A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Gods, Goddesses, Ghosts, Ghoulies,
Heroes, Villains and Things That Go Bump In The Night
- Sources
K
- Ka. Egyptian name for the vital force of life.
- Kaaba. A shrine of Mecca, said to have been built by Abraham
on the spot where Adam first worshipped after his expulsion from
Paradise. In the north—east corner is a stone seven inches
long, said to be a ruby sent down from heaven. It is now black,
from being kissed so often by sinful man.
- Kabandha. The chief demon of the Ramayana. Indra zapped him
with a thunderbolt. Hindu
- Kabibonokka. Son of Mudjekeewis, and the Indian Boreas, who
dwelt in Wabasso (the North). He paints the autumn leaves scarlet
and yellow, sends the snow, binds the rivers in ice, and drives
away the seagull, cormorant, and heron. North-American
- K'daai Yakut. A fire demon and the father of smiths and iron
workers. Siberia
- K'pop'ala, Protective god Georgia
- Ka Ahu Pahay, Goddess of the ocean Hawaii
- Ka Ata Killa, Goddess of the moon. Had a nice house with a
view of Lake Titicaca. Peru
- Ka Tyeleo Senufo, Creator god Ivory Coast
- Ka'cak Asiatic, Sea spirit and of rather unpleasant habits
Inuit
- Kaang, Supreme god Africa
- Kabandha. A monstrous evil spirit slain by Rama. A son of the
goddess Sriand "covered with hair, vast as a mountain, without
head or neck, having a mouth armed with immense teeth in the
middle of his belly, arms a league long, and one enormous eye in
his breast." India
- Kabeiroi, Cabeiri, mystic
divinities who occur in various parts of the ancient world.
- Kabezya-Mpungu decides to become invisible after creating the
world and the first humans who did not yet have a heart. After
balancing the rain, sun, moon, and darkness, he leaves. To
replace the visible god, he sends the people Mutima ("heart"),
the life-giving or divine part of humans. Bantu
- Kabiri. Deities and very mysterious gods with the ancient
nations, including the Israelites, and were held in the highest
veneration at Thebes, Lemnos, Phrygia, Macedonia, and at
Samothrace.
- Kabirim. Phoenician name for the Kabiri
- Kabrakan. A giant demon that causes earthquakes and makes
mountains disappear Mayan
- Kabta, God of bricks Mesopotamia/Sumeria
- Kabunian, descended from his home in the sky. On earth he
married a virtuous maiden named Bangan. She bore him three
children. The first was Kabigat, a boy, second was Daungen, a
girl. After the birth of the third child, Kabunian had to return
to his home in heaven. As a god, he could not continue living
indefinitely on earth. Philippines
- Kacha, a disciple of Sukra who learnt the mystic power of
restoring the dead to life. Hindu
- Kachina. Ancestor spirits and the souls of virtuous dead
people. Pueblo Indians
- Kadaklan. The supreme being and a sky and thunder god who
created the universe. He has a little doggie called Kimat who can
throw lightning. Tinguians, Philippines
- Kadavul, an ancient Tamil word for God meaning, "He who is
both immanent and transcendent." India
- Kades, Goddess of fertility usually shown sky clad
Canaan
- Kadi, Goddess of justice Assyria
- Kadlu, Thunder spirit[female] Inuit
- Kadru, the mother of a thousand powerful many-headed serpents
and many other fierce and venomous serpents. Hindu
- Kaei. "in the beginning," the "world was all water and in the
firmament above dwelt the great god Kaei. Malaya
- Kagaba, sun goddess, creator and mother of all. Uganda
- Kagaya-hime, he wedded the Refulgent-Princess. Shinto
- Kagutsuchi, God of fire Japan
- Kahdir, Vegetation god of the got his immortality by drinking
from the well of life Africa
- Kahilan. I have spoken. Arabic
- Kahindo, Goddess of fire Zaire
- Kahukura aka Rongo. A major god, the god of cultivated food.
He separated the primordial parents Rangi and Papa to allow
daylight into the world. Tawhirimatea, the god of storms did not
consent to this plan and afterwards attacked his brothers with
unrelenting fury. Rongo and Haumia, the god of wild food, took
refuge in the body of Papa, mother earth, who hid them until the
storm passed. Maori
- Kai-matutsi lived on the earth and below. The word associated
is with 'earth occupation.' Pomo
- These spirits were imagined to live
in sweat houses or dance-houses at each end of the world. At
times, these supernatural beings were malevolent and could kill
men. However if properly treated or placated, they were
benevolent.
- Kai Yum, God of music Mayan
- Kaiamunu, Demon who plays a large part in initiation ceremony
for boys Papua New Guinea
- Kaikara Bunyoro, Harvest goddess Uganda
- Kaitabha and Madhu were two horrible demons who, according to
Mahabharata and the sprang from the ear of Vishnu while he was
asleep. Hindu
- Kaka, Minor god with political pull
Babylon/Mesopotamia/Akkadia
- Kakaku, God of rivers invoked to protect houses against fire
Japan/Shinto
- Kakia, spirit of vice and sister of Arete ("virtue").
Greek
- Kakunupmawa, "the radiance of the child of the winter
solstice." The dawn light of each new day is Kakunupmawa's breath
expressed as a sigh. Bears, rattlesnakes, deer, mountain lions
and ravens were the "pets of Sun. The Chumash, California
- Kakupacat, God of war with a shield of fire Mayan
- Kala. A name of Yama, the judge of the dead. In the
Atharva-Veda Time is addressed as the source and ruler of all
things. Hindu
- Kalacakra, Tutelary god who is personally selected
Buddhist/Tibet/Mahayana
- Kaladuti, Goddess whose name means messenger of death
Buddhist/Mahayana
- Kalahari aka Cagn Mantis, a creator god of the people of the
Kalahari in Africa and in particular Botswana. He is credited
with having made all things (he made the moon from an old shoe),
and is the god of natural phenomena. Omnipresent, he manifests
himself in everything in the world, but especially in the mantis
and caterpillar, which seem to be his favored animals. He has one
wife, Coti, and, with her, two sons, Cogaz and Gewi. At one time,
he lived on earth but he later moved his dwelling to the top of
the sky.
- Kalaka, a daughter of Daksha, married to Kasyapa, and bore
him 60,000 distinguished Danavas, called Paulomas and Kalakanjas,
who were powerful, ferocious, and cruel. Hindu
- Kalavikarnika, Fever goddess Hindu/Puranic
- Kaldas, Goddess of cattle Russia
- Kaleda. The god of peace, somewhat similar to the Latin
Janus. His feast was celebrated on the 24th of December.
Selavonic
- Kali, Goddess of cemeteries, destruction and death who helped
dance the universe into existence Hindu/Puranic/India
- Kali, The Kaliyuga, personified as the spirit of evil. In
playing dice Kali is the ace and so is a personification of ill
luck. Hindu
- Kali, Goddess of learning Jain
- Kali, 'The black.' In Vedic days this name was associated
with Agni (fire), who has seven flickering tongues of flame for
devouring oblations of butter. Of these seven, Kali was the black
or terrific tongue. India
- Kalika, Goddess common often seen standing upon a corpse
Buddhist/Mahayana
- Kali-matutsi. Lived in the sky and heavens above. The word is
associated with 'sky occupation.' Pomo Indians, California
- Kalisia Pygmy, Creator god who is the guardian of hunters and
the jungle forests Congo/Zaire
- Kaliya. A serpent king who had five heads, and dwelt in a
deep pool of the Yamuna, with numerous attendant serpents. His
mouths vomited fire and smoke and he laid waste all the country
round. Hindu
- Kaliyuga The last of the four Hindu periods contained in the
great Yuga, equal to the Iron Age of classic mythology. It
consisted of 432,000 solar—sidereal years, and began 3,102
years before the Christian era. The bull, representing truth and
right, has but one foot in this period, because all the world
delights in wickedness.
- Kalki[n], 'The white horse.' Vishnu's tenth incarnation,
which is yet to come. Hindu
- Kallingenia, Rather obscure goddess of birth found only in
the ritual texts of Athens Greek
- Kalmashapada. A king of the Solar race, son of Sudasa (hence
he is called Saudasa), and a descendant of Ikshwaku. Saktri
turned him into a man-eating goblin. Hindu
- Kalpa. A day and night of Brahmâ, a period of
4,320,000,000 solar—sidereal years. Some say there are an
infinity of Kalpas, others limit the number to thirty. A Great
Kalpa is a life of Brahmâ; the whole duration of time from
the creation to the destruction of the world.
- Kalpa—Tarou. A tree in Indian mythology from which
might be gathered whatever a person desired. This tree is
“the tree of the imagination.”
- Kaltes, Goddess of birth Siberia/Vogul
- Kaltesh Ugric, Goddess concerned with the birth and destiny
of the child Siberia(west)
- Kalunga Ndonga, Creator of all things Africa(south)
- Kalyb. The “Lady of the Woods,” who stole St.
George from his nurse, brought him up as her own child, and
endowed him with gifts. St. George enclosed her in a rock, where
she was torn to pieces by spirits. Britain
- Kamenae, Goddesses unbowed of springs and wells with a shrine
in Rome where of the of vestal virgins got their water Italy
- Kama. The Hindu god of love. His wife is Rati
(voluptuousness), and he is represented as riding on sparrow,
holding in his hand a bow of flowers and five arrows.
- Kamadhenu. The cow which grants desires, belonging to the
sage Vasishtha. She was produced at the churning of the ocean.
Hindu
- Kama-Gami, God of potters Japan/Shinto
- Kamado No Kami, God of kitchen stoves Japan/Shinto
- Kamak, a Swallowing Monster of the Koryak, Kamchatka peninsula.
- Kamaksi, Goddess Dravidian/Tamil
- Kamala, Goddess Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kamennaia Baba. 'The Stone Mothers', the monolithic stone
menhirs in southern Russia. These were possibly of Scythian
origin and engraved with serpent and animal images, hold a horn,
and are flanked by horsemen.
- Kami, God identifier in Shintoism Japan
- Kami-Musubi-No-Kami, Third creator being in the primordial a
list of deities, this being was born alone in the cosmos and its
presence remains hidden from humans Japan/Shinto
- Kama-no-kami, this is the Deity of the Furnace held in
reverence by all people. Shinto
- Kamini, Minor goddess Buddhist/Mahayana
- Kamo-Wake-Ikazuchi, One of the many rain gods
Japan/Shinto
- Kamos Moab, Chief god who when Hellenized became equated with
Ares Jordan
- Kamrusepas. A god of healing. Hittite
- Kamui-fuchi, Lady Hearth. A Hearth Goddess who is also known
as the Supreme Ancestress and the spirit of female reproductivity
and the home. Ainu, Japan
- Kamrusepa[s], Goddess of magic and healing Hittite
- Kamui, Sky god Japan
- Kamulla, Proper guidance in Kassite
- Kan-xib-yui. He re-created the earth after it was destroyed
by the four Bacabs. Mayan
- Kan u Uayeyab, God who guarded cities. Mayan
- Kana. The Divine Source. Early Nazorean
- Kana d-Zidqa aka Habs'aba. Habshaba, the Day of the Sun, and
his bride Kana d Zidqa (the holy feast food offerings). Heavenly
Helpers of earthly Nazoreans during their ascent upward. Habshaba
is said to deliver souls out of purgatory on his special day.
Early Nazorean
- Kanat-Nit'ufta. Kanat is the title of a Ruling Goddess in the
Nazorean Heavens. Nitufta again means "drop" or formed
impregnated seed. Early Nazorean
- Kana-yama-biko-no-kami, the deity of fire. Shinto
- Kana-yama-bime-no-kami. The deity of clay. Shinto
- Kana-Yama-Hime-No-Kami, Goddess of miners with a very sad
birth story Japan/Shinto
- Kanaloa, God of the ocean Hawaii
- Kando. The Ainus consider the heavens to be three in number.
The first in order is called Shi-nish kando, "the greatest
skies;" this is supposed to be the home of the chief of the gods,
i.e. the Creator. The second order of heavens is called Nochiu-o
kando, "the skies which bear the stars;" the second order of gods
is supposed to dwell here. The last or lowest heavens are named
range kando or urara kando, i.e. "the hanging skies" or "the fog
skies;" the lowest orders of gods and some of the demons,
especially the demons of thunder, are supposed to live here.
Japan
- Kanati "The Lucky Hunter." Sometimes called First Man. He
lives with his wife Selu ("Corn") in the east where the sun
rises, and their sons, the Twin Thunder Boys, live in the west.
Cherokee
- Kane, God of fertility and fresh water Hawaii
- Kanfi'il, Kanfiel. A heavenly being. Early Nazorean
- Kanfun. Uthra whose name is in the House of Life. Early
Nazorean
- Kangalogba Pokot, Primordial female spirit personified in the
dragonfly Uganda
- Kanikanihia, Goddess of love Hawaii
- Kanipinikassikueu, the Caribou Master, is a powerful spirit
in traditional Innu an Indegenous people of present day Canada
and Quebec. In the myth, an Innu man goes to live with the
Caribou. He marries one of the does, and becomes transformed
himself into caribou form. He becomes the master of the caribou,
and the provider of caribou for the Innu people.
- Kankar Mata, Mother goddess who became a mother of evil
intent Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kannan. Who measured the Universe in three steps. India
- Kantatman, god of medicine and good health.
Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kanti, Goddess whose name means desire
Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kao Kuo-Jiu, Immortal being, Tutelary god of actors
China/Taoist
- Kapali, God, one of the forms of the Rudra
Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kapo, Goddess of abortions, fertility, childbirth and
midwives Hawaii
- Kappa, Water spirits; their food is blood and cucumbers, they
are mischevious but extremely knowing and prove helpful to humans
Japan
- Kapu mate, mother of graves, presided over cemeteries and
graves. Latvia
- Karai-Shin, God of lightning Buddhist/Japan
- Karalkal Ammaiyar Hindu, Local mother goddess India
- Karei, De goddess of Thunder and storm Andaman Is.
- Kari Semang, Supreme god who lets you know he is mad when it
thunders Malya
- Karini, Fear goddess Buddhist/Mahayana
- Karkotaka. The evil spirit who bit Nala at the request of
Indra, transforming Nala into a twisted and ugly shape.
Hindu
- Karkawan-Ziwa. Being who assists Hauraran and Treasure of
Light. Early Nazorean
- Karmavasita, Minor goddess who personifies the discipline of
spiritual regeneration Buddhist
- Karnmapa, a monster which swallows the population of a village-or, indeed, of the whole country and is subsequently slain by a boy hero. Bantu
- Karora, a creator god. He was born in a lake and, after
fathering many children, he returned there to slumber.
Australia
- Karta, one of a trinity of fate goddesses that included her
sisters Dekla and Laima. All three may have been aspects of
Laima. Latvia
- Karttikeya, the son of Siva or Rudra, and to have been
produced without the intervention of a woman. Siva cast his seed
into fire, and it was afterwards received by the Ganges:
Karttikeya was the result; hence he is called Agnibhu and
Gangaja. Hindu
- Karttiki, Mother goddess Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Karuilers siunes, Deities who were taken over by the Hittites
in as gods of all oaths Syria
- Kasku, God of the moon known from inscriptions
Hittite/Hurrian
- Kaswa. Mahomet's favourite camel, which fell on its knees in
adoration when the prophet delivered the last clause of the Koran
to the assembled multitude at Mecca. This is one of the dumb
creatures admitted into the Moslem paradise.
- Kasyapa. "Having assumed the form of a tortoise, Prajapati
created offspring. That which he created he made; hence the word
kurma (tortoise). Kasyapa means tortoise; hence men say, 'All
creatures are descendants of Kasyapa.' This tortoise is the same
as Aditya." Hindu/Puranic/Vedic
- Katahziwuri
- Katargama, Tutelary gody Tamil/Sri Lanka
- Katavi Ntamwezi, And in a demonic being who is chief of the
water-spirits Tanzania
- Katavul, Ultimate creator all who exists in the world and
able to judge humanity and to reward or punish India/Tamil/Sri
Lanka
- Katayana, Form the goddess Durga or Parvati
Hindu/Puranic
- Kathar, God of architects, artisans and weapons makers
Ugart
- Kathirat, Wise goddesses Canaan
- Katoyalla aka Apu Illapu, a very popular weather god. He was
said to keep the Milky Way in a jug and use it to create rain. He
appeared as a man in shining clothes, carrying a club and stones.
Inca
- Katsinas, Children of Iatiku who could bring rain and food
Acoma
- Kattakju. Goddess of healing. Innuit
- Katyayani, Form of the goddess of Durga or Parvati
Hindu/Puranic
- Kaukas, Spirit being, some type of goblin who brings good
luck who is also bound to the notion of a dragon guarding
treasure Lithuania
- Kauket, Keket. A primordial goddess, one of the eight who
represent chaos. She was a snake-headed woman who ruled over the
darkness with her husband. Egypt
- Kaumauri, Goddess who later became considered a goddess of
evil intent Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kaumudi, Goddess of the light of the moon Hindu
- Kausika. A devotee mentioned in the Mahabharata as having
gone to a hell of torment for having pointed out to robbers a
road by which they pursued and killed some persons who fled from
them. Hindu
- Kaustubha. A celebrated jewel obtained at the churning of the
ocean, and worn by Vishnu or Krishna on his bosom. India
- Kautar. The craftsman god. Canaanite
- Kavra'nna Chukchee, Sun spirit, female type
Siberia(East)
- Kawa No Kami, God of rivers Japan
- Kaya Nu Hima, Goddess of herbs Japan
- Kaza-ge-tsu-wake-no-oshi-wo-no-kami, son of
Youth-of-the-Wind-Breath-the-Great-Male. A deity involved in the
Ritual of the General Purification. Shinto
- Kazyoba Nyamwezi, God of the sun-held to be the creator and
tutelary deity of the tribe Tanzania
- Ke'lets Chukchee, Demon of death Siberia
- Kebechet, Chthonic snake goddess Egypt
- Kebechsenef, Funerary god responsible for at the lower
portion of the body Egypt
- Keca Aba, Goddess of the Sun. Russia
- Kederli. The St. George of Mahometan mythology. He slew a
monstrous dragon to save a damsel exposed to its fury, and,
having drunk of the water of life, rode about the world to aid
those warriors who invoked him.
- Kefa, Goddess of the Great Bear Egypt
- Kehama. A Hindu rajah who obtains and sports with
supernatural powers.
- Kek, Kuk, Keku, the god of the darkness of chaos, the
darkness before time began. Egypt
- Kek t Ken, Goddess of love Egypt
- Keket, Goddess of darkness associated with the the island of
flame Egypt
- Kele De, Very old goddess Ireland
- Kelpie or Kelpy. A spirit of the waters in the form of a
horse. Scottish
- Kematef, Epitaph for Primeval god Amun Egypt
- Kema. The books containing the secrets of the genii, who,
infatuated with love, revealed the marvels of nature to men, and
were banished out of heaven. According to some etymologists, the
word chemistry is derived from this word.
- Kemos Moab, Tutelary god Jordan
- Kemwer, Black Bull, the venerated at Athribis. Egypt
- Kemwer, an epithet of Horus, who was viewed as a hawk.
Egypt
- Kemwer, a description of the Mnevis bull, a manifestation of
the Ka (life-force/power) of the chief god, Atum-Ra. Egypt
- Keneun, Chief of the Thunderbirds an invisible spirit
Iroquois
- Keng Li Ssu, God robbers. China
- Keng Yen cheng, another god of robbers and thieves.
China
- Kenos, God who was sent to earth by the supreme god,
supposedly to bring order into the world. He goofed up and
created humans. Tierra del Fuego
- Ker or Cer, the personified necessity of death. Greek
- Keres. female death-spirits. Greek
- Keret, a son of El and soldier of the Goddess Sapas, but not
very brave. Fought against the Moon God Terah at his father's
behest (eventually), but lost. Bought a costly wife: his son,
Danel, was a prodigy. Phonecian
- Keret'kun, God of the sea. Siberia.
- Keri and Kame Bacairi. Twin brothers who steal the Sun and
the Moon from a vulture then created humanity. Bochica
- Kerridwen. "Kerridwen, Wise Crone Mother, Mother of bone and
stone, Cutter of Ties, join me and watch over my rites this
Samhain night." Celtic
- Kesava, Minor avatar of Visnu Hindu
- Kesi. a demon with and was defeated by Indra. In the Puranas,
a Daitya who took the form of a horse and attacked Krishna, but
was killed that hero's thrusting his arm into his jaws and
rending him asunder. India
- Kesini, Goddess Buddhist
- Ketchimanet, Great Spirit Iowa/Fox
- Ketq Skwaye, Creator Huron
- Ketua Ngbandi, God of fortune invoked at daybreak Zaire
- Keyeme Taulipsang, God and lord of the animals South
America
- Khadau. A pair of wooden sandles once worn by the hindu god
Ram. Bharat placed them symbolically on Ayodhya's throne. Amur,
Siberia
- Khadoma, Goddess of knowledge Tibet
- Khandoba, Form of the god Siva Hindu
- Khasa, Minor goddess who controls the spirits of forests
Hindu/Vedic
- Khasaparna, God Buddhist
- Khem, God of life and growth in nature, vegetation, animals,
fertility Egypt
- Khen-Ma, Goddess who is the controller of the earth's demons
Buddhist/Tibet
- Khen-Pa, God who controls the demons of heaven
Buddhist/Tibet
- Khentimentiu, God who rules the destinies of all of the dead
Egypt
- Khepera, Blue haired scarab god of transformation, water,
creation and warriors Egypt
- Kherty, Chthonic earth god, was around from 2500 BCE
Egypt
- Khesef, Lion god who repels feelings of lust Egypt
- Khio. Goddess of song and green sapphires. Thai
- Khipa, Tutelary deity Hittite/Hurrian
- Khitka. Kidnapping spirit; an aspect of the Rusalka.
Russian
- Khnum, Khnemu, one of the earliest Egyptian gods, originally
the god of the source of the Nile River. Since the annual
flooding of the Nile brought with it silt and clay, and its water
brought life to its surrounds, he was thought to be the creator
of human children, which he made at a potter's wheel, from clay,
and placed in their mothers' wombs. He was later described as
having molded the other gods, and he had the titles Divine Potter
and Lord of created things from himself. Egypt
- Kho. Vietnamese god of fishermen.
- Khodumodurno, Kammapa or Karnmapa, a huge, shapeless thing that swallowed every living creature that came in its way. Bantu
- Khons. God of healing. Egyptian
- Khonsu, aka Chons, Khensu, Khons, Khonsu or Khonshu, is an
ancient lunar deity, from before formal structure was given to a
pantheon. His name reflects the fact that the Moon travels across
the night sky, for it means The Wanderer, and also had the titles
Embracer, Pathfinder, and Defender, as he was thought to watch
over night travelers. Egypt
- Khonuum Pygmies, Chief god Africa
- Khopun, river god. He drowned people in retribution for their
misdeeds. Slavonic
- Khoromozitel, a house spirit in Slavic folklore. They are
masculine, typically small, and sometimes covered in hair all
over. According to some traditions, they take on the appearance
of current or former owners of the house and have a grey beard,
sometimes with tails or little horns.
- Khors, Korsha, Korssa, Chors, Corsa, Xors. A sun or daylight
god, he may be synonymous with Dazhbog and Bielbog. He was
invoked him for hunting and against diseases. Slavic
- Khosaadam Yenisei, Driven out of heaven to become an eater of
souls Siberia
- Khovaki, Creator of the world Siberia
- Khu the brother of the Vietnamese god of fishermen.
- Khusor, God of navigation and incantations Semitic
- Khshathra Vairya 'Desirable Dominion', the angel presiding
over metals. Zoroastrianism
- Khwarenah, the angel presiding over Divine Grace or Fortune.
Zoroastrianism
- Khyung-Gai mGo-Can, Local god Buddhist/Tibet/Bon
- Ki, Chthonic principal, feminine in nature
Mesopotamia/Sumeria
- Kianda, a goddess of the sea. She was traditionally
worshipped by throwing offerings such as food and clothing into
the sea. Angola
- Kianto. The god of foreign aliens, and the disease they
brought with them. Mayan
- Kibuka Buganda, God of war Uganda
- Kichijo Ten, Goddess of good fortune and beauty Japan
- Kiehton. Great spirit and creator. The Algonquin
- Kigatilik, Delightful fanged demon who has no love of priests
Inuit
- Kihe Wahine, Kindly goddess of demons, who from the the
goodness of her heart is also a goddess of lizards Hawaii
- Kihigilan. Thunder-Man. The Supreme Being, propitiated for
purely material reasons, such as the procuring of a food-supply
by hunting land and sea animals, the picking of berries and
roots, and the tending of the reindeer herds. If the Supreme
Being ceases to look upon the earth disorder at once begins.
Koryak
- Kiki. The underlying flow of spirit and creativity that are
inseperable, embracing the cycles of Life and Death and the
freedom of honoring the ancient, wild, inner woman. New Age
- Kikimora. Female house spirit and counterpart of the Domovoi,
to whom she is sometimes wedded. She lives in the cellar or
behind the stove. At night she comes out to spin and help with
the housework in a well-tended home. She is depicted as an
average woman with hair undone, sometimes with chicken feet.
Sometimes she might appear, spinning, as a portend to one about
to die. Slavic
- Kikumbha. A Rakshasa or evil spirit, who fought against Rama.
He was son of Kumbhakarna. India
- Kikumbha. A supreme spirit who could die only by the hands of
Vishnu. He was king of Shatpura and had great magical powers, so
that he could multiply himself into many forms, though he
commonly assumed only three. He carried off the daughters of
Brahmadatta, the friend of Krishna, and that here attacked him
and killed him under different forms more than once, but he was
eventually slain outright by Krishna, and the city of Shatpura
was given to Brahmadatta. India
- Killmoulis, an ugly Brownie, with an enormous nose and no
mouth, who haunts mills. He is characterized by To eat he
presumably stuffs the food up his nose. Although they often help
the miller, they are fond of practical jokes. Celtic
- Kilya, Goddess of marriage Inca
- Kin. A Mayan sun god.
- Kinich Ahau. A solar deity and father of Itzamna. Mayan
- Kinich Kakmo. A solar deity represented by a macaw.
Mayan
- King Wan, God of chance. China
- Kingu, Demon mentioned in the creation epic Akkadia
- Kingu, Husband/son of Tiamat Babylon
- Kini'je, Sky spirit who is in charge of keeping an accounting
of the time. Siberia(East)
- Kinich Ahau, God of war and the sun. Mayan
- Kinich Kakmo, God of the sun and is symbolized by the Macaw.
Mayan
- Kinnar, And musician god Semitic(West)
- Kinnara, Group of spirit beings who it looked like birds with
a human heads India
- Kinorohingan, and his wife Suminundu had a beautiful daughter
Huminodun. The people of Sabah were starving, so Kinoingan
sacrificed Huminodun. Out of her body came rice seeds which grew
bountifully. Malaysia
- Kinyras, Local god of metalworking (thought to have come from
Syria) Cyprus
- Kiri Amma, Goddess of healing, childhood diseases. Sri
Lanka
- Kirmira. A monster, brother of Vaka. He opposed the entrance
of the Pandavas into the Kamyaka forest, and threatened that he
would eat Bhima. A furious combat ensued, in which Bhima and he
hurled large trees at each other, but the demon was at length
strangled and had all his bones broken by Bhima. India
- Kirti, Goddess Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kis, God based in Kusae Egypt
- Kisar, Primordial god/dess
Babylon/Mesopotamia/Akkadia/Sumeria
- Kishi Mojin, Goddess of motherhood Buddhist/Japan
- Kishijoten, Goddess of good luck. Japan
- Kishimo Jin. The reformed mother goddess of the demons who
now works as a child minder. Japan
- Kisin, the god of death and earthquakes. If a person lied,
was a thief, or committed murder or incest, their soul is given
to Kisin, who punishes the spirit by alternate burning or
freezing. Mayan
- Kiskil-lilla. Your spirit is blasphemed and this night demon
will get you. Sumeria
- Kitanitowit, was in charge of the original formation of the
cosmos. Delaware River Basin
- Kitchki, "The Great Spirit", "The Supreme God", "Father,
Creator, universal Big Daddy." I'm sure you get the message.
Manitou
- Kitsune. A foxy ghost. Japan
- Kiya'marak, Supreme being from he remains out of touch, and
distinct and remote as regards ordinary mortals Inuit
- Kiyo Hime, Goddess of justice, opened Her heart to a mortal.
But then she was abandoned by her lover. When She sought him, he
fled from Her. Coward, he hid in a temple bell. She took the form
of a snake and enwrapped him until Her love-turned-to-anger ended
his mortal existence. Japan
- Klaboutermannikin, inhabit the figureheads of ships, giving
them guidance and protection. Dutch
- Klippe. The local name for a fairy. Forfarshire.
Scotland
- Klotho, Clotho or Moirae, Goddess of spinning, one of the three
fates. Hesiod (Theogony
127) has the personification complete for he calls them,
together with the Keres, daughters of
Night; and distinguishes three, viz.
Clotho, or the spinning fate; Lachesis, or the one who assigns to
man his fate and Atropos, or the fate that cannot be avoided.
Greek
- Kn Sgni, Goddess of the Sun. India
- knaritja. The earth and the sky had always existed and had
always been the home of Supernatural Beings. The western Aranda
believe that the sky is inhabited by an emu-footed Great Father
(Knaritja), who is also the Eternal Youth (altjira nditja). He
has dog-footed wives and many sons and daughters. "They lived on
fruits and vegetable foods in an eternally green land, unaffected
by droughts, through which the Milky Way flowed like a broad
river...".' They have an Eden-like place where only trees, fruits
and flowers flourish. All these sky-dwellers are seen as ageless
and beyond death. The Aranda, Australia
- Kneph, was originally the breath of life, his name meaning
soul-breath. Indeed, according to Plutarch and Diodorus, kneph
was identical with the Greek pneuma. Kneph in this context was a
spirit that breathed life into things, giving them form. Egypt
Kneph eventually became considered to be the creator god himself,
in Elephantine, although his identity was finally assimilated
into the more important god Amun.
- Ko Hsien Weng, God of jugglers. China
- Kobold, a German household goblin, also frequenting
mines.
- Kodamata, Goddess of health and healing. India
- Kohkomhthena. Supreme goddess and creatress. The Shawnee
- Kokomikeis, Goddess of the moon mother of the Morning Star
Blackfoot
- Kokopell Mana, Goddess of fertility. Hopi
- Kokopelli, a fertility deity, usually depicted as a
humpbacked flute player (often with a huge phallus and
antenna-like protrusions on his head), who has been venerated by
many Native American cultures in the Southwestern United States.
Like most fertility deities, Kokopelli presides over both
childbirth and agriculture. He is also a trickster god and
represents the spirit of music.
- Kokyan, Creator goddess; she created humans, plants, and
animals Hopi
- Koliada, Koljada, Kolyada. Goddess of time and
personification of the winter solstice. Poland
- Kolias, Goddess of foothills Greek
- Kollapura-Mahalaksmi, Goddess Hindu/Puranic
- Kolpia. Lesser God of wind Phoenicia
- Kombu Bantu, God of creation Africa
- Komodia, Goddess of happiness and amusement Greek
- Kon, God of all the desert. Peru
- Kon, the god of rain and wind that came from the south. He
was a son of Inti and Mama Quilla. Inca
- Kondos, God of cereal crops and the harvest. Finland
- Kongde, Goddess of justice China
- Kongsim, Goddess of healing Korea
- Kono Hana Sakuya, Goddess of spring Japan
- Kono-Hana-Sakuya-Hime-No-Kami, Goddess of mountains
Japan/Shinto
- Koolukoolwani. "It is agreed among the Zoolus, that their
forefathers believed in the existence of an overruling spirit,
whom they called Villenangi [Umvelinqangi] (literally the First
Appearer), and who soon after created another heavenly being of
great power, called Koolukoolwani, [Unkulunkulwana,] who once
visited this earth, in order to publish the news (as they express
it), as also to separate the sexes and colours among mankind.
Duling the period he was below, two messages were sent to him
from Villenangi, the first conveyed by a cameleon, announcing
that men were not to die; the second, by a lizard, with a
contrary decision. The lizard, having outrun the slow-paced
cameleon, arrived first, and delivered his message before the
latter made his apperance." Amazulu, South Africa
- Kongsim. Goddess of healing. Korean
- Korawini. Mother of All Peoples and the goddess of jolly
bonking. Paiute. North America
- Kore or Core, the maiden, a name by which Persephone is often called. Greek
- Kornjunfer, Goddess of grain germanic
- Korobona, Goddess of lakes Caribbean
- Koros, Goddess of extravagant joy and exuberance Greek
- Korraval, Goddess of war India/Dravidian/Tamil/Sri Lanka
- Korrawi, Goddess of battle and victory India/Tamil/Sri
Lanka
- Korred, the good-natured guardians of Brittany's standing
stones.
- Korrigan, Goddess of underground springs French
- Korybantes, Demonic companions of Kybele Asia Minor/
- Koshchei, the Deathless, a powerful wizard or demigod who
kidnapped Marena (Mara, the Russian goddess of death. Koshchie is
the son of Vij, lord of the Underground, and travels on a
war-horse or as a whirlwind. Russia
- Kostroma, benevolent and malevolent fertility goddess; like
the Greeks' Persephone, she is a dying and reborn daughter.
Russian
- Kostromo, Kostrubonko - A
dying-and-ressurecting spring fertility-god. Russian
- Kostrubonko,
God of spring. “...in Little Russia it used to be the
custom at Eastertide to celebrate the funeral of a being called
Kostrubonko, the deity of the spring. A circle was formed of
singers who moved slowly around a girl who lay on the ground as
if dead, and as they went they sang:
‘Dead, dead is our Kostrubonko!
Dead, dead is our dear one!’
until the girl suddenly sprang up, on which the chorus joyfully
exclaimed:
‘Come to life, come to life has our Kostrubonko!
Come to life, come to life has our dear one!’”
Russia
- Kotar, God of blacksmiths Syria
- Kothar, God of blacksmiths and crafts. Canaan
- Kothar-wa-Hasis. Ugaritic god of arts and crafts.
- Kotisri. A goddess of silk cultivation with responsibility of
uprooting thorn bushes Sraddha Hindu.
- Koto-Shiro-Nushi, God of love Japan/Shinto
- Kottavei, Goddess of war India
- Kotys or Cotys, a Thracian divinity,
whose festival, the Cotyttia resembled that of the Phrygian
Cybele, and was celebrated on hills with riotous
proceedings.
- Kou Njami, Goddess of Sun. Siberia
- Kouretes, rustic spirits appointed
by Rhea to guard the infant god Zeus in a cave on Mount Ida.
Greek
- Kovas, God of war Lithuania
- Koyote or Coyote. At the time Coyote danced to make the corn
grow, the story of the Great God Coyote commences. This is where
Coyote first used his power given to him by the gods. At a
Yeibache, yé’i·bicai, the people will dress
up a poor man to look and act like Coyote. First Man told him to
do many things. The other gods had the power, but they did not
have the knowledge. First Man and First Woman were jealous of the
others trying to grow corn and did not give them the knowledge to
grow corn. They sent Coyote to go and make the corn grow. First
Man and First Woman are themselves not to do such things, but
they will have a hand in such things and send Coyote as their
representative. Towards the end of the life of Coyote, he became
almost mad with his power and it was taken from him because of
this. Navaho
- Krak. Legendary founder of Cracow. He rescued the people from
control of a dragon.
- Krasnyi. 'Red' or 'Beautiful'. Russian epithet to a girl and
the sun.
- Kratesis, Goddess of victory Greek
- Kratos, God of strength Greek
- Krishna. 'Black.' This name occurs in the Rigveda, but
without any relation to the great deity of later times. The
earliest mention of Krishna, the son of Devaki, is in the
Chhandogya Upanishad, where he appears as a scholar. Hindu
- Krishna. The modern deity Krishna is the most celebrated hero
of Indian mythology, and the most popular of all the deities. He
is said to be the eighth Avatara or incarnation of Vishnu, or
rather a direct manifestation of Vishnu himself. This hero,
around whom a vast mass of legend and fable has been gathered,
probably lived in the Epic age, when the Hindus had not advanced
far beyond their early settlements in the north-west.
- Krittika, Goddesses of the Pleiades India
- Krodha. The mother "of all sharp-toothed monsters, whether on
the earth, amongst the birds, or in the waters, that were
devourers of flesh." India
- Krodhadevatas, Gods of terror. Buddhist
- Kronos or Cronus, a son of Uranus and Ge, and the
youngest among the Titans. He was
married to Rhea, by whom he became the
father of Hestia, Demeter, Hera,
Hades, Poseidon, and Zeus.
Cheiron is also called a son of
Cronus. At the instigation of his mother, Cronus unmanned his
father for having thrown the Cyclopes, who were likewise his children by
Ge, into Tartarus. Out of the blood
thus shed sprang up the Erinnyes.
Greek
- Krosdari, Goddess, a rather emancipated goddess Hindu
- KRSNA, Incarnation of Vishnu known as the dark one
Hindu/Puranic/Tamil/Epic
- Krsanu. An ineffectual guardian of immortality's plant who
failed to prevent the falcon bringing Soma. India
- Krttika[s], Minor malevolent goddess/es
Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Krtya, Goddess of witchcraft Hindu
- Krukis. Patron god of smiths and domestic animals.
Russia
- Krumine, God of grain. Lithuania
- Krumu mate, mother of shrubs, presided over bushes, shrubs
and saplings. Latvia
- Krun, Akrun. The ruler of one fo the levels of darkness.
Called the "mountain of flesh". Opponent of Hibil Ziwa. Early
Nazorean
- Ksama, In minor goddess Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kshumai Kafir, Beneficent goddess of fertility
Afghanistan
- Ksitigarbha, 'Earth-Womb'. "Name of a Bodhisattva who saves
suffering beings in the hell" he aspires to deliver sentient
beings wandering astray in the five(or six) paths of mundane
existence. Buddhist/Mahayana
- Ktazil Bhira Dakia. The Chosen Pure One (Yawar). Early
Nazorean
- K'uei Hsing. Chinese god of examinations.
- Ku, God of power, war and warriors Hawaii
- Ku Uasa, God of water. Finnish
- Kubai-khotun. 'Great Mother'; she dwells in the 'tree of
life' or under its roots and protects and supports humans and
animals. Her milk is the origin of the Milky Way. She was the
primordial mother-goddess. Anatolian
- Kucumatz, Kukumatz. Supreme god of Quiche people of
Guatemala.
- Kuku-no-chi-no-kami, the Deity of Trees, whose name is Deity
Stem-Elder. Shinto
- Ku'nkunxuliga Ma'maelegae, Tribal god and personification of
the Thunderbird BC Canada
- Ku'urkil Chukchee, Not only god, but a powerful Shannon and
the first man Siberia
- Kuan Ti, God of literature and fortune telling. China
- Kuan Yin, Benign guardian goddess, probably of India origin
China/Taoist
- Kuan-Yin, Merciful One. A Buddhist boddhisattva and Asian
Goddess. China
- Kwannon. Merciful One. A Buddhist
boddhisattva and Asian Goddess. Japan
- Kwanseieun. Merciful One. A Buddhist
boddhisattva and Asian Goddess. Korea
- Kuanja, Goddess of hunting. Angola
- Kuat, God of the sun and war. Brazil
- Kubaba. "gave bread to the fisherman and gave water, she made
him offer the fish to Esagila" Shrines in her honour spread
throughout Mesopotamia. In the Hurrian area she may be identified
with Kebat, or Hepat, one title of the Hurrian Mother Goddess
Hannahannah
- Kubera, a chief of the evil beings or spirits living in the
shades: a sort of Pluto. India
- Kubera, the god of wealth. Yakshas
- Kubjika, Goddess of writing Hindu
- Kubuddhi, Minor goddess whose name means stupid, she ran
around with Gansea Hindu
- Kucumatz, God who created all things from itself
Mayan/Quiche
- Kud, Eembodiment of the evil principle which abounds in the
world. Korea
- Kudia, God of the sky Siberia
- Kuei ku Tzu, God of fortune telling China
- Kuei Shing, God of literature presides in Ursa Major
China
- Kuga. Goddess of fate. Slovenia
- Kujaku Myoo, Gives protection against drought and protects
against all evil in the Shingo sect of Japan. Buddhist
- Kuju, Benevolent sky spirit who supplies with food
Yukaghir
- Kuk, Primeval god, one of a pair, a member of the Ogdoad, who
represent the darkness who reigned prior to the creation of any
heavenly body. Egypt
- Kuklikimoku, God of war. Polynesia
- Kuku-ki-waka-muro-tsunane-no-kami, god who is the protector
of houses, the name denotes the beams, and the ropes with which
the beams were bound together. Japan
- Kuku-Toshi-No-Kami, God responsible for a harvest of full
grown rice, his shrines are often served by Buddhist priests.
Japan
- Kukudhi aka Kukuthi, an undead or vampire which grows
stronger with time until, after thirty years, it reachs a final
stage where he is no longer required to return to its grave and
can live in a home during the day. He then typically travels to
other lands as a merchant. Albanian
- Kukulcan, Wind god who started life as a god of the Toltec
Mayan
- Kukuth, Female demon of sickness. Albania
- Kul. A water spirit who may be malevolent but generally helps
with fishing. As a show of gratitude, it is customary to offer
him some of the fish caughts at the beginning of the season.
Eskimo
- Kuladevi, The family Goddess. Another name for Durga.
Hindu
- Kulcan. The Mayan supreme god. He was also a god of the four
elements, the creator god, god of resurrection and
reincarnation.
- Kulika. One of the eight serpent kings, described as of a
dusky brown colour and having a half-moon on his head. Hindu
- Kulika. According to Buddhist legend, the first notable king
of Shambhala, King Suchandra was the one who requested teaching
from the Buddha that would allow him to practice the dharma
without renouncing his worldy enjoyments and
responsibilities.
- Kulisankusa, Goddess of learning Jain
- Kulisevari, Goddess often shown with a corpse
Buddhist/Mahayana
- Kulla, God of builders and responsible for the creation of
bricks Babylon/Akkadia
- Kulshedra, Female demonic individual in who may be either an
enormous hag with pendulous breasts and/or a dragon like monster
who spits fire Albania
- Kumarbis, Creator/father of the gods Hittite/Hurrian
- Kumari. A name of Skanda, god of war. In the Brahmanas the
term is applied to Agni. Hindu
- Kumbhakarna. A monster who, under the curse of Brahma, slept
for six months at a time and remained awake for only a single
day. Hindu
- Kumokums Modoc, Creator god Oregon
- Kumuda. A Naga or serpent king whose sister, Kumudvati,
married Kusa, son of Rama. Hindu
- Kamu-iku-musu-bi-no-kami, daughter of the
Divine-Life-Producing-Wondrous-Deity. Shinto
- Kun, a mythological bird. China
- Kun Aymara, Snow god and main deity Bolivia
- Kun Lun. The Kunlun mountains are well known in Chinese
mythology and are believed to be Taoist paradise. The first to
visit this paradise was King Mu. He supposedly discovered there
the Jade Palace of Huang-Di, the mythical Yellow Emperor and
originator of Chinese culture, and met Hsi Wang Mu, the 'Spirit
Mother of the West' usually called the 'Queen Mother of the
West', who was the object of an ancient religious cult which
reached its peak in the Han Dynasty, also had her mythical abode
in these mountains.
- Kun tu bzan po, Head of god in the Bon pantheon Tibet
- Kunmanngur, is a serpent from an Aboriginal tale, “The
Flood and the Bird Men”, told by Kianoo Tjeemairee of the
Murinbata tribe. There are many names for the Rainbow Serpent in
Aboriginal mythology, depending on location and language. It is a
powerful symbol of fertility and creation. Australia
- Kun-Rig, God associated associated with the prayer wheel
Buddhist/Tibet
- Kunado-No-Kami, Guardian deity of roads and crossroads
Japan/Shinto
- Kunapipi Alawa, Type of magna mater, rather unpleasant who is
still a part of the rite of passage for males Australia
- Kundalini, Mother goddess responsible for provision of all
food from the soil Aztec
- Kundalini, the energy associated with a spiralling, or
circulating, fire serpent that lies dormant before its journey
through the known chakras, and the hidden Dark Star whose
perihelion passage through the system. Yoga
- Kunitokotatchi, Chief deity. Japan/Shinto
- Kunti. In her maidenhood she showed such respectful devotion
to the sage Durvasas, that he gave her a charm by means of which
she might have a child by any god she pleased to invoke. She
called upon the sun, and by him had a son named Karna, but
without any detriment to her virginity; still, to keep her affair
secret, the child was exposed on the banks of the Yamuna.
India
- Kuntu bXan Po, Head of the pantheon. Tibet/Bon
- Kuo Tzu i, God of happiness. China
- Kupal'nitsa - Russian Mother goddess of the southwest,
consort of Ivan Kupalo. She seems synonymous with Kubai-khotun
and Kupalo/Kupala.
- Kupalo. Russian and Balkan midsummer goddess associated with
water, magic, fertility, trees, flowers, and herbs.
- Kupala, the goddess of herbs, sorcery, sex, and midsummer.
She is also the Water Mother, associated with trees, herbs, and
flowers. Slavic
- Kupalo, Goddess of midsummer. Russia
- Kupole, the spirit of springtime vegetation and flowers. The
Festival of Kupole was associated with Feast of St. John the
Baptist. In this festival, women picked sacral herbs, danced and
sang songs. Kupolines is also known as Rasos. Lithuanian
- Kura-Okami-No-Kami, Rain god who may also cause snow falls
Japan/Shinto
- Kurdalaegon, Kurdaligon. God of blacksmiths who shoes the
hooves of dead men's horses. Caucasus
- Kuretes, the nine dancers who venerate Rhea, who clashed their spears and shields to
drown out the wails of infant Zeus.
Greek
- Kurke, God of grain. Prussia
- Kurma. Avatar of Visnu. In the form of a tortoise he placed
himself at the bottom of the sea of milk, and made his back the
base or pivot of the mountain Mandara. The gods and demons
twisted the great serpent Vasuki round the mountain' and,
dividing into two parties, each took an end of the snake as a
rope, and thus churned the sea until they recovered the desired
objects. Hindu/Puranic/Epic
- Kuru. A prince of the Lunar race, son of Samvarana by Tapati,
a daughter of the sun. Hindu
- Kurukalla, Goddess, usually of terrifying appearance
Buddhist
- Kurukalla, Goddess, one of the Tantric deities Hindu
- Kurukalla, Goddess of riches Tibet
- Kurunta. This god's symbol is the stag. He is associated with
rural areas. Hittite
- Kus, God of herdsmen Babylon/Mesopotamia/Akkadia/Sumeria
- Kus: 'A king of Brahmá's seed who bore
The name of Kus'a reigned of yore.
Just, faithful to his vows, and true,
He held the good in honour due.
His bride, a queen of noble name.
Of old Vidarbha's 1 monarchs came.
Like their own father, children four,
All valiant boys, the lady bore.
In glorious deeds each nerve they strained,
And well their Warrior part sustained. Hindu
- Kusag, Not only is he this patron god of priests, he is the
high priest of the gods. Babylon
- Kushi-Dama-Nigi-Haya-Hi, God of the sun, the apotheosis of
the morning sun Japan/Shinto
- Kushi-Iwa-Mado-no-Mikoto, Guardian god, protects entrance
gates Japan/Shinto
- Kusor the Mariner. Great God of Mariners and Inventors.
Brother of Hasisu, 'son of law', craftsman of the gods. Invented
mechanical devices, the fishing boat and fishing, architecture,
and navigation. Skilled in divination, soothsaying, and the arts
of incantation and magic formulas. Phonecian
- Kusta, Kushta, means Truth, and the Monastery (Sangha) and is
a name of Miryai, the spouse of Mind in Valentinian theology.
Early Nazorean
- Kusuh, God of the moon. Hurrian
- Kutkhu Kamchadal, Male and guardian spirit Siberia(East)
- Kutkinnaku, Spirit who taught mankind to hunt and catch fish
in addition to giving them the fire stick and the shamans drum
Koryak
- Kuvalaswa. A prince of the Solar race, who had 21,000 sons.
Attended by his sons he attacked the great Asura, Dhundhu, who
lived in a sea of sand, and harassed the devotions of the pious
sage Uttanka. They unearthed the demon and slew him. India
- Kuvalayapida. An immense elephant, or a demon in elephantine
form, belonging to Kansa, and employed by him to trample the boys
Krishna and Balarama to death. The attempt failed and the
elephant was killed. Hindu
- Kvasir, the God of Ultimate Wisdom. Norse
- Kwan Yin, Goddess of childbirth, compassion and mercy
China
- Kwanonn. Merciful One. A Buddhist boddhisattva and Asian
Goddess. Japan
- Kwanseieun. Merciful One. A Buddhist
boddhisattva and Asian Goddess. Korea
- Kwoth, is considered to be the spirit in or of the sky. Like
all spirits Kwoth is invisible and omnipresent, but he manifests
himself in a number of forms. Nuer, eastern Sudan
- Kyanwa, Goddess of hunting. Nigeria
- Kybebe. A variation of Kybele
- Kybele, Phrygian mother of the gods; an Asiatic goddess
associated with Rhea
- Kypala Goddess of long life. Slavic
- Kyumbe Zaramo, Creator god of the earth. Tanzania
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