About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia or other free sources online. Pages: 35. Chapters: Agricultural deities, Arts deities, Beauty deities, Celtic deities, Death deities, Earthquake deities, Earth deities, Egyptian deities, Etruscan Deities, Fertility deities, Fertility goddesses, Fire deities, Gateway deities, Goddesses, Gods, Greek deities, Harvest deities, Health deities, Hearth deities, Horse deities, Hunting deities, Joy deities, Love deities, Lunar deities, Marriage deities, Messenger deities, Music deities, Nature deities, Norse deities, Peace deities, Poetry deities, Roman deities, Sea and river deities, Sex deities, Shinto deities, Sky deities, Smithing deities, Solar deities, Thunder deities, Trickster deities, War deities, Wine deities, Wisdom deities, Ceres, Brigid, Aphrodite, Balder, Hel, Brigid, Cernunnos, Horned God, Viracocha, Gaia, Anubis, Aten, Isis, Tages, Artemis, Frigg, Brigid, A Irmandade de Odin, Lofn, A Irmandade de Odin, Artemis, Brigid, Artemis, Odin, Balder, Aphrodite, Artemis, Gaia, Pan, AEsir, Balder, Odin, Endovelicus, Pan, Brigid, Amaterasu, Aten, Endovelicus, Thor, Loki, Brigid, Odin, Tyr, Odin. Excerpt: Ceres is the Roman goddess of growing plants (in particular cereals) and of motherly love. She is the daughter of Saturn and Rhea; the wife-sister of Jupiter; the mother of Proserpina by Jupiter; and sister to Juno, Vesta, Neptune and Pluto. Her primary festival is the Cerealia or Ludi Ceriales ("games of Ceres"), instituted in the 3rd century BC and held annually on the 12th to 19th of April. Twelve minor gods assisted her, each in charge of specific aspects of farming. Brigid is a Celtic deity. She is the daughter of Dagda, and therefore one of the Tuatha De Danann. She had two sisters, also named Brighid, and is considered a classic Celtic Triple Goddess. Perhaps one of the most complex and contradictory Goddesses of the Celtic pantheon, Brigid can be seen as the most powerful religious figure in all of Irish history...