ANGUTA (Inuit/Eskimo)
Gatherer of the dead. Anguta carries the dead down to the underworld,
where they must sleep with him for a year.
ANINGAN (Inuit/Eskimo)
The moon, brother to the sun whom Moon chases across the sky.
Aningan has a great igloo in the sky where he rests. Irdlirvirissong,
his demon cousin, lives there as well. The moon is a great hunter,
and his sledge is always piled high with seal skins and meat.
ASGAYA GIGAGEI (Cherokee)
The Red Man or Woman evoked in spells to cure the ill. Asgaya
Gigagei is either male or female, depending on the sex of the
patient.
ATIRA (Pawnee) The Earth,
Sacred Mother of every living creature. The Pawnee were hunters.
When told to abandon hunting and settle down to farming, their
priest replied: "You ask me to plow the ground! Shall I take
a knife and tear my mother's bosom? Then when I die she will not
take me to her bosom to rest. You ask me to dig for stone! Shall
I dig under her skin for her bones? Then when I die I cannot enter
her body to be born again. You ask me to cut grass and make hay
and sell it, and be rich like white men! But how dare I cut off
my mother's hair? It is a bad law and my people cannot obey it."
AWONAWILONA (Pueblo Indians)
"The One Who Contains Everything." The Supreme God,
the Creator of All. Before the creation there was only Awonawilona;
all else was darkness and emptiness. Both male and female, Awonawilona
created everything from himself and taking form became the maker
of light, the Sun.
BIG HEADS (Iroquois) Demon
gods. Giand heads without bodies which fly about in storms. They
find men very tasty.
BREATHMAKER (Seminole)
Breathmaker taught men to fish and dig wells, and made the Milky
Way. When the virtuous die, they follow the Milky Way to a glorious
city in the western sky.
COYOTE (Southwestern Indians,
but known in other areas as well) A trickster, a clown. The creator
and teacher of men. Like Loki, Coyote is always lurking about,
causing trouble and playing pranks. To the Zunis, Coyote is a
hero who set forth the laws by which men may live in peace. The
Pomo Indians maintain that Coyote created the human race and stole
the sun to keep them warm. The Montana Sioux say that Coyote created
the horse. The Chinook tell how Coyote and Eagle went to the land
of the dead to bring back their dead wives. On reaching the land
of the dead, they found a meeting lodge lit only by the moon which
lay on the floor. Every night an old woman would swallow the moon
and the dead would appear in the meeting lodge. Recognizing their
wives among the spirits of the dead, the two gods devised a plan.
The next day, after the old woman had vomited up the moon and
the dead had disappeared, Coyote built a huge wooden box and placed
in it leaves of every kind of plant. Coyote and Eagle then killed
the old woman, and Coyote donned her clothes. When the time came,
Coyote swallowed the moon. The dead appeared, but Eagle had place
the box outside the exit. When Coyote vomited up the moon, the
dead filed out and were trapped in the box. Coyote pleaded to
be allowed to carry the box, and Eagle gave it to him. But Coyote
couldn't waitto see his wife and opened the box. The spirits of
the dead rose up like a cloud and disappeared to the west. So
it is that people must die forever, not like the plants which
die in winter and are green again in a season.
DEOHAKO (Iroquois/Seneca)
Spirits of maize, beans and gourds who live together in a single
hill. Searching for dew, the maize spirit Onatha was captured
by the evil spirit Hahgwehdaetgah who took her off to the underworld.
Sun rescued her, and ever since she has remained in the cornfields
until the corn is ripe.
ESTANATLEHI (Navajo) First
Woman's adopted daughter. To punish mankind for pride, First Man
and First Woman sent a plague of monsters to kill and devour them.
The time came when First Woman repented of the evils she and First
Man had visited upon men, and she sought a means for their deliverance.
First Woman discovered the infant Estanatlehi lying on the ground
near First Woman's mountain, and took her in. The infant Estanatlehi
grew to adulthood in four days. Making love with the Sun, she
gave birth to the Twin Brothers who after many adventures slew
the monsters.
EVENING STAR (Pawnee)
An evil star who drives the sun down out of the sky and send his
daughter to hinder Morning Star from the sun back up again.
FIRST MAN AND FIRST WOMAN
(Navajo) In the beginning, First Man and First Woman ascended
from the underworld together with Coyote, leading the people through
trials and tribulations into the surface world which became their
home. Deciding that the sky was too empty with only Sun and Moon,
First Man, First Woman and Coyote gathered up glittering stones
and placed them in the sky to serve as stars.
GAHE, also GA'AN (Apache)
Supernatural beings who dwell inside mountains. The can sometimes
be heard dancing and beating drums. Because they can heal and
drive away disease, they are worshipped. In the ritual dances
of the Chiricahua Apache masked dancers painted a different color
for each point of the compass represent all the Gahe except the
Grey One. The Grey One, though he appears as a clown, is really
the mightiest of all the Gahe.
GLUSKAP (Algonquin) The
Creator, or more exactly, the creator force. Generally benevolent,
but often whimsical. Gluskap created the plains, the food plants,
the animals and the human race from the body of the Mother Earth.
His rival was his wolf brother Malsum, who made rocks, thickets
and poisonous animals. After a long struggle Gluskap killed Malsum
and drove his evil magic under the earth. Gluskap drove away monsters,
fought stone giants, taught hunting and farming to men, and gave
names to the stars. His work done, Gluskap paddled towards the
sunrise in a birch bark canoe. Some day he may return.
HINO (Iroquois) Thunder
god, god of the sky. The Rainbow is his consort. With his fire
arrows, Hino destroys evil beings.
IRDLIRVIRISISSONG (Inuit/Eskimo)
The demon cousin of the moon. Sometimes Irdlirvirissong comes
out into the sky to dance and clown and make the people laugh.
But if anyone is nearby, the people must restrain themselves or
the demon clown will dry them up and eat their intestines.
KACHINAS (Hopi) Nature
spirits which inhabit and control everything -- animal spirits,
spirits of departed ancestors, spirits of natural resources such
as wind, rain and thunder. Their exact number is not known, but
at least five hundred appear in the mythologies of the different
villages.
KANATI (Cherokee) "The
Lucky Hunter." Sometimes called First Man. He lives with
his wife Selu ("Corn") in the east where the sun rises,
and their sons, the Twin Thunder Boys, live in the west.
KITCKI MANITOU (Algonquin)
The Great Spirit, the Supreme Being. The Uncreated, the Father
of Life, God of the Winds. The Great Spirit is present in some
way in nearly every North American Indian mythology.
MICHABO (Algonquin) The
Great Hare. A trickster. A shape-shifter. Creator of men, the
earth, deer, water and fish. Michabo drives away cannibal spirits.
In the House of Dawn, Michabo is host to the souls of good men,
feeding them succulent fruits and fish.
MORNING STAR (Pawnee)
A protector who leads the sun upward into the sky. A soldier god.
NAGENATZANI (Navajo) Elder
Twin Brother.
NESARU (Arikara) Sky spirit.
In the beginning, Nesaru had charge over all creation. Displeased
with a race of giants in the underworld who would not respect
his authority, Nesaru sent a new race to the underworld to replace
them and sent a flood which destroyed the giants without destroying
the new men. When the new men cried out to be released from the
underworld, Nesaru sent the Corn Mother for their deliverance.
NOKOMIS (Algonquin) "Grandmother."
The Sacred Earth Mother. Nokomis nurtures all living things.
NORTH STAR (Pawnee) A
creator god. Beneficiant and venerated.
OCASTA (Cherokee) "Stonecoat."
The name comes from his coat which was made of pieces of flint.
Equally good and evil, Ocasta was one of the Creator's helpers.
Ocasta created witches and drifted from village to village stirring
up turmoil. Some women trapped Ocasta, pinning him to the ground
with a stick through his heart. The men cremated the dying Ocasta,
who while burning on his funeral pyre taught them songs and dances
for hunting, fighting wars and healing. Some of the men were granted
great power and became the first medicine men.
OLELBIS (Wintun, Pacific
Coast) The Creator who lived in Olelpanti (Heaven) with two old
women. When the first people destroyed the world with fire, Olelbis
sent wind and rain to quench the flames, and repaired the earth.
Olelbis intended men to live forever. When they grew old, they
were to climb to heaven and join Olelbis in paradise. Olelbis
set two vultures to the task of building a ladder to Olelpanti
for men to ascend, but Coyote persuaded them to stop work.
RABBIT (Southeastern tribes)
Like Coyote and Michabo, a trickster god. Through a sly trick,
Rabbit brought fire to man.
RAVEN (Northwestern tribes)
Another trickster god. Very greedy, forever seeking food. Raven
stole the moon from a miser and placed it in the sky.
SEDNA (Inuit/Eskimo) Goddess
of the sea and the creatures of the sea. A one-eyed giant. A frightful
old hag, but she was young and beautiful when her father threw
her in the sea as a sacrifice. A sorcerer wishing to visit Sedna
must pass through the realms of death and then cross an abyss
where a wheel of ice spins eternally and a cauldron of seal meat
stews endlessly. To return he must cross another abyss on a bridge
as narrow as a knife edge.
SELU (Cherokee) "Corn."
Sometimes known as First Woman. Kanati's wife. Selu created corn
in secret by rubbing her belly or by defecating. Her sons, the
Twin Thunder Boys, killed her when they spied upon her and decided
she was a witch.
SHAKURA (Pawnee) Sun god.
The Pawnee performed their famous Sun Dance for Shakura's sake.
Young warriors attached themselves to tall poles with strips of
hide which were tied to sharp stakes. The stakes were driven through
the skin and flesh on the chest. The young brave would then support
his entire weight with the hide ropes as he slowly circled the
pole following the sun's movement in the sky. This lasted until
the sun went down or the stakes ripped out of the brave's flesh.
SOUTH STAR (Pawnee) God
of the underworld, the opposite of North Star. Magical and feared.
SUN (Cherokee) A goddess.
When Sun's daughter was bitten by a snake and taken to the Ghost
Country, Sun hid herself in grief. The world was ever dark, and
Sun's tears became a flood. At last the Cherokee sent their young
men and women to heal Sun's grief, which they did with singing
and dancing.
SUN (Inuit/Eskimo) A beautiful
young maiden carrying a torch who is chased through the sky by
her brother Aningan, the moon. The planet Jupiter is the mother
of the sun and very dangerous to magicians. If they are careless,
she will devour their livers.
TEKKEITSERKTOCK (Inuit/Eskimo)
The earth god, master of hunting to whom all deer belong.
TIRAWA-ATIUS (Pawnee)
The Power Above, creator of the heavens and the earth. In the
beginning Tirawa-Atius called the gods together to announce his
plan to create the human race and promised the gods a share of
power for their help. Shakura the Sun was assigned to provide
light and heat, Pah the Moon was assigned the night, and Tirwara-Atius
placed the Evening Star, the Mother of All Things in the west.
The Morning Star he set to guard the east. After the gods had
raised dry land from the watery chaos, Tirawa Atius told Sun and
Moon to make love, and they gave birth to a son. He then told
Evening and Morning Star to make love, and they gave birth to
a daughter. So the human race was made. All would have been well
if Coyote had not stolen a sack of storms from Lightening. Opening
the sack, Coyote loosed the storms and so brought death into the
world.
THOBADESTCHIN (Navajo)
Youngest Twin Brother.
THOUME' (Chitimacha) Thoume'
taught the people to make clothing and fire, and how to make love.
After making the moon and the sun, Thoume' sent the trickster
god Kutnahin to teach medicine and food preparation to men. Kutnahin
traveled through the world disguised as a derelict covered with
buzzard dung.
TORNGASAK (Inuit/Eskimo)
The good spirit, representing everything in nature good and helpful
to man.
TWIN THUNDER BOYS (Cherokee)
The sons of Kanati and Selu. Kanati and Selu live in the east,
the Twin Thunder Boys live in the west. When thunder sounds, the
boys are playing ball.
WACHABE (Sioux/Osage)
Black Bear. A guardian. Symbol of long life, strength and courage.
The preceding information was compiled and is copyrighted
1994 by D.W. Owens. Distribution is allowed if credit is given.
Likewise, all validity, spelling, and authenticity of information
rests on the author's shoulders and not ours. Enjoy!
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