List of health deities


A health deity is a god or goddess in mythology or religion associated with health, healing and wellbeing. They may also be related to childbirth or Mother Goddesses. They are a common feature of polytheistic religions.

List of health deities

African

Yoruba and Afro-American

  • Aja, spirit of the forest, the animals within it and herbal healers
  • Babalú-Ayé, spirit of illness and disease
  • Erinlẹ, spirit of abundance, the healer, and Physician to the Orisha
  • Loco, patron of healers and plants
  • Mami Wata, a pantheon of water deities associated with healing and fertility
  • Ọsanyìn, spirit of herbalism
  • Sopona, god of smallpox

Albanian

  • Dielli, the Sun: giver of life, health and energy
  • Zjarri, the Fire: purifier, healer, protector, and energizer
  • Prende: dawn goddess, goddess of love, beauty, fertility, health and protector of women

Armenian

  • Anahit, goddess of fertility and healing, wisdom and water in Armenian mythology.

Aztec

Baltic

  • Aušrinė, Baltic pagan deity of medicine, health and beauty.
  • Ragana, witch deity protecting healers and wisdom holders.

Buddhist

  • White Tara, a female Buddha in Vajrayāna Buddhism who is supplicated for longevity.
  • Hayagriva, known for curing skin sicknesses particularly skin diseases such as leprosy

Celtic

Chinese

Egyptian

  • Sekhmet, goddess of healing and medicine of Upper Egypt
  • Heka, deification of magic, through which Egyptians believed they could gain protection, healing and support
  • Serket, goddess of healing stings and bites
  • Ta-Bitjet, a scorpion goddess whose blood is a panacea for all poisons
  • Isis, goddess of healing, magic, marriage and protection
  • Bes, Apotropaic god, represented as a dwarf, particularly important in protecting children and women in childbirth.
  • Taweret, Hippopotamus goddess who is often depicted as a protective deity, particularly associated with childbirth, fertility, and motherhood.

Etruscan

  • Fufluns, god of plant life, happiness and health and growth in all things
  • Menrva, goddess of war, art, wisdom and healthcare

Filipino

  • Kadaklan: the Itneg deity who is second in rank; taught the people how to pray, harvest their crops, ward off evil spirits, and overcome bad omens and cure sicknesses
  • Talanganay: a male Gaddang god-spirit; enters the body of a healer and gives instructions on how to heal the sick while in a trance
  • Menalam: a female Gaddang goddess-spirit; enters the body of a healer and gives instructions on how to heal the sick while in a trance
  • Cabuyaran: the Ilocano goddess of healing; daughter of Abra and Makiling, the elder; she eloped with Anianihan
  • Akasi: the Sambal god of health and sickness; sometimes seen at the same level of power as Malayari
  • Lakambini: the Tagalog deity who protects throats and who is invoked to cure throat aches; also called Lakandaytan, as the god of attachment
  • Daniw: the Hanunoo Mangyan spirit residing in the stone cared for by the healers
  • Hamorawan Lady: the deity of the Hamorawan spring in Borongan, who blesses the waters with healing properties
  • Beljan: the Pala'wan spirits of all beljan ; able to travel to the vertical universe, divided into fourteen different layers, in order to heal the world and to re-establish cosmic balance; also referred to as Balyan
  • Maguimba: the Batak god in the remotest times, lived among the people, having been summoned by a powerful babaylan ; provided all the necessities of life, as well as all cures for illnesses; has the power to bring the dead back to life
  • Ibabasag: the Bukidnon goddess of pregnant women
  • Mandarangan: the Bagobo god of warriors married to Darago; resides at Mount Apo's summit; human sacrifices to him are rewarded with health, valor in war, and success in the pursuit of wealth
  • Cotabato Healer Monkey: a Maguindanao monkey who lived near a pond outside Cotabato city; it heals those who touch it and those who give it enough offerings
  • Pagari: also called Inikadowa, the Maguindanao twin-spirit who is sometimes in the form of a crocodile; if a person is possessed by them, the person will attain the gift of healing

Greek

  • Apollo, god of medicine, healing, plagues, diseases and prosperity healing
  • Asclepius, god of the medicinal arts
  • Artemis, goddess of young women and childbirth
  • Chiron, a centaur known for his knowledge and skill in medicinal arts
  • Darrhon, a health god worshipped in Macedon
  • Eileithyia, goddess of childbirth
  • Epione, goddess of the soothing of pain
  • Aceso, goddess of curing sickness and healing wounds
  • Aegle, goddess of radiant good health
  • Hera, goddess of childbirth; she was called upon for women's safety during childbirth and for good health of the infants
  • Heracles Apotropaios, god of strength and athletes; he was trained in medicine and called on to avert plagues.
  • Hygieia, goddess of cleanliness and sanitation
  • Iaso, goddess of cures and remedies
  • Paean, physician of the gods, who was later syncretized with Apollo
  • Panacea, goddess of the cure by medicines and salves
  • Prothyraia, goddess of childbirth, identified with Artemis and Eileithyia
  • Telesphorus, demi-god of convalescence

Hindu

Hittite

  • Kamrusepa, goddess of healing, medicine, and magic

Hurrian

  • Shaushka, goddess of love, war, and healing

Igbo

  • Agwu Nsi, the patron spirit of the dibia

Inuit

Japanese

  • Ashitekōjin, god of hands and feet
  • Sukunahikona, god of medicine, as well as nation building, incantation, agriculture and hot springs
  • Dōsojin, gods of boundaries, roads, travellers, villagers, marriage, fertility, procreation, health, defense, guardianship and protection

Maya

  • Ixchel, jaguar goddess of midwifery and medicine
  • Maximón, hero god of health

Mesopotamian

  • Namtar, god of death and disease
  • Ninazu, god of the underworld and healing
  • Ningishzida, god of the underworld and patron of medicine
  • Ninti, Sumerian goddess of healing
  • Ninisina, divine physician, worshiped in Isin
  • Ninkarrak, divine physician, worshiped in Sippar and Terqa
  • Nintinugga, divine physician, worshiped in Nippur
  • Damu, son and assistant of Ninisina
  • Gula, a goddess of medicine, portrayed as a divine physician and midwife. She is also a goddess of healing and the healing arts.

Native American

  • Kumugwe, Nuxalk underwater god with the power to see into the future, heal the sick and injured, and bestow powers on those whom he favors
  • Angak, a Hopi kachina spirit, represents a healing and protective male figure.

Norse

  • Eir, goddess associated with medical skill

Ossetian

  • Alardy, god who heals skin diseases

Persian

Phoenician

Roman

  • Angitia, snake goddess associated with magic and healing
  • Apollo, Greco-Roman god of light, music, healing, and the sun
  • Bona Dea, goddess of fertility, healing, virginity, and women
  • Cardea, goddess of health, thresholds and door hinges and handles
  • Carna, goddess who presided over the heart and other organs
  • Endovelicus, god of public health and safety
  • Febris, goddess who embodied and protected people from fever and malaria
  • Feronia, goddess of wildlife, fertility, health, and abundance
  • Valetudo, Roman name for the Greek goddess Hygieia, goddess of health, cleanliness, and hygiene
  • Vejovis, god of healing
  • Verminus, god who protected cattle from disease

Sami

Slavic

  • Żywie, goddess of health and healing

Sumerian

  • Gula, a goddess of healing, medicine and healing arts
  • Damu, god of healing

Thracian

  • Derzelas, god of abundance and the underworld, health and human spirit's vitality

Turkic

  • Akbugha, god of medicine. He is the god of health and healing in ancient Turkic tradition. He has a white serpent.

In monotheistic religion

Christianity and Islam

According to the Gospels, Jesus performed miracles during his earthly life as he traveled through Galilee, Judea, and Jerusalem. The miracles performed by Jesus are mentioned in two sections of the Qur'an in general, with few details or comments. One of the greatest miracles Jesus performed was healing, the Gospels provide different amounts of detail for each episode, at other times he uses materials such as spit and mud. In general, they are mentioned in the Synoptic Gospels, but not in the Gospel of John. Luke, one of the apostles, was a physician.
Jesus endorsed the use of the medical assistance of the time when he told the parable of the Good Samaritan, who "bound up wounds, pouring on oil and wine" as a physician would. Jesus then told the doubting teacher of the law to "go, and do likewise" in loving others with whom he would never ordinarily associate.
In 1936, Ludwig Bieler argued that Jesus was stylized in the New Testament in the image of the "divine man", which was widespread in antiquity. It is said that many of the famous rulers and elders of the time had divine healing powers.
Archangel Raphael, is known to be the primary angel of healing. His name is derived from Hebrew, רָפָאֵל, which means "God has healed", "God heals" or simply "it is God who has healed". The name is derived from two Hebrew words: רָפָא, meaning "to heal," and אֵל, meaning "God". He was first mentioned in the Book of Tobit and in 1 Enoch. He is mentioned throughout various traditions from Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. People would pray to Raphael for healing and guidance. He is the patron of travelers, the blind, those who need healing, and many more.