Name
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Etymology
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Mythology
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Parent Mythology
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Details
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Horus
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From Late Latin Hōrus, from Ancient Greek Ὧρος (Hôros), from Egyptian ḥr.
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Egyptian
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Afroasiatic
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In Ancient Egypt, Horus was ruler of the sky. He was shown as a male humanoid with the head of a falcon. It is not uncommon for birds to represent the sky in ancient religions, due to their ability to fly. However, in Egyptian mythology the sky was perceived as the goddess Nut.
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Tengri
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Borrowed from a Turkic language; ultimately from Proto-Turkic *teŋri ('sky, heaven, god'). Compare Turkish tanrı ('god').
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Turkic, Mongolic
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Altaic
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Chief god of the early religion of the Turkic and Mongolic peoples.
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Aten
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Egyptian
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Afroasiatic
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Was a Monotheistic Sun God under the pharaoh Akhenaten.
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Wākea
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Hawaiian
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Austronesian
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Ranginui
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Māori
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Austronesian
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The sky father and earth mother Papatūānuku, embraced and had divine children.
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Dyaus Pita
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From Sanskrit द्यौष्पितृ (dyauṣ-pitṛ). From Proto-Indo-European *Dyḗws ph₂tḗr; synchronically analyzable as द्यौस् (dyaús, nominative singular of द्यु, dyú, 'sky') + पितृ (pitṛ́, 'father').
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Indo-Aryan (Hinduism
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Indo-European)
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In the early Vedic pantheon, appears already in a marginal position, but in comparative mythology is often reconstructed as having stood alongside Prithvi Mata "Earth Mother" in prehistoric times.
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Jupiter
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From Latin Iūpiter ('father Jove'), from Proto-Italic *djous patēr (literally 'sky father')
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Italic
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Indo-European
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Often depicted by birds, usually the eagle or hawk, and clouds or other sky phenomena. Nicknames included Sky God and Cloud Gatherer.
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Zeus
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From Ancient Greek Ζεύς (Zeús). From Proto-Hellenic *dzéus, related to Mycenaean Greek 𐀇𐀺 (di-wo /diwos/); from Proto-Indo-European *dyḗws.
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Hellenic
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Indo-European
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Dagr
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From Proto-Germanic *dagaz ('day, name of the D-rune'). Cognate with Old English dæġ (Modern English day), Old Frisian dei, di, Old Saxon dag, Old Dutch dag, Old High German tac, tag, Gothic 𐌳𐌰𐌲𐍃 (dags). Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *dʰegʷʰ- ('to burn').
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Nordic
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Indo-European
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The personification of the daylit sky.
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Perun
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Slavic
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Indo-European
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Diepatura
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Illyrian
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Indo-European
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Zojz
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A derivation of Proto-Indo-European *dyḗws
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Albanian
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Indo-European
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Perkūnas
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From Proto-Balto-Slavic *Perkūnas, from Proto-Indo-European *perkʷunos, from *pérkʷus ("oak").
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Baltic
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Indo-European
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Týr
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From earlier runic ᛏᛁᚢᛦ (tiuʀ), from Proto-Germanic *Tīwaz; identical to *týr ('god'). From Proto-Indo-European *deywós ('god'). Vṛddhi derivative of *dyew- ('sky, heaven')
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Germanic
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Indo-European
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Bochica
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Muisca
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Native American
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In what is now Colombia, the Muisca worshipped this sky father.[2]
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Gitche Manitou
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Native American
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Native American
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Common character in creation myths.[3]
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Shangdi
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上帝 (Hanyu Pinyin: shàng dì; literally 'king above')
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Confucianism
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Sino-Tibetan
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Supreme God worshipped in ancient China. It is also used to refer to the Christian God in the Standard Chinese Union Version of the Bible. In China, in Daoism, 天 (tian), meaning sky, is associated with light, the positive, male, etc., whereas 地 (di) meaning earth or land, is associated with dark, the negative, female, etc.
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Tian
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天 (lit. 'sky' or 'heaven')
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Confucianism
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Sino-Tibetan
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Used to refer to the sky as well as a personification of it. Whether it possesses sentience in the embodiment of an omnipotent, omniscient being is a difficult question for linguists and philosophers. Zhu, Tian Zhu (主, 天主, lit. 'Lord' or 'Lord in Heaven') is translated from the English word, Lord, which is a formal title of the Christian God in Mainland China's Christian churches.
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Tianfu
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天父 (Hanyu Pinyin: tiān fù)
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Taoism
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Sino-Tibetan
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Another word used to refer to the Christian God in the Standard Chinese Union Version of the Bible.
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An or Anu
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(Akkadian: 𒀭𒀭, romanized: Anu, from 𒀭 an, 'sky, heaven') or Anum, originally An (Sumerian: 𒀭, romanized: An)
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Sumerian, Assyrian and Babylonian
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Sumerian, Assyrian and Babylonian
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The father deity of the Sumerian and Assyro-Babylonian pantheon and is also the earliest attested Sky Father deity.
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Ukko
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From Proto-Finnic *ukko. Probably a Finnic pet form of *uros ('man, male').
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Finnish
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Uralic
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Taevaisa
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Taevas 'sky', isa 'father'
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Uralic
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The word by which adherents in Estonia of the Maausk (faith of the land) and the Taara native beliefs refer to God. Although both branches of the original Estonian religion — which are largely just different ways of approaching what is in essence the same thing, to the extent that it remains extant — are pantheistic, heaven has a definite and important place in the ancient pre-Christian Estonian belief system. All things are sacred for those of the faith of the land, but the idea of a sky father — among other "sacrednesses" — is something all Estonians are well aware of. In newer history, after the arrival of Christianity, the ideas of a sky father and "a father who art in heaven" have become somewhat conflated. One way or another, the phrase taevaisa remains in common use in Estonia.
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Urcia
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Basque
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Vasconic
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The Liber Sancti Iacobi by Aymericus Picaudus tells that the Basques called God Urcia, a word found in compounds for the names of some week days and meteorological phenomena.[4][5] The current usage is Jaungoikoa, that can be interpreted as 'the lord of above'. The grammatical imperfection of the word leads some to conjecture that it is a folk etymology applied to jainkoa, now considered a shorter synonym.
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