Spirit in Sioux mythology
In Sioux mythology (Indigenous American mythological tradition that includes Lakota mythology), Anpao (Lakota: Aŋpáo[1]), or Anp, is a spirit with two faces that represents the dawn.
Anpao dances with Han, a primordial spirit of darkness, to ensure that Wi does not burn up the Earth, resulting in day and night.
George Bushotter (Yankton Dakota-Lakota, 1860–1892) wrote that when his younger brother was ill, the brother was told to pray to Anpao, the Dawn, and recovered.[2]
Anpao zi is the "yellow of the dawn", which oral history described as the meadowlark's breast.[3]
See also
- Anog Ite, a two-faced goddess from Lakota mythology
- Bangpūtys, two-faced Lithuanian god whose focus is on the weather and the sea
- Hausos, PIE dawn goddess, reflexes of whom are common in daughter cultures
- Ikenga, two-faced Igbo spirit of fate, fortune, and achievement
- Isimud, two-faced Mesopotamian messenger god
- Janus, two-faced Roman god whose focus is on doorways, endings, and beginnings in general
- Two-Face, a monster from Plains Indian mythology
- Sharp-Elbows, a monster from Ioway folklore sometimes described with two faces
References