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05MillanSchoolWall

Aztec god Tlaloc, Millan Primary School in Mexico City.

A rain deity is a god or goddess associated with rain in mythology. There are many different gods of rain in different religions.

African[]

African mythology[]

  • Anẓar, god of rain in Berber mythology.
  • Achek, wife of the rain god Deng in Dinka mythology
  • Mangwe, a water spirit known as "the flooder" in the beliefs of the Ila people of Zambia[1]
  • Oya, goddess of violent rainstorms in Yoruba mythology
  • Sinvula, god of rain in Bantu mythology
  • Nanvula/Nomvula goddess of rain Bantu mythology
  • Mbaba Mwana Waresa, goddess of rain in Bantu mythology

American[]

Mesoamerica[]

  • Chaac, in Maya religion;
  • Tohil, in K'iche' Maya mythology
  • Q'uq'umatz, another K'iche' Maya rain god
  • Tlaloc, in Aztec and all the other Nahua religions;[2]
  • Cocijo, in Zapotec religion;[3]
  • Tirípeme Curicaueri, in Purépecha religion;
  • Dzahui, in Mixtec religion;[4]
  • Mu'ye, in Otomi religion
  • Jaguar, in Olmec religion
  • Quiateot of the Nicarao people in Nicaragua

North America[]

  • Yuttoere, in De'ne' and Carrier
  • Asiaq, goddess among Greenlandic Inuit,[5] and Inuit in Northern Canada
  • Shotokunungwa of Hopi people
  • Tó Neinilii of Navajo people
  • Coyote (Navajo mythology)

South America[]

  • Eschetewuarha of Chamacoco
  • Chibchacum in the religion of the Muisca

Asian[]

Hindu mythology[]

Middle Eastern mythology[]

Tibetan mythology[]

  • Kalden
  • Lumo, sky goddess of rain and mist

European[]

Greek mythology[]

  • Hyades, nymphs that bring rain
  • Zeus, god of rain, thunder, and lightning

Lithuanian mythology[]

  • Blizgulis, god of snow

Norse Mythology[]

  • Freyr, Norse god of rain, sunshine, summer and fertility

Slavic mythology[]

  • Dodola, goddess of rain
  • Dudumitsa, Bulgarian goddess of rain

Oceanian[]

Hawaiian mythology[]

  • Lono,[6] who was also a fertility god

Australian Aboriginal Dreaming[]

References[]

  1. McVeigh, Malcolm J. (1974). God in Africa: Conceptions of God in African Traditional Religion and Christianity. C. Stark. p. 14. ISBN 9780890070031. 
  2. Noticia del Dia (in Spanish)
  3. Miller & Taube 1993, 2003, p.64.
  4. Terraciano, Kevin (2001). The Mixtecs of colonial Oaxaca: Ñudzahui history, sixteenth through eighteenth centuries. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-3756-8. OCLC 45861953. 
  5. Monaghan, Patricia (2009). Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines [2 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 139. ISBN 978-0-313-34990-4. https://books.google.com/books?id=8zHxlL8my-YC&pg=PA139. 
  6. Thompson, Hunter (1979). The Great Shark Hunt: Strange Tales from a Strange Time, 1st ed., Summit Books, 105-109. ISBN: 0-671-40046-0 .
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