Apollo, God of light and the sun, healing (or disease), music (especially stringed instruments), poetry, archery and prophecy
"Apollo" by Mengs (18th century) |
Bacchus (Dionysus), God of grapes, fruitfulness, vegetation, wine, ecstasy and madness
"Young sick Bacchus" (1594) by M da Carravaggio |
Castor and Pollux (Dioscuri) Twin Gods of sailors and horsemanship; associated with camaraderie
"Abduction of the daughters of Leucippus" (c. 1617) by P P Rubens |
Ceres (Demeter), Goddess of agriculture, plant growth and crop fertility
"Ceres, Goddess of the Harvest" (17th century) by S Vouet |
Diana (Artemis), chaste Goddess of the hunt, animals (esp. wild), woodlands, childbirth and the moon
"Diana the Huntress" by G Saint-Pierre (b. 1833) |
Faunus (Pan), woodland God who brings fertility to fields and flocks; associated with pleasure-seeking
"Nymph and Satyr after Rubens" (before 1844) |
Flora (Chloris), Goddess of flowering plants; associated with spring, fertility and sexual licentiousness
Detail of "Flora and the Zephyrs" (1897) by J W Waterhouse |
Fortuna (Tyche), Goddess of increasing prosperity, good fortune, ill fortune, chance and luck
"Fortuna" (c. 1670) by H Gascar |
Freyja (similar to Venus) Germanic Goddess of love, life and fertility*
"Freja" (1910) by J Bauer |
Freyr (similar to Faunus) Germanic fertility God associated with good times, peace and plenty
"Frey and Freyja" by Donn Crane (circa 1920) |
Hercules (Herakles), God of heroism, strength and perseverance
"Hercules and Prometheus" (1656) by M Preti |
Janus, God of beginnings, transitions, openings, closings and entrance-ways
Bust of Janus, Capitoline Museums |
Juno (Hera), Goddess of women, marriage and motherhood
"Juno and Argus" (c. 1617) by O Riminaldi |
Jupiter (Zeus), protecting God of the sky and weather, esp. rain and storms; associated with oaths
"Jupiter and Thetis" (1811) by J Ingres |
Magna Mater (Cybele), Earth Goddess, great mother of the Gods and all beings
"Cybele" (c. 1675) Tredegar House |
Mars (Ares), God of war, valour and virility
Mars Ultor, Palazzo Altemps, Rome |
Mercury (Hermes), God of financial gain, trade, travel, writing, language, communication, cunning and psychopomp
"Mercury" (1780) by A Pajou |
Minerva (Athena), Goddess of wisdom, skilled workmanship and strategy
"Minerva (and the Centaur)" by S Botticelli (d. 1510) |
Neptune (Poseidon), God of water, the sea and horses
"Neptune's Horses" by W Crane (1893) |
Odin (similar to Mercury) Germanic God of writing, eloquence, wisdom, cunning and prosperity
"Odin the wanderer" (1886) by G von Rosen |
Hades (Hades) & Proserpina (Persephone), Deities of death, the underworld and mineral wealth
"The Rape of Proserpina" (1622) by G L Bernini |
Salus (Hygeia), Goddess of safety, good
health and well-being
"Hygeia" (circa 1615 CE) by P P Rubens |
Saturn (Kronos), God of agricultural abundance, sowing, seeds; ruler of a past golden age
"The Temple of Saturn" (19th century), Villa Torlonia, Rome |
Thor (similar to Jupiter) protecting Germanic God of the sky, thunder, lightning and rain
"Thor battering the Midgard Serpent" (1790) by H Fuseli |
Trivia (Hekate), Goddess of crossroads (usually three-way), ghosts, the undead and witchcraft
"Hekate" (1795) by W Blake |
Tyr (similar to Mars) Germanic God of war and bravery
Tyr losing his hand to the bound wolf Fenrir; from an 18th century Icelandic manuscript (Royal Library, Copenhagen) |
Venus (Aphrodite), Goddess of sexual love, relationships, passion, pleasure, beauty, charm and fertility
"Venus of Urbino" (1538) by Titian |
Vesta (Hestia), Goddess of the hearth-fire and home; associated with purity and virginity
"Herm of a Vestal Virgin" (1822) by A Canova |
Victoria (Nike), Goddess of victory, especially military victory
"Triumph of Victoria" (c. 1614) by P Rubens |
Vulcan (Hephaestus), God of potent fire, the forge and blacksmithing
"Vulcan forging the thunderbolts of love" (1638) by P Rubens |
By M' Sentia Figula (aka Freki), find me at neo polytheist
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