Era, the main character in Apocrypha of Era, is named in honor of Libera, a deity of uncertain mythology, whose story became lost and entangled with the stories of Persephone and Proserpina. Libera is referred to in the Oxford Classical Dictionary only in passing as a female counterpart to Liber Pater and as part of the Aventine temple of Liber, Libera, and Ceres. I wish there were more written about her. Some excerpts from what I have found follow.
“Liber and Libera, in Roman religion, a pair of fertility and cultivation deities of uncertain origin. Liber, though an old and native Italian deity, came to be identified with Dionysus. The triad Ceres, Liber, and Libera (his female counterpart) represented in Rome, from early times and always under Greek influence, the Eleusinian Demeter, Bacchus-Dionysus, and Kore (Persephone). Ovid (Fasti, Book III) identifies Libera with the deified Ariadne.” Source: Encyclopedia Britannica.
“The rites of Demeter, Proserpine, and Dionysus, which were indeed the most ancient most general and originally almost the sole rites of the gentile world, were very early introduced amongst the Italic nations. Amongst these people Proserpine and Dionysus were worshipped as Libera and Liber as the daughter and son of Ceres. The former, Cicero tells us, was the same as the Proserpine that was ravished from the fields of Enna. And it is remarkable that the temple that was dedicated by the dictator Posthumius, and which according to Tacitus was sacred to Ceres, Libera, and Liber, is called by Dionysius of Halicarnassus a temple dedicated to Demeter, Proserpine, and Dionysus. The three are mentioned in connection several times by Livy. Hence then we see why the mysteries of Dionysus were connected with those of Demeter; they were an integral part of them and rested on the same foundations.”
Source: The Classical Journal. (1829). United Kingdom: A.J. Valpy.
“Proserpina, Proserpine. SEE PERSEPHONE.”
Source: The Oxford Classical Dictionary. (1996). Third Edition.
“Apocrypha, (from Greek apokryptein, ‘to hide away’), in biblical literature, works outside an accepted canon of scripture. The history of the term’s usage indicates that it referred to a body of esoteric writings that were at first prized, later tolerated, and finally excluded.” Source: Encyclopedia Britannica.
Drop me a note or comment if you come across more about Libera.

Apocrypha of Era is a lyrical fairy tale retelling of the myth of Persephone and Hades — warm, witty, and beautifully told — for readers who believe a woman should always get to speak for herself.
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