essays in religion and thought in Magna Graecia Oxford 1971 p 75 83 Martin Nilsson 1967 Die Geschichte der Griechische Religion pp 463 477 Martin Nilsson 1967 Die Geschichte der Griechische Religion pp 463 465 Homer Odyssey 5 125 Hesiod Theogony 969 974 Diodorus Siculus Book III Pausanias 8 28 5 7 Pausanias 8 42 1 Orphic frr 400 I I p 334 fr 41 Kern Scholia on Apollonius of Rhodes 3 467 400 II I p 334 Bernabe fr 42 Kern Scholia on Theocritus 2 12 Smith s v Mecon Servius on Virgil s Georgics 1 212 Scholiast on Pindar Pythian Odes 3 177 Hesychius Diodorus Siculus 5 48 2 Hesiod Theogony 969 974 Morford p 339 Hyginus De Astronomica 2 4 7 Diodorus Siculus 5 76 3 Pausanias 2 30 3 Pausanias 10 7 2 10 16 5 Natalis Comes Mythologiae 3 1 Smith s v Acheron Kerenyi 1951 pp 232 241 and notes 784 798 As in Burkert Greek Religion Harvard 1985 p 160 Martin Nilsson The Greek popular religion The religion of Eleusis pp 51 54 Sacred texts com HOMERIC HYMN TO DEMETER www uh edu Ovid Metamorphoses Book V ln 533 571 Graf Demeter in Brill s New Pauly The Eleusinian Mysteries The Rites of Demeter World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 27 April 2019 Martin Nilsson Greek Popular Religion pp 48 50 Clement of Alexandria Exhortation to the Greeks 2 11 Grimal s v Baubo Graves p 92 Nilsson 1940 p 50 The Demophon story in Eleusis is based on an older folk tale motif which has nothing to do with the Eleusinian Cult It is introduced to let Demeter reveal herself in her divine shape Homer Odyssey 5 125 ff trans Shewring Smith s v Iasion Ovid Metamorphoses 9 421 IASION Greek Demi God of the Samothracian Mysteries Hesiod Theogony 969 974 Gantz p 64 Tripp s v Iasion Oxford Classical Dictionary s v Iasion Other ritually bathed goddesses were Argive Hera and Cybele Aphrodite renewed her own powers bathing herself in the sea Kerenyi 1951 p 185 In Arcadia she was also a second goddess in the Mysteries of her daughter the unnameable who was invoked only as Despoina the Mistress Kerenyi 1967 pp 31ff citing Pausanias 8 37 9 L H Jeffery 1976 Archaic Greece The Greek city states c 800 500 B C Ernest Benn Limited p 23 ISBN 0 510 03271 0 Ovid Metamorphoses 8 738 878 Callimachus Hymn VI to Demeter 34 ff Hyginus De Astronomica 2 14 4 McKay p 93 Louvre S 1677 Vase www perseus tufts edu Tufts University Retrieved 22 February 2023 Smith amp Plantzos 2018 p 409 Ovid Metamorphoses 5 446 461 Antoninus Liberalis Metamorphoses 24 Tripp s v Ascalabus Antoninus Liberalis Metamorphoses 24 Oppian Halieutica 3 485 ff Strabo Geographica 8 3 14 Scholia ad Nicandri Alexipharmaca 375 Ovid Metamorphoses 10 728 Pausanias Description of Greece 2 35 4 Apollodorus 1 5 3 Apollodorus 2 5 12 Hyginus Fabulae 141 Scholia on Pindar s Olympian Odes 13 74 Ovid Metamorphoses 5 642 678 Hyginus De Astronomica 2 14 2 Pausanias 8 15 3 Pausanias 8 15 4 Pausanias 1 37 2 Grimal s v Phytalus p 373 Apuleius The Golden Ass 5 28 31 Apuleius The Golden Ass 6 1 4 Hyginus De Astronomica 2 4 7 Grimal s v Philomelus p 366 Antoninus Liberalis Collection of Transformations 3 Pausanias 2 5 8 Pausanias 2 11 2 Pausanias 9 39 5 Grimal s v Trophonius pp 459 460 Kerenyi 1967 pp 42 43 J Paul Getty Museum 1983 p 31 especially note 58 J Paul Getty Museum 1983 p 30 Lycophron Alexandra 152 155 Hyginus Fabulae 83 Grimal s v Pelops This chart is based upon Hesiod s Theogony unless otherwise noted According to Homer Iliad 1 570 579 14 338 Odyssey 8 312 Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus see Gantz p 74 According to Hesiod Theogony 927 929 Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone with no father see Gantz p 74 According to Hesiod Theogony 886 890 of Zeus children by his seven wives Athena was the first to be conceived but the last to be born Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena from his head see Gantz pp 51 52 83 84 According to Hesiod Theogony 183 200 Aphrodite was born from Uranus severed genitals see Gantz pp 99 100 According to Homer Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus Iliad 3 374 20 105 Odyssey 8 308 320 and Dione Iliad 5 370 71 see Gantz pp 99 100 References editAntoninus Liberalis The Metamorphoses of Antoninus Liberalis translated by Francis Celoria Routledge 1992 Online version at the Topos Text Project Apollodorus Apollodorus The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer F B A F R S in 2 Volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1921 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Apuleius The golden ass or Metamorphoses E J Kenney 2004 London Penguin Books Bernabe Alberto Poetae epici Graeci Testimonia et fragmenta Pars I Bibliotheca Teubneriana Stuttgart and Leipzig Teubner 1996 ISBN 978 3 815 41706 5 Online version at De Gruyter Burkert Walter Greek Religion Harvard University Press 1985 ISBN 0 674 36281 0 Callimachus Callimachus and Lycophron with an English Translation by A W Mair Aratus with an English Translation by G R Mair London W Heinemann New York G P Putnam 1921 Internet Archive Cole S G Demeter in the ancient Greek city and the countryside in eds S Alcock R Osborn Placing the gods Sanctuaries and secret spaces in Ancient Greece Oxford 1994 p 199 216 Diodorus Siculus Library of History Volume III Books 4 59 8 translated by C H Oldfather Loeb Classical Library No 340 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1939 ISBN 978 0 674 99375 4 Online version at Internet Archive Online version by Bill Thayer Farnell Lewis Richard The cults of the Greek city states Vol III Oxford at the Clarendon Press 1907 Gantz Timothy Early Greek Myth A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources Johns Hopkins University Press 1996 Two volumes ISBN 978 0 8018 5360 9 Vol 1 ISBN 978 0 8018 5362 3 Vol 2 Graf Fritz Demeter Brill s New Pauly Ed Hubert Cancik and et al Brill Reference Online Web 27 September 2017 Graves Robert The Greek Myths Moyer Bell Ltd Unabridged edition December 1988 ISBN 0 918825 80 6 Grimal Pierre The Dictionary of Classical Mythology Wiley Blackwell 1996 ISBN 978 0 631 20102 1 Halieutica in Oppian Colluthus Tryphiodorus Oppian Colluthus and Tryphiodorus Translated by A W Mair Loeb Classical Library 219 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1928 Online version at topos text Hard Robin The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology Based on H J Rose s Handbook of Greek Mythology Psychology Press 2004 ISBN 9780415186360 Google Books Harrison Jane Ellen 1908 Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion second edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1908 Internet Archive Harrison Jane Ellen 1928 Myths of Greece and Rome Garden City New York Doubleday Doran amp Company Inc 1928 Online version at Internet Sacred Text Archive Hesiod Theogony in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Hesiod Works and Days in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Iliad with an English Translation by A T Murray Ph D in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Odyssey with an English Translation by A T Murray PH D in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1919 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homeric Hymn 2 to Demeter in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Hyginus Gaius Julius Fabulae in The Myths of Hyginus edited and translated by Mary A Grant Lawrence University of Kansas Press 1960 Online version at ToposText Hyginus Gaius Julius Astronomica from The Myths of Hyginus translated and edited by Mary Grant University of Kansas Publications in Humanistic Studies Online version at the Topos Text Project Kerenyi Karl 1951 The Gods of the Greeks Thames and Hudson London 1951 Kerenyi Karl 1967 Eleusis Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter Princeton University Press 1991 ISBN 9780691019154 Kerenyi Karl 1976 Dionysos Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life Princeton University Press 1996 ISBN 9780691029153 Kern Otto Orphicorum Fragmenta Berlin 1922 Internet Archive Lycophron Alexandra in Callimachus and Lycophron with an English translation by A W Mair Aratus with an English translation by G R Mair London W Heinemann New York G P Putnam 1921 Internet Archive McKay Kenneth John Erysichthon Brill Archive 1962 Morford Mark P O Robert J Lenardon Classical Mythology Eighth Edition Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 530805 1 Martin P Nilsson Greek Popular Religion 1940 Sacred texts com Nilsson Martin P Die Geschichte der Griechieschen Religion Vol I C H Beck s Verlag Munchen 1967 Ovid Metamorphoses Volume I Books 1 8 Translated by Frank Justus Miller Revised by G P Goold Loeb Classical Library No 42 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1977 first published 1916 ISBN 978 0 674 99046 3 Online version at Harvard University Press The Oxford Classical Dictionary second edition Hammond N G L and Howard Hayes Scullard editors Oxford University Press 1992 ISBN 0 19 869117 3 Pausanias Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W H S Jones Litt D and H A Ormerod M A in 4 Volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1918 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Smith Tyler Jo Plantzos Dimitris 18 June 2018 A Companion to Greek Art Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 8604 9 Robertson N D New light in Demeters mysteries The festival Petrosia in GRBS37 1996 p 319 379 Smith William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology London 1873 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Stalmith A B The name of Demeter Thesmophoros in GRBS48 2008 p 115 131 Strabo The Geography of Strabo Edition by H L Jones Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Tripp Edward Crowell s Handbook of Classical Mythology Thomas Y Crowell Co First edition June 1970 ISBN 069022608X West M L 1983 The Orphic Poems Clarendon Press Oxford 1983 ISBN 978 0 19 814854 8 West M L 2007 Indo European Poetry and Myth OUP Oxford 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 928075 9 Google Books Dalby Andrew 2005 The Story of Bacchus London British Museum Press ISBN 0 7141 2255 6 Kerenyi Karl 1967 Eleusis Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter Translated by Ralph Manheim New York City New York Pantheon Books J Paul Getty Museum 1983 Greek Vases in the J Paul Getty Museum Vol 1 Malibu California Getty Publications ISBN 0 89236 058 5 Archived from the original on 8 February 2023 Retrieved 8 February 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Demeter Hymn to Demeter Ancient Greek and English text Interlinear Translation edited amp adapted from the 1914 prose translation by Hugh G Evelyn White with Greek English glossary notes and illustrations Foley P Helene The Homeric hymn to Demeter translation commentary and interpretive essays Princeton Univers Press 1994 with Ancient Greek text and English translation Text of Homeric Hymn to Demeter Online book of Martin P Nilsson Greek Popular Religion The Political Cosmology of the Homeric Hymn to Demeter The Sophian Prayer to Demeter The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database images of Demeter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demeter amp oldid 1187851281, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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