Parvati
The Hindu goddess Parvati represents strength, vitality, sustenance, peace, love, beauty, devotion, and motherhood. She is a physical incarnation of Mahadevi in all of her fullness. She is highly famous for her roles as Kali and Durga. She is the main goddess in Shaivism and one of the main deities of the goddess-oriented cult known as Shaktism. She is a member of the Tridevi, which also includes Lakshmi and Saraswati.
Shiva's wife Parvati is a Hindu deity. She is the reincarnation of Sati, Shiva's first wife who committed herself by self-immolation during a yajna (fire sacrifice). The mountain king Himavan and queen Mena's child is Parvati. Ganesha and Kartikeya are Hindu deities whose mother is Parvati. She was also mentioned in the Puranas as the sister of the god of preservation Vishnu and the river goddess Ganga. She is seen by Shaivites as the divine force that exists between a man and a woman, similar to the energy of Shiva and Shakti. Woman is revered by Vaishnavites as Vishnu Vilasini, also known as "she who dwells on Vishnu," according to the Mahishasura Mardini Stotram.
Although Parvati is typically shown as a kind and loving mother goddess, she is also linked to a number of terrifying personas that she assumes to battle evil and demons, including Durga, Kali, the ten Mahavidyas, and Navadurgas.