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By
N.S. Gill
N.S. Gill
Ancient History and Latin Expert
- M.A., Linguistics, University of Minnesota
- B.A., Latin, University of Minnesota
N.S. Gill is a Latinist, writer, and teacher of ancient history and Latin. She has been featured by NPR and National Geographic for her ancient history expertise.
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Updated on August 16, 2024
Who is the sun god? That varies by religion and tradition. In ancient cultures, where you find deities with specialized functions, you'll probably find a sun god or goddess, or several within the same religious tradition.
Sun Gods Riding Across the Sky
Many sun gods and goddesses are humanoid and ride or drive a vessel of some sort across the sky. It may be a boat, a chariot, or a cup. The sun god of the Greeks and Romans,for example, rode in a four-horse (Pyrios, Aeos, Aethon, and Phlegon) chariot.
In Hindu traditions, the sun god Surya travels across the sky in a chariot pulled by either seven horses or a single seven-headed horse. The chariot driver is Aruna, the personification of dawn. In Hindu mythology, they fight the demons of darkness.
There may be more than one god of the sun. The Egyptians differentiated among the aspects of the sun and had several gods associated with it: Khepri for the rising sun, Atum for the setting sun, and Re for the noontime sun, who rode across the sky in a solar bark. The Greeks and Romans also had more than one sun god.
Female Sun Deities
You may notice that most sun gods are male and act as counterparts to female moon deities, but don't take this as a given; sometimes the roles are reversed. There are goddesses of the sun just as there are male deities of the moon. In Norse mythology, for example, Sol (also called Sunna) is the goddess of the sun, while her brother, Mani, is the god of the moon. Sol rides a chariot that is drawn by two golden horses.
Another sun goddess isAmaterasu, a major deity in the Shinto religion of Japan. Her brother,Tsukuyomi, is the god of the moon. It is from the sun goddess that the Japanese imperial family is believed to be descended.
Name | Nationality/Religion | God or Goddess? | Notes |
Amaterasu | Japan | Sun Goddess | Major deity of the Shinto religion. |
Arinna (Hebat) | Hittite (Syrian) | Sun Goddess | The most important of three Hittite major solar deities |
Apollo | Greece and Rome | Sun God | |
Freyr | Norse | Sun God | Not the main Norse sun god, but a fertility god associated with the sun. |
Garuda | Hindu | Bird God | |
Helios (Helius) | Greece | Sun God | Before Apollo was the Greek sun god, Helios held that position. |
Hepa | Hittite | Sun Goddess | The consort of a weather god, she was assimilated with the sun goddess Arinna. |
Huitzilopochtli (Uitzilopochtli) | Aztec | Sun God | |
Hvar Khshaita | Iranian/Persian | Sun God | |
Inti | Inca | Sun God | The national patron of the Inca state. |
Liza | West African | Sun God | |
Lugh | Celtic | Sun God | |
Mithras | Iranian/Persian | Sun God | |
Re (Ra) | Egypt | Mid-day Sun God | An Egyptian god shown with a solar disk. Center of worship was Heliopolis. Later associated with Horus as Re-Horakhty. Also combined with Amun as Amun-Ra, a solar creator god. |
Shemesh/Shepesh | Ugarit | Sun goddess | |
Sol (Sunna) | Norse | Sun Goddess | She rides in a horse-drawn solar chariot. |
Sol Invictus | Roman | Sun God | The unconquered sun. A late Roman sun god. The title was also used of Mithras. |
Surya | Hindu | Sun God | Rides the sky in a horse-drawn chariot. |
Tonatiuh | Aztec | Sun God | |
Utu (Shamash) | Mesopotamia | Sun God |
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Your Citation
Gill, N.S. "Who Are the Sun Gods and Goddesses?" ThoughtCo, Aug. 16, 2024, thoughtco.com/sun-gods-and-sun-goddesses-121167.Gill, N.S. (2024, August 16). Who Are the Sun Gods and Goddesses? Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/sun-gods-and-sun-goddesses-121167Gill, N.S. "Who Are the Sun Gods and Goddesses?" ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/sun-gods-and-sun-goddesses-121167 (accessed November 29, 2024).
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