Gods and Goddesses of the Collective
Abzu | crafts, water, intelligence, mischief and creation (Meopotamian) |
Aequitas | divine personification of fairness (Roman) |
Aeternitas | goddess and personification of eternity. (Roman) |
Airmed | Irish goddess associated with healing and resurrection (Celtic) |
Anagolay | The goddess of lost things and the only offspring of Lakapati and Mapulon. She was married to Dumakulem (Philipines) |
Anahita | goddess of fertility, healing and wisdom (Persian) |
Ares | The god of war, bloodshed, violence, manly courage, and civil order. (Greek) |
Aro | god of judgment (Igbo tribe) |
Artemis | Virgin goddess of the hunt, wilderness, animals, young girls, childbirth and plague. (Greek) |
Athena | The goddess of wisdom, warfare, battle strategy, heroic endeavour, handicrafts and reason (Greek) |
Baldur | god of light, summer and innocence (Norse) |
Benzaiten | Also known as Benten, she is the goddess of everything that flows: words (and knowledge, by extension), speech, eloquence, and music. Said to be the third daughter of the dragon-king of Munetsuchi, over the course of years she has gone from being a protective deity of Japan to one who bestows good fortune upon the state and its people. Derived from Saraswati, the equivalent Hindu goddess. ("Benzaiten" is the Japanese name for the Goddess Saraswati . . . Goddess of love, beauty, knowledge, eloquence and music.) (Japanese) |
Cernunnos | a horned god associated with fertility and hunting (Celtic) |
Chimalma | goddess of fertility, life, death and rebirth. (Aztec) |
Coatlicue | goddess of fertility, life, death and rebirth. (Aztec) |
Damu | god of vegetation and rebirth; possibly a local offshoot of Dumuzi (Meopotamian) |
Devana | goddess of the hunt; the Slavic equivalent of the Roman goddess Diana (Slavic) |
Diyan Masalanta | The goddess of love, conception and childbirth and the protector of lovers. (Philipines) |
Ecne | god of wisdom and knowledge (Irish) |
Eir | goddess associated with medical skill (Norse, Currently MIA) |
Endursaga | a herald god (Meopotamian) |
Enki or Ea | god of the freshwater (Meopotamian) |
Eastre | (Goddess of the Saxon, Frankish and Germanic tribes, also known as Eostre or Ostara) |
Forseti | god of justice (mediator, all who go before him will feel fairly treated) (Norse- Currently MIA) |
Freyja | goddess associated with love, beauty, fertility, wealth, gold, music, seiđr (divination and magic), war, and death (Norse, Currently MIA) |
Freyr | god associated with farming, weather and fertility (Norse, Currently MIA) |
Frigg | goddess associated with prophecy, marriage and childbirth (Norse, Currently MIA) |
Fukurokuju | he is the god of wisdom and longevity and said to be an incarnation of the Southern Polestar. He is a star god accompanied by a crane and a turtle, which are considered to be symbols of longevity, and also sometimes accompanied by a black deer. The sacred book tied to his staff is said to contain the lifespan of every person on Earth. (Japanese) |
Fulla | goddes, bountiful, abundance (Norse) |
Geshtu-E | minor god of intelligence (Meopotamian) |
Guan Yu | god of brotherhoods, martial power, and war (Chinese) |
Hel | goddess of Hel, where the dead live (Norse, Not Asynjur - Currently MIA) |
Hendursaga | god of law (Meopotamian) |
Hephaestus | (pron.: He-phaistos) was the Greek god of blacksmiths, craftsmen, artisans, sculptors, metals, metallurgy, fire and volcanoes.[1] Hephaestus' Roman equivalent was Vulcan. In Greek mythology, Hephaestus was the son of Zeus and Hera, the king and queen of the gods, husband of Aphrodite. |
Hermes | The god of travel, messengers, trade, thievery, cunning wiles, language, writing, diplomacy, athletics, and animal husbandry. (Greek) |
Hiemdallr | god of foresight, can see more than 1000 miles, wisdom, guardian of the bifrost road (Norse-Currently MIA) |
Hodr | god of all things dark and cold (Norse, Currently MIA) |
Hors | God of the winter sun, healing, survival, and the triumph of health over illness (Slavic) |
Huh | deification of eternity (Egyptian) |
Idunn | goddess of youth, and love, the "constant goddess" (Norse, was Helen reborn in Gaia end of S2) |
Inanna | goddess of fertility, love, sex and war (Meopotamian, also known as Ishtar) |
Ipabog | God of the hunt (Slavic) |
Jar'Edo Wens | deity associated with earthly knowledge and physical might (Australian) |
Justitia | goddess of justice. (Roman) |
Kedes | The god of the hunt. (Philipines, Agta god) |
Kneph | a creator deity (Egyptian) |
Kukulkán | The plumed serpent. A Mayan aspect of the Mesoamerican traditional God Quetzalcoatl. (Mayan) |
Kvasir | "the wisest of all". (from wikipedia) "Bragi says that the Ćsir once wrangled with the Vanir (see Ćsir-Vanir War) but eventually came together to make peace. The two groups decided to form a truce by way of both sides spitting into a vat. After they left, the gods kept the vat as a symbol of their truce, "and decided not to let it be wasted and out of it made a man". The man was named Kvasir, and he was extremely wise; he knew the answer to any question posed to him. Kvasir traveled far and wide throughout the world teaching mankind and spreading his vast knowledge." (Norse) |
Lahmu | first-born son of Abzu and Tiamat; a protective and beneficent deity (Meopotamian) |
Lelantos | Titan of air and the hunter's skill of stalking prey. He is the male counterpart of Leto. (Greek) |
Liddum | Is regarded as the chief mediator between the people and the other gods. (Philipines, Ifuago god) |
Lmugot Mangay | The god of life and of all growing things. (Philipines, Tiboli god) |
Loki | god of fire, the trickster, not a friend of the Aesir (he's a Jotunn) (Norse) |
Ma'at | goddess who personified the order and balance of the universe,and worked in the underworld to do the "weighing of the heart ceremony. (Egyptian) |
Mars | god of war (Roman) |
Menhit | goddess of war, associated with Sekhmet (Egyptian) |
Mercury | messenger of the gods and bearer of souls to the underworld, and one of the Dii Consentes. (Roman) |
Metis | Titan of good counsel, advice, planning, cunning, craftiness and wisdom, and mother of Athena. (Greek) |
Mímir | a god renowned for his knowledge and wisdom; Odin is advised by his decapitated head (Norse) |
Mnemosyne | Titan of memory and remembrance, and mother of the Nine Muses. (Greek) |
Monthu | falcon god of war (Egyptian) |
Mummu | god of crafts and technical skill (Meopotamian) |
Nabu | god of wisdom and writing (Meopotamian) |
Nammu | a creation goddess (Meopotamian) |
Nanshe | goddess of social justice, prophecy, fertility and fishing (Meopotamian) |
Neit | a god of war (Irish) |
Neith | goddess of creation, war, and hunting, sometimes associated with wisdom (Egyptian) |
Ninshubur | Queen of the East, messenger goddess and second-in-command to Inanna (Meopotamian) |
Nintinugga | Babylonian goddess of healing (Meopotamian) |
Nodens | god associated with healing, the sea, hunting and dogs (Celtic) |
Odin | god associated with wisdom, war, battle, and death, and also magic, poetry, prophecy, victory, the hunt, and music (Norse, Aesir) |
Omoikane | The deity of wisdom and intelligence, who is always called upon to "ponder" and give good counsel in the deliberations of the heavenly deities. (Japanese) |
Orunmila | deity of wisdom, divination and foresight (Yoruba tribe) |
Oxossi | hunter and the scout of the orishas (Yoruba tribe) |
Peklenc | God of the underground and a divine judge (Slavic) |
Phoebe | Titan of the "bright" intellect and prophecy, and consort of Koios. (Greek) |
Piltzintecuhtli | god of the temporals, the rising sun and healing. (Aztec) |
Pinga | the goddess of the hunt, fertility and medicine (Inuit) |
Prometheus | Titan of forethought and crafty counsel, and creator of mankind. (Greek) |
Providentia | goddess of forethought. (Roman) |
Ptah | creator deity, also a god of craft. (Egyptian) |
Quetzalcoatl | god of wisdom, life, knowledge, morning star, fertility, patron of the winds and the light, the lord of the West. (Aztec) |
Ra | the sun, also a creator deity, whose chief cult center was based in Heliopolis. (Egyptian) |
Saxnot | Divine
anscestor of the Saxons, First King of the Anglo Saxons, and known as the god
of Family. (God of the Saxon, Frankish and Germanic tribes, also known as Seaxneat (pronounced [sæksnæt]). |
Sekhmet | Goddess of War and a Goddess of Healing. When the Goddess first came to me in 1989 in dreams and meditation, I asked her, "What is the difference between a warrior and a warmonger?" Her response, "A warrior unites, protects and defends. A warmonger divides, conquers and enslaves. A warrior can take a life but a warrior can also save a life. A warrior is a healer. A warrior is a dancer." (Egyptian) |
Selket | Goddess of magic and healing of poisonous snakes She is also the protector of women and children particularly in child birth. Her name means "She who tightens the throat" as well as "She who breathes" showing her power over life, death and rebirth. (Egyptian) |
Shamash | god of the sun, arbiter of justice and patron of travellers (Meopotamian, also known as Utu) |
Sjofn | Goddess of love (Norse) |
Snotra | goddess associated with wisdom (Norse) |
Sobkou | messenger god (Egyptian) |
Suadela | goddess of persuasion (Roman) |
Sunna | The Sun personified in Germanic mythology. (Saxon, also known as Sunne, Álfröðull) |
Svetovid | God of war, fertility and abundance (Slavic) |
Themis | Titan of divine law and order. (Greek) |
Thor | god associated with thunder, strength, defense, oaks, goats, lightning, storms, weather, crops, trading voyages, courage, trust, revenge, protection, warfare and battles (Norse) |
Thoth | ibis-headed god of the moon, drawing, writing, geometry, wisdom, medicine, music, astronomy and magic. (Egyptian, also known as Djehuty) |
Tranquillitas | goddess of peace and tranquility. (Roman) |
Týr | god associated with honor, law (the "Allthing"), justice in battle, victory, and heroic glory (Norse, Currently MIA) |
Ullr | god associated with archery, male beauty, skiing, winter sports, single combat, and war (Norse, in the show hunting & games, can't lose at games) |
Var | goddess of oaths and contracts (Norse) |
Veritas | goddess and personification of the Roman virtue of veritas or truth. (Roman) |
Vica Pota | goddess of victory and competitions. (Roman) |
Victoria | goddess of victory. (Roman) |
Vör | goddess associated with wisdom (Norse) |
Wepwawet | jackal god of warfare and hunting (Egyptian) |
Wong Tai Sin | god with the power of healing (Chinese) |
Xipe-Totec | god of force, patron of war, agriculture, vegetation, diseases, seasons, rebirth, hunting, trades and spring, the lord of the East. (Aztec) |
Xochitlicue | goddess of fertility, life, death and rebirth. (Aztec) |
Yum Caax | God of the woods, of wild nature, and of the hunt; invoked before carving out a maize field from the wilderness.(Mayan) |
Zywie | goddess of health and healing (Slavic) |