Abandinus: A god of whom we know little of, except an inscription reference in Cambridgeshire, England.
Abnob:(Also Abnoba) Goddess of the hunt and a river goddess, specifically in the region of the Black Forest. The English river “Avon” is named or her.
Abarta: “Performer of Feats”. A God of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Abelard & Heloise: God of love, loyalty, and couples. She and Heloise died together and were buried in the same tomb.
Abellio: A god of apple trees. A local deity of the Garonne valley.
Abhean: The harper God of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Accasbel: The God of mead and wine.
Achall: The Goddess of Devotion and Familial Love. When her brother died in battle she grieved so deeply that she also died.
Achtland: Achtland was a Goddess Queen whom no mortal man could sexually satisfy, so she took a giant from the faery realm as her mate. A Goddess of sex and Desire.
Adammair: A God of sex and stamina. The husband of the mistress of the beasts, Flidais.
Addanc: Addanc is part of the Celtic flood myth.
Adna: He was a Bard God in the employment of King Conchobar.
Adsullata: A Continental Celtic river Goddess and Goddess of hot springs from Celtic Gual. She is the origin of the Anglo-Celtic sun Goddess, Sul.
Aeb: The mother of Fionnuala and her three brothers by Llyr or the Irish, Lir. She died birthing her daughter. The four children became the subject of one of the “Four Sorrows” of Irish mythology when they were changed into singing swans by Llyr’s jelous second wife, Aife.
Aeda: He was the dwarvish faerie king who sought after the hand of the giantess, Vivionn, whom he later killed.
Aedh: Son of Ler, sometimes considered the Father of Macha. He is a Lord of fire, and may thus be considered as a male aspect of Brigit.
Aengus: Also known as Aengus MacOg. He was a harpist of the Tuatha De Danann and the son ofthe Daghda and Boand. Associated with birds,”songbirds”. He is considered a God of Beauty, Perfection and Love.
Aericura: A chathonic underworld god.
Aeron: A river Goddess, but one whose name derives from the root for “slaughter”.
Aerte:(Also Aerfen) A Goddess of fate who presided over the outcome of war between several Celtic clans.
Aesun: An Irish God who’s name means, “to be” Aesun is mostly reffered to by the Persians and in Scandinacia.
Aeval:(Also Aebhel) A Goddess and Munster queen who held a midnight court to hear the debate on whether the men of her province were keeping their women sexually satisfied. She deemed that men were both prudish and lazy, and commanded that they bow to the women’s sexual wishes.
Afagddu: The ill-favoured child of Ceridwen, whose name means “Dark” or “Ugly”, for whom the Potion of Knowledge is intended.
Agrona: Goddess of strife and slaughter. The river Aeron in Wales is named after her.
Ai: or Aoi Mac Olloman. The bard and poet God of the Tuatha Dé Danann. Son of Olloman.
Aibell:(Also Aoibhell) A faerie Goddess of munster whose name means “most beautiful”.
Aibheaog: A fire Goddess also known as Tobar Brid.
Aichleach:Also spelled Ailach. He killed Fionn MacCumhal during the Fianna rebellion.
Aife(Also Aoife) A Goddess queen of the Isle of Shadow along with her rival sister Scathach. Aife had a son to Cuchulain who grew up to join his father’s Red Branch Warriors.
Ailill Agach: Also known as Ailill Edge of Battle. He is the father of mythic voyager Mail Duin.
Ailill Dubh-Dedach: A warrior God who like the Greek Achilles, could not be harmed by any weapon, yet the myths allude his only one weakness.
Aimend: A minor Celtic Sun Goddess, who was said to be the daughter of the king of the region known as Corco Liodhe.
Aine: She is a cattle, sun, fire, and tutelary Goddess of Knockany, Munster. She is said to have been the daughter of Ouel, a sage and seer of the Tuatha De Danann.
Ainle: The brother of Naoise and Ardan. One of the little known male Trinities.
Airmid: A daughter of Diancecht, the God of Medicine. This Goddess of the Tuatha De Danann was adept at healing and medicine. She was looked upon as a magician and herbalist of great repute.
Aitherne: He is a bard and God of courage. He stole the infamous three cranes of denial, deceit, and Churlishness from King Midhir.
Alaunus: He’s the Celtic version of Apollo, who was revered in the areas of Mannheim and Salzburg in Germany.
Albiorix: Also known as Teutates. “King of the World”
Alisanos: Also known as Alisaunus. A Gaulish God of stone, specific to the region of the Cite d’Or.
Almha:All that is known is that she was a Goddess of the Tuatha De Danann, and a hill in southern Ireland is named for her.
Amaethon: The god of agriculture, son of the goddess Don. He is directly responsible for the war between the deities of the underworld, led by Arawn, and the Children of Don.
Ambisagrus: Originally from Gual Ambisagrus was a God of rain, wind, hail and fog.
Amergin: A harper God of magick and seer’s.
Amorgin: Another poet God who is boasted for wisdom, wealth, and his quick tongue.
Ancamna: A water goddess.
Ancasta: All is lost of this Goddess who only survives through the insription on a stone in Hampshire.
Andarta: A warrior and fertility Goddess in Celtic France.
Andraste:(Also known as Andrasta, and Adraste). The goddess of war whose name means “the invincible one”.
Angus: or, Angus Mac Oc His name means “son of the young”; A Gaelic Eros known for his physical beauty and golden hair; his kisses become birds.
Angus Og: Or, Aengus Og, Also known as Oenghus. He is the son of Dagda and Boann, Brother of Danu. He is the god of fatal love (a kin to Cupid). Angus’ kisses turn into singing birds, and the music he plays draws all who hear it to his side.
Anind: A God of Immortality. He could not be bound to his grave for he sprung to life each time it was dug.
Anluan: A Connacht warrior who fought against Ulster Red Branch Warriors.
Arannan: A son of Milesius, who climbed to the top of the shipsmast during the invasion of Ireland.
Anu: Also known as Ana, Anann, Don, and Danu. A Goddess of fertility and revered as the mother of the gods.
Arawn: (Welsh Arawen, Arawyn, Arrawn) Lord of Annwn, the underworld and realm of departed spirits.
Arca Dubh: He was a king of the minor Irish kingdom known as Airgialla. He possessed a great shield that none could penetrate. On it’s top sat Babd, the Irish Goddess of war and death in her crow form. He was partially blind, but deemed the greatest seer in Celtic history.
Ard Greimme: His name means “high power”. He was an ancient Sun God and father of the famed warrioress sisters Aife and Scathach.
Arduinna: The Goddess of the Ardennes Forest and of the moon. She seems to be a particular protector of wild boars, and is imaged as riding upon one.
Ardwinna: A woodland Goddess who haunted the forests of Ardennes riding a wild boar.
Arecurius: A Tutelary God of northern Britannia during the Roman occupation.
Arianrhod: One of the descendants of Don. She is associated with Night, using the star Polaris, and her hall is said to be the aurora borealis. She is the Goddess of Caer Arianrid, which is sometimes identified with the Coronea Borealis,”Northern Crown”, which is where the souls of slain heroes go. Her name means “Silver Wheel”.
Arnemetia: A water goddess.
Artaius: A God of sheep and cattle hearders from Celtic Gual.
Artio: A Goddess of Bears, a protector and nurturer of ursine virtues.
Avagdu: Afagddu Son of Cerridwen and Tegid, dubbed the ugliest child in the world while his sister, Creirwy, was most beautiful. Due to a potion brewed by his mother he became what was said to have been the most learned man in the world.
Avalloc: The father of the goddess Modron. His status is unclear, but he is occasionally mentioned as the king of the otherworld or the kingdom of Avalon.
Aveta: Goddess of birth and midwives.
Badb: Called “the Fury” One of the triple Warrior goddesses of the Tuatha De Danann. Badb, having the virgin aspect of the Triple goddess.
Badb Nechtan: she was the water-god whose sacred well was a source of knowledge.
Balor: He is the god of death and the king of the Fomorians, a race of giants who were the enemy of the Tuatha de Dannan.
Banbha: One of the triple Goddesses (with Fotla and Eriu). Who are patronesses of all Ireland. She is the wife of King MacCuill and one of the daughters of Fiachna. Her Name is derived from the same root as “sow”, or “pig”.
Banshee: Any of a class of female spirits with a variable appearance – sometimes as pale, ghostly maidens, sometimes as dark hags. They foretell (but do not cause) death in a particular locale or among a particular family or group by appearance and by a wailing shriek. See also Cyhiraeth.
Beag: A goddess of the Tuatha Dé Danann, associated with a magic well.
Bebhionn: An underworld goddess and a patron of pleasure.
Belatu-Cadros: Also known as Belatucadros. A god of war and of the destruction of enemies. His name means “fair shining one”.
Belenus: Also known as Bel or Belenos. God of light, and referred to as “The Shining One”. He is in charge of the welfare of sheep and cattle. His wife is the goddess Belisama.
Beli: Brother of Bran the Blessed, and reputed to be father of all the Gods in some cycles. The Name is derived from root for “bright”.
Belisama: Goddess of light and fire, the forge, and of crafts. She is the wife of the god Belenus.
Bendigeidfran: The Cymric equivalent of Bran.
Berecyntia: A goddess, which is thought to be the same as the Irish Brigid.
Bile: The god of the underworld, life and death. He is regarded as the ancestor of the Irish. His consort is the Goddess Danu. Bile is the father of Mil.
Blodeuedd: A woman created by Math out of flowers (those of Oak, Broom, and Meadowsweet) to be a wife to Llew Llaw Gyffes.
Boand: Also known as Boann. Goddess of rivers and fertility. Wife of the water God Elcman.
Bodb Dearg:(Also known as Bodb). The Goddess of battle. She prophesied the doom of the Tuatha Dé Danann after the Battle of Mag Tuireadh (Moytura). A tutelary Goddess over southern Connacht and part of Munster.
Bodb the Red: He succeeds his father as king of the Gods.
Borvo: Also known as Bormanus, and Bormo. His name means “To Boil”. The God of hot mineral springs and healing.
Boudicca: A female personification of Victory, especially in a martial sense.
Bran: “The Raven” A master of the Isle of Britain, he is a cauldron God, associated with a cauldron of regeneration which would revive the slain while leaving them voiceless. He is the son of Llyr and Penarddun, and brother of Branwen and Manawydan.
Branwen: The name is simply the feminine form of Bran. She is the sister of Bran.
Bress: Elathan’s son; His name means “beautiful”; God of fertility and agriculture; one of the first kings of the Tuatha De Danaan. married to Brigit of the Tuatha de Dannan.
Brigit: A triple Goddess associated with of the hearth, fire and poetry; and Forge. Best loved of all deities Candlemas is held in her honor. Also associated with motherhood and childbirth. As an individual, she is a daughter of the Daghda.
Brigantia: tutelary goddess of the Brigantes in Yorkshire and the goddess of the rivers Braint and Brent, which were named after her. Brigantia was also a pastoral goddess associated with flocks and cattle.
Bronach: A goddess of cliffs.
Cailleach: She is an ancient goddess, both in worship and in form and is referred to as the “Mother of All” in parts of Scotland. She is a sorceress who created the earth.
Cailleach Beara: A Celtic deity said to turn to stone on Beltane and be reborn on Samhain. She is represented as a hag or a giantess associated with Winter and mountains. She is a Goddess of tutelage to southwest Munster.
Cailleach Bheur: A giantess associated with Winter. She is said to be blue in color, and a peculiarity of hers is that she emerges on Samhain as an ancient hag, gradually ages in reverse, and disappears at Beltane as a young and beautiful maiden.
Cairbre: Divine bard, son of Oghma and Etan. The power of his poetic eloquence raised welts upon the face of Breas, King of the Tuatha de Danaan, resulting in the loss of his throne when he insulted Cairbre.
Camma: The goddess of the hunt.
Camulus: Also known as Camulos Of the invincible sword:. A God of war mentioned by the Romans.
Carlin: A spirit of the harvest, especially associated with Samhain-Eve (All-Hallows Eve) as a protector against evil spirits.
Carman: The Goddess was destructive witch and the goddess of evil magic. whose three equally destructive sons: Dubh, (“darkness”) and Olc (“evil”) Calma, also called Dian (“violence”) ravaged Ireland before they were finally defeated by the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Caswallawn: God of war.
Cenn Cruaich: The Heaven-God.
Cermait: Called the “honey-mouthed” king of the bards and God of eloquence and literature. Sometimes considered an aspect of Oghma.
Cernunnos: “The horned one”. an archaic and powerful deity, widely worshipped as the “lord of wild things”.
Cerridwen:(Also Caridwen, Ceridwen) A cauldron-Goddess associated with the brewing of a potion of Knowledge. She is the mother of the poet Taliesin. Is the cognate to the Irish Brigid.
Cian: A fairly obscure divinity, possibly the son of Dioncecht, and certainly the father of Lugh. He has some associations with swine, and could shape-shift into that form.
Cliodhna:(Also Cliodna) The Goddess of beauty and the otherworld.
Clota: Goddess of the river Clyde.
Cocidius: A God of hunting. The Romans equated him with their Silvanus.
Corb: A God of the Fomorians.
Condatis: A personification of water…
Coventina: A Goddess of water and springs.
Crearwy: The favoured child of Ceridwen, sibling to Afagddu.
Credne: Also known as Creidhne. He was the god of metal working. One of the trio of Smithy-Gods of the Tuatha De Danaan, as were Goibhniu and Luchta.
Creiddylad: The daughter of Llyr.
Cruacha: An obscure figure, maidservant to Etain.
Cúchulain : Doubtlessly the best-known of the early Irish Heroes; ultimately mortal, but of partially divine parentage; his father is Lugh.
Curoi Mac Daire: A Celtic Sun diety; a giant armed with an ax, who brings storms…
Cyhiraeth: A goddess of streams. She later entered folklore as a spectre haunting woodland streams. Her shriek was said to foretell death as the Banshee.
Cymidei Cymeinfoll: A War-Hag, said to give birth every six weeks to a fully armed warrior. Wife to Llasar.
Dagda: Also known as Daghdha and Ollathair (Great Father). He is king of the Tuatha de Dannans and father of many Gods. God of earth; “good God”; he posses a living harp and the “undry,” a cauldron, where everyone find sustenance in proportion to his/her merits.
Damara: A feritility goddess, associated with the month of May.
Damona: Goddess of fertility and healing; her name means “divine cow”. She is the spouse of Borvo.
Danu: Also known by Don, Anu, and Dana. She is the goddess of the Tuatha Dé Danann, (The People of Dana). She was the daughter of the god Dagda (the Good), and had three sons, who had only one son between them, “Ecne”. She is a river Goddess whose name appears across the face of Europe, the tutelary deity of many nations and places. The wife of Bile.
Dewi: The Red Dragon god. The emblem of Wales.
Diancecht: God of medicine. Married to Morrigu; among their children are Etain, who marries Ogma, and Cian, who marries Ethniu, daughter of Balor, the Fomor.
Don: She was the great mother goddess; the Welsh equivalent of the Irish Danu.
Dön: He was the leader of one of the two warring families of gods His children were the powers of light, the other family’s children were the powers of darkness.
Druantia: A forest Goddess, Patroness to coniferous trees, especially Firs. She is said to be the “mother” of the Celtic Tree Calendar.
Dwyn: A god of love.
Dylann: sea god. Son of Arianrhod.
Ecne: An early divinity of wisdom and understanding. He is said to be the grandson of Danu.
Edain: Goddess who is associated with horseback-riding.
Efnisien: Maternal half-brother to Bendigeidfran (Bran) and full brother to Nisien.
Elathan: The beautiful Miltonic Prince of Darkness with golden hair.
Eoch: An important figure associated with a sacred well, and water in general. Also called “the Daghda”, a fertility God. Various names and epithets of his seem to link him to horse-cults, fire, and knowledge. He is the father of many of the others, including Mider, Aengus, Oghma, and Bodb Dearg.
Eochaid: A very early Aspect of the Daghda, A solar deity associated with lightning. Usually spoken of as one-eyed, and often refered to by an epithet of Daghda’s, Deirgderc, redeye, the sun.
Epona: Female associated with sovereignty and rulership. Aspect is as a horse, which are sacred to her.
Ernmas: Maternal divinity, the mother of the Morrigan triplicity and of the Eriu triplicity.
Eriu: She belongs to the Fomorians, is one of the daughters of Fiachna. The triple Goddesses who are patronesses of all Ireland. The other two were Fotla and Banbha. She is also the mother of Bres, king of Ireland.
Esus:(Also known as Hu’Hesu) The dying God. He is usually pictured as a woodcutter.
Etan: Sometimes confused with Etain, above. The daughter of Dioncecht and the wife of Oghma; she is considered a Patroness of craftsmanship and artisans.
Etain: Wife of Mider, the mother of Liban by Eochaid.
Fand: Wife of Manannan. The Name is a cognate with”Venus”.
Faus: A Pyrenean god of beech trees.
Fea: Known as “the ugly”, War Goddess called the hateful. Possibly part of the Triple War Goddess Nemhain.
Fer: Divine harpist, seated and playing in his tree beside or above a waterfall.
Fiachra: A son of Ler.
Finnguala: A daughter of Ler, sister to Aedh, Conn, and Fiachra and, like them, a victim of Aife. She is also known as Nuala, as such regarded in some legends as Queen of Faerie (connected thereby into English mythology as Una).
Flidais: A Celtic Artemis; a huntress figure associated with archery, the sanctity of forests, the wildlife therein, and the chase.
Fotla:(Also known as Fodla). One of the triple goddesses who lent their name to Ireland. The other two were Banbha and Eriu.
Gilfaethwy: The brother of Gwydion. His uncontrolled lust for Goewin encompassed his doom.
Goewin: The footmaiden of Math.
Goibhniu: A God of smithcraft, One of three craft-gods of the Tuatha De Danaan. The other two were Luchta and Creidhne. He is known as the provider of the Fled Goibnenn, a Sacred Feast. He is said to have formulated a draught of immortality; and a potion that enables those who drink it to become invisible.
Gorics: Any of a class of minor chthonic Earth spirits, normally described as “Gnomes”, who indwell within dolmens and other megalthic remains.
Govannon: God of smiths and metalworkers. Those who drink from his sacred cup need no longer fear old age and infirmity.
Grannus: A god of healing, associated with mineral springs. His consort is the fertility goddess Sirona.
Gwenn Teir Bronn: Goddess of motherhood.
Gwydion: The Cymric equivalent of Goibhniu. He was the tutor and mentor of Llew. In the Battle of the Trees (Battle of Cath Godeau) he transformed trees into warriors with whose help the deities of the underworld were defeated.
Gwyn ap Nudd: He is the Lord of the Underworld and master of the wild hunt.
Hafgan: A lord in Annwyn, and a mortal enemy of Arawn, he may only be slain if struck a single killing blow; to strike a mercy-blow to his mortally wounded body would be to revive him again.
Hafren: Another river Goddess, she is the tutulary of the River Severn.
Icaunus: River diety,(also known as Yonne). Spirit of the river Yonne.
Idech: King of Dommu.
Ilbrech: A son of Manannan, he rules over a section of Donegal County.
Ler: A God of the sea. Father of Bran, Fiachra, Aedh, Manannan, and numerous others.
Leucetious: A god of thunder.
Liban: A water-spirit, the daughter of Eochaid, by Etain.
Llasar: Keeper of the Cauldron of Regeneration.
Llasar Llaes Gyfnewid: The husband of Cymidei, and bearer of the Cauldron later taken by Bran.
Llew Llaw Gyffess: The Cymric equivalent of Lugh.
Llyr: The Cymric equivalent of Ler. God of the sea.
Luchta: One of a triple Smithy-Gods, his aspect is that of a wright, a mechanic, and an artificer.
Lugh:(He is also known as Lugh-Lamh-fada, Llew in wales and Lugos in Gual) Son of Cian and Ethniu and father of Chullain. called the “long-handed” or “far-shooter”; Considered the chief Lord of the Pantheon, he is the called son of the Sun. He possesses a magic spear and magic hound; He is the “master of all art,” an accomplished carpenter, smith, warrior, harpist, poet, physician, cup – bearer, and bronze-worker.
Luxovius: A God of the waters of Luxeuil. Consort of Bricta.
Mabon: The Hunter God associated with youthfulness, he is offtimes conflated with Pryderi. His full name is “Mabon Ap Modron”, which simply means “Son of Mother”. Also known as the Son of Light. He was the god of liberation, harmony, music and unity.He has the power to make land flourish or waste away.
Macha: Battle Goddess, daughter of Ernmass She was the High Queen and one of the greatest of the women of the Tuatha de Danaan. She was goddess of war and fertility who could take the shape of a crow. She, along with her Daughters: Badb and Morrigu, formed the Triple goddess known as the Morrigan.
Maeve: A War-Goddess, tutelary divinity of the Sovereignty of Ireland and of Tara, the mystical heart of the island.
Manannan:(Also Manannan Mac Lir) Ler’s son; “God of the headlands”; patron of sailors and merchants.
Manawydan: The God of the sea and fertility. Cymric equivalent to Manannan. Manawydan ap Llyr, son of Llyr and Penarddun and brother of Branwen and half brother of Nisien and Efnisien. Manawydan was a scholar, a magician, and a peaceful man. He married the Goddess Rhiannon, widow of Pwyll of Dyfed and mother of Pryderi.
Maponos: A Celtic God associated with youth.
Math:(Uncle to Llew) Tutelary to Gwynedd in North Wales. He is considered the premier sage of Britain. Old beyond reckoning, most skilled in Magick, and knowledgeable beyond measure.
Mathonwy: Also known as Math ap Mathonwy. God of sorcery. Father to Math.
Matres: A mother goddess. Irish counterpart is Modron
Matrona:(Also called Dea Matrona) The Mother Goddess. The Earth Mother.
Medb: She is the Queen of Connacht, her name means “she who intoxicates”. A goddess of war. Medb wields a weapon herself and the sight of Medb blinds enemies, and she is said to run faster than the fastest horse.
Mider: God of the underworld; His Name derives from the root for “middle”, and implies judgement or negotiation. His abode is Falga, the Isle of Man; Etain (Ogma’s daughter) became his wife.
Mog Ruith: The one-eyed god of the sun who rides through the sky in a shining bronze chariot, or who flies through the sky like a bird.
Morrigu: The Daughter of Macha and one of the triple Warrior goddesses of the Tuatha De Danann. Morrigu (had the Mother aspect of the Tripple Goddess) Who were known of the collectively as the Morrigan.
Morrigan: Was the collective name of the Triple War Goddess. Made up of Macha “the aspect of Mother” and her Two Daughters: Morrigu (sometimes confused with Morrigan) “oddly; the aspect of the Crone”; and Badb, “the virgin aspect” were part of this Triad. They were all bloodthirsty War Goddesses and rode horseback into battle, wielding broadswords and decapitated all in their path.
Nantosuelta: (Also Nantosuetta) She is Goddess of nature. She is the consort to Sucellos, the controller of the other world, as a goddess of the realm of the dead. She is represented with a cottage on her hand. Her attribute is as cornucopia (“horn of plenty”), which refers to her aspect of fertility goddess.
Nechtain: Another water-spirit, He is associated with a sacred Well within which live the Salmon of Knowledge. He is closely associated with the Daghda.
Nehalennia: Primarily associated with protection of travellers over the sea. She is invariably associated with a large dog as a companion.
Nemausus: The god associated with the Springs of Nimes. In later times he became the god of the city of Nimes.
Nemetona: Goddess of sacred groves or shrines (nemeton, “shrine”).
Nemhain: She was the goddess of war and battle. A triple Goddess of the Valkyries, similar to/and often mistaken for the Morrigan exalting in battle frenzy, chaos, and the gore of slaughter. She/they have a particular role of choosing who will be slain in battle; selecting, severing from the body, and guiding to the afterworld the spirits of fallen warriors.
Nemon: known as the venomous; One of the aspects of the triple goddess Nemhain.
Nisien: Maternal half-brother to Bendigeidfran (Bran) and full brother to Efnisien. Well-favoured, he was a natural diplomat of whom it was said that he could make a peace between two embattled armies at the height of their fury.
Noudens: A derivation from Nuada.
Nuada:(Also known as Nuada Arga-lamh (silver hand), Nudd, Lludd, and Lludd Llaw Ereint). Nuada lost his hand in the battle of Moytura and had a metal hand made to replace it. A warrior God, whose best identifying attribute is his silver hand. He was king over the Tuatha De Danann and Husband of Macha… Likened to Zeus; called “he of silver hand”; killed by Fomor, Balor early in history of the Gods.
Nudd: Also known as Lludd or Noden. Another form of Nuada.
Oenghus: Also known as Angus Og, his name means the “ever young”, Lord of Tir-Nan-Og, the Land of Youth, is perhaps one of the most ancient deities in Eire and Alba. He is the son of Daghdha and Boann, Brother of Danu. Angus tricked his father, the Dagda, out of ownership of his home “Brugh-Na-Boyne” (Newgrange) in Ireland, thus taking on the principles of the Dagda’s role as a deity. He is the god of fatal love (a kin to Cupid). Angus’ kisses turn into singing birds, and the music he plays draws all who hear it to his side.
Oghma: also Ogma, A warrior God who is closely connected to knowledge, magick and eloquence. He married Etain, daughter of Diancecht. Also known as (Ogma mac Elathan) the champion God of the Tuatha de Dannan in Cath Maige Tuired. Ogham script, the Celtic variety of runes; is named after him.
Ogmios: The warrior God who is equated with the Roman Hercules and Irish Ogma mac Elathan. He was the god of poetry, charm and incantation.
Pryderi: The son of Pwyll, whom he succeeds in his lands. His Name equates with “care” or “thought”.
Pwyll: Lord of Arberth. Father of Pryderi, Husband of Rhiannon, and trusted associate of Arawn. His Name has the meaning of “sense”.
Rhiannon: Wife of Pwyll, mother of Pryderi. Unjustly accused of destroying her newborn son (Who had been kidnapped by a nameless Fiend), she is compelled to take on the role of a horse, (so is considered a Horse goddess)until her son is returned to her.
Robur: He is the god of oak trees.
Rosmerta: Rosmerta was a Celtic goddess of fertility and wealth, fire, warmth, and abundance. Her name means “great provider. She was a flower queen and hater of marriage, Her attributes are a cornucopia and a stick with two snakes. Rosmerta was the wife of Esus, the Gaulish Hermes.
Sabrina: Celtic river goddess of the river Severn.
Scáthach: She was a female warrior, and the Sister Aife, Goddess queens of the Isle of Shadow; known as “the shadowy one”. She was famous as a teacher of warriors, and many Celtic heroes were initially trained by her.
Segomo: Is a god of war and victory.
Sequanna:(Also called Dea Sequana) Patron Goddess of the River Seine.
Shannon: She was Goddess of the river Shannon.
Sheila-na-gig: A goddess of fertility in mythology. An ugly, troll-like creature. She prominently displays her genitals in an attempt to allay the power of death.
Shoney: A Celtic sea deity recognized in Britain.
Silvanus: A woodland spirit associated with parks, villas, and fields, and at an earlier date associated with the forest beyond the settlements, the wildwood.
Sinann: Patron Goddess of the River Shannon.
Sirona: Another patron goddess of healing.
Smertrios: Is a God of war who was worshipped by the Gaulish Treveri peoples.
Sucellos: Is the controller of the other world. The name means, “the good striker”. Same as the Welsh/Irish Arawn. God of agriculture and forests and a hammer god. His consort is Nantosvelta.
Sul: A Celtic goddess of hot springs, especially at Bath.
Tailltiu: Tutelary Goddess of the Telltown region of Ulster. She is also worshipped as an earth-goddess. She was the nurse of Lugh. She raised him until he is able to carry arms.
Taliesin: A semi-mythical figure whose life has become deeply intertwined with the Divinities of the Celts. A book of his work exists, set down in the 13th century; several of the works within it are regarded as genuine. He figures in many tales, but chief among them is the story that he began as the boy Gwion, was asked by the Cauldron-Crone Ceridwen to watch the vessel in which she brewed a Knowledge potion, inadvertently tasted it himself, was pursued by her in a chase involving many shape-shifts, and was at length swallowed by Her, to be reborn nine months later as the Divine bard Taliesin.
Tamesis: A goddess of fresh waters. Her name survives in the English River Thames.
Taran: A Jovian figure whose name means “Thunder”. He is also known as Taranis in the Gaulish pantheon.
Taranis: God whose name means “Thunderer”. Taranis is the god of the wheel, associated with forces of change.
Teutates: He is the god of fertility, war, and wealth. His name means “the god of the tribe”. Human sacrifices were supposedly made to him.
Tuireann: Husband to Brigit (Brigid).
Uathach: Daughter of Scathach and, like Her, a lover of CuChulainn.
Vivionn: She was the giantess sought after by the dwarfish faerie king Aeda whom he killed after she rejected him.