Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - Who is Hades' wife?
Who is Hades' wife?
Persephone Persephone (Greek: ∏ ε ρ σ ε φ? ν η) is the queen of the underworld in Greek mythology. She is the daughter of Demeter and Zeus. She was kidnapped by Hades, married to Hadders of the underworld and became an afterlife. That is to say, after my death, I married my uncle.
In Greece, different dialects have different names for Persephone. When the Romans first heard her name, she was added to the dialect of Pi Na, prosser, so she was called prosser Pi Na in Roman mythology. The Roman goddess Prusi Pina later became the representative image of the Renaissance.
In Greek art, Persephone is generally depicted as a woman in a robe, holding the harvested ears of rice or wheat and smiling gravely. According to hesiod's genealogy, Persephone was the daughter of Zeus and Demeter: "He (referring to Zeus) came to Demeter's generous bed and gave birth to Persephone with her white arm. She was stolen from her mother by Hades."
But unlike the children of other gods on Olympus, Persephone had no fixed position at first. It is said that Hermes, Ares, Apollo and Hercules all proposed to her, but Demeter refused. Demeter hid Persephone in the mountains to keep her away from other gods. Therefore, before Persephone became a ghost, her life was very quiet.
One day, Persephone was picking flowers in Enna with other water/lake fairies or sea fairies (in Homer's epic, she was with Athena and Artemis), but she inadvertently left her friends. There are all kinds of flowers on the beautiful grass, but among them are daffodils, which represent the sacred flowers of hades! When Persephone went to pick the seemingly harmless daffodils, the earth cracked. Four dark horses appeared in front of Persephone, pulling Pluto's chariot. The resistance was ineffective, and Pluto easily picked up the future and disappeared into the dark country of death. According to relevant information, Pluto got Zeus' permission before taking Persephone away, but Zeus didn't consult Demeter or ask Persephone if he would. However, "related information" is nonsense. Zeus and Pluto have already fought for the throne, so Pluto moved to the underworld after losing the throne, just to show that Zeus would allow his brother to marry his daughter. )
Demeter was very sad after losing her daughter, and left Olympus to look for her everywhere, so everything on the earth stopped growing (Demeter was the goddess of high yield and agriculture). Helius, the sun god, witnessed everything and told Demeter the whereabouts of Persephone.
Finally, Zeus couldn't make everything on the earth barren. He asked Hades if he could give Persephone back to Demeter. He sent Hermes to pick up Persephone. But before the arrival of Hermes, Hadders persuaded Persephone to eat six pomegranate seeds (some say he ate three), which forced Persephone to return to the underworld for six months every year (some say he stayed in the underworld for one third of the year).
In another version, Escala Fowles told other gods that Persephone ate pomegranate seeds from the underworld. Every year when Demeter is reunited with her daughter, everything on the earth grows, but in the other six months, when Persephone returns to the underworld, everything on the earth dries up. Another version says that Hekate saved Persephone. The earliest story about Persephone said that Persephone was a terrible goddess of death.
Some people think that the root of this story is the wedding in ancient Greece. The ancient Greeks believed that marriage meant that the groom took the bride away from her home. The explanation of the season was added later.
Persephone, the Persephone of the afterlife, only pitied once. Deeply moved by orpheus's singing, she agreed that orpheus would bring his wife Eurydice back to the world. But Persephone made a harsh request: Eurydice must walk behind orpheus, and orpheus must not look back at Eurydice before they reach the ground. Orpheus agreed, but just as they were about to return to the world, he couldn't help looking back to see if his wife was behind him, so he lost his wife forever.
Persephone also appeared in the story of Aphrodite's Syrian lover adonis. After adonis was born, he was kidnapped by Aphrodite with the help of his good friend Helena. Aphrodite was deeply moved by the infinite beauty of adonis. She asked Persephone to help her look after the beautiful boy, but Persephone was also moved by adonis's beauty, so she refused to give him back to Aphrodite. Finally, Zeus or Kalliope stepped in and decided to let adonis stay with Aphrodite for four months each year, with Persephone for four months, and he was free to decide the remaining four months. But adonis always decided to be with Aphrodite, not with the ruthless afterlife.
Hadders once loved a Shui Ze fairy named Minta, who was turned into mint by the jealous Persephone. Another story is that the Shui Ze fairy took adonis away from the world, so she wanted to kill her in the afterlife.
Perito, Russia fell in love with Persephone. Perito, Russia and theseus decided to marry only the daughter of Zeus, and theseus was in charge of Helen. They kidnapped Helen and decided to raise her until Helen could marry theseus. They gave Helen to theseus's mother, Etla, and then went to the underworld, because Litos took a fancy to Persephone. Persephone's husband Hades pretended to be friendly to them and invited them to dinner, but when the two heroes sat down, their feet were entangled in snakes. They are not allowed to leave the underworld again. Later, theseus was saved by Herakles, and because of time, Perito was left here forever.
Persephone and her mother Demeter are often mentioned at the same time
Bethany is another transliteration of Persephone. Also called Bethany.
About Persephone's creation.
According to the works of Greek mythologist Higginus, Persephone (the daughter of Demeter, the goddess of agriculture) found some clay when crossing the river, and she used it to shape people's images. When Zeus came, Persephone asked Zeus to give life to the man she had created. Zeus agreed to her request and gave the clay figurine a fresh life. But when Persephone wanted to name the newly created person after himself, Zeus disagreed, because he also wanted to name the new life after himself. Later, Gaia (Demeter), the mother of the earth, joined the dispute because she felt that the new life should be named after herself. Finally, God Cronus ruled that after death, the soul belongs to Zeus and the body belongs to Kaya, and Persephone, who shaped man, can dominate his life while he is alive.
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