Persephone (Proserpina in Latin) picks flowers, just before, acorrding to Greek mythology, Hades takes her to the Underworld.


In Greek mythology, Persephone (in Roman, her name was Proserpina) was the goddess of fertility and the daughter of Zeus (Jupiter) and Demeter (Ceres). Hades (Pluto and also Dis), the god of the underworld, stole her, but Demeter convinced him to allow Persephone to return to the upper world for part of the year. Because Hades had tricked her into eating pomegranate seeds (some say 4, some say 6), she had to remain in the underworld for part of the time (the months equivalent to the number of seeds she ate). When she returns to earth, the plants blossom, and it is springtime. And so the cycle of seasons depends on her mother's mood—happy when she is on earth and sad when she is in the underworld. This 1917 illustration shows Proserpina picking flowers in springtime


Size: 3853px × 4890px
Photo credit: © Ivy Close Images / Alamy / Afripics
License: Royalty Free
Model Released: No

Keywords: ancient, ceres, demeter, dis, fertility, goddess, gof, greek, hades, jupiter, legend, legends, myth, mythology, persephone, pluto, pomegranate, proserpina, reason, roman, seeds, spring, springtime, underworld, underworls, zeus