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  2. Celtic Gods – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/celtic-gods

    Accessed on 24 Sep. 2024. (2022, November 29). . Mythopedia. The Celtic gods and goddesses are a vast group of deities who were worshipped by the ancient Celtic tribes. Their names and attributes varied between languages and locations, with some deities worshipped by all tribes while others were specific to a particular region or people.

  3. Celtic Mythology – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/guides/celtic-mythology

    Táin Bó Cúailnge. Celtic mythology is the collection of stories and folklore from various ancient Celtic cultures like the Irish, the Welsh, and the Gauls. Many of these myths were suppressed by Roman conquerors, with their first widespread recordings dating from the early medieval period.

  4. Norse Gods - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/norse-gods

    Accessed on 24 Sep. 2024. (2022, November 29). . Mythopedia. The Norse gods and goddesses are the array of deities honored by ancient Nordic worshipers. They primarily came from two different tribes, the Aesir and the Vanir, but were united in their efforts to fight the jötnar, a tribe of giants dwelling in another realm of the world tree ...

  5. Mythopedia is the ultimate online resource for exploring ancient mythology; from the Greeks and Romans, to Celtic, Norse, Egyptian and more.

  6. Taranis – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/taranis

    Taranis was known in Irish mythology as Tuireann, and played an important part in the story of Lugh, another pan-Celtic deity. He was also related to the Gaulish Ambisagrus. For the Romans, Taranis was associated with both Jupiter and the cyclops, Brontes, whose name similarly means “thunder.”. Other Indo-European thunder gods shared a ...

  7. Morrigan – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/morrigan

    In the Canadian fantasy television series Lost Girl, the Morrigan is a title held by the leader of the Dark Fae. The Morrígan has also appeared in several comic book series, including Marvel Comics—where she is depicted as a powerful goddess in the Celtic pantheon—and The Wicked + The Divine.

  8. Brigid – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/brigid

    Brigid, or the Exalted One, was the Irish goddess of spring, fertility, and life. Beloved by poets, she was the master of both healing and smithing. Her holiday, Imbolc, was held on February 1st and marked the midpoint of winter. Many of Ireland’s wells and waterways were devoted to her. As a member of the Tuatha Dé Danann, Brigid was the ...

  9. Lugh – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/lugh

    The Irish god of nobility, Lugh of the Long Arm was a master of crafts and a cunning warrior. He was both Ollamh Érenn and King of the Tuatha Dé Danann, and wielded the Spear of Assal, which none could stand against. His dwellings were at Tara in County Meath, and at Moytura, in County Sligo. His holy day was Lughnasa, which fell on August 1st.

  10. Cernunnos – Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/cernunnos

    Cernunnos was the Gaelic god of beasts and wild places. Often called the Horned One, Cernunnos was a mediator of man and nature, able to tame predator and prey so they might lie down together. He remains a mysterious deity, as his original mythos has been lost to history. Though Cernunnos himself appeared primarily in Ancient Gaul, similar ...

  11. Dagda - Mythopedia

    mythopedia.com/topics/dagda

    This Gaelic name was first derived from the Proto-Indo-European Dhagho-deiwos, or “shining divinity." As the language evolved into Proto-Celtic, the root morphed into Dago-deiwos. It is from the word Dagos that the Dagda’s name receives its two meanings: “shining” in relation to daytime, or “good” as in skilled.