Aegir:
Aegir is the Scandinavian God of the sea. Sacrifices were made to appease him, as Sailors believed that Aegir would drag men and ships down to his undersea
hall. Aegir married Ran, the Goddess of storms, and ruler of the realm of the dead. Aegir was known for great banquets where he entertained the other Scandinavian Gods; it was during one of these banquests that Loki killed him.
Aine na gClair:
Aine na gClair, pronounced aw-ne, is identified with the Goddess Anu in Ireland. Aine na gClair was worshipped on Midsummer's Eve in County Limerick at a hill called Cnoc Aine. The worshippers would carry torches of hay and straw. After invoking her they would return to their field and pastures to wave the torches over the crops and livestock. Aine na gClair is revered among Irish herbalists and healers and is said to be responsible for the body's life force; to
this end, no blood letting was allowed on the Friday,
Saturday and Sunday before Lughnasadh Day.
Angus Mac Og:
Angus Mac Og, (aka Angus Mac Oc, Angus of the Brugh, Oengus of the Bruig) is the Irish God of youth, love and beauty.
Amen-Re:
Amen-Re is an Egyptian fusion of the Gods Amun and Re.
Amun:
Amun, (aka Amon) is the Egyptian creater God of Thebes
and fertility. He is associated with rams and geese.
Anu:
Anu, pronounced an-oo, (aka Anann, Dana, Dana-Ana) is
the Irish Goddess of plenty and is the maiden aspect of the Morrigu. She is the Mother-Earth Goddess and the flowering fertility Goddess.
Anubis:
Anubis is the Egyptian God of embalming. He is associated with the dog or jackal.
Aphrodite:
Aphrodite is the Greek Goddess of Passion and sexual love, and womanly beauty. Said to have been born of sea-foam; her name means "laughter loving".
Apollo:
Apollo is the Roman God of light, intellect, the arts,
healing and prophecy.
Apollon:
Apollon is the Greek God of light, reason, inspiration, prophecy, the arts, healing and oracles. He is identified with the sun, and his Roman counterpart is Apollo.
Arachne:
Arachne is the Greek spider Goddess, who is the weaver of
fate
Ares:
Ares is the Greek God of war. He is also called 'the
shield-piercer' and [the] 'sacker of towns".
Arianrhod:
Arianrhod, pronounced ari-an-rod, is the Mother aspect of the Triple Goddess in Wales. Her palace is Caer Arianrhod (the Aurora Borealis). Arianrhod is the keeper of the circling "Silver Wheel of Stars", which is a symbol of both time and karma. This wheel was also known as the Oar Wheel, a ship which carrried dead warriors to the Moon-land (Emania). Arianrhod was married to Nwtvre ("Sky of Firmament"), but is the mother of Llue Llaw Gyffes and Dylan by her brother
Gwydion. Invoke Arianrhod to promote fertility, Beauty, and knowledge of reincarnation.
Artemis:
Artemis, the Huntress, is the Greek Moon Goddess. She is shown often with a Deer as a companion and carried a bow and a quiver of arrows. She is also the deity of wild places, groves and ponds.
Astarte:
Astarte, (aka Ashtoreth, Ashtaroth, Ashtart, Ishtar)
is the general Greek Fertility Goddess as well as the
Goddess of love, war and the planet Venus. She is usually depicted as being naked, wearing a lapis- lazuli necklace and carrying a spear or a bow. Sometimes she is shown with crescent-Moon horns; and sometimes she is shown walking on a lion skin.
Astrild:
Astrild is a Scandinavian Goddess of love.
Aten:
Aten is the Sun God of Egypt.
Athena:
Athena (aka Athene) is the Greek Goddess of War as well
as the Greek Goddess of Wisdom. She is the daughter of the Greek God Zeus and Metis. Athena is depicted as a strong woman in full armour. Her breast-plate symbolizes earned wisdom, and her helment, the protection of knowledge. Athena is the Greek patron of
craftsmen and the protector of cities.
Atum:
Atum is the Creater God of Heliopolis Egypt, where he was merged with Re. His sacred animal was the Mnevis bull.