| Abuk In Sudanese Dinka mythology, she is the first woman. She is the patron 
        goddess of women and gardens, and her emblem is a small snake.
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      | Aja This forest goddess is honored by the Yoruba of Nigeria. She instructs 
        her followers in the use of medicinal herbs found in the African forests.
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      | Aje A Nigerian Yoruba goddess of wealth.
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      | Akonadi An oracular goddess of Ghana.
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      | Akwaba This goddess symbolizes welcome and is always placed above the door. Maidens 
        receive her image from an elder mentor as they come of age, welcoming 
        them into their motherhood role in the tribe. In Togo, a giant Akwaba 
        always precedes the chief in tribal procession, signifying that the Mother 
        and reverence for Nature are the foremost communal values.
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      | Ala She is the earth and fertility goddess of the Ibo people of Nigeria, as 
        well as a goddess of the underworld. She is the daughter of the great 
        god Chuku and is considered to be the mother of all things. In the beginning 
        she gives birth, and at the end she welcomes the dead back to her womb. 
        In Nigeria, where she is still worshipped, she has temples situated in 
        the center of the villages, where she has a statue surrounded by the images 
        of other gods and animals.
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    	| 
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      | Agwe Mother of the sea in Benin. She is affectionate and nurturing to humans 
        who honor her.
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      | Aha 
        Njoku This popular goddess is worshipped by the Ibo people of Nigeria. She is 
        responsible for yams, a central ingredient in the Ibo diet, and the women 
        who care for them.
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      | Aida 
        Wedo In Benin and Haiti she is the snake companion to Damballah-Wedo, the most 
        popular god, who is also in snake form.
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      | Aje Yoruba goddess of wealth in all its forms.
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      | Akonandi (Ghana) An oracular goddess of justice.
 | 
     
      
      | Amirini An early goddess of the Yoruba of West Africa.
 | 
     
      
      | Anansi The spider goddess of Ghana, she is considered the creator's chief official, 
        and a hero of many tales.
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      | Asase 
        Ya (Asase Yaa) Ashanti earth goddess. Ghanian creator of humanity, and wife 
        of Nyame. She was also the mother of the gods.
 | 
     
      
      | Ashiakle Goddess of wealth of the Gan people of Ghana.
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      | Atete Fertility goddess of the Kafa people of Ethiopia.
 | 
     
      
      | Ayabba Hearth goddess of the Fon people of Benin.
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      | Azeman A name given to a female vampire or werewolf in Surinam folk belief. At 
        night, she transforms from human to animal form and travels around drinking 
        human blood. According to belief, the best way to stop her is by sprinkling 
        grains or seeds about, so she will be compelled to stop and pick them 
        up. Another way of stopping her is by propping a broom, which she won't 
        cross, against a door.
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      | Aziri The goddess of possessions.
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      | Bayanni (Yoruba) Sister of Shango. She was sacrificed to make her younger brother, 
        Shango, a stronger god.
 | 
     
      
      | Bele 
        Alua (Ghana) Tree goddesss
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      | Bomo 
        Rambi A moon Goddess of Zimbabwe.
   | 
     
      
      | Bosumabla A sea goddess of Ghana, one of the minor deities.
 | 
     
      
      | Buk (Sudan-Nuer) She is the goddess of rivers and streams and the source of 
        life. Her children are Deng, Candit and Nyaliep.
 | 
     
      
      | Bunzi A rain goddess of Zaire, depicted as a rainbow-colored snake. She took 
        over her mother's duties as rain goddess when her mother was killed.
 | 
     
      
      | Buruku She is a creator goddess of Ghana, associated with the moon and sometimes 
        considered male.
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      | Candit The goddess of streams in Sudan.
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      | 
Dewi 
        Nawang Sasih In Sudanese myth, a celestial nymph who taught people how to cook rice. 
        The myth says she gave the women a simple recipe; place one grain of rice 
        in a pot, boil, and wait until it sub-divides again and again until the 
        pot is full. Her one restriction was that no man ever touch a woman's 
        cooking utensils. The people feasted fully, and easily, following her 
        instructions until one king who felt above all others deliberately touched 
        a cooking implement. The goddess in disgust departed the earth, and since 
        that time it takes a whole bunch of rice to fill a pot, because although 
        the grains swell up, they no longer divide and reproduce.
 
 
 Dziva
 The generally benevolent creatrix goddess of the Shona people of Zimbabwe. 
        There is, however, an awful aspect to her nature.
 
 
 Edinkira
 An African tree goddess.
 | 
     
      
      | Egungun-Oya Another form of the Yoruba goddess of divination.
 | 
     
      
      | Eka 
        Abassi The creator of life. Her son and consort was Obumo (god of thunder and 
        rain)
 | 
     
      
      | Enekpe Goddess of the family and guardian of destiny. One story relates that 
        when she saw that her tribe was losing a battle, she offered herself as 
        a sacrifice to save her people, and was buried alive on the battlefield; 
        her tribe was saved.
 | 
     
      
      | Eseasar An earth goddess married to the sky god, Ebore.
 | 
     
      
      | Fatouma She was born in a village near a lake in Mali that was inhabited by a 
        virgin-devouring dragon who each year claimed a village virgin as payment 
        for the use of the lake's waters. The day came when Fatouma was the only 
        eligible virgin remaining so she was left on the shore for the dragon 
        to eat. Along came a hero named Hammadi who slew the dragon, married Fatouma, 
        and lived happily ever after with her.
 | 
     
      
      | Gbadu The daughter of Mawu. She is the goddess of fate of the Fon or Dahomey 
        people of Benin, and she is saddened by the fighting among her mother's 
        mortal children.
 | 
     
      
      | Gleti The moon goddess of Benin. She is the mother of all the stars (Gletivi). 
        An eclipse is said to be caused by the shadow of the her husband when 
        he comes to "visit".
 | 
     
      
      | Gonzuole The first woman of Liberia. Without a mate she gave birth to many beautiful 
        daughters; they lived together in a village without men for many years. 
        Eventually some men nearby trapped them all and Gonzuole, fearing for 
        her daughters' safety, agreed to give them in marriage to the men.
 | 
     
      
      | Hyrax The wife of the creator god I Kaggen (praying mantis) revered by men of 
        the western bush.
 | 
    
     
      
      | Ilankaka The sun goddess of the Nkundo of Zaire was trapped by a man who was hunting 
        during the night. She begged to be released and promised him much wealth 
        for doing so, but the only wealth he wanted was her, so she agreed to 
        marry him. Soon pregnant, she refused to eat anything but forest rats. 
        Because it was known that a man had to provide for any whim of a pregnant 
        woman, the man was kept very busy trapping for her. One night, however, 
        she awakened to realize she was no longer pregnant. Shocked, she discovered 
        the baby had slipped out of the womb and was already eating meat. He grew 
        up to be the hero Itonde, who captured the heart of the Elephant Girl 
        Mbombe.
 | 
     
      
      | Inkosazana A female spirit of the Zulus who makes the maize grow. The deity of agriculture, 
        she is venerated in springtime.
 | 
     
      | Lissa The Dahomey mother goddess. Mother of the Sun god Maou and the Moon god 
        Gou. Her totem was the chameleon.
 | 
     
      
      |  | 
     
      | Mami 
        Wata A water-spirit, sometimes described as a mermaid figure, who can found 
        throughout the western coastal regions and into central Africa. Mami Wata 
        is described as having long dark hair, very fair skin and compelling eyes. 
        Although she may appear in dreams and visions to her devotees as a beautiful 
        mermaid, she is also said to walk the streets of modern African cities 
        in the guise of a gorgeous but elusive woman. She is interested in all 
        things contemporary: some of her favorite offerings include sweet, imported 
        perfumes, sunglasses and Coca-Cola. Nonetheless, the spirit appears to 
        be related to other water spirits (known in Igbo, a language of southeastern 
        Nigeria, as 'ndi mmili) who have a much longer history on the continent. 
        Mami Wata's colors are red and white. Those she afflicts with visions 
        and temptations, and who experience her as an obsession or an illness, 
        may wear the red of sickness and dangerous heat. Others who have a more 
        positive orientation towards the spirit may show their blessings by wearing 
        white. Most devotees wear a combination of red and white clothing. Mami 
        Wata is also said to have a number of avatars on earth- mortal women who 
        have the same look as the deity and who act as her "daughters." 
        Mami Wata may give wealth to her devotees, her "daughters" or 
        to her (male) spouses, but she is never known to give fertility. Some 
        Igbo stories suggest that the fish under the waters are her children, 
        and that she uses them as firewood.
 Mami Wata is sometimes seen as a metaphor for modern African conditions 
        -- having the knowledge of global wealth and the desire for large-scale 
        consumption, but lacking the actual wealth or access to the world's wealth 
        that would enable Africans to participate in that system.
 | 
     
      
      | Mamlambo The Zulu goddess of rivers.
 | 
     
      
      | Marwe A Chaga folktale heroine.
 | 
     
      
      | Massassi The maiden created for Mwuetsi, in the mythology of the Makoni tribe of 
        Zimbabwe. She bore to her husband grasses, bushes and trees.
 | 
     
      | Mawu Mawu is the Creator/Moon Goddess known among the people from the Dahomey 
        region of West Africa, the female aspect of the divinity Mawu-Lisa. She 
        is associated with the moon, night, fertility, motherhood, gentleness, 
        forgiveness, rest and joy. The cosmology of the Fon has the Earth as floating 
        on the water, while above circle the heavenly bodies on the inner surface 
        of a gourd. The son of Mawu-Lisa, Da (Danh) the cosmic serpent, helps 
        in ordering the universe; he had 3500 coils above the earth, and the same 
        number below. Together these coils support Mawu-Lisa's creation. After 
        creating the earth and all life and everything else on it, she became 
        concerned that it might be too heavy, so she asked the primeval serpent, 
        Aido Hwedo, to curl up beneath the earth and hold it up in the sky. When 
        she asked Awe, a monkey she had also created, to help out and make some 
        more animals out of clay, he boasted to the other animals and challenged 
        Mawu. Gbadu, the first woman Mawu had created, saw all the chaos on earth 
        and told her children to go out among the people and remind them that 
        only Mawu can give Sekpoli - the breath of life. Gbadu instructed her 
        daughter, Minona, to go out among the people and teach them about the 
        use of palm kernels as omens from Mawu. When Awe, the arrogant monkey 
        climbed up to the heavens to try to show Mawu that he too could give life, 
        he failed miserably. Mawu made him a bowl of porridge with the seed of 
        death in it and reminded him that only she could give life and that she 
        could also take it away.
 | 
     
      
      | Mbaba 
        Mwana Waresa A beloved goddess of the Zulu people of Southern Africa, primarily because 
        she gave them the gift of beer. She is the goddess of the rainbow, rain, 
        harvest, and agriculture. The story of her search for a husband is well 
        known, and recently appeared in a beautifully illustrated children's book.
 | 
     
      
      | Mboze Mother of the Woyo people of Zaire, and mother of Bunzi. When her husband 
        found out he was not the father of Bunzi, he killed Mboze.
 | 
     
      
      | Mebeli In Congo, she is the mother of the race of man (given life by Massim Biambe) 
        with god Phebele.
 | 
     
      
      | Moombi She is the creator goddess of the Kikuyu who mothered nine daughters by 
        Gikuyu.
 | 
     
      
      | Mujaji The rain queen of the Lovedu people of the Transvaal.
 | 
     
      
      | Musso 
        Koroni The goddess of disorder among the Bambara of Africa and the first woman 
        to be created. She is the daughter of the Voice of the Void, and wife 
        of Pemba. She planted Pemba in the soil, but disliked his thorns and so 
        forswore the god. Now she wanders the earth, causing sadness and disorder 
        among mankind.
 | 
     
      
      | Nambi (Buganda) The first woman.
 | 
     
      
      | Nana-Bouclou (Benin) Primal god of the Ewe people of the Dahomey, both male and female, 
        who created the twins from whom all the Voodoo gods descended.
 | 
     
      
      | Nana 
        Buluku ( Nana, Nan Nan, Nana Baruku, Na Na Baraclou, Boucalou ) As Nana Buluku 
        she is the primordial creator goddess of the Fon Nation of Benin (Dahomey). 
        As Nana Buruku she is first Grandmother to all the Divinities and first 
        human woman in the religion of the Yorubas. It was of Nana that the Cosmic 
        Twins Mawu and Lisa were born. From Mawu and Lisa came the Cosmic Egg, 
        and the Cosmic Seed that germinated the Egg. This egg was formed about 
        the center of Ashe, the realm of Ikode Orun. From this egg hatched the 
        Great Irunmole. So Nana Baruku is the Womb of Olodumare, Mawu is the Cosmic 
        Egg, and Lisa is Olodumare's Seed. Once set into motion, they are the 
        creation of all that is, was and ever will be.
 When the Orisha called Obatala formed the first human head upon the face 
        of the earth, it was Olodumare who came down from the great Adobe of the 
        Spiritual Realm, and breathed life into it. It was through the mysteries 
        of the breath of Olodumare that Nana Baruku first came forth and took 
        up residence within a clay figure, becoming the first living soul. Thus 
        Nana Baruku was both Great Divinity, first of all ancestors, the great 
        Grandmother of the Divinities, but also the Ancient Grandmother and progenitor 
        of the human race.
 In human form Nana Buruku was known by the name Ayizan. Ayizan, (Nanan) 
        is envisioned as an ancient black grandmother, her face covered with palm 
        fronds in honor of the palm trees which she used to create shelter upon 
        earth. In her arms Ayizan carries a woven basket containing bark, roots, 
        and herbs. Ayizan was the first human herbalist, sacred to her is the 
        mandrake root, which resembles a human form and is a symbol of her human 
        husband Osanyin. With her vast knowledge of herbs she attracted the attention 
        of the Orisha Osanyin, whom took form and became known as Loco. In life 
        Ayizan lived in a marshy swamp, she was a powerful ancestor who was unsurpassed 
        in the knowledge of herbs and root magic. Sacred to her is quicksand, 
        which surrounded her home and protected her from wild animals.
 | 
     
      
      | Oboto The goddesses of serenity.
 | 
     
      
      | Oduduwa A creator deity and earth goddess of the Yoruba.
 | 
     
      
      | Oshun (Osun) The Orisa of Love and Sensuality. The Yoruba peoples of Nigeria 
        brought Oshun to the New World via Brazil and Cuba. She is depicted as 
        an old wise woman sad at the loss of her beauty. Alternately she may be 
        shown as tall, light brown-skinned and with the sensuality of a prostitute. 
        She is patroness of rivers and the bloodstream, and wears seven brass 
        bracelets. She wears a mirror at her belt to admire herself, is companioned 
        by the primping peacock and cricket, and carries river water in her pot. 
        Powerful spells are worked through this lady of opposites. Love and sensuality 
        are the domains of Oshun. Tall and brown-skinned, she is patroness of 
        rivers and the bloodstream, always carrying her mirror. Powerful love 
        spells are worked through this Lady. Oshun, the Yoruba Goddess of Love 
        and Life-Sustaining Rivers, is the Goddess of all the arts, but especially 
        dance. Beauty belongs to Oshun and represents the human ability to create 
        beauty for its own sake, to create beyond need. It is also said that she 
        is the knitter of civilization, since great cities have been founded, 
        for the most part, along rivers in order to supply water to their populations.
 | 
     
      | Oya The Yoruba warrior goddess of the wind, the primeval mother of chaos, 
        the mother of nine children (the nine tributaries of the Niger River). 
        She creates change of fortune, and her power is associated with lightning, 
        tornadoes, earthquakes and other storms, cemeteries and death. Her motherly 
        strength inspires us to embrace change and learn from it.
 Using her machete, or sword of truth, she cuts through stagnation and 
        clears the way for new growth. She does what needs to be done. She is 
        the wild woman, the force of change; also the queen of the marketplace 
        and a shrewd businesswoman who is adept with horses. As the wind, she 
        is the first breath and the last, the one who carries the spirits of the 
        dead to the other world, which is why she is associated with cemeteries. 
        Oya is tall, stately, and fierce in battle. She is the orisa of creative 
        power and action. They say every breath we take is the gift of Oya. The 
        other two Ancient Mothers are Osun and Yemaja.
 | 
     
      
      | Pamba The creator and sustainer of life in Ovambo mythology. The Ovambo, a matrilineal 
        people, declare that 'the mother of pots is a hole in the ground; the 
        mother of people is god.'
 | 
     
      
      | Yemayah (Yemaja, Yemoja) She is one of the great goddesses of the Nigerian Yoruba. 
        The Orisha of the Ocean and Motherhood, Yemayah was brought to the New 
        World by the Yoruba people of Nigeria via Brazil and Cuba, where she has 
        been venerated for centuries as Protectress during the middle passage 
        of slavery. She was the sister and wife of Aganju, the soil god, and mother 
        by him of Orungan, god of the noonday sun. She was said to be the daughter 
        of the sea into whose waters she empties.
 She is also an avatar of Mama Wata, the mother of waters. Even as she 
        slept, she would create new springs, which gushed forth each time she 
        turned over. The first time she walked on earth, fountains that later 
        became rivers sprang up wherever she set foot. Sea shells, through which 
        the priestesses and priests could hear the voice of the universe, were 
        among her first gifts to the people.
 She is known by different names in many localities; As Yemoja (Yemayah) 
        she is the power (orisa) of the ocean and motherhood. She is long-breasted, 
        the goddess of fishes, and wears an insignia of alternating crystal and 
        blue beads. She has a strong, nurturing, life-giving yet furiously destructive 
        nature. She is considered the Great Witch, the ultimate manifestation 
        of female power.
 As Yemanja (Imanje) in Brazil she is ocean goddess of the crescent moon, 
        as Ymoa in West Africa she is the river goddess who grants fertility to 
        women. In Cuba she is known as Yemaya (Yemaya Ataramagwa, wealthy queen 
        of the sea; Yemaya Achabba, the stern goddess; Yemaya Oqqutte, the violent 
        goddess; or Yemaya Olokun, the dream goddess). She is known as Agwe in 
        Haiti. She is also referred to as Yamoja, which is a contraction of the 
        the sentence "Iyamo eja", meaning "our mother" or 
        "my mother of fishes". Among the Brazilian Umbandists, Yemaja 
        is the goddess of the sea and patroness of shipwrecked persons. In Santeria, 
        Yemaja (Yemaya) is the equivalent of the Catholic saint Our Lady of Regla. 
        The river Ogun is associated with her, because the water of this river 
        is considered to be a remedy for infertility.
 
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 Text/Research by Dominic Marks.  Editing/html page design by April Ingram
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