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Greek Goddess

Persephone

The Spring Witch by George Wilson (ca. 1880)

The Spring Witch by George Wilson (ca. 1880).

Delaware Art MuseumPublic Domain

Overview

Persephoneoften known simply as Kore (“Maiden”)was a daughter of Zeus and Demeter. Her mythology tells of how she was abducted by her uncle Hades one day while picking flowers. Demeterdistraughtwandered the entire world in search of her daughter. 

When Demeter at last located Persephone in the Underworldshe demanded that her daughter be returned. But Hades had tricked Persephone into eating something—a handful of pomegranate seeds—while she was in the Underworld. Thusalthough Persephone was allowed to spend part of the year on Olympus with her mothershe was forced to spend the other part of the year in the Underworld as Hades’ bride.

As the wife of HadesPersephone was the queen of the Underworld. She was also associated with springgirlhoodand marriage. Persephone was often worshipped alongside her motherDemeter—for examplein the Eleusinian Mysteries.

Etymology

Ancient authors sometimes sought creative etymologies for the name “Persephone” (Greek Περσεφόνηtranslit. Persephonē). Platofor exampleinterpreted the name as “she who touches things that are in motion” (epaphē tou pheromenou)a reference to Persephone’s wisdom (to touch things that are in motion implies an understanding of the cosmoswhich is constantly in motion).[1] 

Other ancient etymologies connected Persephone’s name with aphenos (“wealth”)phonos (“death”)and phōs (“light”). But these are folk etymologies that lack credibility. 

NowadaysPersephone’s name is often thought to have Indo-European origins. Robert Beekes and others have connected it to two Indo-European roots: *perso- (“sheaf of corn”) and *-gʷn-t-ih₂ (“hitstrike”). This would indicate that Persephone’s name means something like “female corn thresher.”[2]

Pronunciation

  • English
    Greek
    PersephoneΠερσεφόνη (translit. Persephonē)
  • Phonetic
    IPA
    [per-SEF-uh-nee]/pərˈsɛf ə ni/

Alternate Names

The name Kore (Korē“Maiden”) was commonly used as an alternative to “Persephone” and highlighted the goddess’s role as the daughter of Demetergoddess of agriculture. Another alternate nameDespoina (“Mistress”)focused on Persephone’s role as the wife of Hades and queen of the Underworld.

There were several alternate forms of the name “Persephone” itselfincluding Persophatta or Persephatta (which may have been the original form of the name)Persephoneiē (the Homeric form)Pherrephattaand Phersephonē.

Persephone’s Roman counterpart was called Proserpina or Proserpine.

Titles and Epithets

Persephone was known by numerous cult titlesincluding Sōteira (“Savior”) and Brimō (“Angry”). She also had a handful of epithets. These included epainē (“awful”)which stressed Persephone’s role as queen of the Underworldas well as agauē (“venerable”)hagnē (“holy”)and arrētos (“she who must not be named”).

Attributes

There were two sides to Persephone. On the one handshe was Persephonewife of Hades and goddess of the Underworldand thus a chthonic figure closely associated with the inevitability of death. On the other handshe was Korethe maiden daughter of the agricultural goddess Demeteran alternate guise that brought her into the sphere of agriculture and fertility. In her ritual and mythologyPersephone/Kore was also regarded as a goddess of all aspects of womanhood and female initiationincluding girlhoodmarriageand childbearing.

True to her double naturePersephone was imagined as having two homes: one on Olympus with her motherDemeterand the other in the Underworld with her husbandHades. According to Homershe also possessed sacred groves on the western edge of the worldnear the entrance to the Underworld.[3]

In her iconographyPersephone was represented as a young womanmodestly clad in a robe and wearing either a diadem or a cylindrical crown called a polos on her head.

Persephone was characterized by several attributes and symbolsmost notably torchesstalks of grain or ears of cornand scepters. More rarelyshe was associated with pomegranates or poppies. Other attributessuch as the roosterwere more localized and tied to the iconography of specific cults.

Locri Pinax Of Persephone And Hades

Pinax (sculpted votive tablet) from the temple of Persephone in Epizephyrian Locris showing Persephoneholding a cock and grainsitting beside her husband Hades. National Archaeological MuseumReggio di CalabriaItaly.

AlMareCC BY-SA 4.0

Several scenes from Persephone’s mythology—especially her abduction by Hades—were popular among ancient artists.[4]

Family

In the standard traditionPersephone was the daughter of Zeusthe king of the godsand his sister Demeterthe goddess of agriculture.[5] But there were a handful of rival traditions surrounding Persephone’s parentageincluding one in which she was the daughter of Zeus and Styxan Oceanid who gave her name to one of the rivers of the Underworld.[6] The Orphic version of Persephoneon the other handwas a daughter of Zeus and Rhea,[7] while an Arcadian version of Persephone called Despoina was the daughter of Demeter and Poseidon.[8]

Persephone krater Antikensammlung Berlin 1984.40

The so-called “Persephone Krater,” an Apulian red-figure volute-krater by the Circle of the Darius Painter (ca. 340 BCE). Altes MuseumBerlinGermany.

Bibi St. PaulPublic Domain

Persephone was usually regarded as the only child born to Zeus and Demeterbut both gods had children with other consorts. ThusPersephone’s half-siblings included Demeter’s other children (ArionCorybasand Plutus) as well as the numerous children of the promiscuous Zeus (including ApolloArtemisAthenaDionysusHeraclesPerseus—and manymany others).

Family Tree

Mythology

Abduction by Hades

Persephone was the daughter of Demeter and Zeus. The most detailed account of her myth comes from the second Homeric Hymnalso known as the Homeric Hymn to Demeter

This poem describes how Persephone was picking flowers in a meadow when she was abducted—with Zeus’ permission[14]—by Hadesthe god of the Underworld and the brother of Demeter and Zeus (and thus Persephone’s uncle).[15] Later sources added that it was Aphrodite and Eros who caused Hades to fall in love with Persephone in the first place.[16]

Rape of Prosepina - Bernini 1621-22

The Rape of Proserpine by Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1621/1622). Borghese GalleryRomeItaly.

AlvesgasparCC BY-SA 4.0

The Homeric Hymn then tells of how Demeterrealizing her daughter was missingbegan a desperate search. After wandering the entire earthDemeter finally learned the truth from Hecatethe goddess of witchcraftwho had happened to hear Persephone cry out before she disappeared. 

Though Hecate did not know where Persephone had been takenshe told Demeter to seek information from Heliosthe charioteer of the sunwho was the only witness to the crime. Sure enoughHelios was able to tell Demeter how Hades had abducted her daughter.[17]

Upon discovering that Hades had Persephone—and that Zeus himself had helped him kidnap her—Demeter was justifiably furious:

But grief yet more terrible and savage came into the heart of Demeterand thereafter she was so angered with the dark-clouded Son of Cronos that she avoided the gathering of the gods and high Olympusand went to the towns and rich fields of mendisfiguring her form a long while.[18]

EventuallyDemeter’s wanderings brought her to Eleusisa town in the region of Atticajust northwest of Athens. Demeter arrived at the palace disguised as an old womanwhere she was treated kindly by Queen Metaneira and King Celeus. In returnshe nursed their sick childknown as Demophon in most versions of the myth,[19] and tried to make him immortal.

When Demeter’s efforts to impart immortality failed (the boy’s motherMetaneirainadvertently interrupted the process when she saw Demeter holding the child in a fire)Demeter commanded the Eleusinians to build her a temple. She then abandoned her functions as the goddess of agriculturecausing grain to stop growing and nearly starving humanity. Demeter’s terrible rage was ended only through the intervention of Zeuswho sent the messenger god Hermes to persuade Hades to return Persephone to Demeter.

Hades told Hermes he would release Persephone—as long as she had not tasted food while in the Underworld. He then tricked Persephone into eating a handful of pomegranate seeds. Because of thisPersephone could not leave Hades for good. In the enda compromise was reached: Persephone would spend part of the year in the Underworld as Hades’ wife and the other part on Olympus with her motherDemeter.[20]

Persephone in the Underworld

Persephone was the queen of the Underworld and so ruled over all mortals who had died. Though dreadedshe did sometimes listen to and grant requests. For exampleshe allowed the prophet Tiresias to keep his reasoning and prophetic abilities even in death.[21]

Persephone also featured in the myths of a handful of heroes and mortals who descended to and returned from the Underworld. According to one sourceshe was the one who allowed Orpheus to bring his dead wife Eurydice back from the Underworldprovided he did not look back while leading her up (a condition that Orpheus failed to meet).[22]

In another storyTheseus agreed to help Pirithous abduct Persephone from the Underworldbut they were caught and held prisoner. In some versionsPersephone eventually allowed Heracles to bring Theseus and Pirithous back with him when he came to the Underworld to fetch Cerberus (as part of his final labor).[23]

Persephone also featured in some versions of the myth of Alcestis. When Alcestis’ husband Admetus was told that he could put off his death if he found somebody willing to die in his placeAlcestis bravely volunteered. According to some authorsPersephone was so moved by this deed that she allowed Alcetis to return to the land of the living (in the more familiar versionthoughAlcestis was brought back by Heracles).[24]

At least one person tried to take advantage of Persephone’s amenable nature. When Sisyphus wanted to escape deathhe came up with a clever trick. He told his wife not to bury him; thenwhen he arrived in the Underworldhe convinced Persephone (though in some versions it was Hades) to let him return to the world of the living to punish his wife for neglecting his funeral.[25]

Lovers and Rivals in Love

The fact that Persephone was married did not prevent her from being imagined as a virginal maiden. There werehowevera handful of myths that challenged this persona.

According to some sourcesPersephone vied with Aphrodite for the love of Adonisan astonishingly handsome mortal man. EventuallyZeus determined that Adonis would spend part of the year with Aphrodite and part of the year with Persephone.[26]

terracotta loutrophoros darius painter 340-330 bce

Terracotta loutrophoros (ceremonial water jug) attributed to the Darius Painter (ca. 340–330 BCE). The upper register of the body shows Zeus between Persephone and Aphrodite regarding Adonis.

Metropolitan Museum of ArtPublic Domain

In another mythHades took a nymph named Minthe as his lover. When Persephone found outshe jealously trampled Minthe and turned her into a plant: garden mint.[27]

Orphic Mythology

The Orphicsan ancient Greek religious community that subscribed to distinctive beliefs and practices (called “Orphism,” “Orphic religion,” or the “Orphic Mysteries”)had their own unique mythology of Persephone.

According to several strands of OrphismPersephone was the daughter of Zeus and his motherthe Titan Rhea (rather than Demeter). She was conceived after Zeus transformed himself into a snake to have sex with Rhea. When Persephone was bornshe had a monstrous formwith numerous eyesan animal’s headand horns. TerrifiedRhea refused to nurse the child and fled. But Zeus transformed into a snake again and had sex with Persephonewhereupon she conceived the god often called Zagreus or Dionysus Zagreus.[28]

Worship

Temples

Persephone had temples throughout the Greek worldmany of them shared with Demeter. The most notable of these was the Temple of Demeter in Eleusisa hugeancient temple likely built during the seventh century BCE. The famous “Eleusinian Mysteries,” religious rites honoring Demeter and Persephone/Korewere performed there.

excavation-of-temple-to-demeter-persephone-eleusis-greece

A view of the excavation of EleusisGreece. This is the site of the annual Eleusinian Mysteries and an early temple to Demeter and Persephonebuilt around the 7th century BCE.

Marcus CyronsCC BY-SA 2.0

Persephone shared many other temples with Demeterthough she also had several temples of her own; the one at Epizephyrian Locris (a Greek colony in southern Italy) is an important example.[29] At other sitesincluding Teithras in Attica,[30] Acrae in Sicily,[31] and the island of Thasos,[32] Persephone had a separate sanctuary called a Koreion.

Elsewheresuch as Cyzicus,[33] Erythrae,[34] Sparta,[35] Megalopolis in Arcadia,[36] and the Athenian deme of Corydallus,[37] Persephone was worshipped with the cult title Soteirameaning “Savior.”

Festivals and Rituals

Just as Persephone shared many of her temples with Demetershe also shared many of her festivals with her.

The most important festival of Persephone and Demeterthe Thesmophoriawas celebrated by married women throughout the ancient Greek world. In Athensthe Thesmophoria lasted three days and involved several ritualsincluding one in which the rotten remains of a slaughtered pig were dug up and placed on the altars of the goddesses.[38] The Thesmophoria was also celebrated in other parts of Greecesuch as the region of Boeotia.[39]

Many of the festivals of Persephone and Demeter were related to the myth of Persephone’s abduction. At Eleusisworshippers reenacted Demeter’s search for Persephone at night by torchlight. When Persephone was “found,” the ritual ended with celebrationtorch throwingand probably the sounding of a gong.[40] At Megarasimilarlyworshippers reenacted Persephone’s abduction by a sacred rock called Anaklēthriswhere Demeter was believed to have “called back” (anekalesen in Greek) Persephone when she passed by it during her search.[41] 

In Sicilysometimes said to have been the island from which Hades had abducted the goddessPersephone was honored in a number of different festivals and rituals. The Korēs Katagōgē (“Descent of Kore”)for examplecommemorated Hades taking Persephone (Kore) down to the Underworld.[42] Every year in the Sicilian city of SyracusePersephone was honored with the sacrifices of smaller animals and the public drowning of bulls.[43]

Another festivalcalled the Chthoniawas celebrated annually at Hermionea city in the Argolid. It honored Demeter in her connection with Persephonethe queen of the Underworld. One part of the festival involved four old women who sacrificed four heifers with sickles.[44]

Other festivals celebrated Persephone in connection with the institution of marriage (rather than with Demeter and agriculture). This seems to have been how Persephone was honored at her temple in Epizephyrian Locris. In some Sicilian cities[45] and in the Locrian colony of Hipponion,[46] there were festivals celebrating Persephone’s wedding.

In Cyzicuswhere Persephone was worshipped under the title Soteiraher festival was called either the Soteria,[47] the Pherephattia,[48] or the Koreia.[49] A festival called the Koreia appears to have also been celebrated in Arcadia[50] and Syracuse[51] (though the Syracusean Koreia was likely simply the equivalent of the Thesmophoria).

Persephoneboth individually and together with other godswas also honored through festival and ritual at numerous other sitesincluding MantineaArgosPatraeSmyrnaand Acharaca.

Other Worship: Orphism and Curse Tablets 

The Orphicswho called Persephone either Despoina[52] or the “Chthonian Queen,”[53] worshipped her primarily in connection with the Underworld. They also associated her with salvation: it was believed that she would grant a blissful afterlife to those who had been properly purified.

Persephone was often invoked on curse tablets under her Underworld title Despoina. Curse tablets were engraved texts that called upon a godusually a “chthonian” god associated with the Underworld (such as HecateHermesor Gaia)to punish or harm an enemywho would generally be named in the text.

Pop Culture

Persephone has continued to captivate the modern imagination as the virginal yet terrifying queen of the Underworld. She has appeared in a handful of modern adaptations of Greek mythologyincluding Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson and the Olympians franchisethe 1990s TV series Hercules: The Legendary Journeysand even the video game Assassin’s Creed: Odyssey.

Together with DemeterPersephone is also depicted on the Great Seal of North Carolinawhere she is shown in a pastoral setting with the sea in the background. 

References

Notes

  1. PlatoCratylus 404d.

  2. Robert S. P. BeekesEtymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden: Brill2009)2:1179–81.

  3. HomerOdyssey 10.509ff.

  4. On Persephone in ancient artsee Gudrum Güntner“Persephone,” in Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae (Zurich: Artemis1997)8:956–78.

  5. HomerOdyssey 11.217; HesiodTheogony 912; Homeric Hymn 2; ApollodorusLibrary 1.5.1; PausaniasDescription of Greece 8.37.9; OvidFasti 4.575Metamorphoses 5.501; NonnusDionysiaca 5.562; etc.

  6. ApollodorusLibrary 1.3.1.

  7. Orphica frag. 8788 Bernabé.

  8. PausaniasDescription of Greece 8.37.9. HoweverPausanias distinguishes this “Despoina” from the Persephone who was the daughter of Zeus and Demeter (writing that he dared not disclose this goddess’s true name).

  9. Orphic Hymns 28.669.3; StatiusThebaid 11.4712.557.

  10. Orphic Hymns 70.1ff.

  11. Orphica frag. 89 Bernabé; Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 5.75.4; HyginusFabulae 155; HesychiusLexicon, s.v. “Zagreus”; Suda, s.v. “Zagreus”; etc.

  12. AeschylusTrGF 3 frag. 228.

  13. ApollodorusLibrary 3.14.4; HyginusAstronomica 2.7.

  14. Homeric Hymn 2.32.77ff; cf. HesiodTheogony 912ff.

  15. The site of Persephone’s abduction varies considerably in the ancient sources. The Homeric Hymn places it in Nysaan ancient city in Asia Minor. But many later sources put the site of Persephone’s abduction somewhere on the island of Sicilywhich was heavily connected with the worship of Persephone and her motherDemeter.

  16. OvidMetamorphoses 5.362ff.

  17. Homeric Hymn 2.58ff; cf. OvidFasti 4.583ff. Though this is the standard traditionthere were other versions in which it was the nymph Arethusa (OvidMetamorphoses 5.487ff) or the people of Hermione (ApollodorusLibrary 1.5.1) who gave Demeter the information she was looking for.

  18. Homeric Hymn 2.90–94trans. H. G. Evelyn-White.

  19. Howeveraccording to OvidFasti 4.510ffthe child was Triptolemus. Cf. HyginusFabulae 147; OvidTristia 3.8.2 (where Triptolemus also has different parents).

  20. Exactly how the year was split up varied in ancient sources. In most Greek sourcessuch as Homeric Hymn 2Persephone spent only one-third of the year with Hades and two-thirds with her mother. But in some Roman sourcesshe divided the year equally between her two homes (OvidFasti 4.614Metamorphoses 5.564ff; HyginusFabulae 146).

  21. HomerOdyssey 10.491ff.

  22. Lament for Bion 123–24; VirgilGeorgics 4.486ff. In other sourcesHadesrather than Persephonewas the one who gave Eurydice to Orpheus and set these terms.

  23. Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 4.26.1. In other sourcesit was Hades who negotiated the release of Theseus and Pirithous; sometimesit was said that only Theseus was allowed to returnoralternativelythat neither Theseus nor Pirithous was allowed to return.

  24. PlatoSymposium 179b; ApollodorusLibrary 1.9.15.

  25. TheognisElegiac Poems 1.701–12; cf. Alcaeusfrag. 38a.5ff Voigt; PherecydesFHG 1 F 78; scholia on Homer’s Odyssey 11.593; scholia on Pindar’s Olympian Ode 1.97.

  26. ApollodorusLibrary 3.14.4; HyginusAstronomica 2.7.

  27. StraboGeography 8.3.14.

  28. Orphica frag. 87ff Bernabé.

  29. CiceroOn the Nature of the Gods 3.34.

  30. SEG 24.151.21–22.

  31. IG 14 217.

  32. SEG 49.1173.

  33. FD 3 3.342.

  34. IK 2.201.49.

  35. PausaniasDescription of Greece 3.13.2.

  36. PausaniasDescription of Greece 8.31.1.

  37. Ammonius GrammaticusOn the Differences of Synonymous Expressions 279.

  38. Scholia on Lucian 275–76 Rabe.

  39. PlutarchOn Isis and Osiris 69378e.

  40. ApollodorusFGrH² 44 frag. 110b; LactantiusDivine Institutions 23.

  41. PausaniasDescription of Greece 1.43.2.

  42. Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 5.4.5–6.

  43. Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 5.4.2.

  44. PausaniasDescription of Greece 2.35.5ff; AelianOn the Nature of Animals 11.4.

  45. Scholia on Pindar’s Olympian Ode 6.160; cf. Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 5.2.3.

  46. StraboGeography 6.1.5.

  47. FD 3 3.342.

  48. PlutarchLife of Lucullus 10.1.

  49. StraboGeography 2.3.4.

  50. PausaniasDescription of Greece 8.31.1; scholia on Pindar’s Olympian Ode 7.153.

  51. PlutarchLife of Dion 56.3.

  52. Orphica frag. 488.7 Bernabé.

  53. Orphica frag. 474.13475.15488–490.1 Bernabé.

Primary Sources

Greek

  • Homer: Persephone is named in the Iliad and the Odyssey (eighth century BCE) as Hades’ wifethough the details of her abduction are not mentioned.  

  • Hesiod: There is a brief reference to Persephone’s genealogy and the myth of her abduction in the seventh-century BCE epic the Theogony.

  • Homeric Hymns: The second Homeric Hymn (seventh/sixth century BCE)—one of the longest and most important of the hymns—is dedicated to Demeter and tells the story of the abduction of Persephone.

  • Aristophanes: The comedy Women at the Thesmophoria (411 BCE) parodies the Thesmophoria festivalcelebrated at Athens in honor of Demeter. The premise of the play is that the women gathered at the Thesmophoria are plotting against the tragedian Euripides.

  • Plato: There is a brief summary of Persephone’s involvement in the myth of Alcestis in Plato’s philosophical dialogue the Symposium (fourth century BCE).

  • Orphic Hymns: The Orphics were a Greek cult that believed a blissful afterlife could be attained by living an ascetic life. Persephone is featured in several of the Orphic Hymns (ca. third century BCE to second century CE)and the twenty-eighth is dedicated to her.

  • Lament for Bion: This poem from the second or first century BCE (sometimes speciously attributed to Moschus) tells of how Persephone allowed Orpheus to take his wife Eurydice back from the Underworld.

  • Diodorus of Sicily: The Library of Historya work of universal history covering events from the creation of the cosmos to Diodorus’ own time (mid-first century BCE)contains references to the myths of Persephone.

  • Strabo: There are references to Persephoneher mythand her cult in the Geographya late first-century BCE geographical treatise and an important source for many local Greek mythsinstitutionsand religious practices from antiquity.

  • Apollodorus: The Librarya mythological handbook from the first century BCE or the first few centuries CEsummarizes the myths of Persephone.

  • Pausanias: There are references to Persephone’s mythology and cult in the Description of Greecea second-century CE travelogue andlike Strabo’s Geographyan important source for local myths and customs.

  • Nonnus: In Book 6 of the epic poem Dionysiaca (fifth century CE)which relates the travels of the young god DionysusDemeter tries to prevent Zeus from sleeping with her daughter Persephone. She is unsuccessfuland Persephone ends up giving birth to one of the early Dionysuses.

Roman

  • Virgil: Proserpina (the Roman equivalent of Persephone) appears a handful of times in the Georgics (29 BCE) and the Aeneid (19 BCE).

  • Ovid: The myth of Persephone/Proserpina and her abduction is told differently in two of Ovid’s poemsthe Metamorphoses and the Fasti (both ca. 8 CE). 

  • Hyginus: The Fabulaea Latin mythological handbook (first or second century CE)includes sections on the myths of Persephone/Proserpina.

  • Claudian: The fourth-century CE poem the Rape of Proserpina tells of the abduction of Persephone/Proserpina and her mother’s search for her.

Secondary Sources

  • BurkertWalter. Greek Religion. CambridgeMA: Harvard University Press1985.

  • ClintonKevin. Myth and Cult: The Iconography of the Eleusinian Mysteries. Stockholm: Swedish Institute in Athens1992.

  • FarnellLewis R. The Cults of the Greek States. Vol. 3. Oxford: Clarendon Press1907.

  • GantzTimothy. Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources. 2 vols. BaltimoreMD: Johns Hopkins University Press1996.

  • GravesRobert. The Greek Myths. London: Penguin1955.

  • GüntnerGudrum. “Persephone.” In Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae ClassicaeVol. 8956–78. Zurich: Artemis1997.

  • GuthrieW. K. G. The Greeks and Their Gods. London: Methuen1962.

  • Jiménez San CristóbalAna Isabel. “Persephone/Kore.” In The Oxford Classical Dictionaryedited by Simon HornblowerAntony Spawforthand Esther Eidinow. Published online 2020. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.4880.

  • KerényiKároly. Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter. PrincetonNJ: Princeton University Press1967.

  • KerényiKároly. The Gods of the Greeks. London: Thames and Hudson1951.

  • MylonasGeorge E. Eleusis and the Eleusinian Mysteries. PrincetonNJ: Princeton University Press1961.

  • RoseH. J. A Handbook of Greek Mythology. London: Methuen1929.

  • SmithWilliam. “Persephone.” In A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. London: Spottiswoode and Company1873. Perseus Digital Library. Accessed October 292021. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0104%3Aalphabetic+letter%3DP%3Aentry+group%3D15%3Aentry%3Dpersephone-bio-1

  • Sourvinou-InwoodChristiane. “PersephoneKore.” In Brill’s New Paulyedited by Hubert CancikHelmuth SchneiderChristine F. SalazarManfred Landfesterand Francis G. Gentry. Published online 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e914950

  • Sourvinou-InwoodChristiane. “Persephone/Kore.” In The Oxford Classical Dictionary4th ed.edited by Simon HornblowerAntony Spawforthand Esther Eidinow1109–10. Oxford: Oxford University Press2012.

  • Theoi Project. “Persephone.” Published online 2000–2017. https://www.theoi.com/Khthonios/Persephone.html.

  • ZuntzGünther. Persephone: Three Essays on Religion and Thought in Magna Graecia. Oxford: Clarendon Press1971.

Citation

KapachAvi. “Persephone.” MythopediaMarch 092023. https://mythopedia.com/topics/persephone/.

KapachAvi. “Persephone.” Mythopedia9 Mar. 2023. https://mythopedia.com/topics/persephone/. Accessed on 15 Jul. 2025.

KapachA. (2023March 9). Persephone. Mythopedia. https://mythopedia.com/topics/persephone/

Authors

  • Avi Kapach

    Avi Kapach is a writerscholarand educator who received his PhD in Classics from Brown University

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