Name ▲▼ | Origin ▲▼ | Description ▲▼ |
---|---|---|
Spirit name "Gitche/ Manitou" | Algonquin / Lenape | The Great spirit, the All Father |
"Gjallar horn" | Norse | Heimdal's horn, which he will blow at Ragnarok. Norse |
"Gjallarrbridge [gjalla" | Norse | To yell, to resound]. The bridge across the river Gjol, near Helheim. The bridge between the land of the living and the dead. Norse |
"Gjalp" | Norse | One of Heimdal's nine mothers. Norse |
"Gjoll" | Norse | One of the rivers Elivagar that flowed nearest the gate of Hel's abode. Norse |
God name "Glad [Clear" | Norse | Bright]. One of the horses of the gods. Norse |
"Gladsheim" | Norse | Gladsheim [Home of brightness or gladness]. Odin's dwelling. Norse |
God name "Glanis" | France | A Gaulish god åśśociated with a healing spring at the town of Glanum in the Alpilles mountains of Provence in southern France. |
"Glaser" | Norse | A grove in Asgard. Norse |
Demon name "Glasya-Labolas" | Christian | A mighty President of Hell who commands thirty-six legions of demons. He teaches all arts and sciences just in an instant. He is the author and captain of manslaughter and bloodshed, tells all things past and to come, gains the minds and love of friends and foes causing love among them if desired, incites homicides and can make a man invisible. Christian demonology |
"Glauca" | Greek | wife of Alcis. |
"Glaucippa" | Greek | wife of Potamon. |
God name "Glaucus" | Greek | This sea god went around muttering prophesies |
"Glaucus" | Greek | A grandson of Aeolus, son of Sisyphus and Merope, and father of Bellerophontes. Greek |
God name "Glaucus" | Roman | Sea god. See also GLAUKOS.... |
God name "Glaukos" | Greek | A sea god, a rather bizarre story like many other god claims |
God name "Glaukos" | Greek | Sea god. Allegedly an impoverished fisherman who ate a sea-gråśś with magical properties, dived into the ocean and remained there as a guardian deity of fishermen and their nets.See also PROTEUS.... |
Spirit name "Glauron aka Glaura" | Fnose | A beneficent spirit of the air, involked from the North. Fnose |