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Below is a list of deities by their region of origin or by groups, and organized alphabetically.

North America

Haitian

  • Bugid Y Aiba - God of war
  • Ogoun - God of war

Central/South America

Aztec

  • Ometeotl - Progenitor of the Teotl, Dual-God of Fertility. Also known as "Two God".
  • Ehecatl - God of wind; an aspect of Queztalcoatl
  • Huitzilopochtli - God of War and Sacrifice; The tribal Leader. Lord of the South
  • Mixcoatl - God of many tribes, God of the hunt; and at one time, a God of War
  • Quetzalcoatl - God of the Wind, Rain, and Sky; regarded as a Culture hero. Lord of the West
  • Tezcatlipoca - God of Obsidian and the Night Sky; Also known as "The Smoking Mirror." Lord of the North
  • Tlaloc - God of rain, storms, and water; ruler of Tlalocan, a separate underworld consisting of those who died from drowning
  • Xipe Totec - God of force, patron of war, agriculture, Vegetation, diseases, seasons, rebirth, hunting, trades, and Spring; Lord of the East
  • Xiuhtecuhtli - God of fire
  • Xochiquetzal - Goddess of fertility, beauty, and female sexual power
  • Mictlantecuhtli - God of the Underworld (Known to the Aztecs as 'Mictlan'

Costa Rican

Xroma

when He was born in november the 14th, 1976, He spewed curses human language can not reproduce. They barely can be translated as "What the F***** is this F*****? I was supposed to be born on November the Fifth".

As a god of dying and rebirth, and a god of many masks, he had multiple death and multiple rebirths and multiple masks.

Then, time stood still untill he could figured... ditto.

Incan

Mayan

  • Buluc Chabtan - God of War
  • Chaac - God of Rain
  • Ekchuah - God of War
  • Ixchel - Goddess of Childbirth and War
  • Itzel - Goddess of Love, Beauty, the Moon, and Medicine
  • Ixtab - Goddess of Suicide and Hanging
  • Ah Puch - God of Death, Disaster, and Destruction, Ruler of Xibalba
  • K'awiil - God of Lightning
  • Nacon - God of War
  • Q'uq'umatz - God of Creation, the Sun, and Power, Ruler of the Sky
  • Tohil - God of rain, sun, and fire
  • Yopaat - God of storm

Europe

Anglo-Saxon

  • Elves - local spirits of the land.
  • Eostre- Goddess of April.
  • Frigg - Goddess of the Earth.
  • Hretha- Goddess of March.
  • Saxnot- God of the English.
  • Shef- God of the corn harvest.
  • Thunor - God of Thunder.
  • Tir - God of war
  • Weyland- God of smiths.
  • Woden - God of royalty, healing and magic

Armenian

  • Aramazd - King of the gods; god of the sun, air, and sky; the equivalent of Ahura Mazda, taken from Zoroastrianism
  • Mihr - God of light and wisdom; the equivalent of Mithra, taken from Zoroastrianism
  • Anahit – Goddess of fertility, healing, wisdom, and water
  • Aray - God of war
  • Astghik - Goddess of love, beauty, and water springs
  • Nane - Goddess of war
  • Tir - God of writing, and interpreter of dreams
  • Tsovinar - Goddess of the sea, water, and rain
  • Vahagn – God of war, lightning, and dragon-slaying

Celtic/Gaul

  • Aeracura - An earth mother Goddess
  • Aine - Goddess of sun, light
  • Ambisagrus - God of storms
  • Anann - Irish goddess of war, death, predicting death in battle, cattle, prosperity, and fertility
  • Andarta - Goddess of fertility
  • Andraste - Gaulish warrior goddess
  • Angus Og - God of youth, love and beauty.
  • Anu - Goddess of nurturing
  • Arianrhod - An earth mother Goddess, moon
  • Arawn - God of the underworld, terror, revenge and war.
  • Arito - Wildlife Goddess
  • Aoibhell - Woman of the Shide, she made her dwelling in Craig Liath. Legend has it that she gave a golden harp to Meardha.
  • Badb - Goddess of destruction, war
  • Balor - Although he was born with two good eyes, one was ruined in an accident; the eye is so hideous that he only opens it in battle so that its venom will slay whoever is unlucky enough to catch glimpse of it; his daughter marries Cian. Also known as Balor of the Evil Eye.
  • Bandua - Gallaecian god of war
  • Belatucadros - War god worshipped by soldiers and equated with the Roman war god Mars
  • Black Annis - A Goddess crone/wisewoman
  • Blodeuwedd - A Maiden. She was changed into an owl for committing adultry and plotting to kill Lleu. Symbolizes wisdom, lunar mysteries, initiations. Known to help a garden or a child grow. Known as the Ninefold Goddess of the Western Isles of Paradise and Flower-Face, Goddess was created by Math and Gwydion as a wife for the God Lleu
  • Boann - Goddess of rivers
  • Brigid - Goddess of poetry, fertility, protector of all who call upon her, healing; A Maiden; A Triple Goddess
  • Bran - God of health
  • Branwen - Goddess of love and beauty.
  • Bris - God of fertility and agriculture.
  • Caer - A Maiden, Goddess of sleep and dreams; and perhaps a less violent version of Mare.
  • Cailleach - Goddess of wisdom, disease and plague. A Goddess crone/wisewoman
  • Camulus - God of war of the Belgic Remi and British Trinovantes
  • Caswallawn - God of war
  • Catubodua - Gaulish goddess assumed to be associated with victory
  • Ceridwen - Inspiration, childbirth/midwifery, magic, moon, wisdom
  • Cicolluis - Gaulish and Irish god associated with war
  • Cian - Farther of Lugh
  • Creidhne - God of metalworking; one of the trio of craft-gods of the Tuatha De Danaan.
  • Creiddylad -  Goddess of flowers, love. 
  • Cyhiraeth - Goddess of streams, her scream fortells death. Coincides with the Beansidhe or Banshee
  • Cernunnos - God of virility, fertility, life, animals, forests and the underworld.
  • Cocidius - Romano-British god associated with war, hunting, and forests
  • Danu - A Goddess creatrix/primordial darkness, an earth mother; Also Goddess of nurturing
  • Diana Triformis - A Triple Goddess
  • The Dagda - God of the Earth and All Father.
  • Dewi - God represented by a red serpent or dragon.
  • Diancecht -  God of healing and medicine. 
  • Druantia - "Queen of the Druids". Celtic Fir Goddess and Mother of the tree calender. Symbolizes protection, knowledge, creativity, passion, sex, fertility, growth, trees and forests. Her feast day was Beltane
  • Dylan - Sea God
  • Don - Queen of the Heavens and Goddess of air and sea
  • Dis Pater - God, originally of death and the underworld, eventually the chief of Gods
  • Epona - Goddess of Horses
  • Elaine - Aspect of the maiden, she was later transformed in the Arthurian sagas.
  • Eostre - Goddess of Spring, worshipped at festivals all over Britain.
  • Eriu - Another of the three Goddesses after which Ireland was named. Along with Banb and Fotia or Fodla.
  • Flidais - Goddess of the forest, woodlands, and wild things
  • Fodla - Third of the trinity of goddesses of Ireland along with Babd and Eriu. Variants: Fotia.
  • Greine - A Goddess crone/wisewoman
  • Goibhniu - God of blacksmiths, weapon-makers, brewing.
  • Gwydion - Warrior and magician God, God of enchantment, illusion, magick.
  • Gwynn Ap Nudd - God of the underworld. 
  • Leucetius - God of thunder
  • Labraid - God of the underworld.
  • Llew Llaw Gyffes - God of harpers, healing, poets, smiths, sorcerers, and waters. 
  • Llyr -  God of waters and the sea. 
  • Liban - Goddess of under water
  • Lugh - God of of kings, justice, and rulership. He was the master of all arts. Often seen as a sun or light God.
  • Luchta - God of wrights; one of the triad of craft-gods of the Tuatha De Danaan
  • Manannan Mac Lir - God of the sea
  • Maeve - Goddess of Earth, fertility and war. 
  • Manannan Mac Lir - Patron of sailors and merchants. 
  • Math Mathonwy - God of magick, sorcery, and enchantment. 
  • Mider - God of the Underworld.
  • Myrrdin - Sorcerer, Druid, Wizard and Magician.
  • Margawse -  Mother aspect of the Goddess, she was transformed in the later Arthurian sagas.
  • Morrigan - Goddess of destruction, fertility, moon, vegetation, war; A Triple Goddess
    • Macha - Irish goddess associated with war, horses, and sovereignty; member of the Morrigan
    • Nemain - Irish goddess of the frenzied havoc of war; member of the Morrigan
    • Anu - Manifestation magic, moon, air, fertility, prosperity. Celtic (Irish) Goddess of plenty. Mother earth Goddess and maiden aspect of the Morrigan
    • Badb - Goddess of war and death, sometimes links to rebirth and reincarnation
  • Neit - Irish god of war, husband of Nemain of Badb
  • Nantosuelta - Goddess of nature, valley, and streams.
  • Nemain - Goddess of war
  • Niamh -  Goddess of beauty and brightness. Helps heroes at their death.
  • Nostiluca - Goddess of witches
  • Nuada - God of the hunt, justice, leadership, water.
  • Ogma - Warrior God often associated with Heracles. 
  • Olwen - Goddess of flowers and springtime. Also symbolizes love and re-birth.
  • Pwyll - God, prince who married the Goddess Rhiannon and bore a son, Pryderi.
  • Scathach - Goddess of healing, magic, fighting arts, prophecy. 
  • Rhiannon - Goddess of Horses, inspiration, moon, death, fortune/luck, poetry and music. Also known for fertility and motherhood.
  • Rosmerta - Celtic Goddess of fertility and wealth. 
  • Rudianos - Gaulish god of war
  • Segomo - Gaulish god of war
  • Sequana - Goddess of the river and of health.
  • Shannon - Goddess of the River Shannon
  • Smertios - War Deity
  • Sucellus - God of agriculture and the forest, ferries souls to the underworld. His consort is Nantosvelta.
  • Sul - Goddess of sun, light
  • Taliesin - God of song, known as Prince of Song, Chief of the Bards of the West, and Patron God of the Druids, he was a great magician, bard, and shapeshifter who gained his knowledge from the Goddess Cerridwen directly.
  • Taranis - God of thunder
  • Tephi - Goddess who co-founded tea.
  • Taranus - God of thunder
  • Teutates - British and Gaulish god of war and the tribe, fertility and money.
  • The White Lady - Celtic all Celtic countries; goddess of death and destruction. Called the Dryad of Death and Queen of the Dead, this goddess was a Crone aspect of the Goddess.

English

  • Black Shuck East Anglian dog spirit.
  • Herne (m) - Hunter spirit of Windsor.
  • Jack in the Green (m) - May day fertility spirit.

Finnish

  • Ahti - God of the sea.
  • Akka - Goddess of women.
  • Ilmarinen - God of the the forge.
  • Loviatar - Goddess of pestilence.
  • Mielikki - Goddess of the forrests and hunt.
  • Tuoni - God of the underworld.
  • Ukko - God of the sky and thunder.
  • Vellamo - Goddess of the sea.
  • Väinämöinen - God of the magic and poetry.

German/Dutch

  • Holda (f) - Goddess of winter, weather, textiles and fertility
  • Nehalennia (f) - Goddess of Seafaring & Fertility (German/Dutch).
  • Nerthus (f) - Goddess of the Earth (German/Danish).

Greek

  • Acheron - God of one of the seven rivers of the underworld with the same name
  • Achlys - A primordial deity and the goddess of eternal night, misery, and sorrow
  • Adonis - The mortal lover of Aphrodite
  • Aeolus - King of the winds
  • Aether - A primordial deity and the personification of the upper sky
  • Alastor - Spirit of blood feuds and vengeance
  • The Algea - Spirits of pain and suffering
    • Achos
    • Ania
    • Lupe
  • Alpheus - God of one of the seven rivers of the underworld with the same name
  • Ananke- Personification of fate or necessity
  • Aphrodite – Goddess of beauty; one of the twelve Olympians
  • Apollo – God of poetry, music, and the sun and the prophecy; an Olympian
  • Ares – God of war; an Olympian
  • Artemis – Goddess of the hunt and of of the moon; an Olympian
  • Asclepius- God of healing
  • Asteria - Goddess of nocturnal oracles and the stars
  • Ate- Goddess of moral blindness and personification of folly
  • Athena – Goddess of wisdom, defensive war, and Athens; an Olympian
  • Bia - Spirit of force and compulsion
  • Charon - Ferryman of the dead
  • Cronus - King of the Titanes and the god of time
  • Cocytus - God of one of the seven rivers of the underworld with the same name
  • Deimos - Personification of terror
  • Despoina - Goddess of mysteries of Arcadian cults and of horses
  • Demeter – Goddess of the harvest and of nature, often considered an Olympian
  • Dionysus – God of wine, he took Hestia's place as an Olympian
  • Echo - A mountain nymph that was punished by Hera so that she could no longer speak except to repeat the last words of another
  • Eris – Goddess of confusion, chaos, and laughter.
  • Enyalius - God of war
  • Enyo - Goddess of war, sometimes appears to be identical to Eris
  • Epiphron - Demon of shrewdness
  • Erebus - The primeval god of darkness
  • Eridanos - God of one of the seven rivers of the underworld with the same name
  • Erinyes - Chthonic deities of vengeance
  • Eos – Goddess of the dawn
  • Eros - God of lust and desire
  • Gaia – Primordial Goddess of earth, and mother of the Titans
  • Geras - God of old age
  • Hades – God of the underworld, often considered an Olympian
  • Hecate – Goddess of Witchcraft and crossroads
  • Helios – God who drives of the sun: a primordial
  • Hemera - A primordial deity and the personification of day
  • Hephaestus – God of smiths and fire; an Olympian
  • Hesperides - Nymphs of evening and golden lights of sunsets
  • Hera – Chief Goddess of the pantheon and Goddess of marriage; an Olympian
  • Hermes – The messenger of the Greek Gods; an Olympian
  • Hestia – Goddess of the hearth who gave up seat at Olympus to Dionysus
  • Homados - Spirit of the din of battle
  • Horme - Spirit of impulse, effort, eagerness, setting oneself in motion, and starting an action
  • Hybris - Spirit of outrageous behavior
  • Hypnos - A primordial deity and the personification of sleep
  • Hysminai- Female spirits of fighting and combat
  • Iapetus - Titan god of the underworld who brought violent deaths to mortals
  • Ioke - Spirit of onslaught, battle-tumult, and pursuit
  • Iris - Goddess of rainbows and messenger of Hera
  • Keres - Goddesses of violent death; sisters of Thanatos
  • Kratos - Personification of strength and power
  • Kydoimos - Spirit of the din of battle
  • Lampades - Torch-bearing underworld nymphs
  • Lethe - Goddess of one of the seven rivers of the underworld with the same name
  • Limos - Goddess of starvation
  • Macaria - goddess of the blessed death
  • Makhai - Male spirits of fighting and combat
  • Melinoe - Goddess of ghosts
  • Moirai - Any of the three goddesses that determined humans' fates, the span of a person's life, and their allotment of misery and suffering
  • Momos - Evil-spirited god of blame
  • Moros - God of impending doom
  • Nemesis - The avenging goddess of divine retribution
  • Nike - Spirit of victory
  • Nyx - A primordial deity and the personification of the night
  • Oizys - Goddess of misery, distress, anxiety, and worry
  • Palioxis - Spirit of back-rush, flight, and retreat from battle
  • Pallas - Titan god of war-craft and the springtime campaign season
  • Pan – God of shepherds
  • Persephone - Queen of the underworld; wife of Hades and goddess of spring growth
  • Perses - Titan of destruction
  • Phlegethon - God of one of the seven rivers of the underworld with the same name
  • Phobos - Spirit of panic, fear, flight, and battlefield route
  • Phonoi - Spirits of murder, killing, and slaughter
  • Phrike - Spirit of horror and trembling fear
  • Polemos - Spirit of war
  • Poseidon – God of the sea and the Father of horses; an Olympian
  • Proioxis - Spirit of onrush and battlefield pursuit
  • Selene – Goddess who drives the moon;a Primordial
  • Styx - Goddess of one of the seven rivers of the underworld with the same name that formed a boundary between the living and the dead
  • Tartarus - A primordial deity who the abyss used as the dungeon of torment that resides beneath the underworld was named after
  • Thanatos- The god of death
  • Thyche- Goddess of fortune
  • Uranus – Primordial god of the heavens, and father of the Titans
  • Zeus – God of sky and air; chief Olympian
  • Morpheus – God of dreams

Irish

Lusitanian

  • Endovelicus (m) - A Solar God with many faces, the supreme head God, god of dreams/visions and health.
  • Ataegina (f) - The goddess of health, the moon, and rebirth (a significant theme in their religion).
  • Runesocesius (m) - A god of mystery and martial skills, the god of the javelin.

Norse

  • Asgard - home to the Æsir tribe of Gods.
  • Alfar
  • Balder – God of beauty, innocence, joy, peace and purity; Son of Odin.
  • Beyla (f) - Goddess of bees or cattle.
  • Bil (f) - Goddess of the moon.
  • Bragi – God of poetry.
  • Byggvir (m) - God of Barley.
  • Dagr (m) - God of the day.
  • Disir - local female goddesses or female ancestors.
  • Eir (f) - Goddess of healing.
  • Fenrir - Wolf God of Destruction, and Ragnorak (Norse Armageddon)
  • Forseti (m) - God of justice.
  • Freyja / Freya (f) - Goddess of love domestic skills and magic.
  • Freyr – God of fertility and love.
  • Frigga (f) - Goddess of women domestic skills and wisdom.
  • Heimdall – The guardian of the Norse deities.
  • Hel – Queen of Helheim, the Norse underworld.
  • Hoenir (m) - God of reason.
  • Idunn (f) - Goddess of apples and immortality.
  • Irpa - Goddess of hail storms
  • Jord (f) - Earth Goddess.
  • Lofn (f) - Goddess of thwarted lovers.
  • Loki – The Norse trickster god.
  • Mani (m) - God of the moon.
  • Njord (m) - God of the coast and wealth.
  • Norns (f) - The three goddesses of fate Verdandi Urd and Skuld.
  • Nott (f) - Goddess of night.
  • Odin – God of the hunt, of magic, poetry, victory war, and wisdom.
  • Ran (f) - Goddess of the drowned.
  • Saga (f) - Goddess of wisdom.
  • Sif (f) - Goddess of kinship.
  • Siofn (f) - Goddess of love.
  • Skadi (f) - Goddess of skiing and mountains.
  • Snotra (f) - Goddess of wisdom.
  • Sol (f) - Goddess of the sun.
  • Syn (f) - Goddess of protection.
  • Thor – God of thunder.
  • Thorgerd - Goddess of hail storms
  • Tyr – God of battle and warfare.
  • Ull (m) - God of skiing, hunting and combat.
  • Vali (m) - God of vengeance.
  • Var (f) - Goddess of Oaths.
  • Vidar (m) - God of Strength.
  • Vor (f) - Goddess of hidden knowledge.

Roman

  • Apollo – God of the sun, music, and poetry
  • Bellona - Goddess of war
  • Bacchus – God of wine
  • Caelus - God of heaven
  • Cardea - Goddess of health, thresholds, and door hinges and handles
  • Ceres – Goddess of the harvest
  • Cupid – God of love
  • Diana – Goddess of the hunt
  • Fulgora - Goddess of lightning
  • Honos - God of chivalry, honor, and military justice
  • Janus – Two-headed god of beginnings and endings
  • Juno – The chief Goddess of the Roman pantheon; Goddess of marriage
  • Jupiter – The chief god; God of the sky
  • Maia – The "good Goddess", Goddess of spring
  • Mars – God of war
  • Mercury – The messenger of the Roman Gods
  • Minerva – Goddess of wisdom and civilization
  • Neptune – God of the sea
  • Nerio - Warrior goddess and personification of valor
  • Pluto – God of the underworld
  • Plutus – God of wealth
  • Portunus - God of keys, doors, and livestock
  • Proserpina – Queen of the underworld
  • Tempestas - Goddess of storms and sudden weather
  • Terminus - God who protected boundary markers
  • Trivia - Goddess of magick and three-way crossroads; equivalent to the Greek Hecate
  • Venus – Goddess of beauty
  • Vesta – Goddess of the hearth
  • Victoria - Personification of victory
  • Virtus - God of bravery and military strength
  • Vulcan – God of the forge

Romano-Celtic

  • Abnoba - Goddess of forests, rivers
  • Andrasta - Goddess of war
  • Arduinna - Goddess of hunting, forests
  • Arnemetia - Goddess of water
  • Aveta - Goddess of childbirth/midwifery
  • Sequana - Goddess of healing/health
  • Sirona - Goddess of healing/health
  • Suleviae - Goddess of crossroads, moon
  • Sulis - Goddess of healing/health, death

Slavic

  • Belobog – God of the sun, light, hope and goodwill.
  • Chernobog - Cursed God of darkness, destruction and loss. Brother of Belobog.
  • Indibog - God of balance, father of the all seeing eye, the decoder of light and darkness
  • Jarovit - God of war
  • Morana - Goddess of Harvest, Witchcraft, Winter and Death.
  • Perun - God of thunder and lightning; king of the gods
  • Rugiviet - God of war
  • Svantetit - God of war
  • Svetovit - God of war
  • Triglav - God of war
  • Zroya - Goddess of war

Urartian

  • Haldi – God of War, Supreme God of the Urartian pantheon
  • Arubani - Goddess of Fertility and Art

Egyptian

  • Anhur, God of War, Sky Bearer
  • Ankt - Goddess of war
  • Anouke - Goddess of war
  • Anubis, God of Embalming, Prosecutor of the Dead
  • Apep - The serpent deity of evil and darkness
  • The Aten, the embodiment of the Sun's rays
  • Atum, a creator deity
  • Bast, Goddess of Cats
  • Bes, God-Demon of Protection, Childbirth and Entertainment
  • Geb, God of the Earth
  • Hapi God of the Nile and Fertility
  • Hathor, Goddess of Love and Music
  • Heget Goddess of Childbirth
  • Horus the falcon-headed god, King of gods
  • Imhotep God of wisdom, medicine and magic
  • Isis, Goddess of Magic, sister of Nephthys
  • Khepry, the scarab beetle, the embodiment of the dawn
  • Khnum, a creator deity
  • Khonsu, God of the Moon
  • Kuk - An uncreated god who personified the primordial darkness
  • Maahes - Lion-headed god of war
  • Ma'at, Goddess of Truth, Balance, and Order
  • Menhit - Goddess of war
  • Mentu - God of war
  • Min, God of Male Fertility
  • Mont, god of war
  • Naunet, the primal waters
  • Neith, the great mother goddess, goddess of war
  • Nephthys, mother of Anubis
  • Nut, goddess of heaven and the sky
  • Osiris, God of death
  • Pakhet - Goddess of war
  • Ptah, a creator deity
  • Ra, the sun God
  • Satis - Deification of the floods of the Nile River and an early war; goddess of hunting and fertility
  • Sekhmnet, goddess of war and battles
  • Sobek, Crocodile God
  • Set, God of Storms, possible father of Anubis
  • Sopdu - God of the scorching heat of the summer sun, associated with war
  • Shu, god of the wind and air
  • Taweret - Goddess of childbirth and fertility
  • Tefnut, goddess of order, justice, time, Heaven and Hell and weather
  • Thoth, god of the moon, drawing, writing, geometry, wisdom, medicine, music, astronomy, and magic
  • Wepwawet - Wolf-god of war and death who later became associated with Anubis and the afterlife

African

  • Àganjù - God of the Volcanoes and Earthquakes
  • Ajá (Aje) - Goddess of Commerce and Money
  • Ayao - Goddess of the Whirlwinds or Cyclone 
  • Eleguá - God of the Crossroads, Doors, Trickster
  • Èṣhù - God of Beginnings and Balance
  • Hara Ké - Goddess of Spring
  • Mémé - Goddess of Health, Healing
  • Obatálá - God of Peace, Justice, and Divine Judgement
  • Obbá-Nani - Goddess of Marriage, Domesticity and Protection
  • Olódùmarè - God of Creation
  • Ogún- God of Iron, Employment, Technology and the Forest
  • Ochósi - God of Hunting, Justice and the Forest
  • Olókun - God of the Deep Sea, Wealth, Prosperity and Health
  • Orunmila - God of Wisdom, Divination, Destiny, and Foresight 
  • Oshún - Goddess of Rivers, Money, Independence, beauty and love 
  • Oyá - Goddess of Winds, Storms,Tornados, Lighting and the Marketplace
  • Yemáyá - Goddess of the Ocean, Fertility and Healing 

East Asia

Chinese

  • Ch’ang’O (Ch’ang’E) - Goddess of the Moon, Relationships and Devotion
  • Dian Wu - Thunder deity
  • Du Kang - God of wine
  • Kuan Yin (Guan Yin) - Chinese Goddess (Bodhisattva) of Compassion, Mercy, and Kindness
  • Feng Bo - (Taoist) God Wind deity
  • Feng Po Po - Goddess of Windsy
  • Han Zixian - God of Winds
  • Jiao Ling - A mythical water beast with the blood of a dragon, four claws, the head of a horse, whiskers, scales, and horns
  • Lei Gong - God of Thunder
  • Li Shi - A minor god who looks after loose change
  • Wenchang Wang - (Taoist) God of Culture, Literature, and Education
  • Mazu - Patron goddess of seafarers
  • Meng Po - The Lady of Forgetfulness
  • Ne Zha - Child God - protect the human world against the surge of demons
  • Sun Wukong - The Monkey King - A powerful monkey spirit who can see the true form of any demon
  • Tsai Shen Yeh - God of Wealth and Fortune
  • Wen Zhong - Thunder deity
  • Yunzhongzi - Master of clouds
  • Yu Shi - God of rain

Japanese/Shinto (there are way more kami then this)

  • Amaterasu – Goddess of the sun
  • Cannon - Mahayana Buddhist Goddess of Compassion. Also known as Guan Yin.
  • Futsu-Nushi-no-Kami - God of war
  • Fuujin - God of wind
  • Hachiman - God of war
  • Inari- God of Foxes
  • Izanagi- First god
  • Izanami- Goddess of Death, Uncleanliness and the Underworld. Also the first goddess
  • Raijin - God of thunder, lightning, and storms
  • The Shichifukujin- Seven Gods of Good Fortune
    • Daikoku- God of Wealth, commerce and trade
    • Ebisu- God of Fishers and Merchants
    • Benzaiten- Goddess of eloquence, music, art and beauty
    • Bishamonten- God of Warriors
    • Fukurokuju- God of Longevity, Happiness and Wealth
    • Jurojin- God of Longevity
    • Hotei- God of Abundance and Good Health
    • Ejay- God of criminology
  • Susanoo- God of Storms
  • Tengu- Minor deities (kami) of Mountains
  • Tsukiyomi- God of the Moon

Tibetan

  • Beg-tse - God of war
  • there are definitely more to this category and the Vietnamese category But yet again I’m too lazy

Vietnamese

  • Princess Lieu Hanh - One of the Four Immortals

West Asia

Hindu

  • Brahma - God of creation
  • Dyaus - God of heaven
  • Ganesha/Ganesha - God of beginnings and remover of obstacles. A god with an elephant head (his father Shiva cut off his human head)
  • Hanuman - A muscular monkey god, the son of the wind, a character in the Ramayana who helped Rama save Sita
  • Indra - God of war
  • Kali - Goddess of death and time
  • Karttikeya - God of war
  • Lakshmi - Goddess of wealth and fortune; a consort of Vishnu
  • Mariamman - Goddess of rain
  • Maruts - Storm gods
  • Parvati - Goddess of fertility, love, beauty, and children. A Mother Goddess
  • Saranyu - Goddess of the clouds
  • Saraswati - Goddess of learning, music, and art. Consort of Brahma
  • Shiva - Several of his avatars are gods of avenging and destroying
  • Vayu - God of the wind
  • Vishnu - God of protection and preservation, several of his avatars are associated with fighting and vanquishing evil
    • Kalki - The tenth avatar of Vishnu to end the Kali Yuga
    • Krishna - A well-known avatar of Vishnu who preserves the force of the universe
    • Kurma - An avatar of Vishnu who appeared as a turtle
    • Matsya - An avatar of Vishnu who appeared as a fish
    • Rama - An avatar of Vishnu, known from the Ramayana, a prince who saved his wife Sita from enemies
  • Yama - A wrathful god said to judge the dead and preside over the Narakas and the cycle of the afterlife (samsara)

Persian

  • Ahura Mazda, AKA Ormazd - The chief god in Zoroastrianism. His name means "Lord Wisdom". He has seven "emanations", which are called the amesha spenta, which means "immortal holy ones".
  • Mitra/Mithra - The second-highest god in Zoroastrianism. He is the Zoroastrian god of contracts and oaths. He is one of the three judges at the bridge of souls.
  • Apam Napat - The third-highest god in Zoroastrianism. His name means "water's child". He was originally the world-creator god, until Zoroaster came and wrote The Gathas, which supplanted Apam Napat with Ahura Mazda.

Mesopotamian

  • Adad - God of storms (Assyrian)
  • An - Sumerian
  • Anshar - father of heaven
  • Anu - the god of heaven (Mesopotamian)
  • Apsu - the ruler of gods and underworld oceans
  • Ara Tiotio - God of tornadoes and whirlwinds (Maori)
  • Ashtart - Goddess of war (Babylonian)
  • Ashur - God of war and national god of the Assyrians (Assyrian)
  • Damkina - Earth mother goddess
  • Ea - god of wisdom
  • Enki - God of Creation, Water, Fertility, Black Arts, and Mischief. (Babylonian)
  • Enlil - god of weather and storms (Mesopotamian)
  • Ereshkigal - Goddess of the Underworld
  • Erra - An Akkadian plague god; also the god of mayhem and pestilence who is responsible for periods of political confusion (Akkadian/Babylonian)
  • Ninurta - god of war (Babylonian)
  • Hadad - God of storms (Mesopotamian)
  • Inanna - Goddess associated with love, beauty, sex, desire, fertility, war, justice, and political power (Mesopotamian/Sumerian)
  • Ishtar - goddess of love (Assyrian/Akkadian/Babylonian)
  • Jabru - God of the underworld (Elamite)
  • Kingu - husband of Tiamat
  • Kishar - father of earth
  • Marduk - national god of the Babylonians; god of water, vegetation, judgement, and magick (Babylonian)
  • Mummu - god of mists
  • Nabu - god of the scribal arts
  • Nammu
  • Namtar - A chthonic minor deity, god of death, and minister and messenger of An, Ereshkigal, and Nergal
  • Nanaja - Goddess of war (Sumerian)
  • Nanna
  • Nergal - Ereshkigal's husband and Lord of the Underworld (Babylonian)
  • Ninhursag
  • Ninlil - Goddess of air (Mesopotamian)
  • Ninsusinak - National god of the Elamite Empire and consort of Pinikir (Elamite/Assyrian)
  • Nintu - mother of all gods
  • Pap-nigin-gara - God of war (Akkadian/Babylonian)
  • Sebitti - Group of minor war gods (Akkadian/Babylonian)
  • Shamash - god of the sun and of justice
  • Shala - Goddess of war and grain (Akkadian/Babylonian)
  • Shara - Minor god of war (Sumerian)
  • Shulmanu - God of the underworld, fertility, and war, weapon
  • Sin - moon god
  • Tawhirimatea - God of storms (Maori)
  • Tiamat - dragon goddess of saltwater (Babylonian)
  • Utu
  • Zababa - God of war (Akkadian)

Semitic

  • El - The west-semitic king of the gods
  • Baal - His name means "lord"
  • Yam - God of the sea; called Yawa in other areas, being the equivalent of the jewish god Yahweh
  • Mot - God of death and the underworld
  • Asherah - One of two wives of El
  • Astarte
  • Anat - One of two wives of El; goddess of love and war
  • Dagon
  • Nikkal
  • Yareha
  • Moloch - His name means "king"
  • Kothar-Wa-Khasis

Abrahamic

  • Yahweh, AKA Jehovah, anciently called Yahwah - Merged with El to form the jewish god
  • El, AKA El Shaddai - Meaning "the all-conquering god"; merged with Yahwah to form the jewish god
  • Allah - The arabic equivalent of the canaanite/hebrew god El
  • Jesus of Nazareth - A jewish cult leader who was deified by himself and his followers
  • The Holy Spirit - An invention of Paul of Tarsus, which was subsequently written into the mouth of Jesus
  • The Trinity - The combination of El/Yahweh, Jesus, and The Holy Spirit

Australia

God of rain (I think)( if a 12-year-old can do this so can you so put down the gods and goddesses you know)

  • Birrahgnooloo, Kamilaroi goddess of fertility who would send floods if properly asked to
  • The rainbow serpent
    • Adnoartina, the lizard guard of Uluru
    • Altjira, Arrernte sky god who created the earth
    • Ankotarinja, first man of Arrernte mythology
    • Onur, Karraur lunar deity
    • Bamapana, Yolngu trickster spirit who creates discord
    • Banaitja, creator deity
    • Barnumbirr, Yolgnu creator spirit
    • Barraiya, creator of the first vagina
    • Bobbi-Bobbi, benevolent Binbinga snake deity
    • Djanggawul, three creator-siblings of northeast Arnhem Land mythology
    • Galeru, rainbow snake in Arnhem Land mythology who swallowed the Djanggawul
    • Djunkgao, group of sisters associated with floods and ocean currents
    • Julunggul, Yolgnu rainbow snake goddess associated with initiation, fertility, rebirth and water
    • Karora, creator god
    • Kunapipi, mother goddess and the patron deity of many heroes
    • Malingee, malignant nocturnal spirit
    • Mamaragan, lightning deity
    • Mangar-kunjer-kunja, Arrernte lizard deity who created humans
    • Mimi, fairy-like beings of Arnhem Land
    • Minawara and Multultu, legendary ancestors of the Nambutji
    • Namarrkon (also known as Namarrgon[2]), Lightning man, makes lightning appear and creates roars of thunder in storms
    • Mokoi, evil Yolngu spirit who kidnapped and ate children
    • Ngintaka, Pitjantjatjara creator being
    • Nogomain, god who gives spirit children to mortal parents
    • Manuriki, god of beauty
    • Papinijuwari, a type of one-eyed giant which feeds on the bodies of the dead and the blood of the sick
    • Ulanji, snake-ancestor of the Binbinga
    • Wala, solar goddess
    • Wawalag, Yolngu sisters who were swallowed by a serpent, only to be regurgitated
    • Wollunqua, snake-deity associated with rain and fertility
    • Wuluwaid, rain god of Arnhem Land
    • Wuriupranili, solar goddess whose torch is the sun
    • Wurugag and Waramurungundi, first man and woman of Gunwinggu legend
    • Yhi, Karraur solar goddess associated with light and creation
    • Yurlungur, Yolngu snake deity who swallowed and regurgitated the Wawalag sisters; associated with initiation and rebirth
    • Anjea, fertility goddess or spirit, in whom people's souls reside between their incarnations
    • Gaiya, giant devil dingo of lower Cape York Peninsula
    • Dhakhan, ancestral god of the Kabi
    • I'wai, culture hero of the Kuuku-Ya'u
    • Yalungur, god of the first baby
    • Bagadjimbiri, a pair of Karadjeri creator-spirits
    • Dilga, Karadjeri goddess of fertility and growth, and mother of the Bagadjimbiri
    • Julana, lecherous Jumu spirit who surprises women by burrowing beneath the sand, leaping out, and raping them
    • Kidili, Mandjindja moon deity who was castrated for attempting to rape the first women, who in turn became the Pleiades
    • Kurdaitcha (or kurdaitcha man) is a ritual "executioner" in Australian Indigenous Australian culture (specifically the term comes from the Arrernte people).
    • Ngariman, Karadjeri quoll-man who killed the Bagadjimbiri and was drowned in revenge
    • Njirana, Jumu deity and father of Julana
    • Ungud, snake deity associated with rainbows and the fertility and erections of the tribe's shamans
    • Wagyl, Noongar snakelike creator being
    • Wati-kutjara, a pair of western Australian lizard-men
    • Wondjina, Mowanjum cloud or rain spirits
      • Daramulum, southeast Australian deity and son of Baiame
      • Gnowee, solar goddess who searches daily for her lost son; her torch is the sun
      • Karatgurk, seven sisters who represent the Pleiades star cluster
      • Kondole, man who became the first whale
      • Lohan-tuka, wife of Loo-errn
      • Loo-errn, spirit ancestor and guardian of the Brataualung people
      • Nargun, fierce half-human, half-stone creature of Gunai legend
      • Pundjel, creator deity involved in the initiation of boys
      • Thinan-malkia, evil spirit who captures victims with nets that entangle their feet
      • Tiddalik, frog of southeast Australian legend who drank all the water in the land, and had to be made to laugh to regurgitate it
      • Wambeen, evil lightning-hurling figure who targets travellers

Antarctica

Other

Deities of oriental mystery religions and roman imperial cults

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