Topic Archive

Myths about Goddesses

Explore myths connected by the recurring theme of Goddesses across cultures, characters, and sacred places.

6 myths currently featured for Goddesses.

The Grieving Sister Goddesses of the Xiang River

🐉 Chinese MythologyXiang River, Hunan, ChinaEhuang • Nüying • Emperor Shun

Ehuang and Nüying, the daughters of Emperor Yao and wives of Emperor Shun, were archetypes of devotion whose grief transformed them into the guardian spirits of the Xiang River. After the death of their husband during a southern expedition, their tears permanently stained the local bamboo, creating the famous 'spotted bamboo' of Hunan. Their story serves as a foundational myth for the Chu...

Ehuang and Nüying: The Tears of the Xiang River

🐉 Chinese MythologyJunshan Island, Hunan, ChinaEhuang • Nüying • Emperor Shun

Ehuang and Nüying were the devoted wives of the legendary Emperor Shun and daughters of Emperor Yao. Following the death of their husband during a southern inspection tour, their profound grief transformed them into the goddesses of the Xiang River. Their tears fell upon the local bamboo, creating permanent purple and brown spots that characterize the 'Spotted Bamboo' found on Junshan Island...

Goddess Saraswati Transforming into the Mythical Hidden River

🕉️ Hindu MythologyMana, IndiaSaraswati • Brahma • Vishnu

The myth tells of how Goddess Saraswati, the embodiment of wisdom and eloquence, transformed her celestial form into a mighty river to save the world from a cosmic fire. Flowing from the Himalayas near Mana, she eventually chose to vanish from the surface to preserve her purity, becoming the 'Antahsalila' or the hidden river. Today, she is worshipped both as the goddess of learning and the...

Hel Preparing Her Dark Hall Éljúðnir for the Sick and Elderly

🪓 Norse MythologySnæfellsjökull, IcelandHel • Odin • Loki

After being banished by Odin, Hel descends into the misty realm of Niflheim to establish a kingdom for those who die of sickness and old age. She constructs her massive hall, Éljúðnir, furnishing it with symbolic items like the plate Hunger and the bed Sickbed to reflect the nature of those who suffer 'straw deaths.' This myth details her meticulous preparation of the underworld as a somber...

Gefjon Demanding Land from the Swedish King Gylfi

🪓 Norse MythologyOdense, Funen, DenmarkGefjon • King Gylfi • Oxen Sons

The goddess Gefjon, disguised as a wandering traveler, tricked the Swedish King Gylfi into granting her as much land as four oxen could plow in a single day and night. Using her giant-born sons transformed into massive oxen, she tore a vast portion of Sweden's earth away and dragged it into the sea, forming the island of Zealand. The remaining cavity in the Swedish landscape became Lake...

Frigg Spinning the Clouds in Her Watery Hall Fensalir

🪓 Norse MythologySognefjord, NorwayFrigg • Odin • Fulla

The Queen of the Aesir, Frigg, resides in her misty hall, Fensalir, where she performs the cosmic task of spinning the clouds for Midgard using a jeweled distaff. While she possesses the wisdom of the fates, she remains silent, focusing her divine energy on the domestic and natural order of the universe. Accompanied by her handmaids, she maintains the balance between the celestial realms and...