Celtic Gods
Abellio: The Gallic god of apple trees.
Abhean: An Irish/Celtic god, harper of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Aericura: A Romano-Celtic chthonic underworld god.
Ai (Aoi Mac Ollamain): The Irish poet god, a member of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Alaunus: The Celtic version Apollo, who was venerated in the areas of Mannheim and Salzburg in Germany.
Amaethon: The Welsh god of agriculture, son of the goddess Don.
Arawn: The Welsh god of the underworld.
Balor: In the Celtic-Irish mythology, Balor is the god of death.
Belatu-Cadros (Belatucadros): The Celtic god of war and of the destruction of enemies.
Belenus: Belenus is the Gaulish/Celtic god of light, and referred to as 'The Shining One'. Bile (Belenus, Belanos [Gaul),
Beli [Briton & Cymru]): The Celtic god of light and healing.
Borvo (Bormanus, Bormo): "To Boil". The Gallic god of hot (mineral) springs and healing.
Brea: A Irish god of minor importance. He is a member of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Bres: The Irish-Celtic god of fertility and agriculture.
Caswallawn: A Celtic war god of Britain.
Cernunnos: Cernunnos ("the horned one") is a Celtic god of fertility, wealth, and the underworld.
Cocidius: A hunting deity of Celtic North Britain.
Condatis: The River god of Celtic Britain.
Dagda (Daghda, Dagde, Dagodevas): The Irish-Celtic god of the earth and treaties, and ruler over life and death.
Dewi: An old Welsh god. The official emblem of Wales, a red dragon, is derived from the Great Red Serpent that once represented the god Dewi.
Dian Cecht: The great god of healing and the physician of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Dwyn (Dwynwen): The Celtic god of love.
Fagus: A Gaulish / Pyrenean god of beech trees.
Goibniu: An Irish/Celtic smith god, son of the goddess Danu.
Govannon (Gofannon): The Welsh smith god, the equivalent of the Irish Goibniu.
Grannus: The continental Celtic god of healing, associated with mineral springs.
Gwynn ap Nudd: The south-Welsh god of the underworld.
Leucetios: A Continental Celtic god of thunder.
Llyr: The Welsh sea god. Llyr (Lir Llyr) is the father of Bran, Branwen, and Manawydan.
Luxovius: The Gaulish god of the waters of Luxeuil.
Manannan mac Lir: The Irish god of the sea and fertility, who forecasts the weather.
Maponos: The Celtic god of youth.
Math Mathonwy: The Welsh god of sorcery, brother of the goddess Don.
Mog Ruith: The one-eyed Celtic/Irish god of the sun who rides through the sky in a shining bronze chariot, or who flies through the sky like a bird. The word ruith is possibly derived from the Irish roth, meaning "wheel" (representing the sun).
Nemausus: The Gaulish god associated with the Springs of Nimes.
Nodens (Nodons): The Celtic river god of the Severn estuary in south-west Britain.
Nuada: Also Nudd or Ludd. "Silver Hand." The Irish/Celtic chieftain-god of healing, the Sun, childbirth, youth, beauty, ocean, dogs, poetry, writing, sorcery, magic, weapons, and warfare.
Ogma: In Irish-Celtic myth, Ogma is the god of eloquence and learning.
Ogmios (Ogmios Sun-Face): The Celtic patron god of scholars and personification of eloquence and persuasiveness.
Ogyruan: The Celtic god of bards.
Robur: The Gaulish god of oak trees.
Segomo: The Gaulish (Continental Celtic) god of war and victory.
Smertios: The Celtic war-god who was especially worshipped by the Gaulish Treveri peoples.
Sucellos: A Continental Celtic syncretic god whose aspects are not exactly clear. One of his frequently appearing attributes is the hammer, which earned him the title of 'hammer-god' and which reminds of a god of the dead. Often he holds a cup and a purse in his hand, which denotes a fertility god.
Sucellos is occasionally confused with the popular vegetation god Silvanus.
Taranis: "Thunder". The thunder-god of ancient Gaul, and master of the sky.
Tarvos Trigaranos (Taruos Trigaranus): The Gallic bull god who is known chiefly from a monument on the Seine (near Paris).
Tethra: In Irish myth, king of the Fomorians, as well as the sea god and god of the otherworld.
Teutates (Loucetius, Rigisamos): god of war, fertility, and wealth.
Vosegus: The Gaulish god of the Vosges Forest in France.
h poet god, a member of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Alaunus: The Celtic version Apollo, who was venerated in the areas of Mannheim and Salzburg in Germany.
Amaethon: The Welsh god of agriculture, son of the goddess Don.
Arawn: The Welsh god of the underworld.
Balor: In the Celtic-Irish mythology, Balor is the god of death.
Belatu-Cadros (Belatucadros): The Celtic god of war and of the destruction of enemies.
Belenus: Belenus is the Gaulish/Celtic god of light, and referred to as 'The Shining One'. Bile (Belenus, Belanos [Gaul),
Beli [Briton & Cymru]): The Celtic god of light and healing.
Borvo (Bormanus, Bormo): "To Boil". The Gallic god of hot (mineral) springs and healing.
Brea: A Irish god of minor importance. He is a member of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Bres: The Irish-Celtic god of fertility and agriculture.
Caswallawn: A Celtic war god of Britain.
Cernunnos: Cernunnos ("the horned one") is a Celtic god of fertility, wealth, and the underworld.
Cocidius: A hunting deity of Celtic North Britain.
Condatis: The River god of Celtic Britain.
Dagda (Daghda, Dagde, Dagodevas): The Irish-Celtic god of the earth and treaties, and ruler over life and death.
Dewi: An old Welsh god. The official emblem of Wales, a red dragon, is derived from the Great Red Serpent that once represented the god Dewi.
Dian Cecht: The great god of healing and the physician of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Dwyn (Dwynwen): The Celtic god of love.
Fagus: A Gaulish / Pyrenean god of beech trees.
Goibniu: An Irish/Celtic smith god, son of the goddess Danu.
Govannon (Gofannon): The Welsh smith god, the equivalent of the Irish Goibniu.
Grannus: The continental Celtic god of healing, associated with mineral springs.
Gwynn ap Nudd: The south-Welsh god of the underworld.
Leucetios: A Continental Celtic god of thunder.
Llyr: The Welsh sea god. Llyr (Lir Llyr) is the father of Bran, Branwen, and Manawydan.
Luxovius: The Gaulish god of the waters of Luxeuil.
Manannan mac Lir: The Irish god of the sea and fertility, who forecasts the weather.
Maponos: The Celtic god of youth.
Math Mathonwy: The Welsh god of sorcery, brother of the goddess Don.
Mog Ruith: The one-eyed Celtic/Irish god of the sun who rides through the sky in a shining bronze chariot, or who flies through the sky like a bird. The word ruith is possibly derived from the Irish roth, meaning "wheel" (representing the sun).
Nemausus: The Gaulish god associated with the Springs of Nimes.
Nodens (Nodons): The Celtic river god of the Severn estuary in south-west Britain.
Nuada: Also Nudd or Ludd. "Silver Hand." The Irish/Celtic chieftain-god of healing, the Sun, childbirth, youth, beauty, ocean, dogs, poetry, writing, sorcery, magic, weapons, and warfare.
Ogma: In Irish-Celtic myth, Ogma is the god of eloquence and learning.
Ogmios (Ogmios Sun-Face): The Celtic patron god of scholars and personification of eloquence and persuasiveness.
Ogyruan: The Celtic god of bards.
Robur: The Gaulish god of oak trees.
Segomo: The Gaulish (Continental Celtic) god of war and victory.
Smertios: The Celtic war-god who was especially worshipped by the Gaulish Treveri peoples.
Sucellos: A Continental Celtic syncretic god whose aspects are not exactly clear. One of his frequently appearing attributes is the hammer, which earned him the title of 'hammer-god' and which reminds of a god of the dead. Often he holds a cup and a purse in his hand, which denotes a fertility god.
Sucellos is occasionally confused with the popular vegetation god Silvanus.
Taranis: "Thunder". The thunder-god of ancient Gaul, and master of the sky.
Tarvos Trigaranos (Taruos Trigaranus): The Gallic bull god who is known chiefly from a monument on the Seine (near Paris).
Tethra: In Irish myth