, the wife of
Ahti and the goddess of water, pictured as a
mermaid in the coat of arms of
Päijät-Häme. •
Aarni, a
haltija protector of treasure. •
Ahti, the god of water. •
Ajatar (sometimes
Ajattara), an evil
forest spirit. •
Äkräs, the haltija of multiple plants, especially rutabagas and potatoes. •
Antero Vipunen, a deceased great
tietäjä, sometimes called a giant. •
Etiäinen, a haltija which appears as a premonition. •
Hiisi, originally meaning a sacred grove, later came to mean a giant or demon and goblin-like creatures. •
Hongatar, the haltija of the bear. •
Iku-Turso, one or multiple giants, a sea giant and a war god. •
Ilmarinen, the original god of the sky, later known better as the forger of the sky and god of wind. •
Jumala, a generic name for a major deity. Originally the name given by the Finns to the sky, the sky-god, and the supreme god. The word means god and was later used for the Christian
God. •
Kaleva, a primordial giant and father of multiple heroes. •
Kave, an air spirit connected to the lunar cycle, also refers to a group of nature goddesses. •
Kivutar, the goddess of pain. •
Kullervo, a tragic antihero. Model for
Túrin Turambar in
Tolkien's
Silmarillion. •
Kuutar, the goddess of the
Moon. •
Käreitär, the haltija of foxes. •
Lemminkäinen, a tietäjä hero. •
Lempo, a fire haltija, came to be associated with demons by Christians. •
Lalli, Finn who slew
St. Henry of Uppsala on the ice of Lake Köyliö, according to a legend. •
Louhi, the matriarch of
Pohjola, hostess of the Underworld. •
Maaemä, the goddess of earth. •
Menninkäinen, originally spirits of the dead, later came to be seen as a fairy spirit or leprechaun of some sort. •
Mielikki, the goddess of the forest. •
Nyyrikki, a forest deity, son of Tapio. •
Näkki, a fearsome spirit of water. •
Otso, the spirit of bear (one of many circumlocutory epithets). •
Päivätär, the goddess of the
Sun. •
Pekko, the god of
barley and brewing. •
Piru,
demons. •
Rahko, someone who tries to paint the Moon in tar but gets stuck on the Moon, causing the lunar cycle. •
Sampsa Pellervoinen, the haltija of vegetation. •
Soini, a son of Kaleva who was sold into slavery, later created swiddens in
Ostrobothnia. •
Tapio, the god of the forest. •
Tellervo, a forest deity, daughter of Tapio and Mielikki. •
Tonttu, generally benign
tutelary. Originally, a patron of cultivated land, keeper of lot. •
Tuulikki, a forest deity, daughter of Tapio and Mielikki. •
Ukko, a god of thunder and weather, related to
Thor (Estonian
Taara). •
Vellamo, the goddess of water. •
Virankannos, a god of fertility. •
Väinämöinen, a divine tietäjä, smith of songs. ==Places==