===
Ainu mythology=== •
Chup Kamui, a lunar goddess who switched places with her brother to become goddess of the Sun ===
Arabian mythology=== •
Malakbel, god of the Sun •
Shams/Shamsun, a
solar goddess exalted in
Himyar and by the
Sabaeans. ===
Armenian mythology=== • Ar/Arev, the Sun god with its people as "children of the Sun" ===
Buddhist mythology=== •
Marici, goddess of the heavens, the Sun, and light •
Surya, god of the Sun (Suriya Pariththa, Suthra Pitaka, Pali canon, Theravada Buddhism) ===
Canaanite mythology=== •
Shapash, goddess of the Sun •
Ba'al, god of life and fertility, also associated with the Sun and storms ===
Chinese mythology=== charioteering the Sun, being pulled by a
dragon, in
Hangzhou •
Doumu, Sun goddess sometimes conflated with
Marici. •
Xihe, Sun goddess and mother of the ten suns • Yu Yi, god that carries the Sun across the sky • Xu Kai, god of the Sun star ===
Elamite=== •
Nahundi, god of the Sun and law ===
Filipino mythology=== • Init-init: the Itneg god of the Sun married to the mortal Aponibolinayen; during the day, he leaves his house to shine light on the world • Chal-chal: the Bontok god of the Sun whose son's head was cut off by Kabigat; aided the god Lumawig in finding a spouse • Mapatar: the Ifugao sun deity of the sky in charge of daylight • Sun God: the Ibaloi deity who pushed up the skyworld and pushed down the underworld, creating earth, after he was hit by a man's arrow during the war between the peoples of the skyworld and the underworld • Elag: the Bugkalot deity of the Sun, worshiped with the moon and stars; has a magnificent house in the sky realm called Gacay; retreats to his home during nights; giver of light and growth • Apo Init: the Ilocano deity of the sun • Amman: the Ilocano god of the Sun, where the sun is his eye • Agueo: the morose and taciturn Pangasinense sun god who is obedient to his father, Ama; lives in a palace of light • Algao: the Aeta Sun god who battled the giant turtle Bacobaco • Mangetchay: also called Mangatia; the Kapampangan supreme deity who created life on earth in remembrance of his dead daughter; lives in the Sun; in other versions, she is the creator and net-weaver of the heavens • Aring Sinukûan: the Kapampangan Sun god of war and death, taught the early inhabitants the industry of metallurgy, wood cutting, rice culture and even waging war; lives in Mount Arayat, and later included a female form • Apolaki: the Tagalog god of sun and warriors; son of Anagolay and Dumakulem; sometimes referred as son of Bathala and brother of Mayari; ruler of the world during daytime • Quadruple Deities: the four childless naked Tau-buid Mangyan deities, composed of two gods who come from the Sun and two goddesses who come from the upper part of the river; summoned using the paragayan or diolang plates • Adlao: the Bicolano son of Dagat and Paros; joined Daga's rebellion and died; his body became the sun; in another myth, he was alive and during a battle, he cut one of Bulan's arm and hit Bulan's eyes, where the arm was flattened and became the earth, while Bulan's tears became the rivers and seas • Unnamed God: a Bicolano Sun god who fell in love with the mortal, Rosa; refused to light the world until his father consented to their marriage; he afterwards visited Rosa, but forgetting to remove his powers over fire, he accidentally burned Rosa's whole village until nothing but hot springs remained • Sanghid: the Waray giant who wove cloth on a gold loom with supernatural speed; has the power to move back the Sun • Liadlao: the gold-bodied Bisaya son of Lidagat and Lihangin; killed by Kaptan's rage during the great revolt; his body became the Sun • Adlaw: the Bisaya Sun deity worshiped by the good • Launsina: the Capiznon goddess of the Sun, Moon, stars, and seas, and the most beloved because people seek forgiveness from her • Magrakad: the Tagbanwa god found at exactly noontime on the other side of the Sun; gives the warmth which sustains life and, when the people are ill, carries away sickness • Tumangkuyun: wash and keep clean the trunks of the two sacred cardinal trees in Sidpan and Babatan by using the blood of those who have died in epidemics; the blood he uses causes the colors of the sunrise and sunset • Kadaw La Sambad: one of the two T'boli supreme deities; married to Bulon La Mogoaw; lives in the seventh layer of the universe • Lageay Lengkuos: the greatest of Teduray heroes and a shaman (beliyan) who made the earth and forests; the only one who could pass the magnet stone in the straight between the big and little oceans; inverted the directions where east became west, inverted the path of the Sun, and made the water into land and land into water • Sun Deity: the divine Maranao being depicted in an anthropomorphic form as a flaming young man; angels serve as his charioteers ===
Hindu mythology=== •
Surya, the Sun god, rides across the sky in a horse-drawn chariot. •
Aruna, charioteer of Surya, god of the morning Sun. •
Aryaman, god of the midday Sun. •
Savitr, god of the twilight Sun, also known as sunrise and sunset. •
Mitra, often associated with the Sun. •
Tapati, Sun goddess. •
Ushas, goddess of dawn. ===
Hittite mythology=== •
Istanu, goddess/god of the Sun and judgment •
Sun goddess of Arinna •
Sun god of Heaven, daylight god of judgement •
Sun goddess of the Earth, infernal goddess of the underworld. ===
Japanese mythology=== •
Amaterasu, goddess of the Sun •
Kamotaketsunumi no Mikoto, god of Sun ===
Mesopotamian mythology=== •
Shamash, Akkadian god of the Sun and justice •
Utu, Sumerian god of the Sun and justice • Šerida, Sumerian goddess of light, married to the god of the Sun (Akkadian name
Aya) ===
Scythian religion=== •
Tabiti, ancient Iranian goddess possibly connected with the Sun.
Tocharian • A "sun deity" (
kaum näkte), possibly a goddess. ===
Turkic mythology=== •
Gun Ana, common Turkic solar deity, seen as a goddess in the Kazakh and Kyrgyz traditions •
Koyash, god of the Sun ===
Persian mythology=== •
Mithra, often associated with the Sun. •
Hvare-khshaeta, the Sun
yazata ===
Zunism=== • The
Zunbil dynasty and the subjects of
Zabulistan worshiped the Sun, which they called Zun. They believed that the Sun was the god of justice, the force of good in the world and, consequently, the being that drove out the darkness and allowed man to live another day. ===
Vietnamese mythology=== • Goddess
Thần Mặt Trời, the embodiment of the sun, the daughter of
Ông Trời, old sister of
Thần Mặt Trăng, she and her sister have a husband who is a bear, when the Bear God wants to meet them, a solar or lunar eclipse will appear. ==European==