Perun is the highest god of the Slavic pantheon and the god of thunder and lightning. His other attributes were fire, mountains, the oak, iris, eagle, firmament (in Indo-European languages, this was joined with the notion of the sky of stone), horses and carts, weapons (the hammer, axe (Axe of ...
Svarog is the god of the blacksmith and the father of Dažbog, a Slavic solar deity, so some think that Svarog is the Slavic god of celestial fire and of blacksmithing. Folklore portrays him as a fire serpent, a winged dragon that breathes fire. His animals are a golden horned ox, a boar, a horse, ...
Dažbog is one of the major gods of Slavic mythology, most likely a solar deity and possibly a cultural hero. He is one of several authentic Slavic gods, mentioned by a number of medieval manuscripts, and one of the few Slavic gods for which evidence of worship can be found in all Slavic ...
Veles is a major Slavic god of earth, waters and the underworld, associated with dragons, cattle, magic, musicians, wealth and trickery. He is also the opponent of thunder-god Perun, and the battle between two of them constitutes one of the most important myths of Slavic mythology. No direct ...
Svetovid is the Slavic deity of war, fertility and abundance. He is often considered a local Rugian variant of the pan-Slavic god Perun. Sometimes referred to as Beli (or Byali) Vid (Beli = white, bright, shining), Svetovid is often depicted with a sword or bow in one hand and a drinking horn in ...
Triglav, also sometimes called troglav, is a god or a complex of gods in Slavic mythology, similar in nature to the Trinity in Christianity or Trimurti in Hinduism. Often, he is considered to be the same deity as Troyan. Triglav is a unity of three gods. The exact members of the triad vary by place ...
Radgost is a hypothetical West Slavic god of hospitality, fertility, and crops, associated with war and Sun. Since the name can easily be etymologised as meaning something like "dear guest", Radegast was proclaimed as the Slavic god of hospitality and as such entered the hypothetical, reconstructed ...
Jarilo, Yarilo, Jarovit or Gerovit, was a major male Proto-Slavic deity of vegetation, fertility and spring, also associated with war and harvest. The Slavic root 'jar' or 'yar' means spring or summer. He was a fairly typical life-death-rebirth deity, believed to be (re)born and killed every year. ...