List of Divinities
Revision as of 20:19, 16 May 2016 by Trismegistus (talk | contribs)
This list is intended for minor deities and demigods. Divinities are arranged by cultural groupings. It does not necessarily include divinities included in other articles. These are principally minor divinities whose worship extends into modern times.
- Asbardy
- Aididh: protective goddess of maidens and brides
- Basgeleth: lesser divinities that roam the world as glowing specters, usually at night or dusk, thought by the Moigthe to be the spirits of the gods and heroes of the ancient Neptultchi
- Nebhnera: goddess of the peaceful dead, protectress of burials and gravesites
- Shelig: god of bridges and fords
- Smeadra: goddess of the fire under the open sky
- Tamtam Pumpkin Man: anthropomorphic pumpkin that protects the harvest from malevolent entities
- Thacgannoch: son or grandson of the goddess Dawan who lives in sea caves and can be helpful or harmful to fishermen.
- Dewyddair
- Ganfflara: goddess of the alpine meadows, matron of gontha herders
- Mewddilt: little goddess of portals, gates, and transitional passages
- Puddfi: younger son of Parkulliam who protected the ancient kings of Mipnor
- Thowsdrin: god of greetings and partings
- Yddwmion: godling of the dusk
- Gonfaloy
- Shechwbrin: god of lanterns and lost persons
- Hœrnect
- Agrammoch: god of desert windstorms
- Meher-Sha: god of descents, such as into underground tombs or into valleys
- Pasgouatz: fruit-bellied god of abundance
- Ithatia
- Glinter: god of the light of dusk just before setting
- Miatar: goddess of difficult decisions and hard judgments
- Puthos: god of ill-timed words
- Ziltho: goddess of abrupt changes and things ended too soon
- Medibgö
- Brinter Brölu: god that watches over the ancestral hearths of non-aristocrats
- Fasnaghda: god of nighttime lightning
- Fwrgas: a minor divinity of dragonriders
- Galdda: lesser goddess of stewards and stewardesses
- Laglawth: god of the high rains that fall on the skynesses
- Skragimbö: god of ball lightning
- Stwrch: godling of ill-timed winds
- Syrcha: minor god of shifting wind, there were thought to be many syrcha
- Talnabion: lesser god who laughs at night and afflicts laughter on others at night
- Tihurddan: goddess of magical auras
- Wb: goddess of the humming drone within the skyness
- Wewbroig: lesser goddess of perilous descents
- Medibgóëse Winds
- Ddwb: god of the west wind
- Giriagchob: god of the southwest wind
- Imffrigir: god of the northeast wind
- Snachta: god of the northwest wind
- High Pytharnia
- Blaharnag: god of winter snows and cold, wet weather
- Dindrig: mischievous god of lost belongings
- Echnare: god of propitious beginnings
- Elegswona: goddess of those who make and employ knives
- Finshel: god of shadows in alleys and homes
- Linthala: goddess of maidens
- Nerdha: god of contemplative silence
- Shimdoodle: god of chimney sweeps
- Spurgue: god of butchers and meatsellers
- Twathy Gnonk: god of the youthful dead
- Yaine Gumgully: demigod of orphans and protector of the parentless
- Thrace
- Duhavi: god of sowing
- Amirulliam: god of the spring revival (Asurrha)
- Fabfringi: god of sacred springs
- Gafgöra: god of mountain updrafts
- Kaliba: goddess of spring blossoms
- Niknuk: god who protects against goblins and aids those who fight goblins. Niknuk is thought to be half-human and half-dwarven.
- Özluta: god of the harvest
- Snee: god of snowy mountain tops (son of Bur)
- Sordra: goddess of the frozen dead (of those who died by cold)
- Thuspel: god of skiing
- Throvy
- Jugozza: goddess of justice gone awry (ill-meted justice)
- Limshek: god of wanderers and traveling performers
- Spankara: goddess of nighttime illuminations
- Thybdelish: god of those who travel by river
- Tirvishio: god of animal herders
- Vajdan: god of waste and discarded goods
Most Weshifites are Imzaami, but a few privately worship the old gods.
- Bawikr: god of brigands and desert thieves
- Istul: goddess of the cloudless night
- Shaph: goddess of the night-time lights of the heavens and astronomers
- Miscellaneous
See Also
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