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A fertility deity is a god or goddess associated with , sex, , , and . In some cases these deities are directly associated with these experiences; in others they are more abstract symbols. may accompany their worship. The following is a list of fertility deities.


African
  • Ala, goddess of fertility
  • , earth goddess of fertility
  • Deng, sky god of rain and fertility
  • Mbaba Mwana Waresa, goddess of fertility, rainbows, agriculture, rain, and bees
  • Orie, goddess of fertility
  • (known as Ochún or Oxúm in ) also spelled Ọṣun, is an , a spirit, a deity, or a goddess that reflects one of the manifestations of God in the Ifá and religions. She is one of the most popular and venerated orishas. Oshun is the deity of the river and fresh water, luxury and pleasure, sexuality and fertility, and beauty and love. She is connected to destiny and divination.


Ancient Egyptian
  • , creator-god, associated with fertility
  • Bastet, cat goddess sometimes associated with fertility
  • , goddess of music, beauty, love, sexuality and fertility
  • , frog-goddess of fertility
  • , god of creation and fertility
  • , goddess of motherhood, magic and fertility
  • , Creator of the human body, source of the Nile, associated with fertility/ creation of life
  • , goddess of childbirth
  • Min, god of fertility and reproduction
  • , god of the afterlife, the dead, and the underworld agency that granted all life, including sprouting vegetation and the fertile flooding of the Nile River
  • , goddess of the true name, the harvest and fertile fields
  • , god of the river, warfare and fertility
  • , goddess of the fertility of the soil
  • , goddess of fertility and childbirth
  • , goddess of water and fertility


Yoruba


Native American
  • , goddess associated with marriage, childbirth, and feminine endeavors
  • , trickster god associated with fertility, childbirth and agriculture
  • Hanhepi Wi, goddess associated with the moon, motherhood, family and femininity


Aztec
  • , goddess of fertility, life, death, and rebirth.
  • , god of sustenance.
  • , goddess of sustenance.
  • , goddess of fertility, life, death, and rebirth.
  • , god of love, art, games, beauty, dance, flowers, maize, fertility, and song.
  • , goddess of fertility, beauty, female sexual power, protection of young mothers, pregnancy, childbirth, and women's crafts.
  • , god of fertility, wind, water, and chocolate.


Inca
  • , mother goddess, associated with fertility
  • , goddess of grain
  • , fertility goddess who presides over planting and harvesting and causes earthquakes


Inuit
  • Akna, goddess of fertility and childbirth
  • , goddess of children, pregnancy, childbirth and the making of clothes


Mayan
  • Akna, goddess of motherhood and childbirth
  • , goddess of eroticism, female fertility, and marriage
  • , jaguar goddess of midwifery and medicine
  • Maya maize god, gods of maize
  • Maximón, a Mayan god and modern folk saint associated with crops, death, and fertility and Sight


Muiscan
  • Chaquén, god of sports and fertility in the religion of the


Taíno
  • Atabey (goddess), mother goddess of fresh waters and fertility (of people).
  • Yúcahu, masculine spirit of fertility (of crops such as Yucca) along with his mother Atabey who was his feminine counterpart.


Vodou
  • , of fertility, rainbows and snakes
  • Gede, family of spirits that embody the powers of death and fertility


Asian

Arabian
  • Attar (god)


Armenian
  • , goddess of fertility, healing, wisdom, and water
  • , generous king and creator god of fertility, rain, and abundance


Canaanite
  • , storm (and thus rain) god responsible for crops growing, also known as Adad and Ba'al
  • , goddess of fruits
  • , consort of Baʿal Hammon at Carthage


Chinese
  • Chū Shèng Niángniáng, Goddess of Fertility
  • Jiutian Xuannü, a fertility goddess as well as a deity of war and long life
  • Yúnxiāo Niángniáng, goddess of childbirth
  • Qióngxiāo Niángniáng, goddess of childbirth
  • Bìxiāo Niángniáng, goddess of childbirth
  • , goddess of childbirth Berthier, Brigitte. (2008) The Lady of Linshu: A Chinese female cult. California : Stanford University Press.


Filipino
  • Lakapati: the hermaphrodite Tagalog deity and protector of sown fields, sufficient field waters, and abundant fish catch;San Buenaventura, P. (1613). Vocabulario de Lengua Tagala. a major fertility deity;Scott, W. H. (1994). Barangay: Sixteenth-century Philippine Culture and Society. Ateneo University Press. deity of vagrants and waifs;Pardo, F. (1686–1688). Carte ... sobre la idolatria de los naturales de la provincia de Zambales, y de los del pueblo de Santo Tomas y otros cicunvecinos .... Sevilla, Spain: Archivo de la Indias. a patron of cultivated lands and husbandryPlasencia, J. (1589). Relacion de las Costumbres de Los Tagalos.
  • Ikapati: the goddess of cultivated land and fertilityJocano, F. L. (1969). Philippine Mythology. Quezon City: Capitol Publishing House Inc.
  • Lakan-bakod: the Tagalog god of the fruits of the earth who dwells in certain plants;Demetrio, F. R., Cordero-Fernando, G., & Zialcita, F. N. (1991). The Soul Book. Quezon City: GCF Books. the god of crops;Jocano, F. L. (1969). Philippine Mythology. Quezon City: Capitol Publishing House Inc. the god of rice whose hollow statues have gilded eyes, teeth, and genitals; food and wine are introduced to his mouth to secure a good crop;Souza, G. B., Turley, J. S. (2016). The Boxer Codex: Transcription and Translation of an Illustrated Late Sixteenth-century Spanish Manuscript Concerning the Geography, Ethnography and History of the Pacific, South-East Asia and East Asia. Brill. the protector of fencesPotet, J. P. G. (2017). Ancient Beliefs and Customs of the Tagalogs. Morrisville, North Carolina: Lulu Press.
  • Kukarog: the Bicolano giant who was swept by waters into the sea, where his genital can be seen as a rock jutting from the ocean
  • Ibabasag: the Bukidnon goddess of pregnant womenJocano, F. L. (1969). Philippine Mythology. Quezon City: Capitol Publishing House Inc.


Vietnamese
  • Bà mụ, consisting of twelve goddesses responsible for creating each part of the child


Hittite/Hurrian
  • Hutellurra, Irsirra, and Tawara, goddesses of midwifery and nursing children
  • , goddess of fertility, war, and healing


Indian
  • , goddess of the hunt and fertility
  • , goddess of fertility
  • , goddess of the earth and associated with fertility
  • , goddess associated with abundance and fertility
  • , goddess of prosperity, wealth, fortune, and fertility
  • , snake goddess associated with fertility and prosperity
  • , a group of 7-16 goddesses who are associated with fertility and motherly power.
  • , goddess of the Himalayan Mountains, fertility, beauty, food and power
  • Vedic-goddess of the earth and associated with fertility
  • , goddess of protection, strength and fertility
  • , goddess associated with fecundity and easy birth
  • , goddess of fertility and maya (illusion)
  • , Vedic-goddess of knowledge, music, arts, wealth, abundance and fertility
  • , goddess of rain, fertility and cure for small pox


Iranian
  • : or , the divinity of "the Waters" and hence associated with fertility, healing, and wisdom
  • : or , female divinity associated with earth and Mother Nature
  • : a divinity of fertility and fortune


Phoenician
  • , Mother Goddess of nature, groves & trees (exiled by Hezekiah)


Japanese
  • , Minor gods of boundaries, fertility, health and protection.
  • Kichijōten, goddess of happiness, fertility, and beauty
  • , god of agriculture and knowledge
  • Inari Ōkami, deity of fertility, rice, agriculture, foxes, and industry; this deity is of ambiguous gender and may be portrayed as male, female, or ambiguous
  • , fertility god of the


Mesopotamian
  • , Ancient semitic goddess of motherhood and fertility
  • , the wife of Amurru. Ašratum (glorified one), a cognate of Athirat
  • /Tammuz, Mesopotamian dying-&-rising god, Dumuzid-sipad (the Shepherd), husband of Inanna
  • , fertility goddess and tutelary mother goddess of
  • , Sumerian goddess of social justice, prophecy, fertility, and fishing
  • , Identified with Asratum, later Ašrat-aḫītu (Ašratum the foreigner) or (the other Ašratum)
  • /, Mesopotamian goddess of love, beauty, sex, desire, fertility, war, justice, and political power. Her symbols were lions, doves & the 8-pointed star, wife of Dumuzid


Turco-Mongol
  • , goddess of fertility and reproduction, believed to have saved two children (one boy and one girl) from a massacre. She is believed to have offered protection and guidance to the children, who managed to raise the Turkic communities. In the form of a deer, she is accepted by the Turks to be the protective power of the race, and therefore she is called in many texts as "Mother Umay".


European

Albanian
  • , goddess of love, beauty and fertility


Baltic
  • , goddess of luck and fate, associated with childbirth, pregnancy, marriage, and death
  • Zemes māte, goddess of the earth, associated with fertility


Celtic
  • , Irish goddess associated with fertility, spring, healing, smithing, and poetry
  • , horned god associated with the fertility of animals and nature
  • Damara, fertility goddess worshiped in Britain
  • , Gaulish fertility goddess
  • , goddess of horses, mules, donkeys, and the fertility of these animals
  • , a group of deities theorised to be fertility spirits
  • , goddess of nature, the earth, fire, and fertility
  • , goddess of fertility
  • , Gallo-Roman goddess of fertility and abundance


Etruscan
  • , god of plant life, happiness, health, and growth in all things, equivalent to the Greek Dionysus
  • , goddess of the dawn, associated with the generation of life
  • Turan, goddess of love, fertility and vitality


Finno-Ugric


Germanic
  • Ēostre, spring and fertility goddess; in earlier times probably a dawn goddess as her name is cognate to
  • , god associated with peace, marriages, rain, sunshine, and fertility, both of the land and people
  • , a goddess associated with fertility and sister of the above god
  • , goddess associated with prophecy, marriage, and childbirth; in one myth, she also demonstrates a more direct connection with fertility, as a king and queen pray to her for a child
  • , Danish goddess of ploughing and possibly fertility
  • , earth goddess associated with fertility
  • Njörðr, since his name is cognate with the above goddess, it's possible he was originally an earth/fertility deity before transforming into a sea god thanked for a bountiful catch
  • , associated with the bringing of rain


Greek
  • , goddess of beauty, love, pleasure, sexuality, procreation and fertility.
  • , local goddess associated with fertility and the agricultural cycle
  • , goddess of the hunt, the wilderness, wild animals, the Moon, chastity and childbirth
  • , goddess of the harvest, agriculture, fertility and sacred law
  • , god of wine, grapes, and festivity, associated with fertility, particularly that of the vine and males
  • , messenger of the gods, possibly associated with male fertility
  • , goddess of marriage, women, women's fertility, childbirth
  • , god of strength and athletes, had an association with male fertility as well as agriculture.
  • , (also called Eileithyia) goddess of childbirth and midwifery
  • Pan, god of shepherds and flocks, associated with fertility, particularly that of animals
  • Phanes, primeval deity of procreation and new life
  • , rustic god of fertility, protection of livestock, fruit plants, gardens, and male genitalia
  • , minor daemon of fertility
  • , daemon, incarnation of the Phallus, associated with Dionysus


Irish


Roman
  • , Roman version of Dionysus, identified with Roman , god of agricultural and male fertility
  • , goddess of fertility, healing, virginity, and women
  • , goddess of childbirth
  • , goddess of childbirth and prophecy
  • Domidicus, the god who leads the bride home
  • Domitius, the god who installs the bride
  • , embodiment of the divine
  • , goddess of fertility
  • Feronia, goddess associated with fertility and abundance
  • Flora, goddess of flowers and springtime
  • , god of sexual intercourse
  • Jugatinus, the god who joins the pair in marriage
  • Juno, goddess of marriage and childbirth, equivalent to the Greek goddess Hera; has the epithet Lucina Ovid, Fasti II, 425-452
  • , god of viniculture, wine, and male fertility, equivalent to Greek ; in archaic , a phallic deity
  • Libera, female equivalent of Liber, also identified with Romanised form of Greek
  • Manturna, the goddess who kept the bride at home
  • , deity of female maturation also protector in childbirth.
  • , phallic marriage deity associated with the Greek god Priapus
  • Partula, goddess of childbirth, who determined the duration of each pregnancy
  • Pertunda, goddess who enables sexual penetration of the virgin bride; an epithet of JunoAugustine, The City of God, 6.9.3; Arnobius, Adversus Nationes, 4,.7
  • Picumnus, god of fertility, agriculture, matrimony, infants, and children
  • Prema, goddess who made the bride submissive, allowing penetration; also an epithet of Juno, who has the same functionAugustine, The City of God, 6.9.3
  • , fertility god who protects crops against disease
  • Subigus, the god who subdues the bride to the husband's will
  • , goddess of beauty, love, desire, sex and fertility
  • Virginiensis, the goddess who unties the girdle of the bride.


Sami
  • , goddess of fertility and sanity
  • , goddess of spring and fertility


Slavic
  • , Polish goddess of love, marriage, sexuality and fertility
  • , god of fertility, spring, the harvest and war
  • Kostroma, goddess of fertility
  • Mokoš, Old Russian goddess of fertility, the Mother Goddess, protector of women's work and women's destiny
  • , god of love and marriage
  • , god of war, fertility, and abundance
  • Živa, goddess of love and fertility


Oceanian
  • Gedi (mythology), god of fertility, who taught mankind the use of fire
  • Makemake, creator-god, associated with fertility
  • , Fijian god associated with fertility
  • Sido/Soido, Melanesian god associated with fertility
  • Tangaroa, god of the sea and creation, associated with fertility


Hawaiian
  • Haumea, goddess of fertility and childbirth
  • Kamapua'a, demi-god of fertility
  • , patron of the hula dance and god of fertility
  • , god associated with fertility, agriculture, rainfall, and music
  • Nuakea, goddess of lactation


Indigenous Australian


See also
  • The Dinner Party-this artwork features a place setting for Fertile Goddess. Place Settings . Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved on 2015-08-06.
  • Fertility and religion
  • Religion and agriculture
  • Agricultural spiritualism
  • Lists of deities in Sanamahism
  • Fall of man#Agricultural revolution

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