DEMETER KÜLTÜ IŞIĞINDA ELEUSİS MİSTERLERİ
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Pharmakon
Open Access Color
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Abstract
The ground, known as the eternal power source of fertility, is the godmother
and mother earth. As the Hellenic belief personified the gods, the ground allowed
the emergence of Demeter. From the Olympus gods, the goddess Demeter is the
mother earth, the goddess of the cultivated land and fertility, the great goddess bringing
the seasons, nourishing the people, and sustaining life. She is a beautiful goddess
with blond hair and hazel eyes in Homer’s epics, while, in Hesiod’s poems, she is
Kronos and Rheia’s daughter and Zeus’s sister. She is mentioned with her daughter,
and they are described as dual goddesses or goddesses. It is possible to encounter the
Demeter cult in almost every region where grain farming is carried out in continental
Greece. In this cult, the mythology of Persephone’s abduction by Hades forms the
goddess’s worship basis. The Demeter mythology, Persephone and Hades represent
the natural life cycle, the seasonal cycle and the death of the earth in winter and its
rebirth in spring. The mythology of the goddesses, the Demeter cult source and the
Eleusinian Mysteries, considered to have emerged from this mythology, was widely
practised. The religious ceremonies performed during the formation of Eleusinian
Mysteries were secret and completely interconnected. With these mysteries, people
approached death and life with different perspectives. That is, it made possible for
believers to have a more hopeful mood for the afterlife. This study aims to explain
the mythology of Persephone’s abduction by Hades, thought to be the basis of the
Demeter cult, the reasons for the creation of the Eleusinian Mysteries emerging from
this mythology, the ceremonial content, Demeter and Persephone’s duties in these
mysteries, and the reasons for Persephopne’s intermediary role between the earth
and the underworld.
Description
ORCID
Keywords
Greek Mythology, Demeter, Persephone, Eleusinian, Mysteries
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q
Source
II. INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON MYTHOLOGY
Volume
Issue
Start Page
199
End Page
212