The Lydian pantheon was
polytheistic, and was composed of: • native Lydian deities who were reflexes of earlier Aegean-Balkan ones, • as well as Anatolian deities.
Native deities Artimus Unlike traditionally Anatolian pantheons but similarly to the
Phrygian one, the Lydian pantheon was headed by the goddess Artimus (), who is the most well-attested Lydian deity both in the Lydian corpus and archaeologically. Artimus was a deity of wild nature, and was also the Lydian variant of an earlier Aegean-Balkan goddess whose other reflexes included the Greek
Artemis () and the Phrygian Artimis. Being the main goddess of the Lydians, Artimus had a similar role to the Phrygian
Matar Kubeleya and she possessed the features of the latter
Mother goddess well as of a Potnia Theron| ('The Lady of Animals'). Artimus was the mother of the goddess Kufaws, as is visible from the depiction of her larger figure side by side with the smaller figure of Kufaws in a daughter-mother pairing in a Naiskos| from
Sardis. Artimus was also a protector of the dead, and she was invoked to protect grave monuments and punish offenders, with her altar being oriented towards the necropolis hill in the western direction representing this role of this goddess. According to Greek records, the Mermnad kings of Lydia, especially
Croesus, were closely connected to the cult of Artimus.
Hypostases The cult of at least three hypostases of Artimus are attested in Lydia: • Artimus of
Ephesus () • Artimus of the Sardians () • Artimus of
Koloē (). These three hypostases of Artimus were invoked together, showing that they were both distinct from and closely associated with each other. Additional epithets of Artimus are also attested, but their meanings are still unknown: • (), possibly meaning ; • (); • (), meaning . Ephesian
Greeks might have founded the cult of Artimus of Ephesus at Sardis, attesting of a complex connection between Lydian and ancient Greek cults. Whether the cults of Artimus of the Sardians and Artimus of Koloē were founded as a result of that of Artimus of Ephesus is still unknown due to lack of evidence.
Iconography Artimus was depicted using similar iconography as the Phrygian goddess Matar Kubeleya. On the from
Sardis dating to , Artimus holds a
deer while Kufaws holds a
lion, thus attesting that the sacred animal of Artimus was the stag.
Qaλdãns Identification The identity of the figure of Qaλdãns or Qaλiyãns () is still uncertain, and has been variously interpreted as: • the Lydian king of the gods; • a Moon-god who was the main masculine deity of the Lydian pantheon and the consort of Artimus, in which case the Lydians shared this cult of a masculine lunar deity with the Phrygians, who worshipped the Moon-god Mas. • the Lydian equivalent of the Greek god
Apollo (), whose cult has been suggested to have existed in Lydia based on the attestation of the king Croesus having made offerings to the sanctuaries of Apollo
at Delphi and
at Didyma, as well as the Greek accounts of the
Persian conquest of Sardis linking the fate of Croesus to this god. • However, Apollo is still unattested in Lydia, and it is unknown whether there was any native cult of this god in Lydia or whether Lydian kings merely supported the cult of Apollo abroad without importing his cult into Lydia proper; whether this lack of attestation is due to the small size of known Lydian inscriptions or an absence of this deity in Lydia is also uncertain. • a high status or royal title. This figure is mentioned in two inscriptions, where his name always appears before that of Artimus. He is invoked along with Artimus in protective curse formulae in both inscriptions, and figures as the receiver of a temenos| dedicated to "mighty Qaλdãns and Artimus of Ephesus" () in the second inscription. The role of Qaλdãns in both inscriptions can fit either interpretation of him being a human, possibly a deified a ruler or a religious official with a high status, or a deity. The goddess Artimus is herself invoked again alone within the inscription, and never alongside Qaλdãns/Qaλiyãns in another inscription, implying that she held a higher status than him within the Lydian pantheon.
Etymology The etymology of the name Qaλdãns/Qaλiyãns is still uncertain, and several hypotheses have been put forward for it: • it has been tentatively suggested to be from Luwian , meaning , possibly linked to the role of the Greek Apollo as an archer god; • alternatively, it might have meant : • the title Qaλdãns would have found a parallel with the use of the
Lycian name (), meaning , referring to a
Carian deity who also shared a with the goddess Ertemi, that is Artimus; • this use of a title as a theonym might be supported by the parallel between the Lydian coin legend (), meaning , which would find a counterpart in the Lycian coin legend (), meaning .
Lews Lews () or Lefs () was the Lydian equivalent of the Greek god
Zeus () and the Phrygian god Tiws. Unlike the Anatolian storm-god
Tarḫuntas, Lews held a less prominent role in the Lydian religion, although his role as the bringer of rain followed the tradition surrounding the Anatolian Tarḫuntas. Lydian inscriptions referring to this god as Lews the Protector () attest of his role as a protector of graves. There is no information regarding the position of Lews in the Lydian pantheon or his cult, and sanctuaries of Lews have not yet been found, although one might have existed near the market of Sardis, where a dedication to him was discovered. A connection between the Lydian Lews and the Greek Zeus is visible in how
Greek mythology linked the latter to Lydia, more specifically to the site of
Mount Tmolus to the west of Sardis.
Lamẽtrus The goddess Lamẽtrus () was, likewise, the Lydian reflex of an earlier Aegean-Balkan goddess whose Greek iteration was
Dēmētēr ().
Pakiš The frenzy god Pakiš () to whom was performed an
orgiastic cult was also a Lydian variant of an older Aegean-Balkan god whose Greek reflex was
Bakkhos (). Lydian texts or archaeological remains provide no significant information on Pakiš, although his presence in
theophoric names such as () suggests that he was seen positively in Lydia. The Lydian calendar's month of Pakillλ (), which likely corresponded with the part of autumn when grapes were harvested, was named after Pakiš. Although the Greek cognate of Pakiš, Bakkhos, was himself a Greek god already attested during the
Mycenaean period, later Greek myth connected him to Lydia, likely due to the Greeks viewing this region as a famous site of wine production. Therefore, Greek myth depicted Bakkhos as having grown up there, where he was raised by the Anatolian mother goddess Meter
Hipta, that is the Hurrian goddess Hepat.
Kufaws The goddess Kufaws () or Kuwaws (), from an earlier *Kufawus () and referred by the Greeks as (), was a prominent Lydian deity possessing an important temple in Sardis. Kufaws was a young goddess of
divine frenzy, being thus the feminine counterpart of Pakiš, due to which Greek sources therefore sometimes identified her with Artemis because Kufaws shared some features with her, although Kufaws was herself not identical with Artemis. Kufaws was instead the daughter of the Lydian Mother Goddess Artimus, as is visible from her depiction side by side with Artimus in a daughter-mother pairing in a Naiskos| from Sardis, where the larger figure of Artimus holds a deer while the smaller figure of Kufaws holds a lion. The prominence of Kufaws in the Lydian religion is also visible in how the Persians destroyed Greek temples as retaliation for the Greeks having burnt down her temple in Sardis during the
Ionian Revolt. An altar of Kufaws was present in the gold-refining district of Sardis, attesting of her role as the protector of the Lydian gold and silver industry.
Aegean origins Similarly to the relation between the Lydian Artimus and the Greek Artemis, Kufaws was the Lydian reflex of an earlier goddess whose Phrygian variant was the Mother goddess
Kubeleya.
Anatolian influence Despite having Aegean-Balkan origins and not being derived from the Anatolian goddess
Kubaba (), Kufaws was nonetheless influenced by this deity, as can be seen by her appearance in a curse formula on a tomb, reading: This mention finds parallels in
Hieroglyphic Luwian inscriptions from
Tabal, where the goddess Kubaba, the god Šandas and the
Marwainzi were associated to each other as deities who harmed evil-doers.
Iconography Known depictions of Kufaws include: • a marble statuette where she wears a crown similar to that of Kubaba of Karkamiš but without a horn; • a depiction of Kufaws at the entrance of a model of her temple; • and a marble fragment of a sculpture of Kufaws at the entrance of another temple where she holds a snake in her right hand. Also reflecting the influence of Kubaba is the association of Kufaws with felines: as it had been for Kubaba, the lion was the sacred animal of the Lydian Kufaws as well, and was also the symbol of the Lydian royal dynasty, as attested by the imagery of lions on the coinage of the Lydian Empire and the use of the element , meaning in the name of the Lydian king
Alyattes ().
Korē The existence of the goddess Korē () is not recorded during the period of Lydian independence or from any Lydian language source, hence why nothing is known about her worship during the Lydian Empire. She was however later attested during the Hellenistic and Roman periods, when she was assimilated with the Greek goddess
Persephonē. Korē appears to have had some vegetative aspects, and the festival of Khrysanthina () was celebrated at Sardis in her honour during the Hellenistic Period.
Anatolian deities Also present in the Lydian religion were deities of Anatolian origin, who held secondary roles to the Lydian deities.
Sãntas Anatolian deities in the Lydian pantheon included the god Sãntas (), who might have been the consort of Kufaws, but whose nature is still uncertain. While this god's name corresponds to that of the Luwian
Šandas (), he might instead have been more similar to that of the ancient Greek hero
Hēraklēs, whom Greek sources recorded was worshipped in Lydia. The association of Sãntas with the goddess Kufaws and the Mariwdas (Dark Gods) finds parallels in Hieroglyphic Luwian inscriptions from Tabal, where the god Šandas was associated with the Marwainzi and the goddess Kubaba as deities who harmed evil-doers. The name of the god Sãntas appeared as a theophoric element in personal names, such as in that of an advisor of the king Croesus who was named Sandanis ().
Mariwdas Accompanying Sãntas were several lesser demon-like figures called the Mariwdas (). The Mariwdas were the Lydian equivalent of the deities attested in Hieroglyphic Luwian inscriptions as the
Dark Gods ().
Maλiš Another Anatolian deity present in the Lydian pantheon was the goddess Maλiš (), who corresponded to the Anatolian goddess
Maliya, attested in
Hittite as () and Lycian as (), and the Greek goddess
Athena. Maλiš possessed a vegetative aspect, being a goddess of vegetation, especially of wine and corn. According to Ancient Greek sources, the Lydian kings sponsored the cult of the goddess "Athena", that is of Maλiš. The goddess Maλiš was referred to in the Greek fragmentary line from the island of Lesbos reading "holding her spindle, Maλiš spun a fine thread" ().
Identification with Athena A bilingual dedication on a column drum at a
Pergamene temple of Athena also equated the Lydian goddess Maλiš with the Greek goddess Athena. A Greek text of the
myth of Arachne also called the goddess Athena by the name Malis, thus showing that the cult of Maλiš had passed into the Greek milieu.
Iconography A small
ivory statuette of a spinning woman wearing a Lydian headgear might have depicted Maλiš.
Other deities Other deities which might have existed in Lydia include: • Armãs (), as attested in the theophoric name Armãwas (), corresponded to the Luwian Moon-god
Armas (). • Tiwdas (), also attested from a theophoric name, corresponded to the Anatolian Sun-god Tiwadas (). ==Cult==