fbpx
Wikipedia

List of war deities

A war god in mythology associated with war, combat, or bloodshed. They occur commonly in polytheistic religions.

Ares, the Greek god of war
Mars, the Roman god of war
Sarutahiko.

Unlike most gods and goddesses in polytheistic religions, monotheistic deities have traditionally been portrayed in their mythologies as commanding war in order to spread religion. (The intimate connection between "holy war" and the "one true god" belief of monotheism has been noted by many scholars, including Jonathan Kirsch in his book God Against The Gods: The History of the War Between Monotheism and Polytheism and Joseph Campbell in The Masks of God, Vol. 3: Occidental Mythology.)[1][2]

The following is a list of war deities:

North Africa edit

Egyptian edit

  • Anat, also known as Anath was a goddess of fertility, sexuality, love, and war. She was the sister of Baal
  • Anhur, god of war, not a native god
  • Anuke, a goddess of war and consort of anhur
  • Apedemak, the lion god of war, he is sometimes shown with three heads
  • Bast, cat-headed goddess associated with war, protection of Lower Egypt and the pharaoh, the sun, perfumes, ointments, and embalming
  • Horus, god of the king, the sky, war, and protection
  • Maahes, lion-headed god of war
  • Menhit, goddess of war, "she who massacres"
  • Montu, falcon-headed god of war, valor, and the Sun
  • Neith, goddess of war, hunting, and wisdom
  • Pakhet, goddess of war
  • Satis, deification of the floods of the Nile River and an early war, hunting, and fertility goddess
  • Sekhmet, goddess of warfare, pestilence, and the desert
  • Set, god of the desert and storms, associated with war
  • Sobek, god of the Nile, the army, military, fertility, and crocodiles
  • Sopdu, god of the scorching heat of the summer sun, associated with war
  • Wepwawet, wolf-god of war and death who later became associated with Anubis and the afterlife

Berber edit

Sub-Sahara Africa edit

Nilo-Saharan edit

Nubian

Western African-Congo edit

Yoruba

Eastern African-Congo edit

Igbo

Ethiopian edit

Kenya edit

Kalenjin

  • Boryet, Kipsigis Death-wielding god of war. Boryet (also luket) is the act of war. Death (Me'et) is observed as a consequence of war. War is thus personified as such.

Ghanaian edit

Akan

  • Tano, God of War and Strife for the Akan, and additionally God of Thunder for the Northern Akan peoples, such as the Asante
  • Nkunim - The deity of victory in war, called upon by warriors for victory and protection in battle.
  • Sakumo - The deity of war and duels, guardian of the Ga tribe.

Europe edit

Balto-Slavic edit

Baltic edit

  • Kara Māte, Latvian goddess of war
  • Kauriraris, Lithuanian god of war and war steeds
  • Junda, Lithuanian goddess of war
  • Perkūnas, god of thunder and lightning, associated with war

Slavic edit

  • Jarovit, god of vegetation, fertility, and spring, also associated with war and harvest
  • Perun, god of thunder and lightning, associated with war
  • Svetovid, god of war, fertility, and abundance
  • Zorya Utrennyaya, goddess of the morning star, sometimes depicted as a warrior goddess who protected men in battle

Celtic edit

  • Agrona, reconstructed Proto-Celtic name for the river Aeron in Wales, and possibly the name of an associated war goddess
  • Alaisiagae, a pair of goddesses worshipped in Roman Britain, with parallel Celtic and Germanic titles
  • Andarta, Brittonic goddess theorized to be associated with victory, overcoming enemies, war
  • Andraste, Gaulish warrior goddess
  • Anann, Irish goddess of war, death, predicting death in battle, cattle, prosperity, and fertility
  • Atepomarus, god of horses, horsemen, and healing.
  • Badb, Irish goddess of war who took the form of a crow; member of the Morrígan
  • Bandua, Gallaecian God of War
  • Belatucadros, war god worshipped by soldiers and equated with the Roman war god Mars
  • Camulus, god of war of the Belgic Remi and British Trinovantes
  • Catubodua, Gaulish goddess assumed to be associated with victory
  • Caturix, god of war
  • Cicolluis, Gaulish and Irish god associated with war
  • Cocidius, Romano-British god associated with war, hunting and forests
  • Macha, Irish goddess associated with war, horses, and sovereignty; member of the Morrígan
  • Mars Cnabetius, Gaelic god of war
  • The Morrígan, Irish triple goddess associated with sovereignty, prophecy, war, and death on the battlefield
  • Neit, Irish god of war, husband of Nemain of Badb
  • Nemain, Irish goddess of the frenzied havoc of war; member of the Morrígan
  • Rudianos, Gaulish god of war
  • Segomo, Gaulish god of war
  • Teutates, British and Gaulish god of war and the tribe

Lusitanian edit

  • Neto, god believed to be associated with war, death, and weaponry

Norse-Germanic edit

 
Idise by Emil Doepler.

Continental Germanic edit

  • Baduhenna, a western Frisii goddess of warfare
  • Idis (Germanic)/itis/ides, the West Germanic cognates of North Germanic dís, they are connected with battle magic and fettering enemy armies
  • Sandraudiga, goddess whose name may mean "she who dyes the sand red", suggesting she is a war deity or at least has a warrior aspect
  • Týr, god of war, single combat, law, justice, and the thing, who later lost much of his religious importance and mythical role to the god Wōden
  • Wōden, god associated with wisdom, poetry, war, victory, and death

Norse edit

  • Dís, a group of lesser goddesses who are sometimes connected with battle magic; valkyrie may be a kenning for them
  • Freyja, goddess associated with love, beauty, fertility, gold, seiðr, war, and death
  • Odin, god associated with wisdom, war, battle, and death
  • Týr, god associated with law, justice, victory, and heroic glory
  • Ullr, god associated with archery, skiing, bows, hunting, single combat, and glory
  • Valkyries, choosers of the slain and connected to Odin, ruler of Valhalla; they may be the same as the dís above

Graeco-Roman edit

Greek / Hellenic edit

  • Alala, spirit of the war cry
  • Alke, spirit of courage and battle-strength
  • Amphillogiai, goddesses of disputes
  • Androktasiai, spirits of battlefield slaughter
  • Ares, the main Greek god of war
  • Athena, goddess of wisdom, war strategy, and weaving
  • Aphrodite Areia, a goddess of war and beauty worshiped in Kythira and Sparta
  • Bia, spirit of force and compulsion
  • Castor and Pollux, twin brothers that were the gods of war, sailors, and the constellation Gemini.
  • Deimos, personification of terror
  • Enyalius, god of war; in early periods apparently an epithet of Ares, they were differentiated later
  • Enyo, goddess of war, sometimes appears to be identical to Eris
  • Eris, goddess of discord and strife
  • Hera, in the Illiad she has a martial character and fights (and wins) against Artemis; however, this warlike aspect of her appears nowhere else in the surviving corpus, suggesting it was dropped early on
  • Heracles Promachos
  • Homados, spirit of the din of battle
  • Hysminai, female spirits of fighting and combat
  • Ioke, spirit of onslaught, battle-tumult, and pursuit
  • Keres, female spirits of violent or cruel death, including death in battle, by accident, murder, or ravaging disease
  • Kratos, personification of strength and power
  • Kydoimos, spirit of the din of battle
  • Makhai, male spirits of fighting and combat
  • Nike, spirit of victory
  • Palioxis, spirit of backrush, flight, and retreat from battle
  • Pallas, Titan god of war-craft and of the springtime campaign season
  • Perses, the Titan of destruction
  • Phobos, spirit of panic, fear, flight, and battlefield rout
  • Phonoi, spirits of murder, killing, and slaughter
  • Polemos, spirit of war
  • Proioxis, spirit of onrush and battlefield pursuit
  • Zeus Stratios, Zeus had the epithet Stratios (Στράτιος), which means "of armies".[4]

Roman edit

 
Juno Sospita Statue holding a spear and shield.
  • Bellona, goddess of war
  • Hercules Invictus
  • Honos, god of chivalry, honor, and military justice
  • Juno, has a consistent martial character and the patron goddess of Rome, the mother of Mars and Bellona
  • Mars, god of war and agriculture, equivalent to Ares as far as being war gods; aside from this they have very little in common
  • Nerio, warrior goddess and personification of valor
  • Victoria, personification of victory, equivalent to the Greek goddess Nike
  • Virtus, god of bravery and military strength

Etruscan

  • Laran, god of war.
  • Menrva, goddess of war, art, wisdom, and health

Balkan edit

Uralic edit

Hungarian edit

  • Hadúr, god of war and the metalsmith of the gods

Asia edit

Turkic edit

Mongolian edit

East Asia edit

Chinese edit

 
Guan Yu, Chinese god of loyalty, righteousness, and valor.
  • Chiyou, god of war
  • Di Qing, Star of Military Fortune, God of Valor
  • Erlang Shen, a three-eyed warrior
  • Guan Yu, Han dynasty general. God of loyalty, righteousness, and valor.
  • Jinzha, marshal of the center altar
  • Jiutian Xuannü, goddess of war, sex, and longevity[5]
  • Li Jing, Guardian of Celestial Palace
  • Muzha, marshal of the center altar
  • Nezha
  • Wang Shan, Song dynasty general. Primordial Lord-General of Heaven. Guardian of Celestial Palace
  • Wen Qiong[6]
  • Yue Fei
  • Zhao Lang (Zhao Gongming), God of Military Fortune, Guardian of Celestial Palace, Protector of Households
  • Xue Rengui, Tang dynasty general.

Japanese edit

Korean edit

  • Choe Yeong, general of Goryeo period, god of shamans, protector of humanity.
  • Pagunseong, the star at the edge of the Big Dipper in Taoism, symbolizing swords.
  • Baekmashinjang, god of war who rides a white horse.
  • Dungapshinjang, god of war who has the ability of shapeshifting.
  • Byeorakshinjang, god of war who uses thunder and lightning, sometimes punishes the evil.
  • Damuncheonwang, Buddhist god of war.

Southeast Asia edit

Filipino edit

  • Chacha’: the Bontok god of warriors[7]
  • Hipag: the Ifugao spirits of war that give soldiers courage on the field of war but are ferocious and cannibalistic[8]
  • Apolaqui: the Pangasinense war god[9]
  • Aring Sinukûan: the Kapampangan solar deity governing war and death. He taught early humans metallurgy, woodcutting, rice cultivation, and warfare[10]
  • Apolake: the Tagalog god of the sun and warriors[11]
  • Sidapa: another Tagalog god of war, he specifically settles conflicts among mortals[12]
  • Doce Pares: From the Spanish "Twelve Pairs", they are a group of twelve young Tagalog men who went on a quest to retrieve the Golden Calf of Mount Banahaw, together with José Rizal as a culture hero. They are said to return as giants, bearing the Golden Calf, to aid mankind in war.[13]
  • Balangaw: a Hiligaynon and Bisaya god of the rainbow and war[14]
  • Inaginid: a Hiligaynon and Bisaya god of war.[14]
  • Makanduk: a Hiligaynon and Bisaya god of war.[14]
  • Lumalayag: the Tagbanwa spirits who challenge and fight the Salakap, spirits of plague and sickness.[15]
  • Talagbusao: the bloodthirsty Bukidnon god of war.[8]
  • Pamdiya: the Manobo gods who initiate and preside over war.[8]
  • Darago: the Bagobo god of warriors, whose consort is Mandarangan.[16]
  • Mandarangan: the Bagobo war deity married to Darago and resides at the top of Mount Apo. Human sacrifices made to him are rewarded with health, valour in war, and success in the pursuit of wealth.[16]

Vietnamese edit

 
Trần Hưng Đạo, Vietnamese god of exorcism and the god of war.
  • Cao Lỗ, god of military innovations
  • Độc Cước, the protector of coastal settlements. Legend has it that he split himself in two with his axe, each half guards coastal villages against sea ogres.
  • Đồng Cổ, the armored protector of the Lý dynasty.
  • Liễu Hạnh, goddess of earth, heaven and war.
  • Thánh Gióng, god of triumph over foreign invaders.
  • Trần Hưng Đạo, is the national hero of the Vietnamese people, after his death he was honored as the god of exorcism and the god of war.

South Asia edit

Hindu edit

 
Kartikeya, god of war by Surendra Nath Ganguly, 1913.

Manipuri edit

  • Marjing, god of war, polo, horse and sports.
  • Panthoibi, goddess of war, love, courage and longevity.

Tamil edit

  • Korravai, also spelled Kotravai, is the goddess of war and victory in the Tamil tradition. She is also the mother goddess and the goddess of fertility, agriculture, and hunters.

West Asia edit

Armenian edit

  • Anahit, goddess of healing, fertility, wisdom, and water; in early periods associated with war

Canaanite edit

  • Anat, goddess of war
  • Astarte, goddess of sex and war, western Semitic version of the Mesopotamian Ishtar and Inanna
  • Resheph, god of plague and war
  • Tanit, main Carthaginian goddess whose functions included war and the moon

Hebrew edit

Hittite edit

Hurrian edit

  • Aštabi, a war god of Eblaite origin
  • Ḫešui, a war god
  • Nupatik, a god assumed to have warlike character
  • Shaushka, goddess of love, war, and healing
  • Ugur, a war god of Mesopotamian origin

Mesopotamian edit

Nuristani edit

Oceania edit

Polynesia edit

Hawaiian edit

  • , god of war and birds
  • Pele, goddess of fire, lightning, dance, volcanoes, and violence

Māori edit

Americas edit

North America edit

Great Plains edit

Pacific Northwest edit

Central American and the Caribbean edit

Aztec edit

  • Patterns of War
    • Huitzilopochtli, god of will, authority, war, conflict, light, victory, heroic deeds, and sun; patron of the polar south, often compels Tlaloc to bring about rain
    • Mixcoatl, god of battle, hunting, civilisation, and stars
    • Tlaloc, god of thunder, rain, fertility, child sacrifice, drought, and storms; sometimes associated with the south
    • Xipe-Totec patron of war, agriculture, vegetation, creation, fertility; patron of diseases, pubescent development, rebirth, hunting, trades, human sacrifice, chores, spring, and cardinal east
    • Tezcatlipoca, god of night, darkness, lunar light, creation, providence, power, disorder-disarray, destruction, beauty, tricks, merriment, uninhibited sexuality, deception, virility, mystery, polar north, and winter; also a chthonic deity
    • Xiuhtecuhtli, god of fire, old age, daytime, kingship, the hearth, warmth, chronicles of time, and renewal

Mayan edit

  • Tohil, god associated with fire, the sun, rain, mountains, and war
  • Buluc Chabtan, Mayan god of war, violence and gambling.
  • Cadmaela, Mayan goddess of war.

Voodoo edit

  • Ogoun, loa who presides over fire, iron, hunting, politics, and war

References edit

  1. ^ Kirsch, J. (2004). God Against the Gods: The History of the War Between Monotheism and Polytheism. Viking Compass. ISBN 9780670032860. Retrieved 2015-06-22.
  2. ^ Occidental Mythology (Masks of God): Joseph Campbell: 9780140194418: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN 014019441X.
  3. ^ Morris, Arnold Hugh Martin Jones, John Robert: The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire p. 612
  4. ^ pseudo-Aristotle, De mundo, Aristotelis Opera, Volume 3, Oxford, Bekker, 1837
  5. ^ Cahill, Suzanne E. (18 July 2013). "Sublimation in Medieval China: The Case of the Mysterious Woman of the Nine Heavens". Journal of Chinese Religions. 20 (1): 91–102. doi:10.1179/073776992805307692.
  6. ^ http://etheses.lib.cuhk.edu.hk/pdf/004777762.pdf[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Cawed, C. (1972). The Culture of the Bontoc Igorot. Manila: MCS Enterprises .
  8. ^ a b c Jocano, F. L. (1969). Philippine Mythology. Quezon City: Capitol Publishing House Inc.
  9. ^ Aduerte, D. (2014). The Philippine Islands, 1493–1898: Volume XXXII, 1640. CreateSpace Independent Publishing.
  10. ^ Nicdao, A. (1917). Pampangan Folklore. Manila.
  11. ^ Calderon, S. G. (1947). Mga alamat ng Pilipinas. Manila : M. Colcol & Co.
  12. ^ Demetrio, F. R., Cordero-Fernando, G., & Zialcita, F. N. (1991). The Soul Book. Quezon City: GCF Books.
  13. ^ Mojares, R. B. (1974). Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society Vol. 2, No. 3: The Myth of the Sleeping Hero: Three Philippine Cases. University of San Carlos Publications.
  14. ^ a b c Loarca, Miguel de. (1582) 1903. Relation of the Filipinas Islands. In Blair and Robertson, The Philippine Islands 5.
  15. ^ Fox, R. B. (1982). Religion and Society Among the Tagbanuas of Palawan Island, Philippines. Manila: National Museum.
  16. ^ a b Demetrio, F. R., Cordero-Fernando, G., & Zialcita, F. N. (1991). The Soul Book. Quezon City: GCF Books
  17. ^ Hackett, Jo Ann (2001). "'There Was No King in Israel': The Era of the Judges". In Coogan, Michael David (ed.). The Oxford History of the Biblical World. Oxford University Press. pp. 158–59. ISBN 978-0-19-513937-2.

list, deities, gods, redirect, here, other, uses, disambiguation, gods, disambiguation, mythology, associated, with, combat, bloodshed, they, occur, commonly, polytheistic, religions, ares, greek, warmars, roman, warsarutahiko, unlike, most, gods, goddesses, p. God of war and War gods redirect here For other uses see God of War disambiguation and War Gods disambiguation A war god in mythology associated with war combat or bloodshed They occur commonly in polytheistic religions Ares the Greek god of warMars the Roman god of warSarutahiko Unlike most gods and goddesses in polytheistic religions monotheistic deities have traditionally been portrayed in their mythologies as commanding war in order to spread religion The intimate connection between holy war and the one true god belief of monotheism has been noted by many scholars including Jonathan Kirsch in his book God Against The Gods The History of the War Between Monotheism and Polytheism and Joseph Campbell in The Masks of God Vol 3 Occidental Mythology 1 2 The following is a list of war deities Contents 1 North Africa 1 1 Egyptian 1 2 Berber 2 Sub Sahara Africa 2 1 Nilo Saharan 2 2 Western African Congo 2 3 Eastern African Congo 2 4 Ethiopian 2 5 Kenya 2 6 Ghanaian 3 Europe 3 1 Balto Slavic 3 1 1 Baltic 3 1 2 Slavic 3 2 Celtic 3 2 1 Lusitanian 3 3 Norse Germanic 3 3 1 Continental Germanic 3 3 2 Norse 3 4 Graeco Roman 3 4 1 Greek Hellenic 3 4 2 Roman 3 5 Balkan 3 6 Uralic 3 6 1 Hungarian 4 Asia 4 1 Turkic 4 2 Mongolian 4 3 East Asia 4 3 1 Chinese 4 3 2 Japanese 4 3 3 Korean 4 4 Southeast Asia 4 4 1 Filipino 4 4 2 Vietnamese 4 5 South Asia 4 5 1 Hindu 4 5 2 Manipuri 4 5 3 Tamil 4 6 West Asia 4 6 1 Armenian 4 6 2 Canaanite 4 6 3 Hebrew 4 6 4 Hittite 4 6 5 Hurrian 4 6 6 Mesopotamian 4 6 7 Nuristani 5 Oceania 5 1 Polynesia 5 2 Hawaiian 5 3 Maori 6 Americas 6 1 North America 6 1 1 Great Plains 6 1 2 Pacific Northwest 6 2 Central American and the Caribbean 6 2 1 Aztec 6 2 2 Mayan 6 2 3 Voodoo 7 ReferencesNorth Africa editEgyptian edit Anat also known as Anath was a goddess of fertility sexuality love and war She was the sister of Baal Anhur god of war not a native god Anuke a goddess of war and consort of anhur Apedemak the lion god of war he is sometimes shown with three heads Bast cat headed goddess associated with war protection of Lower Egypt and the pharaoh the sun perfumes ointments and embalming Horus god of the king the sky war and protection Maahes lion headed god of war Menhit goddess of war she who massacres Montu falcon headed god of war valor and the Sun Neith goddess of war hunting and wisdom Pakhet goddess of war Satis deification of the floods of the Nile River and an early war hunting and fertility goddess Sekhmet goddess of warfare pestilence and the desert Set god of the desert and storms associated with war Sobek god of the Nile the army military fertility and crocodiles Sopdu god of the scorching heat of the summer sun associated with war Wepwawet wolf god of war and death who later became associated with Anubis and the afterlifeBerber edit Gurzil bull headed warrior god 3 Sub Sahara Africa editNilo Saharan edit Nubian Apedemak Nubian lion headed warrior god Western African Congo edit Yoruba Kokou Ogoun OyaEastern African Congo edit Igbo Amadioha EkwensuEthiopian edit Maher god of war Kenya edit Kalenjin Boryet Kipsigis Death wielding god of war Boryet also luket is the act of war Death Me et is observed as a consequence of war War is thus personified as such Ghanaian edit Akan Tano God of War and Strife for the Akan and additionally God of Thunder for the Northern Akan peoples such as the Asante Nkunim The deity of victory in war called upon by warriors for victory and protection in battle Sakumo The deity of war and duels guardian of the Ga tribe Europe editBalto Slavic edit Baltic edit Kara Mate Latvian goddess of war Kauriraris Lithuanian god of war and war steeds Junda Lithuanian goddess of war Perkunas god of thunder and lightning associated with warSlavic edit Jarovit god of vegetation fertility and spring also associated with war and harvest Perun god of thunder and lightning associated with war Svetovid god of war fertility and abundance Zorya Utrennyaya goddess of the morning star sometimes depicted as a warrior goddess who protected men in battleCeltic edit Agrona reconstructed Proto Celtic name for the river Aeron in Wales and possibly the name of an associated war goddess Alaisiagae a pair of goddesses worshipped in Roman Britain with parallel Celtic and Germanic titles Andarta Brittonic goddess theorized to be associated with victory overcoming enemies war Andraste Gaulish warrior goddess Anann Irish goddess of war death predicting death in battle cattle prosperity and fertility Atepomarus god of horses horsemen and healing Badb Irish goddess of war who took the form of a crow member of the Morrigan Bandua Gallaecian God of War Belatucadros war god worshipped by soldiers and equated with the Roman war god Mars Camulus god of war of the Belgic Remi and British Trinovantes Catubodua Gaulish goddess assumed to be associated with victory Caturix god of war Cicolluis Gaulish and Irish god associated with war Cocidius Romano British god associated with war hunting and forests Macha Irish goddess associated with war horses and sovereignty member of the Morrigan Mars Cnabetius Gaelic god of war The Morrigan Irish triple goddess associated with sovereignty prophecy war and death on the battlefield Neit Irish god of war husband of Nemain of Badb Nemain Irish goddess of the frenzied havoc of war member of the Morrigan Rudianos Gaulish god of war Segomo Gaulish god of war Teutates British and Gaulish god of war and the tribeLusitanian edit Neto god believed to be associated with war death and weaponryNorse Germanic edit nbsp Idise by Emil Doepler Continental Germanic edit Baduhenna a western Frisii goddess of warfare Idis Germanic itis ides the West Germanic cognates of North Germanic dis they are connected with battle magic and fettering enemy armies Sandraudiga goddess whose name may mean she who dyes the sand red suggesting she is a war deity or at least has a warrior aspect Tyr god of war single combat law justice and the thing who later lost much of his religious importance and mythical role to the god Wōden Wōden god associated with wisdom poetry war victory and deathNorse edit Dis a group of lesser goddesses who are sometimes connected with battle magic valkyrie may be a kenning for them Freyja goddess associated with love beauty fertility gold seidr war and death Odin god associated with wisdom war battle and death Tyr god associated with law justice victory and heroic glory Ullr god associated with archery skiing bows hunting single combat and glory Valkyries choosers of the slain and connected to Odin ruler of Valhalla they may be the same as the dis aboveGraeco Roman edit Greek Hellenic edit Alala spirit of the war cry Alke spirit of courage and battle strength Amphillogiai goddesses of disputes Androktasiai spirits of battlefield slaughter Ares the main Greek god of war Athena goddess of wisdom war strategy and weaving Aphrodite Areia a goddess of war and beauty worshiped in Kythira and Sparta Bia spirit of force and compulsion Castor and Pollux twin brothers that were the gods of war sailors and the constellation Gemini Deimos personification of terror Enyalius god of war in early periods apparently an epithet of Ares they were differentiated later Enyo goddess of war sometimes appears to be identical to Eris Eris goddess of discord and strife Hera in the Illiad she has a martial character and fights and wins against Artemis however this warlike aspect of her appears nowhere else in the surviving corpus suggesting it was dropped early on Heracles Promachos Homados spirit of the din of battle Hysminai female spirits of fighting and combat Ioke spirit of onslaught battle tumult and pursuit Keres female spirits of violent or cruel death including death in battle by accident murder or ravaging disease Kratos personification of strength and power Kydoimos spirit of the din of battle Makhai male spirits of fighting and combat Nike spirit of victory Palioxis spirit of backrush flight and retreat from battle Pallas Titan god of war craft and of the springtime campaign season Perses the Titan of destruction Phobos spirit of panic fear flight and battlefield rout Phonoi spirits of murder killing and slaughter Polemos spirit of war Proioxis spirit of onrush and battlefield pursuit Zeus Stratios Zeus had the epithet Stratios Stratios which means of armies 4 Roman edit nbsp Juno Sospita Statue holding a spear and shield Bellona goddess of war Hercules Invictus Honos god of chivalry honor and military justice Juno has a consistent martial character and the patron goddess of Rome the mother of Mars and Bellona Mars god of war and agriculture equivalent to Ares as far as being war gods aside from this they have very little in common Nerio warrior goddess and personification of valor Victoria personification of victory equivalent to the Greek goddess Nike Virtus god of bravery and military strengthEtruscan Laran god of war Menrva goddess of war art wisdom and healthBalkan edit Danubian Rider Sabazios Thracian RiderUralic edit Hungarian edit Hadur god of war and the metalsmith of the godsAsia editTurkic edit Kyzaghan Turkic deity of warMongolian edit Begtse originally a Mongolian war god was later adopted into Tibetan Buddhism Dayisun TngriEast Asia edit Chinese edit nbsp Guan Yu Chinese god of loyalty righteousness and valor Chiyou god of war Di Qing Star of Military Fortune God of Valor Erlang Shen a three eyed warrior Guan Yu Han dynasty general God of loyalty righteousness and valor Jinzha marshal of the center altar Jiutian Xuannu goddess of war sex and longevity 5 Li Jing Guardian of Celestial Palace Muzha marshal of the center altar Nezha Wang Shan Song dynasty general Primordial Lord General of Heaven Guardian of Celestial Palace Wen Qiong 6 Yue Fei Zhao Lang Zhao Gongming God of Military Fortune Guardian of Celestial Palace Protector of Households Xue Rengui Tang dynasty general Japanese edit Futsunushi god of swords martial arts and conquest god of the Mononobe clan Hachiman Daimyōjin Shinto god of war on land and agriculture divine protector of the Minamoto clan mostly worshiped by samurai Sarutahiko god of war and misogi Takemikazuchi god of war conquest martial arts sumo swords and lightning general of the Amatsukami god of Kashima and Ujigami of Nakatomi clan Suwa Myōjin Takeminakata no kami god of valor and duty protector of the Japanese religion Bishamonten god of war who protected Buddhist templesKorean edit Choe Yeong general of Goryeo period god of shamans protector of humanity Pagunseong the star at the edge of the Big Dipper in Taoism symbolizing swords Baekmashinjang god of war who rides a white horse Dungapshinjang god of war who has the ability of shapeshifting Byeorakshinjang god of war who uses thunder and lightning sometimes punishes the evil Damuncheonwang Buddhist god of war Southeast Asia edit Filipino edit Main article List of Philippine mythological figures Chacha the Bontok god of warriors 7 Hipag the Ifugao spirits of war that give soldiers courage on the field of war but are ferocious and cannibalistic 8 Apolaqui the Pangasinense war god 9 Aring Sinukuan the Kapampangan solar deity governing war and death He taught early humans metallurgy woodcutting rice cultivation and warfare 10 Apolake the Tagalog god of the sun and warriors 11 Sidapa another Tagalog god of war he specifically settles conflicts among mortals 12 Doce Pares From the Spanish Twelve Pairs they are a group of twelve young Tagalog men who went on a quest to retrieve the Golden Calf of Mount Banahaw together with Jose Rizal as a culture hero They are said to return as giants bearing the Golden Calf to aid mankind in war 13 Balangaw a Hiligaynon and Bisaya god of the rainbow and war 14 Inaginid a Hiligaynon and Bisaya god of war 14 Makanduk a Hiligaynon and Bisaya god of war 14 Lumalayag the Tagbanwa spirits who challenge and fight the Salakap spirits of plague and sickness 15 Talagbusao the bloodthirsty Bukidnon god of war 8 Pamdiya the Manobo gods who initiate and preside over war 8 Darago the Bagobo god of warriors whose consort is Mandarangan 16 Mandarangan the Bagobo war deity married to Darago and resides at the top of Mount Apo Human sacrifices made to him are rewarded with health valour in war and success in the pursuit of wealth 16 Vietnamese edit nbsp Trần Hưng Đạo Vietnamese god of exorcism and the god of war Cao Lỗ god of military innovations Độc Cước the protector of coastal settlements Legend has it that he split himself in two with his axe each half guards coastal villages against sea ogres Đồng Cổ the armored protector of the Ly dynasty Liễu Hạnh goddess of earth heaven and war Thanh Giong god of triumph over foreign invaders Trần Hưng Đạo is the national hero of the Vietnamese people after his death he was honored as the god of exorcism and the god of war South Asia edit Hindu edit nbsp Kartikeya god of war by Surendra Nath Ganguly 1913 Indra god of heaven kingship thunder rains the gods and the senses Kartikeya god of war and victory Ayyappan warrior deity Mangala god of war and Mars Nirrti goddess of strife Parvati and her forms of Durga and Kali Shiva god of destruction time and arts Vishnu god of preservationManipuri edit Marjing god of war polo horse and sports Panthoibi goddess of war love courage and longevity Tamil edit Korravai also spelled Kotravai is the goddess of war and victory in the Tamil tradition She is also the mother goddess and the goddess of fertility agriculture and hunters West Asia edit Armenian edit Anahit goddess of healing fertility wisdom and water in early periods associated with warCanaanite edit Anat goddess of war Astarte goddess of sex and war western Semitic version of the Mesopotamian Ishtar and Inanna Resheph god of plague and war Tanit main Carthaginian goddess whose functions included war and the moonHebrew edit Yahweh originally a warrior god 17 Hittite edit Sulinkatte god of war of Hattian origin Wurrukatte god of war of Hattian origin Iyarri god of war and plagueHurrian edit Astabi a war god of Eblaite origin Ḫesui a war god Nupatik a god assumed to have warlike character Shaushka goddess of love war and healing Ugur a war god of Mesopotamian originMesopotamian edit Adad a weather god often portrayed as a warrior Erra a god of war associated with Nergal later syncretised with him Ilaba warlike tutelary god of the kings of the Akkadian Empire Inanna Sumerian goddess of love sex and war Ishtar Akkadian later Assyrian and Babylonian counterpart of Inanna Nergal god of war the underworld and pestilence Ninazu a god of the underworld who could also be portrayed as a war deity Ningishzida a god of the underworld who like his father Ninazu could be portrayed as a warrior Ninurta warrior god Pabilsag warrior god and husband of Ninisina Pap nigin gara a war god syncretised with Ninurta Sebitti group of minor war gods best attested in Assyria Shara minor Sumerian god of war Tishpak a warrior god from Eshnunna Zababa tutelary god of Kish and a war godNuristani edit Great Gish god of warOceania editPolynesia edit Oro god of war Rongo Mangaian god of war and taroHawaiian edit Ku god of war and birds Pele goddess of fire lightning dance volcanoes and violenceMaori edit Maru god of war and fresh water Tumatauenga god of war and human activitiesAmericas editNorth America edit Great Plains edit Morning Star O pi ri kus by one spelling the god of war in Pawnee mythologyPacific Northwest edit Qamaits Nuxalk warrior goddess Winalagalis Kwakwaka wakw god of warCentral American and the Caribbean edit Aztec edit Patterns of War Huitzilopochtli god of will authority war conflict light victory heroic deeds and sun patron of the polar south often compels Tlaloc to bring about rain Mixcoatl god of battle hunting civilisation and stars Tlaloc god of thunder rain fertility child sacrifice drought and storms sometimes associated with the south Xipe Totec patron of war agriculture vegetation creation fertility patron of diseases pubescent development rebirth hunting trades human sacrifice chores spring and cardinal east Tezcatlipoca god of night darkness lunar light creation providence power disorder disarray destruction beauty tricks merriment uninhibited sexuality deception virility mystery polar north and winter also a chthonic deity Xiuhtecuhtli god of fire old age daytime kingship the hearth warmth chronicles of time and renewalMayan edit Tohil god associated with fire the sun rain mountains and war Buluc Chabtan Mayan god of war violence and gambling Cadmaela Mayan goddess of war Voodoo edit Ogoun loa who presides over fire iron hunting politics and warReferences edit Kirsch J 2004 God Against the Gods The History of the War Between Monotheism and Polytheism Viking Compass ISBN 9780670032860 Retrieved 2015 06 22 Occidental Mythology Masks of God Joseph Campbell 9780140194418 Amazon com Books ISBN 014019441X Morris Arnold Hugh Martin Jones John Robert The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire p 612 pseudo Aristotle De mundo Aristotelis Opera Volume 3 Oxford Bekker 1837 Cahill Suzanne E 18 July 2013 Sublimation in Medieval China The Case of the Mysterious Woman of the Nine Heavens Journal of Chinese Religions 20 1 91 102 doi 10 1179 073776992805307692 http etheses lib cuhk edu hk pdf 004777762 pdf permanent dead link Cawed C 1972 The Culture of the Bontoc Igorot Manila MCS Enterprises a b c Jocano F L 1969 Philippine Mythology Quezon City Capitol Publishing House Inc Aduerte D 2014 The Philippine Islands 1493 1898 Volume XXXII 1640 CreateSpace Independent Publishing Nicdao A 1917 Pampangan Folklore Manila Calderon S G 1947 Mga alamat ng Pilipinas Manila M Colcol amp Co Demetrio F R Cordero Fernando G amp Zialcita F N 1991 The Soul Book Quezon City GCF Books Mojares R B 1974 Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society Vol 2 No 3 The Myth of the Sleeping Hero Three Philippine Cases University of San Carlos Publications a b c Loarca Miguel de 1582 1903 Relation of the Filipinas Islands In Blair and Robertson The Philippine Islands 5 Fox R B 1982 Religion and Society Among the Tagbanuas of Palawan Island Philippines Manila National Museum a b Demetrio F R Cordero Fernando G amp Zialcita F N 1991 The Soul Book Quezon City GCF Books Hackett Jo Ann 2001 There Was No King in Israel The Era of the Judges In Coogan Michael David ed The Oxford History of the Biblical World Oxford University Press pp 158 59 ISBN 978 0 19 513937 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of war deities amp oldid 1202452599, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.