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The Celtic Gods and Goddesses

These are the Powers who walk between land, sea, and sky… they shaped the stories that shaped us.

Featured Deities

Goddess of healing, poetry, and craft; a bright, many-skilled patron of hearth and inspiration. Brigid bridges sacred fire and fresh water, blessing poets, healers, smiths, and households.
Many-skilled champion of the Tuatha Dé Danann; patron of arts, oaths, and victory. Lugh is the bright master of every craft whose festival Lughnasadh marks the first harvest.
A powerful, shape-shifting goddess of battle, prophecy, and sovereignty. The Morrígan appears as crow or woman at the threshold of conflict, foretelling fate and stirring courage or terror.

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A figure in elaborate armor and fur cloak, holding a sword with glowing embers, flanked by ghostly wolves.
Arawn
Arawn, King of Annwfn, stands among the most misunderstood figures of Celtic myth. To the uninitiated, he migh…
A Celtic warrior prepared for battle with weaponry, armor, and ancient objects around him, set in a natural landscape.
Lugh
Lugh is one of the most radiant and compelling figures in the Irish mythological tradition: a master of many a…
A Celtic druid figure in traditional garb, with a staff and lyre, cooking over an open fire surrounded by autumnal harvest produce.
The Dagda
The Dagda is the jovial powerhouse of the Tuatha Dé Danann: a kingly figure whose gifts are abundant and whose…
This image features a Celtic warrior in traditional clothing, holding a staff, with a cloudy sky and rolling hills in the background.
Taranis
Taranis is the thunder-bearing sky god of the Gaulish and Romano-Celtic world, often depicted with a wheel and…

Who were the Gods and Godessess

The Celtic deities are a diverse group of gods and goddesses found across the ancient cultures of Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and Gaul. Rather than forming a single, unified pantheon like the Greeks or Romans, Celtic deities are deeply regional and often tied to specific landscapes, tribes, and natural forces. Many embody roles connected to everyday life, such as craftsmanship, healing, poetry, warfare, and kingship… while others personify rivers, hills, seasons, or the boundaries between the human world and the Otherworld. Although details vary by region and surviving sources, Celtic deities consistently reflect a worldview in which nature, sovereignty, and the supernatural are closely interconnected. Here, gods act less as distant rulers and more like active participants in the rhythms of the land and the lives of its people.

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