Name ▲▼ | Origin ▲▼ | Description ▲▼ |
---|---|---|
Goddess name "Concordia" | Roman | The personification of concord. Goddess of harmony, peace and justice. Roman |
God name "Condatis" | Roman / British | God of confluence whose sacred places were wherever two rivers or bodies of water met. Roman / British |
God name "Condatis" | Celtic / British | River god. Northern British deity with stone votive inscriptions located in County Durham.... |
Goddess name "Condwiramur" | Welsh | Goddess of sovereignty. Welsh |
Deity name "Coniraya" | Aztec | The deity of the moon who fashioned his sperm into a fruit, which Cavillaca then ate. Aztec |
"Conisalus" | Greek | A daemon, who together with Orthanes and Tychon appeared in the train of Priapus. Greek |
God name "Consentes Dii" | Etruscan | The twelve Etruscan gods, who formed the council of Jupiter and included Juno, Minerva, Summåñuś, Vulcan, Saturn, and Mars. Etruscan |
"Consevius aka Consivius" | Roman | The propagator, occurs as the surname of Jåñuś and Ops. Roman |
God name "Consus" | Roman | Some call him the god of secret deliberations, and others the hidden or mysterious god, that is, a god of the lower regions. Roman |
God name "Contrebis" | Roman / Celtic / British | Local god. Identified from an inscription at Lancaster in conjunction with another deity, IALONUS.... |
"Coon" | Greek | A son of Antenor and brother of Iphidamas, who wounded Agamemnon, but was afterwards slain by him. Greek |
Goddess name "Copia" | Roman | Goddess of prosperity. Roman |
Goddess name "Corchen" | Ireland / Manx | Ancient snake Goddess of which very little is known. Ireland / Manx |
Goddess name "Cordaca" | Greek | A surname of Artemis in Elis, derived from an indecent dance which the companions of Pelops are said to have performed in honour of the goddess after a victory which they had won. |
"Cordelia" | European | A legendary queen of the Britons. |
"Core" | Greece | Of Corinth, mentioned among the mythic stories of the invention of sculpture. Greece |
Hero name "Corineus" | British | A hero in the employ of Brute, who conquered the giant Goem'agot, for which achievement the whole western horn of England was allotted him. He called it Corinea, and the people Corineans, from his own name. British |
"Cormoran" | British | The cornish giant who fell into a pit twenty feet deep, dug by Jack the Giant-killer, and filmed over with gråśś and gravel. British fairy tale |