Cere, The Revered Mother, Goddess of the Home and Midwives, Goddess of Healing, Mercy and Patience
Alignment: Lawful Good
Domains: Life, Nature
Symbol: A millstone
Garb: Simple robes of White
Favored Weapons: Flail
Form of Worship and Holidays: Simple services are held each week on Ardsdag followed by a family or communal meal where freshly baked loaves of bread are broken in her honor. Half of each loaf is donated to orphans or others in need
Typical Worshippers: Human matrons and mothers, midwives, bakers, millers, orphans, the poor, farmers, some civic leaders, halflings
Ceres is an old goddess of the Hyperborean pantheon who has protected home and hearth since the earliest recorded histories. She is seen as a motherly figure who protects her followers and their communities through gentle guidance and nurturing. It is also she who the common folk turn to in prayer to avoid famine from a bad harvest or natural calamities. Though not really a goddess of crops and weather like the god Telophus, her holy writings and liturgy do universally speak of a bountiful harvest to fill the bellies of the community and the needy.
Domains: Life, Nature
Symbol: A millstone
Garb: Simple robes of White
Favored Weapons: Flail
Form of Worship and Holidays: Simple services are held each week on Ardsdag followed by a family or communal meal where freshly baked loaves of bread are broken in her honor. Half of each loaf is donated to orphans or others in need
Typical Worshippers: Human matrons and mothers, midwives, bakers, millers, orphans, the poor, farmers, some civic leaders, halflings
Ceres is an old goddess of the Hyperborean pantheon who has protected home and hearth since the earliest recorded histories. She is seen as a motherly figure who protects her followers and their communities through gentle guidance and nurturing. It is also she who the common folk turn to in prayer to avoid famine from a bad harvest or natural calamities. Though not really a goddess of crops and weather like the god Telophus, her holy writings and liturgy do universally speak of a bountiful harvest to fill the bellies of the community and the needy.
Divine Classification
Deity
Children
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