Balto-Slavic Baltic • Kara Māte, Latvian goddess of war • Kauriraris, Lithuanian god of war and war steeds • Junda, Lithuanian goddess of war •
Perkūnas, god of thunder and lightning, associated with war
Slavic •
Jarovit, god of vegetation, fertility, and spring, also associated with war and harvest •
Perun, god of thunder and lightning, associated with war •
Svetovid, god of war, fertility, and abundance •
Zorya Utrennyaya, goddess of the morning star, sometimes depicted as a warrior goddess who protected men in battle
Celtic •
Agrona, reconstructed
Proto-Celtic name for the
river Aeron in
Wales, and possibly the name of an associated war goddess •
Alaisiagae, a pair of goddesses worshipped in
Roman Britain, with parallel Celtic and Germanic titles •
Andarta, Brittonic goddess theorized to be associated with victory, overcoming enemies, war •
Andraste,
Gaulish warrior goddess •
Anann,
Irish goddess of war, death, predicting death in battle, cattle, prosperity, and fertility •
Atepomarus, god of horses, horsemen, and healing. •
Badb, Irish goddess of war who took the form of a crow; member of the Morrígan •
Bandua, Gallaecian god of war •
Belatucadros, war god worshipped by soldiers and equated with the Roman war god
Mars •
Camulus, god of war of the Belgic
Remi and British
Trinovantes •
Catubodua, Gaulish goddess assumed to be associated with victory •
Caturix, god of war •
Cicolluis, Gaulish and Irish god associated with war •
Cocidius,
Romano-British god associated with war, hunting and forests •
Macha, Irish goddess associated with war, horses, and
sovereignty; member of the Morrígan •
Mars Cnabetius, Gaelic god of war •
The Morrígan, Irish
triple goddess associated with
sovereignty, prophecy, war, and death on the battlefield •
Neit, Irish god of war, husband of Nemain of Badb •
Nemain, Irish goddess of the frenzied havoc of war; member of the Morrígan •
Rudianos, Gaulish god of war •
Segomo, Gaulish god of war •
Teutates, British and Gaulish god of war and the tribe
Lusitanian •
Neto, god believed to be associated with war, death, and weaponry
Norse-Germanic Continental Germanic •
Baduhenna, a western Frisii goddess of warfare •
Idis (Germanic)/itis/ides, the West Germanic cognates of North Germanic
dís, they are connected with battle magic and fettering enemy armies •
Sandraudiga, goddess whose name may mean "she who dyes the sand red", suggesting she is a war deity or at least has a warrior aspect •
Týr, god of war, single combat, law, justice, and the
thing, who later lost much of his religious importance and mythical role to the god Wōden •
Wōden, god associated with wisdom, poetry, war, victory, and death
Norse , a Norse god of war •
Dís, a group of lesser goddesses who are sometimes connected with battle magic; valkyrie may be a
kenning for them •
Freyja, goddess associated with love, beauty, fertility, gold,
seiðr, war, and death •
Odin, god associated with wisdom, war, battle, and death •
Týr, god associated with law, justice, victory, and heroic glory •
Ullr, god associated with archery, skiing, bows, hunting, single combat, and glory •
Valkyries, choosers of the slain and connected to Odin, ruler of Valhalla; they may be the same as the dís above
Graeco-Roman Greek / Hellenic , the Greek god of war •
Alala, spirit of the war cry •
Alke, spirit of courage and battle-strength •
Amphillogiai, goddesses of disputes •
Androktasiai, spirits of battlefield slaughter •
Ares, the main Greek god of war •
Athena, goddess of wisdom, war strategy, and weaving •
Bia, personification of force and compulsion •
Castor and Pollux, twin brothers that were the gods of war, sailors, and the constellation Gemini. •
Deimos, personification of terror •
Enyalius, god of war; in early periods apparently an epithet of Ares, they were differentiated later •
Enyo, goddess of war, sometimes appears to be identical to Eris •
Eris, goddess of discord and strife •
Hera, in the
Illiad she has a martial character and fights (and wins) against Artemis; however, this warlike aspect of her appears nowhere else in the surviving corpus, suggesting it was dropped early on •
Homados, spirit of the din of battle •
Hysminai, female spirits of fighting and combat •
Ioke, spirit of onslaught, battle-tumult, and pursuit •
Keres, female spirits of violent or cruel death, including death in battle, by accident, murder, or ravaging disease •
Kratos, personification of strength and power •
Kydoimos, spirit of the din of battle •
Makhai, male spirits of fighting and combat •
Nike, personification of victory •
Palioxis, spirit of backrush, flight, and retreat from battle •
Pallas, Titan god of war-craft and of the springtime campaign season •
Perses, the Titan of destruction •
Phobos, spirit of panic, fear, flight, and battlefield rout •
Phonoi, spirits of murder, killing, and slaughter •
Polemos, spirit of war •
Proioxis, spirit of onrush and battlefield pursuit •
Zelus, personification of
zeal •
Zeus Stratios, Zeus had the epithet Stratios (Στράτιος), which means "of armies".
Roman , the Roman god of war •
Bellona, goddess of war •
Hercules Invictus •
Honos, god of chivalry, honor, and military justice •
Juno, has a consistent martial character and the patron goddess of Rome, the mother of Mars and Bellona •
Mars, god of war and agriculture, equivalent to Ares as far as being war gods; aside from this they have very little in common •
Nerio, warrior goddess and personification of valor •
Victoria, personification of victory, equivalent to the Greek goddess Nike •
Virtus, god of bravery and military strength
Etruscan •
Laran, god of war. •
Menrva, goddess of war, art, wisdom, and health
Balkan • Danubian Rider •
Sabazios •
Thracian Rider Uralic Hungarian •
Hadúr, god of war and the metalsmith of the god
Finnish •
Ukko, god of the weather, sky and thunder, often associated with fertility and war == Asia ==