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Demeter Pelasgian Goddess
Demeter is the Pelasgian goddess of grain and agriculture, the pure
nourisher of youth and the green earth, the health-giving cycle of life and
death, and preserver of marriage and the sacred law. She is invoked as the
"bringer of seasons" in the Homeric hymn, a subtle sign that she was worshiped
long before the Olympians arrived. The Homeric Hymn to Demeter has been dated to
sometime around the Seventh Century BC.[1] She and her daughter Persephone were
the central figures of the Eleusinian Mysteries that also predated the Olympian
pantheon.
The Roman equivalent is Ceres.
Demeter is easily confused with Gaia or Rhea, and with Cybele. The goddess's
epithets reveal the span of her functions in Greek life. Demeter and Kore ("the
maiden") are usually invoked as to theo ('"The Two Goddesses"), and they appear
in that form in Linear B graffiti at Mycenaean Pylos in pre-classical times. A
connection with the goddess-cults of Minoan Crete is quite possible.
According to the Athenian rhetorician Isocrates, the greatest gifts which
Demeter gave were cereal (thus the Latin name for Ceres; also known as corn to
the British) which made man different from wild animals, and the Mysteries which
give man higher hopes in this life and the afterlife.

For the Greeks Demeter was still a poppy goddess
Bearing sheaves and poppies in both hands. — Idyll vii.157
In a clay statuette from Gazi (Heraklion Museum, Kereny 1976 fig 15), the Minoan
poppy goddess wears the seed capsules, sources of nourishment and narcosis, in
her diadem. "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 certain that in the Cretan cult sphere, opium was prepared from
poppies" (Kerenyi 1976, p 24).
In honor of Demeter of Mysia a seven-day festival was held at Pellené in Arcadia
(Pausan. 7. 27, 9). Pausanias passed the shrine to Demeter at Mysia on the road
from Mycenae to Argos but all he could draw out to explain the archaic name was
a myth of an eponymous Mysius who venerated Demeter.
Major sites for the cult of Demeter were not confined to any localized part of
the Greek world: there were sites at Eleusis, in Sicily, Hermion, in Crete,
Megara, Celeae, Lerna, Aegila, Munychia, Corinth, Delos, Priene, Akragas, Iasos,
Pergamon, Selinus, Tegea, Thorikos, Dion, Lykosoura, Mesembria, Enna, and
Samosthrace.
She was associated with the Roman goddess Ceres. When Demeter was given a
genealogy, she was the daughter of Cronos and Rhea, and therefore the elder
sister of Zeus. Her priestesses were addressed with the title Melissa.
Demeter taught mankind the arts of agriculture: sowing seeds, ploughing,
harvesting, etc. She was especially popular with rural folk, partly because they
most benefited directly from her assistance, and partly because rural folk are
more conservative about keeping to the old ways. Demeter herself was central to
the older religion of Greece. Relics unique to her cult, such as votive clay
pigs, were being fashioned in the Neolithic. In Roman times, a sow was still
sacrificed to Ceres following a death in the family, to purify the household.
Demeter and Poseidon
Demeter and Poseidon's names are linked in the earliest scratched notes in
Linear B found at Mycenaean Pylos, where they appear as PO-SE-DA-WO-NE and
DA-MA-TE in the context of sacralized lot-casting. The 'DA' element in each of
their names is seemingly connected to an Proto-Indo-European root relating to
distribution of land and honors (compare Latin dare "to give"). Poseidon (his
name seems to signify "consort of the distributor") once pursued Demeter, in her
archaic form as a mare-goddess. She resisted Poseidon, but she could not
disguise her divinity among the horses of King Onkios. Poseidon became a
stallion and covered her. Demeter was literally furious ("Demeter Erinys") at
the assault, but washed away her anger in the River Ladon ("Demeter Lousia").
She bore to Poseidon a Daughter, whose name might not be uttered outside the
Eleusinian Mysteries, and a steed named Arion, with a black mane. In Arcadia,
Demeter was worshiped as a horse-headed deity into historical times:
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