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List of Gods : "Winter" - 60 records

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Name ▲▼Origin ▲▼Description ▲▼
Goddess name
"Crone"
Ireland Third aspect of the Triple goddess. She signifies old age or death, Winter, the end of all things, the waning moon, post-mentrual phases of women's lives. Ireland
God name
"Dilis Varskvlavi"
Russia Dilis Varskvlavi "the Morning Star", the Winter god. Russia
God name
"Enten"
Mesopotamian / Sumerian Fertility god. Created by ENLIL as a guardian deity of farmers alongside the minor god EMES , Enten was given specific responsibility for the fertility of ewes, goats, cows, donkeys, birds and other animals. He is identified with the abundance of the earth and with the Winter period....
Goddess name
"Erce"
Anglo-Saxon A triple goddess; a youthful maiden during the spring, maturing into a mother during the Summer, then aging into a crone at Winter-time. Anglo-Saxon

"Fimbul-winter"
Scandinavia The great and awful Winter three years' long preceding the end of the world.
Goddess name
"Frau Holle"
German Goddess of Winter. German
Goddess name
"Gefn"
German German Mother goddess in charge of Spring, Sun, Winter, Fertility, Foresight, Growth, health, love, Magic and Protection.

"Gohone"
Haudenosaunee The divinity of Winter, and things åśśociated with that season. Haudenosaunee
God name
"Great Father"
Celtic The Horned God, The Lord. Lord of the Winter, harvest, land of the dead, the sky, animals, mountains, lust, powers of destruction, regeneration. Represents the male principle of creation. Celtic
Goddess name
"Hemantadevi"
Buddhist Goddess of Winter Buddhist / Tibet
Goddess name
"Hemantadevi"
Buddhist - Lamaist / Tibet Goddess of Winter. One of several seasonal deities. Also an attendant of Sridevi. Usually accompanied by a camel. Color: blue. Attributes: cup and hammer....
God name
"Hod"
Norse God of Winter norse
God name
"Hogfather"
Europian The Discworld's version of Father Christmas or Santa Claus. He wears a red, fur-lined cloak, and rides a sleigh pulled by four wild boars, Gouger, Rooter, Tusker and Snouter. In earlier times he gave households pork products, and naughty children a bag of bloody bones. Earlier than that, he was a Winter god of the death-and-renewal kind. The modern version is a jolly toymaker, with vestiges of the earlier myths (such as his Castle of Bones, a vast palace of ice which has nothing notably bony about it, except for the suggestion of a protruding femur or scapula here and there) still clinging to him.

"Kakunupmawa"
Chumash the radiance of the child of the Winter solstice. The dawn light of each new day is Kakunupmawa's breath expressed as a sigh. Bears, rattlesnakes, deer, mountain lions and ravens were the "pets of Sun. The Chumash, California
Goddess name
"Koliada"
Poland Koljada, Kolyada. Goddess of time and personification of the Winter solstice. Poland
Goddess name
"Louhi"
Finnish Goddess of the ocean and Winter Finnish
Goddess name
"Marzana"
Poland Goddess of Winter Poland
God name
"Mistilleinn"
Norse Mistletoe. The mistletoe or mistle-twig, the fatal twig by which Balder, the white Sun-god was slain. After the death of Balder, Ragnarok set in. Balder's death was also symbolical of the victory of darkness over light, which comes every year at midwinter.. The mistletoe in English households at Christmas time is no doubt a relic of a rite lost in the remotest heathendom, for the fight of light and darkness at midwinter was a foreshadowing of the final overthrow in Ragnarok. The legend and the word are common to all Teutonic peoples of all ages. Norse
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