Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
List of Basque mythological figures
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The following is a list of gods, goddesses and many other divine and semi-divine figures and creatures from ancient Basque mythology.

Deities
- Aide, a minor goddess of wind and air.
 - Amalur, the goddess of the earth.
 - Eate, the god of storms, sometimes associated with fire and ice.
 - Egoi, a minor wind deity, associated with the south wind.
 - Eki, the goddess of the Sun, the daughter of Amalur.
 - Ilargi, the goddess of the Moon, also a daughter of Amalur.
 - Inguma, the malevolent god of dreams and nightmares.
 - Mari, a mother goddess, and wife of the deity Sugaar.
 - Orko, the god of thunder.
 - Sugaar, the god of storms and thunder, and the husband of Mari. He is normally imagined as a dragon or serpent.
 
Remove ads
Spirits and other figures

- Aatxe, a cave-dwelling spirit who adopts the form of a young red bull, but being a shapeshifter, sometimes takes the shape of a man.
 - Akerbeltz, demonic spirit in the form of a billy goat.
 - Basajaun, the wild man of the woods.
 - Gaizkiñ, an evil spirit that causes diseases.
 - Gaueko, an evil spirit that comes out at night.
 - Herensuge, a dragon who plays an important role in a few legends.
 - Iratxoak, Basque imps, which can be helpful or mischievous depending on how well one treats them.
 - Jean de l'Ours, a man born to a woman and a bear.
 - Jentilak, giants sometimes portrayed throwing rocks at churches.
 - Lamiak, nymphs with bird feet that dwell in rivers and springs.
 - Mairuak, giants who build stone circles.
 - Odei, nature spirit of thunder and the personification of storm clouds.
 - Olentzero, a jentil, the Basque equivalent of Santa Claus.
 - San Martin Txiki, popular Christian trickster figure.
 - Sorginak, handmaidens and assistants of the goddess Mari.
 - Tartalo, the Basque equivalent of the Greco-Roman Cyclops.[1]
 
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads
