
A water deity is a deity in mythology associated with water or various bodies of water. Water deities are common in mythology and were usually more important among civilizations in which the sea or ocean, or a great river was more important. Another important focus of worship of water deities has been springs or holy wells.

As a form of animal worship, whales and snakes (hence dragons) have been regarded as godly deities throughout the world (as are other animals such as turtles, fish, crabs, and sharks). In Asian lore, whales and dragons sometimes have connections.Serpents are also common as a symbol or as serpentine deities, sharing many similarities with dragons.
Africa
Akan
- , primordial embodiment of the oceans
- , sea goddess associated with gold
- , goddess of the treasures at the bottom of the ocean
- Tano (Ta Kora), god of the Tano river
- Bia, god of the Bia river
- Birim, goddess of the
- Bosomtwe, antelope god of the
- Ayensu, god of the
- Densu, three headed god of the , often represented as red, and having a bad temper
Bantu
- Bunzi, goddess of rain, rainbow and waters.
- Chicamassichinuinji, king of oceans.
- Funza, goddess of waters, twin phenomenon and malformations in children. Wife of Mbumba.
- Jengu, Sawabantu water spirits
- Kalunga, Bantu Supreme Creator
- Kimbazi, goddess of sea storms.
- Kuitikuiti, serpent god of Congo river.
- Lusunzi, god of spring and waters.
- Mamba Muntu, goddesses of waters and sexuality.
- Makanga.
- Mbantilanda.
- Mbumba, rainbow serpent of terrestrial waters and warriors.
- Mboze.
- Mpulu Bunzi, Bakongo god of rain and waters.
- Nyami Nyami, Batonga river spirit
- Simbi, Bakongo ancestral water spirits
Dahomey
- Erzulie, goddess of sweet water, beauty, and love.
Dogon
- Nommos, amphibious spirits that are worshipped as ancestors.
Egyptian
- Anuket, goddess of the Nile and nourisher of the fields.
- Bairthy, goddess of water, was depicted with a small pitcher on her head, holding a long spear-like sceptre.
- Hapi, god of the annual flooding of the Nile.
- Heh, frog headed god of the primordial waters.
- Heqet, wife of Khnum, also with the head of a frog.
- Khnum, god of the source of the Nile.
- Nephthys, goddess of rivers, death, mourning, the dead, and night.
- Nu, uncreated god, personification of the primordial waters.
- Osiris, god of the dead and afterlife; originally a god of water and vegetation.
- Satet, goddess of the Nile River's floods.
- Sobek, god of the Nile river, is depicted as a crocodile or a man with the head of a crocodile.
- Tefnut, goddess of water, moisture, and fertility.
- Wadj-wer, personification of the Mediterranean Sea or represented the lagoons and lakes in the northernmost Nile Delta.
Ewe / Fon
- Agwé, a sea loa.
- Clermeil, a river loa.
- Mami Wata, a water loa.
- Pie, a lake and river loa.
Lugandan
- Sezibwa, goddess of the Sezibwa River.
Serer
- (or Mindis) is not a deity in Serer religion, but a pangool with goddess–like attributes. She is a female protector of the Fatick Region. Offerings are made in her name at the River Sine. She appears to humans in the form of a manatee, She is one of the best known fangool (singular of pangool). She possess the attributes of a typical water fangool, yet at the same time, she is a blood fangool. The Senegalese Ministry of Culture added the Mbind Ngo Mindiss site to its list of monuments and historic sites in Fatick. It is the site where offerings are made, situated on the arms of the sea which bears her name, in the Sine.
Yoruba
- Oshun, an orisha of fresh "sweet" waters and the Osun River.
- Olokun, an ocean orisha. In Yoruba Mythology he was the god of all waters.
- Yemoja, originally the orisha of the Ogun River (largest river in Yoruba land) but became the orisha over the sea waves by way of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. Originally was the metaphysical mother of all the Orishas. In some traditional-myths she is the co-creator of humans with Obatala.
- , wife of Olokun, orisha over lagoons.
- Oya, orisha of storms and the Niger River.
- Oba, orisha of the Oba River.
- Yewa, orisha of the Yewa River.
- , orisha of the Otin River.
- Yemoo, original wife of Obatala and orisha over waters and maternity. Said to be the original form of most female water orishas
Asia-Pacific and Oceania
East Asia
Taoism and Chinese folk religion
- Emperor the Water Official (shuǐguān)
- Ehuang & Nuying, goddesses of the Xiang River.
- Gonggong, red-haired dragon with the head of a man and water god who, together with his associate Xiang Yao, is responsible for the great floods.
- Hebo, god of the Yellow River.
- Longmu, goddess of the Xijiang River in the Lingnan area.
- Mazu, goddess of the sea and protector of seafarers.
- Shuimu, goddess of the water.
- Shui Wei Niang, goddess of the water.
- Shuidexianjun (水德星君)
- Tam Kung, sea deity worshiped in Hong Kong and Macau with the ability to forecast weather.
- Honorable Kings of the Water Immortals (Shuixian Zunwang).
- Han Ao or Lu Ban, the inventors.
- Qu Yuan, Wu Zixu, and Xiang Yu, famous suicides lost in rivers.
- Yu the Great, tamer of China's Great Flood.
- Dragon Kings of the Four Seas.
- Ao Kuang, Dragon King of the Eastern Sea.
- Ao Qin, Dragon King of the Southern Sea.
- Ao Run, Dragon King of the Western Sea.
- Ao Shun, Dragon King of the Northern Sea.
Japanese
- Ebisu, god of fortunes and fishery, often being referred to marine megafaunas such as whales and whale sharks (hence being also called "Ebisu-shark").
- Hanzaki Daimyojin, gigantic Japanese giant salamander and master of the water.
- Kuraokami, one of Suijin.
- Mizuchi, Japanese dragon and sea god.
- Ōyamatsumi, god of mountains, sea and war.
- Ryūjin or Watatsumi, Japanese dragon and tutelary deity of the sea.
- Suijin, Shinto god of water.
- Sumiyoshi sanjin, god of ocean and sailing.
- Susanoo, Shinto god of storms and the sea.
- Watatsumi, dragon king and ocean god.
- Yamata no Orochi, serpentine monster but also regarded as an incarnation of violent river.
Ainu
- Amemasu, monster in the lakes.
- , god of the sea, often referring to orca.
Korean
- Imoogi or Imugi, giant serpents of Korean folklore which later become true dragons.
- King Munmu, a king who wished to become a dragon before his death to protect Korea from the Sea of Japan.
- , an undersea deity believed to determine the fortunes of fishermen and sailors.
South Asia
Hindu
In Hindu culture, each water body is worshipped as a form of God. Hence, the rivers are worshipped as goddesses and the ocean is worshipped as a god.
- Ap, group of water goddesses.
- Matsya, avatar of Vishnu in piscine form
- Apam Napat, god of fresh water, such as in rivers and lakes.
- Danu, goddess of primordial waters, mother of Vritra and the Danavas.
- Makara, mystical creature of waters.
- Varuna, the God of the ocean and rains and water.
- Indra, King of the Gods, God of weather, and bringer of rain, thunderstorms and clouds.
- Saptasindhu, the seven holy rivers of India, namely:
- Ganga, the Goddess of the Ganges River.
- Yamuna, the Goddess of the Yamuna River.
- Saraswati, the divine Goddess of knowledge and wisdom who was personified as a river that dried up in ancient times.
- Indus, also called Sindhu. The river is considered the eldest daughter of the Himalaya mountains.
- Narmada, the river Goddess often worshipped as a deity and daughter of Lord Shiva.
- Godavari, the longest river of South India. The river is also considered as Dakshina Ganga aka South(ern) Ganga.
- Kaveri, a river of South India, worshipped by people as a goddess who was previously incarnated as Lopamudra, the wife of Sage Agastya.
- Rivers such as Tapi, also known as Tapati, is worshipped as a daughter of the sun god, Surya.
- The river Krishna, worshipped as Krishnaveni Devi/Krishna Mai, is considered to be Lord Vishnu born as a river.
- Tungabhadra, a tributary of Krishna, is worshipped as a goddess. The river is also known as Pampa.
- Pamba River and River flowing past the holy temple towns of Sabarimala in Kerala and Tirupati and Srikalahasti in Andhra Pradesh, respectively.
- The river Brahmaputra is the only river to have a male personification, whose name means "son of Brahma", the creator.
- Mariamman, regional goddess of the rain and medicine
Meitei
- Wangbren, the Sea God who holds storm, rain and disaster .
- Poubi Lai, the giant dragon who ruled its tyranny in the Loktak lake.
- Irai Leima, the Goddess of water and aquatic life.
- Ngāreima, goddess of fish
- Thongjarok Lairembi of Thongjaorok River
- Iril Lairembi of Iril River
- Imphal Turel Lairembi of Imphal River
- Kongba Turel Lairembi of Kongba River
- Loktak Ima of Loktak Lake
- Pumlenpat Lairembi of Pumlenpat Lake
Southeast Asia
Filipino
- Sirinan: the Isnag spirit of the river
- Limat: the Gaddang god of the sea
- Oden: the Bugkalot deity of the rain, worshiped for its life-giving waters
- Ocean Deity: the Ilocano goddess of the ocean whose waters slammed the ediface of salt being built by Ang-ngalo and Asin, causing the sea's water to become salty
- Gods of the Pistay Dayat: Pangasinense gods who are pacified through the Pistay Dayat ritual, where offerings are given to the spirits of the waters who pacify the gods
- Anitun Tauo: the Sambal goddess of win and rain who was reduced in rank by Malayari for her conceit
- Sedsed: the Aeta god of the sea
- Apûng Malyari: the Kapampangan moon god who lives in Mt. Pinatubo and ruler of the eight rivers
- Lakandanum: variant of the Kapampangan Naga, known to rule the waters
- Bathala: the Tagalog supreme god and creator deity, also known as Bathala Maykapal, Lumilikha, and Abba; an enormous being with control over thunder, lightning, flood, fire, thunder, and earthquakes; presides over lesser deities and uses spirits to intercede between divinities and mortals
- Anitun Tabu: the Tagalog goddess of wind and rain and daughter of Idianale and Dumangan
- Lakapati: the Tagalog hermaphrodite deity and protector of sown fields, sufficient field waters, and abundant fish catch
- Amanikable: the Tagalog god of the sea who was spurned by the first mortal woman; also a god of hunters
- Amansinaya: the Tagalog goddess of fishermen
- Haik: the Tagalog god of the sea who protects travelers from tempests and storms
- Bulan-hari: one of the Tagalog deities sent by Bathala to aid the people of Pinak; can command rain to fall; married to Bitu-in
- Makapulaw: the Tagalog god of sailors
- Great Serpent of Pasig: a giant Tagalog serpent who created the Pasig river after merchants wished to the deity; in exchange for the Pasig's creation, the souls of the merchants would be owned by the serpent
- Quadruple Deities: the four childless naked Tau-buid Mangyan deities, composed of two gods who come from the sun and two goddesses who come from the upper part of the river; summoned using the paragayan or diolang plates
- Afo Sapa: the Buhid Mangyan owner of rivers
- Apu Dandum: the Hanunoo Mangyan spirit living in the water
- Tubigan: the Bicolano god of the water
- Dagat: the Bicolano goddess of the sea
- Bulan: the Bicolano moon god whose arm became the earth, and whose tears became the rivers and seas
- Magindang: the Bicolano god of fishing who leads fishermen in getting a good fish catch through sounds and signs
- Onos: the Bicolano deity who freed the great flood that changed the land's features
- Hamorawan Lady: the Waray deity of the Hamorawan spring in Borongan, who blesses the waters with healing properties
- Maka-andog: an epic Waray giant-hero who was friends with the sea spirits and controlled wildlife and fish; first inhabitant and ruler of Samar who lived for five centuries; later immortalized as a deity of fishing
- Maguayan: the Bisaya god who rules over the waters as his kingdom; father of Lidagat; brother of Kaptan
- Maguyaen: the Bisaya goddess of the winds of the sea
- Magauayan: the Bisaya sea deity who fought against Kaptan for eons until Manaul intervened
- Lidagat: the Bisaya sea deity married to the wind; daughter of Maguayan
- Bakunawa: the Bisaya serpent deity who can coil around the world; sought to swallow the seven "Queen" moons, successfully eating the six, where the last is guarded by bamboos
- Makilum-sa-tubig: the Bisaya god of the sea
- Kasaray-sarayan-sa-silgan: the Bisaya god of streams
- Magdan-durunoon: the Bisaya god of hidden lakes
- Santonilyo: a Bisaya deity who brings rain when its image is immersed at sea
- Magyawan: the Hiligaynon god of the sea
- Manunubo: the Hiligaynon and Aklanon good spirit of the sea
- Launsina: the Capiznon goddess of the sun, moon, stars, and seas, and the most beloved because people seek forgiveness from her
- Kapapu-an: the Karay-a pantheon of ancestral spirits from whom the supernatural powers of shamans originated from; their aid enables specific types of shamans to gush water from rocks, leap far distances, create oil shields, become invisible, or pass through solid matter
- Neguno: the Cuyonon and Agutaynen god of the sea that cursed a selfish man by turning him into the first shark
- Polo: the benevolent Tagbanwa god of the sea whose help is invoked during times of illness
- Diwata Kat Sidpan: a deity who lives in the western region called Sidpan; controls the rains
- Diwata Kat Libatan: a deity who lives in the eastern region called Babatan; controls the rain
- Tagma-sa-Dagat: the Subanon god of the sea
- Tagma-sa-uba: the Subanon god of the rivers
- Diwata na Magbabaya: simply referred as Magbabaya; the good Bukidnon supreme deity and supreme planner who looks like a man; created the earth and the first eight elements, namely bronze, gold, coins, rock, clouds, rain, iron, and water; using the elements, he also created the sea, sky, moon, and stars; also known as the pure god who wills all things; one of three deities living in the realm called Banting
- Dadanhayan ha Sugay: the evil Bukidnon lord from whom permission is asked; depicted as the evil deity with a human body and ten heads that continuously drools sticky saliva, which is the source of all waters; one of the three deities living in the realm called Banting
- Bulalakaw: the Bukidnon guardian of the water and all the creatures living in it
- Python of Pusod Hu Dagat: the gigantic Bukidnon python living at the center of the sea; caused a massive flood when it coiled its body at sea
- Bulalakaw: the Talaandig deity who safeguards the creatures in the rivers; the lalayon ritual is offered to the deity
- Tagbanua: the Manobo god of rain
- Yumud: the god of water
- Pamulak Manobo: the Bagobo supreme deity and creator of the world, including the land, sea, and the first humans; throws water from the sky, causing rain, while his spit are the showers
- Eels of Mount Apo: two giant Bagobo eels, where one went east and arrived at sea, begetting all the eels of the world; the other went west, and remained on land until it died and became the western foothills of Mount Apo
- Fon Eel: the Blaan spirit of water
- Fu El: the T'boli spirit of water
- Fu El Melel: the T'boli spirit of the river
- Segoyong: the Teduray guardians of the classes of natural phenomena; punishes humans to do not show respect and steal their wards; many of them specialize in a class, which can be water, trees, grasses, caves behind waterfalls, land caves, snakes, fire, nunuk trees, deers, and pigs
- Tunung: the Maguindanao spirits who live in the sky, water, mountain, or trees; listens to prayers and can converse with humans by borrowing the voice of a medium; protects humans from sickness and crops from pests
- Tonong: divine Maranao spirits who often aid heroes; often lives in nonok trees, seas, lakes, and the sky realm
- Umboh Tuhan: also called Umboh Dilaut, the Sama-Bajau god of the sea and one of the two supreme deities; married to Dayang Dayang Mangilai
- Umboh Kamun: the Sama-Bajau totem of mantis shrimp
- Sumangâ: the Sama-Bajau spirit of sea vessels; the guardian who deflects attacks
Indonesian
- Dewi Danu, Balinese Hindu water goddess.
- Dewi Lanjar, Javanese Queen of the North Sea.
- Nyai Roro Kidul, Javanese Queen of the South Sea (Indian Ocean).
Cambodia
- Yeay Mao, a neak ta divinity in Khmer Buddhism that is the patron guardian of sailors, travelers, and hunters.
Vietnamese
- , Kinh Dương Vương's father-in-law, grandfather of Lạc Long Quân, he was a Long Vương who lived in Dongting Lake.
- Lạc Long Quân, he is the ancestor of the Vietnamese people and is also one of the top Long Vươngs under the Water Palace.
- or Vua Cha Bát Hải Động Đình, he is a Long Vương and also the father of Mẫu Thoải. He is the son of Lạc Long Quân and one of the heads of the Water Palace.
- , was the 25th son of Lạc Long Quân and Âu Cơ who ruled the whole Bồ Sào region, ruled the Red River, gathered people scattered because of floods to re-explore the hamlets, and kept quiet villages throughout the delta form Ngã ba Hạc to the sea estuary.
- Mẫu Thoải, the head goddess of all rivers, lakes and seas. She governs water and all things related to water.
- , the Long Vương is a common name for the gods who rule over the sea and ocean.
- , god of Tô Lịch River.
- , the god who manages the rivers (note that each river has its own governing god, and each person's power may be less or more powerful than Hà Bá).
- , goddess has the same function as Hà Bá
- , this god often appears in the form of large fish (such as whales, dolphins, sperm whales,...) to help ships that have accidents due to weather at sea.
- , god of protection for the people of the sea.
- or Giao Long, They can be water monsters, they can also be water gods.
Western Asia and Central Asia
Armenian
- Astłik, goddess of water sources.
- Tsovinar, goddess of seas and storms.
Canaanite
- Yam (god), god of the sea.
- Asherah (Goddess), goddess of water, fertility, mother goddess, queen of gods and heaven.
- Dagon (God), god of agriculture, fish god and the seas.
- Marah, goddess of water, Anat's twin sister being described as benevolent.
Hebrew
- Leviathan, sea serpent.
Hittite
- Aruna, god of the sea.
Mesopotamian
- Abzu, god of fresh water, father of all other gods.
- Atargatis, fertility goddess tied to fish and identified with a mermaid figure.
- Enbilulu, god of rivers and canals.
- Enki, god of water and of the river Tigris.
- Kulullû, the "fish man", monster servant of Marduk.
- Marduk, god associated with water, vegetation, judgment, and magic.
- Nammu, goddess of the primeval sea.
- Nanshe, goddess of the Persian Gulf, justice, prophecy, fertility and fishing.
- Tiamat, goddess of salt water and chaos, also mother of all gods.
- Sirsir, god of mariners.
Ossetia
- Donbettyr, master of all waters.
Persian and Zoroastrian
- Ahurani, Ahurani is a water goddess from ancient Persian mythology who watches over rainfall as well as standing water.
- Anahita, the divinity of "the Waters" (Aban) and associated with fertility, healing, and wisdom.
- Apam Napat, the divinity of rain and the maintainer of order.
- Haurvatat, the Amesha Spenta associated with water, prosperity, and health in post-Gathic Zoroastrianism.
- Tishtrya, Zoroastrian benevolent divinity associated with life-bringing rainfall and fertility.
Turkic
- Talay, god of ocean.
Polynesian
Fijian
- Dakuwaqa, a shark god.
- Daucina, god of seafaring.
Hawaiian
- Kamohoalii, shark god.
- Kanaloa or Tangaroa, god of the ocean and magics and underworld with forms of cephalopod.
- Nāmaka, sea goddess.
- Nanaue, another shark god.
- Ukupanipo, shark god who controls the amount of fish close enough for the fisherman to catch.
Māori
- Ikatere, a fish god, the father of all the sea creatures including mermaids.
- Kiwa, a guardian of the sea.
- Rongomai, a whale god.
- Ruahine, an eel god.
- Taniwha, deities or monsters (often take forms resembling dragons).
- Tangaroa, god of the sea.
- , god of the weather, rain, storms and wind
- Tinirau, a guardian of the sea.
- (Maori name for southern right whales), the great whale who saved legendary hero Paikea, famously known as the Whale Rider, (also the Maori name for humpback whales) from drowning and carried him to land. This led to the creation of New Zealand.
Samoan
other island nations
- Agunua, serpentine god of the sea of Solomon Islands.
- Ayida-Weddo, serpentine spirit among several island nations.
Cook Islands
- Tangaroa, God of the Ocean and Seas
- Momoke, fair maidens, said to be water spirits with skin as pale as milk. These 'white ones' approach those on land during the night, emerging from deep pools of water to collect food or to seduce men before returning to the water depths. It is said that the Momoke come from an underwater nation, though some have said that this watery kingdom is also 'Avaiki'; paradise, heaven and the source of all of creation.
Aboriginal Australian
- Eingana, mother of all.
- Rainbow Serpents, creators of dreamtime.
- Ungud, serpent god bring fortunes.
- Wirnpa, creator of rain.
- Yurlungur, the copper serpent.
Europe
Baltic
Lithuanian
- Bangpūtys, god of sea and storm.
- Laumė, goddess of wild spaces, including waters.
Celtic
- Belisama, goddess of lakes and rivers, fire, crafts, and light.
- Grannus, a god associated with spas, the sun, fires and healing thermal and mineral springs.
- Nantosuelta, river goddess of fire, the earth, healing, and fertility.
- Nodens, god associated with healing, the sea, hunting and dogs.
- Damona, water goddess associated with healing and rivers
- Selkie, a mythological creature associated with seals.
Gaulish
- Acionna, a water goddess/genius loci of the Orleanais region and the Essonne.
- Condatis, god of the River Wear and healing.
- Segeta, goddess of the Loire.
- Sequana, goddess of the River Seine.
- Souconna, goddess of the Saône.
- Sirona, a goddess associated with healing springs.
Irish
- Brigid, a goddess sometimes associated with water and where three streams join (relating to her being a Triple Goddess).
- Boann, goddess of the River Boyne.
- Danu (Dana), Continental Celtic river goddess. Her Irish variation was an ancestor/mother goddess.
- Manannán mac Lir, god of the sea.
- Lí Ban, water goddess.
- Lir, god of the sea.
- Sinann, goddess of the River Shannon.
Welsh
- Dylan Eil Ton, god of the sea
- Llŷr, god of the sea.
Lusitanian
- Bandua, theonym associated with fountains.
- Duberdicus, god of the sea and rivers.
- Durius, personification of the Douro river.
Germanic
Ancient
- Ægir, personification of the sea.
- Freyr, god of rain, sunlight, fertility, life, and summer.
- Nehalennia, goddess of the North Sea.
- Nerthus, mostly an earth goddess, but is also associated with lakes, springs, and holy waters.
- Nine Daughters of Ægir, who personify the characteristics of waves.
- Nix, water spirits who usually appear in human form.
- Njörðr, god of the sea, particularly of seafaring.
- Rán, sea goddess of death who collects the drowned in a net, wife of Ægir.
- Rhenus Pater, god of the Rhine river
- Rura, goddess of the Rur river
- Sága, wisdom goddess who lives near water and pours Odin a drink when he visits.
English folklore
- Father Thames, human manifestation and/or guardian of the River Thames that flows through Southern England, while his ancient worship is obscure, he has become a popular symbol of the river in modern times, it being the subject of the song "Old Father Thames" and the model of several statues and reliefs scattered around London.
- Davy Jones, the Devil of the seas in Western piratical lore.
- Tiddy Mun, a bog deity once worshiped in Lincolnshire, England who had the ability to control floods.
Scandinavian folklore
- Sjörå, female lake spirits in Swedish folklore
Greek
- Achelous, Greek river god.
- Aegaeon, god of violent sea storms and ally of the Titans.
- Alpheus, river god in Arcadia.
- Amphitrite, sea goddess and consort of Poseidon and thus queen of the sea.
- Anapus, river god of eastern Sicily.
- Asopus, river god in Greece
- Asterion, river-god of Argos
- Brito-Martis, the goddess Brito-Martis is always depicted in arms.
- Brizo, goddess of sailors.
- Carcinus, a giant crab who allied itself with the Hydra against Heracles. When it died, Hera placed it in the sky as the constellation Cancer.
- Ceto, goddess of the dangers of the ocean and of sea monsters.
- Charybdis, a sea monster and spirit of whirlpools and the tide.
- Cymopoleia, a daughter of Poseidon and goddess of giant storm waves.
- Doris, goddess of the sea's bounty and wife of Nereus.
- Dynamene sea nymph and daughter of Nereus, associated with the power and might of ocean waves.
- Eidothea, prophetic sea nymph and daughter of Proteus.
- Electra, an Oceanid, consort of Thaumas.
- Enipeus, a river god
- Eurybia, goddess of the mastery of the seas.
- Galene (Γαλήνη), goddess of calm seas.
- Glaucus, the fisherman's sea god.
- Gorgons, three monstrous sea spirits.
- Euryale
- Medusa
- Stheno
- The Graeae, three ancient sea spirits who personified the white foam of the sea; they shared one eye and one tooth between them.
- Hippocampi, the horses of the sea.
- The Ichthyocentaurs, a pair of centaurine sea-gods with the upper bodies of men, the lower fore-parts of horses, ending in the serpentine tails of fish.
- Kymopoleia, daughter of Poseidon and goddess of violent sea storms.
- Leucothea, a sea goddess who aided sailors in distress.
- Nerites, watery consort of Aphrodite and/or beloved of Poseidon.
- Nereus, the old man of the sea, and the god of the sea's rich bounty of fish.
- Nymphs
- Naiades, freshwater nymphs.
- Nereides, sea nymphs.
- Oceanides, nymphs of freshwater sources.
- Oceanus, Titan god of the Earth-encircling river Okeanos, the font of all the Earth's fresh water.
- Palaemon, a young sea god who aided sailors in distress.
- Phorcys, god of the hidden dangers of the deep.
- Pontus, primeval god of the sea, father of the fish and other sea creatures.
- Poseidon, Olympian god of the sea and king of the sea gods; also god of flood, drought, earthquakes, and horses. His Roman equivalent is Neptune.
- Proteus, a shape-shifting, prophetic old sea god, and the herdsman of Poseidon's seals.
- Psamathe, goddess of sand beaches.
- River gods, deities of rivers, fathers of Naiads, brothers of the Oceanids, and as such, the sons of Oceanus and Tethys.
- Scylla, a sea monster, later authors made up a backstory of her being a Nereid transformed into a monster due to Circe's jealousy.
- The Telchines, sea spirits native to the island of Rhodes; the gods killed them when they turned to evil magic.
- Tethys, Titan goddess of the sources fresh-water, and the mother of the rivers, springs, streams, fountains and clouds.
- Thalassa, primordial goddess of the sea.
- Thaumas, god of the wonders of the sea and father of the Harpies and the rainbow goddess Iris.
- Thetis, leader of the Nereids who presided over the spawning of marine life in the sea, mother of Achilles.
- Triteia, daughter of Triton and companion of Ares.
- Triton, fish-tailed son and herald of Poseidon.
- Tritones, fish-tailed spirits in Poseidon's retinue.
- Aspidochelone, colossal sea monster from the medieval bestiary Physiologus.
Slavic
- Morana, a goddess associated with the winter, death and rebirth. Death and the afterlife itself are tightly connected to the bodies of water, while the effigy of Morana is thrown into a river at the end of winter so it can carry her away.
- Mokosh, a mother goddess associated with wetness.
- Rusalka a type of water spirit connected to floods and death.
- Vodyanoy, a water spirit often drowning people and collecting their souls.
- Bolotnik, a dangerous spirit of muddy waters and swamps.
- Topielec and utopce, spirits of people who were killed by Topielec (or who died drowning) and who now stay in the body of water where they died.
- Zmej or smok, a snake or dragon, often dangerous and living in or controlling a body of water.
Illyrian
- Bindus, Illyrian deity equated to Poseidon
Uralic
Finnish
- Ahti, god of the depths and fish.
- Iku-Turso, a malevolent sea monster.
- Vedenemo, a goddess of water.
- Vellamo, the wife of Ahti, goddess of the sea, lakes, and storms.
Americas
Central America and the Caribbean
Lencan
- Ilangipuca, goddess of fertility, earth, and all bodies of water
Mexico
- Atlaua, god of water, archers, and fishermen.
- Chalchiuhtlicue, goddess of water, lakes, rivers, seas, streams, horizontal waters, storms, and baptism.
- Opochtli, god of fishing and birdcatchers.
- Tlāloc, god of water, fertility, and rain.
- Tlaloque, a group of rain, water, and mountain gods.
Mayan
- Kukulcan, god of the seas.
Pech
- Kaeki Kaska, goddess of the lakes, rivers, and the fish
Taíno
- Atabey (goddess), Mother goddess of fresh water and fertility. Female counterpart of the god Yúcahu.
North America
Inuit
- Aipaloovik, an evil sea god associated with death and destruction.
- Alignak, a lunar deity and god of weather, water, tides, eclipses, and earthquakes.
- Arnapkapfaaluk, a fearsome sea goddess.
- Idliragijenget, god of the ocean.
- Kanajuk, the scorpionfish god and husband of the goddesses Nuliajuk and Isarraitaitsoq.
- Nootaikok, god who presided over icebergs and glaciers.
- Nuliajuk and Isarraitaitsoq, goddesses of the sea's depths and its creatures among the Netsilik Inuit.
- Sedna, goddess of the sea and its creatures.
South America
Tupi-Guarani (Brazilian Myth)
- Boto, A deity that is capable of impregnating unmarried women.
- , Goddess of the rain and frogs.
- Iara, Guardian of the water and of the Amazon River.
- Ipupiara, Guardian of the sea.
- , Goddess of the storms.
- Tupã, God of the thunder, weather, storms and clouds.
Incan
- Amaru, a colossal winged dragon-like celestial deity that can manipulate all the elements of nature.
- Mama Qucha, goddess of water, lakes, rivers, seas, streams, ponds, rain, thunderstorms, and all sources of water.
- Pariacaca, god of water, winds, and rainstorms.
- Paricia, god who sent a flood to kill humans who did not respect him adequately.
- Tunupa, god of fire, volcanoes, the sky and water.
Panche/Muisca
- Mohan, a mischievous entity associated with rivers, lakes and water in general.
See also
- Ekendriya
- Holy wells
- Nadi (yoga)
- Nature worship
- Sea monster
- Water chakra
- Water spirit
References
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A water deity is a deity in mythology associated with water or various bodies of water Water deities are common in mythology and were usually more important among civilizations in which the sea or ocean or a great river was more important Another important focus of worship of water deities has been springs or holy wells Water god in an ancient Roman mosaic Zeugma Mosaic Museum Gaziantep Turkey As a form of animal worship whales and snakes hence dragons have been regarded as godly deities throughout the world as are other animals such as turtles fish crabs and sharks In Asian lore whales and dragons sometimes have connections Serpents are also common as a symbol or as serpentine deities sharing many similarities with dragons AfricaAkan primordial embodiment of the oceans sea goddess associated with gold goddess of the treasures at the bottom of the ocean Tano Ta Kora god of the Tano river Bia god of the Bia river Birim goddess of the Bosomtwe antelope god of the Ayensu god of the Densu three headed god of the often represented as red and having a bad temperBantu Bunzi goddess of rain rainbow and waters Chicamassichinuinji king of oceans Funza goddess of waters twin phenomenon and malformations in children Wife of Mbumba Jengu Sawabantu water spirits Kalunga Bantu Supreme Creator Kimbazi goddess of sea storms Kuitikuiti serpent god of Congo river Lusunzi god of spring and waters Mamba Muntu goddesses of waters and sexuality Makanga Mbantilanda Mbumba rainbow serpent of terrestrial waters and warriors Mboze Mpulu Bunzi Bakongo god of rain and waters Nyami Nyami Batonga river spirit Simbi Bakongo ancestral water spiritsDahomey Erzulie goddess of sweet water beauty and love Dogon Nommos amphibious spirits that are worshipped as ancestors Egyptian Anuket goddess of the Nile and nourisher of the fields Bairthy goddess of water was depicted with a small pitcher on her head holding a long spear like sceptre Hapi god of the annual flooding of the Nile Heh frog headed god of the primordial waters Heqet wife of Khnum also with the head of a frog Khnum god of the source of the Nile Nephthys goddess of rivers death mourning the dead and night Nu uncreated god personification of the primordial waters Osiris god of the dead and afterlife originally a god of water and vegetation Satet goddess of the Nile River s floods Sobek god of the Nile river is depicted as a crocodile or a man with the head of a crocodile Tefnut goddess of water moisture and fertility Wadj wer personification of the Mediterranean Sea or represented the lagoons and lakes in the northernmost Nile Delta Ewe Fon Agwe a sea loa Clermeil a river loa Mami Wata a water loa Pie a lake and river loa Lugandan Sezibwa goddess of the Sezibwa River Serer or Mindis is not a deity in Serer religion but a pangool with goddess like attributes She is a female protector of the Fatick Region Offerings are made in her name at the River Sine She appears to humans in the form of a manatee She is one of the best known fangool singular of pangool She possess the attributes of a typical water fangool yet at the same time she is a blood fangool The Senegalese Ministry of Culture added the Mbind Ngo Mindiss site to its list of monuments and historic sites in Fatick It is the site where offerings are made situated on the arms of the sea which bears her name in the Sine Yoruba Oshun an orisha of fresh sweet waters and the Osun River Olokun an ocean orisha In Yoruba Mythology he was the god of all waters Yemoja originally the orisha of the Ogun River largest river in Yoruba land but became the orisha over the sea waves by way of the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Originally was the metaphysical mother of all the Orishas In some traditional myths she is the co creator of humans with Obatala wife of Olokun orisha over lagoons Oya orisha of storms and the Niger River Oba orisha of the Oba River Yewa orisha of the Yewa River orisha of the Otin River Yemoo original wife of Obatala and orisha over waters and maternity Said to be the original form of most female water orishasAsia Pacific and OceaniaEast Asia Taoism and Chinese folk religion Chinese sea goddess MazuEmperor the Water Official shuǐguan Ehuang amp Nuying goddesses of the Xiang River Gonggong red haired dragon with the head of a man and water god who together with his associate Xiang Yao is responsible for the great floods Hebo god of the Yellow River Longmu goddess of the Xijiang River in the Lingnan area Mazu goddess of the sea and protector of seafarers Shuimu goddess of the water Shui Wei Niang goddess of the water Shuidexianjun 水德星君 Tam Kung sea deity worshiped in Hong Kong and Macau with the ability to forecast weather Honorable Kings of the Water Immortals Shuixian Zunwang Han Ao or Lu Ban the inventors Qu Yuan Wu Zixu and Xiang Yu famous suicides lost in rivers Yu the Great tamer of China s Great Flood Dragon Kings of the Four Seas Ao Kuang Dragon King of the Eastern Sea Ao Qin Dragon King of the Southern Sea Ao Run Dragon King of the Western Sea Ao Shun Dragon King of the Northern Sea Japanese Ebisu god of fortunes and fishery often being referred to marine megafaunas such as whales and whale sharks hence being also called Ebisu shark Hanzaki Daimyojin gigantic Japanese giant salamander and master of the water Kuraokami one of Suijin Mizuchi Japanese dragon and sea god Ōyamatsumi god of mountains sea and war Ryujin or Watatsumi Japanese dragon and tutelary deity of the sea Suijin Shinto god of water Sumiyoshi sanjin god of ocean and sailing Susanoo Shinto god of storms and the sea Watatsumi dragon king and ocean god Yamata no Orochi serpentine monster but also regarded as an incarnation of violent river Ainu Amemasu monster in the lakes god of the sea often referring to orca Korean Imoogi or Imugi giant serpents of Korean folklore which later become true dragons King Munmu a king who wished to become a dragon before his death to protect Korea from the Sea of Japan an undersea deity believed to determine the fortunes of fishermen and sailors South Asia Hindu In Hindu culture each water body is worshipped as a form of God Hence the rivers are worshipped as goddesses and the ocean is worshipped as a god Varuna the Lord of All the Water BodiesAp group of water goddesses Matsya avatar of Vishnu in piscine form Apam Napat god of fresh water such as in rivers and lakes Danu goddess of primordial waters mother of Vritra and the Danavas Makara mystical creature of waters Varuna the God of the ocean and rains and water Indra King of the Gods God of weather and bringer of rain thunderstorms and clouds Saptasindhu the seven holy rivers of India namely Ganga the Goddess of the Ganges River Yamuna the Goddess of the Yamuna River Saraswati the divine Goddess of knowledge and wisdom who was personified as a river that dried up in ancient times Indus also called Sindhu The river is considered the eldest daughter of the Himalaya mountains Narmada the river Goddess often worshipped as a deity and daughter of Lord Shiva Godavari the longest river of South India The river is also considered as Dakshina Ganga aka South ern Ganga Kaveri a river of South India worshipped by people as a goddess who was previously incarnated as Lopamudra the wife of Sage Agastya Rivers such as Tapi also known as Tapati is worshipped as a daughter of the sun god Surya The river Krishna worshipped as Krishnaveni Devi Krishna Mai is considered to be Lord Vishnu born as a river Tungabhadra a tributary of Krishna is worshipped as a goddess The river is also known as Pampa Pamba River and River flowing past the holy temple towns of Sabarimala in Kerala and Tirupati and Srikalahasti in Andhra Pradesh respectively The river Brahmaputra is the only river to have a male personification whose name means son of Brahma the creator Mariamman regional goddess of the rain and medicineMeitei Wangbren the Sea God who holds storm rain and disaster Poubi Lai the giant dragon who ruled its tyranny in the Loktak lake Irai Leima the Goddess of water and aquatic life Ngareima goddess of fish Thongjarok Lairembi of Thongjaorok River Iril Lairembi of Iril River Imphal Turel Lairembi of Imphal River Kongba Turel Lairembi of Kongba River Loktak Ima of Loktak Lake Pumlenpat Lairembi of Pumlenpat LakeSoutheast Asia Filipino Sirinan the Isnag spirit of the river Limat the Gaddang god of the sea Oden the Bugkalot deity of the rain worshiped for its life giving waters Ocean Deity the Ilocano goddess of the ocean whose waters slammed the ediface of salt being built by Ang ngalo and Asin causing the sea s water to become salty Gods of the Pistay Dayat Pangasinense gods who are pacified through the Pistay Dayat ritual where offerings are given to the spirits of the waters who pacify the gods Anitun Tauo the Sambal goddess of win and rain who was reduced in rank by Malayari for her conceit Sedsed the Aeta god of the sea Apung Malyari the Kapampangan moon god who lives in Mt Pinatubo and ruler of the eight rivers Lakandanum variant of the Kapampangan Naga known to rule the waters Bathala the Tagalog supreme god and creator deity also known as Bathala Maykapal Lumilikha and Abba an enormous being with control over thunder lightning flood fire thunder and earthquakes presides over lesser deities and uses spirits to intercede between divinities and mortals Anitun Tabu the Tagalog goddess of wind and rain and daughter of Idianale and Dumangan Lakapati the Tagalog hermaphrodite deity and protector of sown fields sufficient field waters and abundant fish catch Amanikable the Tagalog god of the sea who was spurned by the first mortal woman also a god of hunters Amansinaya the Tagalog goddess of fishermen Haik the Tagalog god of the sea who protects travelers from tempests and storms Bulan hari one of the Tagalog deities sent by Bathala to aid the people of Pinak can command rain to fall married to Bitu in Makapulaw the Tagalog god of sailors Great Serpent of Pasig a giant Tagalog serpent who created the Pasig river after merchants wished to the deity in exchange for the Pasig s creation the souls of the merchants would be owned by the serpent Quadruple Deities the four childless naked Tau buid Mangyan deities composed of two gods who come from the sun and two goddesses who come from the upper part of the river summoned using the paragayan or diolang plates Afo Sapa the Buhid Mangyan owner of rivers Apu Dandum the Hanunoo Mangyan spirit living in the water Tubigan the Bicolano god of the water Dagat the Bicolano goddess of the sea Bulan the Bicolano moon god whose arm became the earth and whose tears became the rivers and seas Magindang the Bicolano god of fishing who leads fishermen in getting a good fish catch through sounds and signs Onos the Bicolano deity who freed the great flood that changed the land s features Hamorawan Lady the Waray deity of the Hamorawan spring in Borongan who blesses the waters with healing properties Maka andog an epic Waray giant hero who was friends with the sea spirits and controlled wildlife and fish first inhabitant and ruler of Samar who lived for five centuries later immortalized as a deity of fishing Maguayan the Bisaya god who rules over the waters as his kingdom father of Lidagat brother of Kaptan Maguyaen the Bisaya goddess of the winds of the sea Magauayan the Bisaya sea deity who fought against Kaptan for eons until Manaul intervened Lidagat the Bisaya sea deity married to the wind daughter of Maguayan Bakunawa the Bisaya serpent deity who can coil around the world sought to swallow the seven Queen moons successfully eating the six where the last is guarded by bamboos Makilum sa tubig the Bisaya god of the sea Kasaray sarayan sa silgan the Bisaya god of streams Magdan durunoon the Bisaya god of hidden lakes Santonilyo a Bisaya deity who brings rain when its image is immersed at sea Magyawan the Hiligaynon god of the sea Manunubo the Hiligaynon and Aklanon good spirit of the sea Launsina the Capiznon goddess of the sun moon stars and seas and the most beloved because people seek forgiveness from her Kapapu an the Karay a pantheon of ancestral spirits from whom the supernatural powers of shamans originated from their aid enables specific types of shamans to gush water from rocks leap far distances create oil shields become invisible or pass through solid matter Neguno the Cuyonon and Agutaynen god of the sea that cursed a selfish man by turning him into the first shark Polo the benevolent Tagbanwa god of the sea whose help is invoked during times of illness Diwata Kat Sidpan a deity who lives in the western region called Sidpan controls the rains Diwata Kat Libatan a deity who lives in the eastern region called Babatan controls the rain Tagma sa Dagat the Subanon god of the sea Tagma sa uba the Subanon god of the rivers Diwata na Magbabaya simply referred as Magbabaya the good Bukidnon supreme deity and supreme planner who looks like a man created the earth and the first eight elements namely bronze gold coins rock clouds rain iron and water using the elements he also created the sea sky moon and stars also known as the pure god who wills all things one of three deities living in the realm called Banting Dadanhayan ha Sugay the evil Bukidnon lord from whom permission is asked depicted as the evil deity with a human body and ten heads that continuously drools sticky saliva which is the source of all waters one of the three deities living in the realm called Banting Bulalakaw the Bukidnon guardian of the water and all the creatures living in it Python of Pusod Hu Dagat the gigantic Bukidnon python living at the center of the sea caused a massive flood when it coiled its body at sea Bulalakaw the Talaandig deity who safeguards the creatures in the rivers the lalayon ritual is offered to the deity Tagbanua the Manobo god of rain Yumud the god of water Pamulak Manobo the Bagobo supreme deity and creator of the world including the land sea and the first humans throws water from the sky causing rain while his spit are the showers Eels of Mount Apo two giant Bagobo eels where one went east and arrived at sea begetting all the eels of the world the other went west and remained on land until it died and became the western foothills of Mount Apo Fon Eel the Blaan spirit of water Fu El the T boli spirit of water Fu El Melel the T boli spirit of the river Segoyong the Teduray guardians of the classes of natural phenomena punishes humans to do not show respect and steal their wards many of them specialize in a class which can be water trees grasses caves behind waterfalls land caves snakes fire nunuk trees deers and pigs Tunung the Maguindanao spirits who live in the sky water mountain or trees listens to prayers and can converse with humans by borrowing the voice of a medium protects humans from sickness and crops from pests Tonong divine Maranao spirits who often aid heroes often lives in nonok trees seas lakes and the sky realm Umboh Tuhan also called Umboh Dilaut the Sama Bajau god of the sea and one of the two supreme deities married to Dayang Dayang Mangilai Umboh Kamun the Sama Bajau totem of mantis shrimp Sumanga the Sama Bajau spirit of sea vessels the guardian who deflects attacksIndonesian Dewi Danu Balinese Hindu water goddess Dewi Lanjar Javanese Queen of the North Sea Nyai Roro Kidul Javanese Queen of the South Sea Indian Ocean Cambodia Yeay Mao a neak ta divinity in Khmer Buddhism that is the patron guardian of sailors travelers and hunters Vietnamese Kinh Dương Vương s father in law grandfather of Lạc Long Quan he was a Long Vương who lived in Dongting Lake Lạc Long Quan he is the ancestor of the Vietnamese people and is also one of the top Long Vươngs under the Water Palace or Vua Cha Bat Hải Động Đinh he is a Long Vương and also the father of Mẫu Thoải He is the son of Lạc Long Quan and one of the heads of the Water Palace was the 25th son of Lạc Long Quan and Au Cơ who ruled the whole Bồ Sao region ruled the Red River gathered people scattered because of floods to re explore the hamlets and kept quiet villages throughout the delta form Nga ba Hạc to the sea estuary Mẫu Thoải the head goddess of all rivers lakes and seas She governs water and all things related to water the Long Vương is a common name for the gods who rule over the sea and ocean god of To Lịch River the god who manages the rivers note that each river has its own governing god and each person s power may be less or more powerful than Ha Ba goddess has the same function as Ha Ba this god often appears in the form of large fish such as whales dolphins sperm whales to help ships that have accidents due to weather at sea god of protection for the people of the sea or Giao Long They can be water monsters they can also be water gods Western Asia and Central Asia Armenian Astlik goddess of water sources Tsovinar goddess of seas and storms Canaanite Yam god god of the sea Asherah Goddess goddess of water fertility mother goddess queen of gods and heaven Dagon God god of agriculture fish god and the seas Marah goddess of water Anat s twin sister being described as benevolent Hebrew Leviathan sea serpent Hittite Aruna god of the sea Mesopotamian Abzu god of fresh water father of all other gods Atargatis fertility goddess tied to fish and identified with a mermaid figure Enbilulu god of rivers and canals Enki god of water and of the river Tigris Kulullu the fish man monster servant of Marduk Marduk god associated with water vegetation judgment and magic Nammu goddess of the primeval sea Nanshe goddess of the Persian Gulf justice prophecy fertility and fishing Tiamat goddess of salt water and chaos also mother of all gods Sirsir god of mariners Ossetia Donbettyr master of all waters Persian and Zoroastrian Ahurani Ahurani is a water goddess from ancient Persian mythology who watches over rainfall as well as standing water Anahita the divinity of the Waters Aban and associated with fertility healing and wisdom Apam Napat the divinity of rain and the maintainer of order Haurvatat the Amesha Spenta associated with water prosperity and health in post Gathic Zoroastrianism Tishtrya Zoroastrian benevolent divinity associated with life bringing rainfall and fertility Turkic Talay god of ocean Polynesian Fijian Dakuwaqa a shark god Daucina god of seafaring Hawaiian Kamohoalii shark god Kanaloa or Tangaroa god of the ocean and magics and underworld with forms of cephalopod Namaka sea goddess Nanaue another shark god Ukupanipo shark god who controls the amount of fish close enough for the fisherman to catch Maori Ikatere a fish god the father of all the sea creatures including mermaids Kiwa a guardian of the sea Rongomai a whale god Ruahine an eel god Taniwha deities or monsters often take forms resembling dragons Tangaroa god of the sea god of the weather rain storms and wind Tinirau a guardian of the sea Maori name for southern right whales the great whale who saved legendary hero Paikea famously known as the Whale Rider also the Maori name for humpback whales from drowning and carried him to land This led to the creation of New Zealand Samoan other island nations Agunua serpentine god of the sea of Solomon Islands Ayida Weddo serpentine spirit among several island nations Cook Islands Tangaroa God of the Ocean and Seas Momoke fair maidens said to be water spirits with skin as pale as milk These white ones approach those on land during the night emerging from deep pools of water to collect food or to seduce men before returning to the water depths It is said that the Momoke come from an underwater nation though some have said that this watery kingdom is also Avaiki paradise heaven and the source of all of creation Aboriginal Australian Eingana mother of all Rainbow Serpents creators of dreamtime Ungud serpent god bring fortunes Wirnpa creator of rain Yurlungur the copper serpent EuropeBaltic Lithuanian Bangputys god of sea and storm Laume goddess of wild spaces including waters Celtic Belisama goddess of lakes and rivers fire crafts and light Grannus a god associated with spas the sun fires and healing thermal and mineral springs Nantosuelta river goddess of fire the earth healing and fertility Nodens god associated with healing the sea hunting and dogs Damona water goddess associated with healing and rivers Selkie a mythological creature associated with seals Gaulish Acionna a water goddess genius loci of the Orleanais region and the Essonne Condatis god of the River Wear and healing Segeta goddess of the Loire Sequana goddess of the River Seine Souconna goddess of the Saone Sirona a goddess associated with healing springs Irish Brigid a goddess sometimes associated with water and where three streams join relating to her being a Triple Goddess Boann goddess of the River Boyne Danu Dana Continental Celtic river goddess Her Irish variation was an ancestor mother goddess Manannan mac Lir god of the sea Li Ban water goddess Lir god of the sea Sinann goddess of the River Shannon Welsh Dylan Eil Ton god of the sea Llŷr god of the sea Lusitanian Bandua theonym associated with fountains Duberdicus god of the sea and rivers Durius personification of the Douro river Germanic Ancient AEgir personification of the sea Freyr god of rain sunlight fertility life and summer Nehalennia goddess of the North Sea Nerthus mostly an earth goddess but is also associated with lakes springs and holy waters Nine Daughters of AEgir who personify the characteristics of waves Nix water spirits who usually appear in human form Njordr god of the sea particularly of seafaring Ran sea goddess of death who collects the drowned in a net wife of AEgir Rhenus Pater god of the Rhine river Rura goddess of the Rur river Saga wisdom goddess who lives near water and pours Odin a drink when he visits English folklore Late 18th century statue of Father Thames by John Bacon the elder at Ham House near Richmond LondonFather Thames human manifestation and or guardian of the River Thames that flows through Southern England while his ancient worship is obscure he has become a popular symbol of the river in modern times it being the subject of the song Old Father Thames and the model of several statues and reliefs scattered around London Davy Jones the Devil of the seas in Western piratical lore Tiddy Mun a bog deity once worshiped in Lincolnshire England who had the ability to control floods Scandinavian folklore Sjora female lake spirits in Swedish folkloreGreek Achelous Greek river god Aegaeon god of violent sea storms and ally of the Titans Alpheus river god in Arcadia Amphitrite sea goddess and consort of Poseidon and thus queen of the sea Anapus river god of eastern Sicily Asopus river god in Greece Asterion river god of Argos Brito Martis the goddess Brito Martis is always depicted in arms Brizo goddess of sailors Carcinus a giant crab who allied itself with the Hydra against Heracles When it died Hera placed it in the sky as the constellation Cancer Ceto goddess of the dangers of the ocean and of sea monsters Charybdis a sea monster and spirit of whirlpools and the tide Cymopoleia a daughter of Poseidon and goddess of giant storm waves Doris goddess of the sea s bounty and wife of Nereus Dynamene sea nymph and daughter of Nereus associated with the power and might of ocean waves Eidothea prophetic sea nymph and daughter of Proteus Electra an Oceanid consort of Thaumas Enipeus a river god Eurybia goddess of the mastery of the seas Galene Galhnh goddess of calm seas Glaucus the fisherman s sea god Gorgons three monstrous sea spirits Euryale Medusa Stheno The Graeae three ancient sea spirits who personified the white foam of the sea they shared one eye and one tooth between them Hippocampi the horses of the sea The Ichthyocentaurs a pair of centaurine sea gods with the upper bodies of men the lower fore parts of horses ending in the serpentine tails of fish Kymopoleia daughter of Poseidon and goddess of violent sea storms Leucothea a sea goddess who aided sailors in distress Nerites watery consort of Aphrodite and or beloved of Poseidon Nereus the old man of the sea and the god of the sea s rich bounty of fish Nymphs Naiades freshwater nymphs Nereides sea nymphs Oceanides nymphs of freshwater sources Oceanus Titan god of the Earth encircling river Okeanos the font of all the Earth s fresh water Palaemon a young sea god who aided sailors in distress Phorcys god of the hidden dangers of the deep Pontus primeval god of the sea father of the fish and other sea creatures Poseidon Olympian god of the sea and king of the sea gods also god of flood drought earthquakes and horses His Roman equivalent is Neptune Proteus a shape shifting prophetic old sea god and the herdsman of Poseidon s seals Psamathe goddess of sand beaches River gods deities of rivers fathers of Naiads brothers of the Oceanids and as such the sons of Oceanus and Tethys Scylla a sea monster later authors made up a backstory of her being a Nereid transformed into a monster due to Circe s jealousy The Telchines sea spirits native to the island of Rhodes the gods killed them when they turned to evil magic Tethys Titan goddess of the sources fresh water and the mother of the rivers springs streams fountains and clouds Thalassa primordial goddess of the sea Thaumas god of the wonders of the sea and father of the Harpies and the rainbow goddess Iris Thetis leader of the Nereids who presided over the spawning of marine life in the sea mother of Achilles Triteia daughter of Triton and companion of Ares Triton fish tailed son and herald of Poseidon Tritones fish tailed spirits in Poseidon s retinue Aspidochelone colossal sea monster from the medieval bestiary Physiologus Slavic Morana a goddess associated with the winter death and rebirth Death and the afterlife itself are tightly connected to the bodies of water while the effigy of Morana is thrown into a river at the end of winter so it can carry her away Mokosh a mother goddess associated with wetness Rusalka a type of water spirit connected to floods and death Vodyanoy a water spirit often drowning people and collecting their souls Bolotnik a dangerous spirit of muddy waters and swamps Topielec and utopce spirits of people who were killed by Topielec or who died drowning and who now stay in the body of water where they died Zmej or smok a snake or dragon often dangerous and living in or controlling a body of water Illyrian Bindus Illyrian deity equated to PoseidonUralic Finnish Ahti god of the depths and fish Iku Turso a malevolent sea monster Vedenemo a goddess of water Vellamo the wife of Ahti goddess of the sea lakes and storms AmericasCentral America and the Caribbean Lencan Ilangipuca goddess of fertility earth and all bodies of waterMexico Atlaua god of water archers and fishermen Chalchiuhtlicue goddess of water lakes rivers seas streams horizontal waters storms and baptism Opochtli god of fishing and birdcatchers Tlaloc god of water fertility and rain Tlaloque a group of rain water and mountain gods Mayan Kukulcan god of the seas Pech Kaeki Kaska goddess of the lakes rivers and the fishTaino Atabey goddess Mother goddess of fresh water and fertility Female counterpart of the god Yucahu North America Inuit Aipaloovik an evil sea god associated with death and destruction Alignak a lunar deity and god of weather water tides eclipses and earthquakes Arnapkapfaaluk a fearsome sea goddess Idliragijenget god of the ocean Kanajuk the scorpionfish god and husband of the goddesses Nuliajuk and Isarraitaitsoq Nootaikok god who presided over icebergs and glaciers Nuliajuk and Isarraitaitsoq goddesses of the sea s depths and its creatures among the Netsilik Inuit Sedna goddess of the sea and its creatures South America Tupi Guarani Brazilian Myth Boto A deity that is capable of impregnating unmarried women Goddess of the rain and frogs Iara Guardian of the water and of the Amazon River Ipupiara Guardian of the sea Goddess of the storms Tupa God of the thunder weather storms and clouds Incan Amaru a colossal winged dragon like celestial deity that can manipulate all the elements of nature Mama Qucha goddess of water lakes rivers seas streams ponds rain thunderstorms and all sources of water Pariacaca god of water winds and rainstorms Paricia god who sent a flood to kill humans who did not respect him adequately Tunupa god of fire volcanoes the sky and water Panche Muisca Mohan a mischievous entity associated with rivers lakes and water in general See alsoWikimedia Commons has media related to Water deities Ekendriya Holy wells Nadi yoga Nature worship Sea monster Water chakra Water spiritReferences謝婧 下園知弥 宮崎克則 2015 明清時代の中国における鯨資源の利用 PDF 西南学院大 学博物館研究紀要 第3号 Seinan Gakuin University pp 9 14 Retrieved 2016 01 16 African Religion defined A Systematic Study of Ancestor Worship among the Akan African Religion defined A Systematic Study of Ancestor Worship among the Akan African Religion defined A Systematic Study of Ancestor Worship among the Akan African Religion 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