Albanian •
Prende, goddess of love, beauty and fertility
Baltic •
Laima, goddess of luck and fate, associated with childbirth, pregnancy, marriage, and death •
Zemes māte, goddess of the earth, associated with fertility
Celtic •
Brigid, Irish goddess associated with fertility, spring, healing, smithing, and poetry •
Cernunnos, horned god associated with the fertility of animals and nature •
Damara, fertility goddess worshiped in Britain •
Damona, Gaulish fertility goddess •
Epona, goddess of horses, mules, donkeys, and the fertility of these animals •
Hooded Spirits, a group of deities theorised to be fertility spirits •
Nantosuelta, goddess of nature, the earth, fire, and fertility •
Onuava, goddess of fertility •
Rosmerta, Gallo-Roman goddess of fertility and abundance
Etruscan •
Fufluns, god of plant life, happiness, health, and growth in all things, equivalent to the Greek Dionysus •
Thesan, goddess of the dawn, associated with the generation of life •
Turan, goddess of love, fertility and vitality
Finno-Ugric •
Äkräs,
Finnish god of fertility •
Rauni or Raun, Finnish-
Estonian goddess of fertility •
Peko or Pellon-Pekko,
Karelian-
Seto god of fertility • Metsik, West Estonian spirit of fertility • Norovava,
Mordovian goddess of fertility • Šun-Šočõnava,
Mari goddess of fertility and birth • Mu-Kyldyśin,
Udmurt god of fertility and earth • Zarni-Ań,
Komi goddess of fertility, represented by a golden woman • Babba or Aranyanya,
Hungarian goddess fertility, represented by a golden woman •
Kalteš-Ekwa,
Ob-Ugric goddess of fertility, represented by a golden woman
Germanic •
Ēostre, spring and fertility goddess; in earlier times probably a dawn goddess as her name is cognate to
Eos •
Freyr, god associated with peace, marriages, rain, sunshine, and fertility, both of the land and people •
Freyja, a goddess associated with fertility and sister of the above god •
Frigg, 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 •
Gefjun, Danish goddess of ploughing and possibly fertility •
Nerthus, 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 •
Thor, associated with the bringing of rain
Greek •
Aphrodite, goddess of beauty, love, pleasure, sexuality, procreation and fertility. •
Aphaea, local goddess associated with fertility and the agricultural cycle •
Artemis, goddess of the hunt, the wilderness, wild animals, the Moon, chastity and childbirth •
Demeter, goddess of the harvest, agriculture, fertility and sacred law •
Dionysus, god of wine, grapes, and festivity, associated with fertility, particularly that of the vine and males , Greek god of fertility, gardens and male genitalia •
Eros, a son of Aphrodite and god of procreation, and erotic and sexual love •
Hermes, messenger of the gods, possibly associated with male fertility •
Hera, goddess of marriage, women, women's fertility, childbirth •
Heracles, god of strength and athletes, had an association with male fertility as well as agriculture. •
Ilithyia, (also called Eileithyia) goddess of childbirth and midwifery •
Pan, god of shepherds and flocks, associated with fertility, particularly that of animals •
Persephone, goddess of springtime, associated with fertility of plants and especially flowers, as well as general fertility of spring •
Phanes, primeval deity of procreation and new life •
Priapus, rustic god of fertility, protection of livestock, fruit plants, gardens, and male genitalia •
Tychon, minor
daemon of fertility •
Phales, daemon, incarnation of the Phallus, associated with Dionysus
Irish •
Dagda Roman •
Bacchus, Roman version of Dionysus, identified with Roman
Liber, god of agricultural and male fertility •
Bona Dea, goddess of fertility, healing, virginity, and women •
Candelifera, goddess of childbirth •
Carmenta, goddess of childbirth and prophecy • Domidicus, the god who leads the bride home • Domitius, the god who installs the bride •
Fascinus, embodiment of the divine
phallus •
Fecunditas, goddess of fertility •
Feronia, goddess associated with fertility and abundance •
Flora, goddess of flowers and springtime •
Inuus, 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 •
Liber, god of viniculture, wine, and male fertility, equivalent to Greek
Dionysus; in archaic
Lavinium, a phallic deity •
Libera, female equivalent of Liber, also identified with
Proserpina Romanised form of Greek
Persephone • Manturna, the goddess who kept the bride at home •
Mater Matuta, deity of female maturation also protector in childbirth. •
Mutunus Tutunus, 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
Juno •
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 function •
Robigus, fertility god who protects crops against disease • Subigus, the god who subdues the bride to the husband's will •
Venus, goddess of beauty, love, desire, sex and fertility • Virginiensis, the goddess who unties the girdle of the bride.
Sami •
Beiwe, goddess of fertility and sanity •
Rana Niejta, goddess of spring and fertility
Slavic •
Dzydzilelya, Polish goddess of love, marriage, sexuality and fertility •
Jarilo, 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 •
Siebog, god of love and marriage •
Svetovid, god of war, fertility, and abundance •
Živa, goddess of love and fertility ==Oceanian==