*Caacrinolaas (Unk) - Wierius' demon of knowledge of liberal arts. Appears as a Griffon. Also Grand President of Hell. Also Caasimolar or Glasya.
*Cabaguil - One of the seven Maya gods who assisted in the creation of the world and of mortals. Referred to as Heart of the Sky.
*Cabari - Greek fertility deities. Their origin can be traced back to Asia Minor, and they were proberbly imported in Greece in the Hellenistic and Roman era. There is some mysterious cult connected to them and the god of fire Hephaestus. There were sanctuaries on the islands of Lemnos, Imbros and especially Samothrace, where traces of those mysteries can still be fount. Some sources mention that originally there were only two of them, but that the number varied over the sebsequent centuries. The male deities were Axiocersus, Cadmilus (his son), and the female deities Axierus and Axiocersa. Later, they became protectors against misfortune and dangers.
*Cabiri - Originally, the Cabiri were Phrygian chthonic and fertility deities, and protectors of sailors, who were imported into Greece. They are mysterious demons whose mystery cults were connected to that of Hephaestus. In Classical times they numbered two, although their numbers seem to have varied over time. Two gods included were Axiocersus and his son Cadmilus. Also mentioned is a female pair, namely Axierus and Axiocersa. Their role, however, was of secondary importance.
*Caca - The Roman goddess of the hearth and the sister of the fire-breathing giant Cacus.
*Cacoch - A Mayan creator god.
*Cacus - Originally a pre-Roman god of fire, who gradually became a fire-breathing demon.
*Cailleach - Cailleach is referred to as the "Mother of All" in parts of Scotland. Also known as Scotia, she is depicted as an old hag with the teeth of a wild bear and boar's tusks. She is believed to be a great sorceress. One superstition regarding Calliach is that the farmer who is last to harvest his grain would be the person to "look after" Caileach for the rest of the year, until the next harvest. The first farmer who finishes harvesting would make a corn-dolly from the grain he has harvested. He would, then, pass it on to the next farmer who finishes. It would keep going until the corn-dolly ends up with the last farmer. That last farmer would be obligated to watch the "old woman". She is also known to have created the earth.
*Cai-shen - The Chinese god of prosperity, both of religious Taoism and in the syncretist folk religion. He has various magical powers, such as warding off thunder and lightning, and ensuring profit from commercial transactions.
*Calliope - The eldest and most distinguished of the nine Muses. She is the Muse of eloquence and epic or heroic poetry. Calliope ("beautiful voice") is the mother of Orpheus and Linus with Apollo. She was the arbitress in the argument over Adonis between Persephone and Aphrodite. Her emblems are a stylus and wax tablets.
*Callisto - Greek moon goddess.
*Camalus - "Of the Invisible Sword", "Heaven". Celtic god of war and sky. Similar to Mars, only more vicious.
*Camaxtli - The Aztec god of war, hunting, and fate, and creator of fire. He is one of the four gods who created the world. He is also a Chichimec tribal god.
*Camazotz - The Mayan bat-god who was ultimately defeated in the legendary struggles between the early gods and peoples.
*Cambions (Unk) - Offspring of Incubi and Succubi.
*Camenae - The Camenae were originally ancient Roman goddesses of wells and springs. Later they were identified with the Greek Muses. In Rome, they were worshipped in a sacred forest at the Porta Capena.
*Camma - The goddess of the hunt among the Britons.
*Candelifera - The Roman goddess of birth. She is identified with Carmenta and the goddess Lucina.
*Carman - The Irish goddess whose three sons Calma, Dubh, and Olc ravaged Ireland before they were finally defeated by the Tuatha Dé Danann.
*Caprakan - The Mayan god of earthquakes and mountains. Son of the giant Gukup Cakix and Chimalmat. His brother is Zipcna.
*Cardea - The goddess of thresholds and especially door-pivots (cardo "door-pivot"). Just as Carna she is also a goddess of health. Cardea is the protectress of little children against the attacks of vampire-witches. She obtained the office from Janus in exchange for her personal favors.
*Carmen - Italian goddess of spellcasting and enchantments.
*Carmenta - Carmenta is the Roman goddess of childbirth and prophecy, one of the Camenae. Her temple (where it was forbidden to wear leather), was in Rome, next to the Porta Carmentalis. Her festival, the Carmentalia, took place on 11 and 15 January, and was mostly celebrated by women. She is the mother of Euander.
*Carna - The Roman goddess associated with the bodily organs, particularly the heart. Carna's festival was observed on June 1.
*Cassiel, Caspiel (Unk) - Ruler of Saturn.
*Caswallawn - A Celtic war god of Britain.
*Caym, Caim (Unk) - Grand President of Hell. One of the 72 Spirits of Solomon.
*Cauac - One of the four Bacabs. Cauac is associated with the south. His color is red.
*Cautha - The Etruscan sun god, also known as Cath. He is generally depicted as rising from the ocean.
*Cel - Italian god of death and the underworld.
*Centeotl - The Aztec maize god, who appears to have been a maize goddess at an earlier time. He was a son of Tlazolteotl and sometimes mentioned as the husband of Xochiquetzal.
*Centzonuitznaua - The Aztec gods of the southern stars, rebel brothers of the sun-god Huitzilopochtli.
*Ceres - Roman Goddess of agriculture and fertility. See also Demeter.
*Cerklicing - The Latvian god of fields and corn.
*Cernunnos- ("the horned one") is a Celtic god of fertility, wealth, and the underworld. His cult was spread all over Gaul, and was later imported into Britain. He is depicted with the antlers of a stag, accompanied by a snake with a ram's head or a ram, sometimes also carrying a purse which spills coins or grain.
*Cerridwen - Celtic (Welsh) Moon, Grain and Nature Goddess. Cerridwen's symbol is a white sow. Patron of the poets, greatest of all the bards.
*Cerunnos - Celtic god of fertility, life, animals, wealth, and the underworld. The Horned God is born at the winter solstice, marries the Goddess at Beltane, and dies at the summer solstice. He alternates with the Goddess of the moon in ruling over life and death, continuing the cycle of death, rebirth and reincarnation. Symbolizes element of earthk, love, fertility, and luck.
*Ch'ang O - Queen of the Moon. Chinese moon goddess who had her palace of Great Cold on the moon.
*Ch'eng-Huang - Chinese god of walls and ditches. Each village had their own Ch'eng-Huang.
*Chac - Aztec and Mayan rain and vegetation god. Also the lord of thunder, lightening, wind, and fertility.
*Chac Uayab Xoc - The Mayan fish god. He was regarded as the one who provided fish for the fisherman, but he also devoured drowned fisherman.
*Chaitanya - A Hindu beggar god.
*Chalchiuhtlatonal - An Aztec god of water.
*Chalchiuhtlicue - In Aztec mythology, Chalchiuhtlicue is the goddess of running and fertility water. She is the consort of Tlaloc, the god of the sky. He was drven away by Quetzalcoatl and was replaced by Chalchiuhtlicue. She was so furious that she created violent floods, and only those who were turned into fish. She is also a vegetation goddess associated with maize. She was depicted bearing a rattle on a stick and dressed in clothing decorated with water lilies.
*Chalchiutotolin - The Aztec god of pestilence.
*Chalmecacihuilt - An Aztec goddess of the underworld.
*Chalmecatl - An Aztec god of the underworld.
*Chama - Hindu god of young love.
*Chamer - The Mayan god of death, who was especially worshipped in eastern Guatemala. His consort is Ixtab.
*Chamunda - A Hindu goddess: a form of Durgha. The name Chamunda is apparently derived from the names of the two demons Chanda and Munda, whom she is said to have killed.
*Chanda - A Hindu demoness: a form of Durgha and one of the nine navadurgas. Chanda was killed by Chamunda.
*Chandanayika - A Hindu goddess. A form of Durgha and one of the nine navadurgas.
*Chandarupa - A Hindu goddess. A form of Durgha and one of the nine navadurgas.
*Chandavati - A Hindu goddess. A form of Durgha and one of the nine navadurgas.
*Chandesvara - A Hindu god; a benevolent aspect of Shiva, whom he serves.
*Chandika - Hindu goddess of desire.
*Chandogra - A Hindu goddess. A form of Durgha and one of the nine navadurgas.
*Chandra - the original Indian god of the moon who was later merged with Soma. He was white in color, and drove the moon chariot across the sky with ten white horses. He was also a fertility god, for the dew which fell on the plants overnight and gave them life was seen as coming from the moon. Chandra was also prayed to when a couple wanted to have a child. He is sometimes called the father of Budha and Tara is named as one of his consorts.
*Chandrasekhara - A Hindu god: a form of Shiva.
*Chantico - Aztec goddess of fire, home and fertility. She symbolized pleasure and pain together. Her symbols were a red serpent and cactus spikes. She ruled wealth and precious stones of the earth. Invoke for fire elements, fertility, domestic matters.
*Chaob - The four Mayan wind gods, each associated with one of the cardinal directions.
*Charon - Boatman of hell. Ferries souls across styx and/or archeron. In Greek mythology, is the ferryman of the dead. The souls of the deceased are brought to him by Hermes, and Charon ferries them across the river Acheron. He only accepts the dead which are buried or burned with the proper rites, and if they pay him an obolus (coin) for their passage. For that reason a corpse had always an obolus placed under the tongue. Those who cannot afford the passage, or are not admitted by Charon, are doomed to wander on the banks of the Styx for a hundred years. Living persons who wish to go to the underworld need a golden bough obtained from the Cumaean Sibyl. Charon is the son of Erebus and Nyx. He is depicted as an sulky old man, or as a winged demon carrying a double hammer. He is similar to the Etruscan (Charun).
*Charontes - Etruscan demons of death. The name suggests a connection to the Greek Charon and his Etruscan equivalent Charun.
*Charun - The Etruscan demon of death who torments the souls of the deceased in the underworld. He also guards the entrance to the underworld. He is similar to the Greek Charon. Charun is portrayed with the nose of a vulture, pointed ears and is usually winged. His attribute is the hammer, with which he finished off his victims.
*Chaturmurti - Hindu god: a form of Vishnu.
*Chax (Unk) - Grand duke of hell. Also Scox.
*Chaya - "Shadow". A Hindu goddess; a reflection of the goddess Sanjna. She was the consort of Surya and the mother of Sani.
*Chemosh (Moabite) - devil.
*Cheng-huang - Chinese protective deities. They ward off disasters and catastrophes and protect the inhabitants of cities under their care, who may also supplicate them. In periods of drought, they provide rain. They grant plentiful harvest and ensure the affluence of the citizens. The Cheng-huang also guide the souls of the departed to Heaven. A Taoist priest who wishes to help the soul of a dead person out of Hell, must first inform the protective deity of the city by submitting a document.
*Chensit - The Egyptian goddess of the twentieth none of Lower Egypt.
*Chentamentet - A local god from Abydus, later identified with Osiris.
*Chenti-cheti - An Egyptian falcon-god, but originally a crocodile god.
*Chenti-irti - An Egyptian falcon god of law and order. He is identified with Horus.
*Cherti - Egyptian ram-god of the underworld and ferryman of the dead. In the Pyramid Texts Cherti was said to be a threat to the pharaoh, who had to be defended by Re himself. However, as an earth-god Cherti also acts as a guardian of the pharaoh's tomb. The main center of Cherti's cult was at Letopolis, north-west of Memphis. He was depicted as a man with the head of a ram, or as a ram. His name means "Lower One".
*Chibirias - A Mayan earth goddess.
*Chiccan - A group of four Mayan rain gods, associated with the four cardinal directions. They create rain clouds from the deep lakes in which they reside.
*Chicomecoatl - "Seven snakes". The Aztec goddess of maize during the Middle Culture period. She is sometimes called "goddess of nourishment". Every September a young girl representing Chicomecoatl was sacrificed. The priests decapitated the girl, collected her blood and poured it over a figurine of the goddess. The corpse was then flayed and the skin was worn by a priest. She is regarded as the female counterpart of the maize god Cinteotl, their symbol being an ear of corn. She is occasionally called Xilonen.
*Chicomexochtli - The Aztec god of painters.
*Chiconahui - The Aztec hearth-goddess, and guardian of the household.
*Chiconahuiehecatl - An Aztec creator god of minor importance.
*Chihuacoatl - An Aztec earth and mother-goddess, patroness of birth and of women who died while giving birth. She assisted Quetzalcoatl in the creation of the first humans of this era, which are made from the ground bones of the people of the previous era mixed with the blood of the old gods who committed self-sacrifice so that the new era could begin. Mixcoatl is her son. Cihuacoatl, which means 'snake-woman', is usually portrayed holding a child in her arms. Cihuacoatl's roaring signalled war. The center of her cult was at Colhuacan (at the Texcoco Lake in Mexico).
*Chimati no Kami - Japanese god of crossroads and footpaths; the positive creative force of life. A phallic deity.
*Chinnamastaka - A Hindu goddess of terrifying aspect. She is portrayed holding her head in one hand. She is a form of the goddess Durgha, and one of the ten mahavidyas.
*Chirakan - The Maya goddess who was brought to the world when four of the gods who created the world split themselves up and became four additional beings.
*Chiron - Originally, Chiron was a Thessalian god of healing, but in later Greek mythology he survived as one of the centaurs. Unlike the others of his race, Chiron was wise and had an extensive knowledge of the healing arts. He had been the tutor of, among others, Asclepius, Theseus, and Achilles. When he was accidentally hit by a poisonous arrow shot by Heracles, Chiron relinquished his immortality (in favor of Prometheus) in order to escape the pain by dying. After his death he became the constellation of Sagittarius. Chiron is regarded as a son of Cronus and Philyra.
*Chitra - A Hindu goddess of misfortune.
*Chitragupta - Hindu recorder of the actions of men, a judge who decided whether men would go to heaven or hell.
*Chloris - The Greek goddess of flowers, and the personification of spring. She is the spouse of Zephyrus. Her Roman equivalent is Flora. Chloris is also the name of a daughter of Niobe. She was the only child that was saved when Apollo and Artemis took their vengeance on Niobes children.
*Chnubis - A Roman syncretic god with Greek and Egyptian associations, portrayed as a snake with a lion's head.
*Chnum - The Egyptian ram god who makes the Nile delta fertile and suitable for agriculture. He is considered the creator of humans, because he makes children from clay and places them in the wombs of the mothers. He is usually depicted as ram or a man with the head of a ram. He was worshipped on Elephantine Island, together with the goddesses Anuket and Satis. He was also worshipped in Esna, (ancient Latopolis, south of Luxor) with his wife, the lion goddess Menhit, and their son Hike (the god of magic). In Esna, a temple dedicated to Chnum can still be found.
*Chons - Egyptian god of the moon. The best-known story about him tells of him playing the ancient game senet ("passage"). against Thoth, and wagering a portion of his light. Thoth won, and because of losing some of his light, Khons cannot show his whole glory for the entire month, but must wax and wane.
*Chontamenti - The Egyptian god of the dead and of the land of the west. He was portrayed as a dog, or as dog's head, with horns.
*Chronos - In the ancient Greek literature, Chronos is the personification of time. He is usually portrayed as an wise, old man with a long, gray beard (Father Time). Chronos is often mistaken for the Titan Cronus.
*Chuang-Mu - Chinese goddess of the bed and sexual delights.
*Chu Jung - Chinese god of fire executions. Emodies justice, revenge, death, and the element of fire.
*Cimeries (African) - devil.
*Cinteotl -Aztec god of corn, also had female forms. Took over the place of Chicomecoatl. Was always protected by water gods.
*Cinxia - The Roman goddess of marriage.
*Cit-Bolon-Tum - A Mayan god of medicine.
*Cit Chac Co - Mayan war god.
*Citlalatonac - An Aztec creator god. With his consort Citlalicue he created the stars.
*Citlalicue - "Star Garment". An Aztec creator goddess. She is the consort of Citlalatonac, and together they created the stars.
*Ciucoatl - An Aztec goddess of the earth.
*Cizin - A Mayan (Yacatec) god of death. He burns the souls of the dead in the Yucatec underworld Metnal.
*Clauneck - Demon over treasures and riches.
*Clementia - The Roman goddess of mercy and clemency.
*Clio - The Muse of historical and heroic poetry. With Pierus, the king of Macedonia, she is the mother of Hyacinth. She was credited for introducing the Phoenician alphabet into Greece. Her attribute is usually a parchment scroll or a set of tablets.
*Cliodhna - The Irish goddess of beauty. She later became a fairy queen in the area of Carraig Cliodhna in County Cork.
*Clisthert (Unk) - a demon who can change day to night and night to day.
*Clitunno - A Roman river deity.
*Cloacina - The goddess who presides of the system of sewers (from the Latin cloaca, "sewer") which drained the refuse of the city of Rome. The main sewer was called Cloaca Maxima.
*Clota - The Celtic goddess of the river Clyde.
*Clotho - a goddess from Greek mythology, is the youngest of the three Fates, but one of the oldest goddesses in Greek mythology. She is a daughter of Zeus and Themis. Each fate has a certain job, whether it be measuring thread, spinning it on a spinning wheel, or cutting the thread at the right length. Clotho is the spinner, and she spins the thread of human life with her distaff. The length of the string will determine how long a certain person’s life will be. She is also known to be the daughter of Night, to indicate the darkness and obscurity of human destiny. No one knows for sure how much power Clotho and her sisters have, however, they often disobey the ruler, Zeus, and other gods. For some reason, the gods seem to obey them, whether because the fates do possess greater power, or as some sources suggest, their existence is part of the order of the Universe, and this the gods cannot disturb.
*Coatlicue - Aztec mother goddess, a giver of life. She was positive and negative and therefore had the ability to bless or punish. Often shown as a woman with claws and a skirt of snakes. Symbolizes the moon.
*Cochimetl - The Aztec god of merchants and commerce.
*Cocidius - A hunting deity of Celtic North Britain. The Romans equated him with their Silvanus.
*Coelus - "Sky". The Roman personified god of the heavens who is identified with the Greek Uranus. His wife is Terra.
*Colel Cab - A Mayan earth goddess.
*Colop U Uichkin - A Mayan sky god.
*Colopatiron - Of the 9th hour of the Nuctemeron, genius. Sets prisons open.
*Comus - Italian god of revelry, drinking, and feasting.
*Concordia - Roman goddess of peace and harmony. The opposite of Discordia, the Roman goddess of strife.
*Condatis - The River god of Celtic Britain.
*Conditor - The Roman god of harvesting the crops.
*Consentes Dii - The twelve major gods of the Roman pantheon, identified by the Roman with the Greek Olympians. Six male and six female gods and goddesses. The are: Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Apollo and Diana, Mars and Venus, Vulcan and Vesta, and Mercury and Ceres. Their statues could be found in the hall of the Consentes Dii at the Forum Romanum.
*Consus - The Roman god who presides over the storing of grain. Since the grain was stored in holes underneath the earth, Consus' altar was also placed beneath the earth (near the Circus Maximus). It was uncovered only during the Consualia, his festival on August 21 and December 15. One of the main events during this festival was a mule race (the mule was his sacred animal). Also on this day, farm and dray horses were not permitted to work and attended the festivities. He is closely connected with the fertility goddess Ops (Ops Consiva). Later he was also regarded as god of secret counsels
*Convector - The Roman god of bringing in the crops.
*Copia - The Roman goddess of wealth and plenty, who carried a cornucopia ("horn of plenty"). She belongs to the retinue of Fortuna.
*Copia - Italian goddess of wealth plenty.
*Corb - An Irish (Celtic) god; one of the Fomorians.
*Corus - The Roman god representing the north/north-west wind.
*Corvus - Italian messenger god.
*Cottyto - The Thracian goddess of immodesty and debauchery, worshipped at Athens with licentious rites. Her priests were called Baptes, from the Greek verb bapto, to wash, because of the so-called ceremonies of purification connected with her rites. However, their midnight orgies were so obscene that they disgusted even the goddess herself.
*Coventina - The Celtic (Britain) goddess of water and springs. She was known locally in the area of Carrawburgh (Roman Brocolitia) along Hadrian's Wall.
*Coyolxuahqi - "Golden Bells". Aztec moon goddess. Symbolizes element of fire, the moon.
*Coyote - The Coyote mythlore is one of the most popular among the Native American. Coyote is a ubiquitous being and can be categorized in many types. In creation myths, Coyote appears as the Creator himself; but he may at the same time be the messenger, the culture hero, the trickster, the fool. He has also the ability of the transformer: in some stories he is a handsome young man; in others he is an animal; yet others present him as just a power, a sacred one.
*Cresil (Unk) - Demon of impurity and slovenliness. Also Gressil.
*Crinisus - One of the many Greek river gods.
*Crius - one of the Greek Titans. The Titans were the principal gods of early Greek mythology. Crius and his siblings were the children of Uranus (Sky) and Gaia (Earth). He had five brothers; Coeus, Cronus, Hyperion, Lapetus, Oceanus; and six sisters; Mnemosyne, Phoebe, Rhea, Tethys, Theia, and Themis. The Titans were best known for their war against the Olympian gods.
*Cronus / Saturn - In Greek myth, Cronus is the youngest of the twelve Titans, son of Uranus and Gaia. / The Roman god of agriculture concerned with the sowing of the seeds. He is regarded as the father of Jupiter, Ceres, Juno and many others. His wife is the goddess Ops. Jupiter supposedly chased him away and he was taken in by the god Janus in Latium where he introduced agriculture and viniculture. This event heralded a period of peace, happiness and prosperity, the Golden Age. Saturn himself was never very popular. From the 3rd century on, he was identified with the Greek Cronus, and his cult became only marginally more popular. That he ruled over the Golden Age is an extension to the Greek myth. Saturday is named after him.
*Cuba - The Roman goddess who protects the infants in their cribs and sends them to sleep.
*Culsu - The Etruscan demoness who guards the entrance to the underworld. Her attributes are a torch and scissors.
*Cum Hau - A Mayan god of death.
*Cunali - One of the demons of the 8th hour of the Nuctemeron.
*Cunina - A Roman goddess of infants.
*Cupid - The Roman god of love. See also Eros.
*Curetes - Originally, the Curetes were vegetation demons who lived on Crete in the pre-Grecian time.
*Curoi mac Daire - A Celtic sun-deity, believed to be a storm-bringing giant, armed with an ax.
*Cybele - Greek Great Mother of the Gods. She is the leading deity of the Greek mystery religions. Symbolizes the element air and fertility.
*Cyhiraeth - The Celtic goddess of streams. She later entered folklore as a spectre haunting woodland streams. Her shriek was said to foretell death
*Cytherea - Another name for the Greek love goddess Aphrodite. See also Aphrodite.