Pan -Tinks Emporium

Gods & Goddesses F

Fabulinus Roman
God who taught children their first word.

Fama Roman 
Goddess of fame and rumor, both good and bad.

Fan-kui China
God of butchers.

Faro Africa 
Sky and water god of the Bambara people. He became pregnant by the rocking of the universe, and he gave birth to various twins, the ancestors of the human race. Returns to earth every 400 years to verify that everything is still in order.

Fates Greek
The triple goddesses of fate and destiny, they have the task of determining the lifespan and events of mortals (and possibly the gods). The Fates are: Clotho, the spinner of the thread of life, Lachesis, the measurer, who chooses one's lot in life and determines how long that life will be, and Atropos, the cutter who snips the thread of life, leading, of course, to death. There is some evidence that the Fates are older than the gods and control their destinies as well.

Fauna Roman 
Earth-mother and fertility goddess. Usually identified with Bona Dea, Ops, or Tellus.

Faunus Roman
God of the wilds and fertility. He is identified with the Greek Pan. Also the protector of cattle.

Faustitas Roman 
Goddess who protects livestock herds.

Favonius Roman 
God of the west wind, the herald of spring. Equivalent to the Greek Zephyrus.

Febris Roman 
Goddess who protects agains fevers.

Februus Etruscan 
God of the underworld and purification. Month of February named after him.

Fei Lian China 
God of the winds. Depicted as a dragon with the head of a stag and tail of a snake.

Felicitas Roman 
Goddess of success.

Feng Bo China 
'Earl of the Wind'. Human form of Fei Lan.

Feng Po-po China 
Goddess of the Wind.

Fenrir Norse Also known as Fenris.
The great wolf, child of Loki and Angrboda, who will eventually devour Odin on Ragnarok. The Aesir bound him with chains to prevent his destructive rampages, but it is foretold that on Ragnarok he will escape.

Feronia Etruscan 
Fire and fertility goddess.

Feronia Roman 
Goddess of freedom and a successful harvest. She was often worshipped by slaves.

Fides Roman 
Goddess of faithfulness and good faith. She was invoked during the signing of treaties.

Flora Roman
Goddess of spring and the blooming flowers. She is associated with the Greek Chloris.

Fontus Roman
God of fountains, wells and springs.

Fornax Roman 
Goddess of the baking of bread.

Forseti Norse 
God of justice who settles court disputes in his gilded hall.

Fortuna Roman 
Goddess of good fortune, she was originally a deity of blessing and fertility.

Freya Norse 
Goddess of love, beauty and sensuality. She is the patroness of sexual encounters, as well as the foremost goddess of fertility and birth.

Freyr Norse
God of fertility, sun and rain. He is a member of the Vanir, and is the brother of the love-goddess Freya. He is considered a gentle and kind god, but also a fierce warrior.

Frigg Norse
Wife of Odin and the goddess of marriage and fertility. She is rumoured to know the destiny of all creatures but never to reveal it.

Fudo Japan 
God of fire and wisdom, he is the patron protector of the people and the god of Astrology. Seen as an ugly old man surrounded by fire, with a sword in one hand and a rope in the other.

Fufluns Etruscan
God of vitality, vegetation and gaiety. Similar to Dionysus and Bacchus.

Fujin Japan 
Shinto god of the wind. Seen as a terrifying dark demon in a leopard skin, with a bag of winds over his shoulder.

Fukurokuju Japan
Shinto god of wisdom, luck and prosperity.

Fulgora Roman
Goddess of lightning.

Funadama Japan
The boat-spirit, she is a goddess who protects and helps mariners and fishermen.

Furies Greek
The carriers of divine justice, the Furies punish crime until the guilty is dead, often driving their victims to suicide. They are particularly concerned with parenticide. The Furies are: Tisiphone, Megaera, and Alecto.

Furies Roman 
Goddesses of vengance. Equivalent to the Greek Erinyes.

Furina Roman 
Goddess of thieves.

Futsu-Nushi-no-Kami Japan 
God of fire and lightning, later became a war god and general of Ameratsu.

Fu-xing China
God of happiness, one of the San-xing. Often seen in the blue clothes of a civil servant and in the company of children, or in his symbolic form of a bat.

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