Hellene Gods (Terra Cognita)

The Demiurgic Triad, who make the kosmos:

§  Zeus (Iuppiter)

§  Poseidon (Neptunus)

§  Hephaistos (Vulcanus)

The Life-Bearing Triad, who animate the kosmos:

§  Demeter (Ceres)

§  Hera (Juno)

§  Artemis (Diana)

The Elevating Triad, who harmonize the kosmos:

§  Apollon (Apollo)

§  Aphrodite (Venus)

§  Hermes (Mercurius)

The Untainted Protective Triad, who watch over the kosmos:

§  Hestia (Vesta)

§  Athene (Minerva)

§  Ares (Mars)

There are a plethora of additional Gods, Nymphs, and Daimons, an exhaustive list:

§  Abeona: Goddess who protects children leaving the home.

§  Abundantia: Goddess of luck, abundance and prosperity. She distributed food and money from a cornucopia.

§  Acca Larentia: Adoptive mother of Romulus and Remus who is worshiped during the festival of Larentalia.

§  Adeona: Goddess who guides children back home.

§  Achelous: God of the Achelous River.

§  Acis: Daimon of the Acis River in Sicily.

§  Adêphagia: Goddess of agricultural bounty worshiped in Sicily.

§  Adonis: God of beauty, desire, and vegetation.

§  Adrasteia: A Nymph who in secret nurtured the infant Zeus in the Dictaean cave.

§  Aeolos: God of the wind.

§  Aequitas: God of fair trade and honest merchants.

§  Aera Cura: Goddess associated with the underworld.

§  Afrika (Africa): Goddess of the African continent and patron of the Republic of Africa.

§  Agathos Daimon: Daimon of the vineyards and grainfields.

§  Agdistis: Hermaphroditic Goddess associated with the Meter Theon.

§  Agon: Daimon of contest who had an altar at Olympia, the site of the Olympic Games.

§  Aius Locutius: God associated with saving Rome from Gallic invasion.

§  Alemonia: Goddess who feeds unborn children.

§  Amphitrite (Salacia): Goddess of the Sea and wife of Poseidon.

§  Ananke (Necessitas): The Goddess of necessity.

§  Anemoi (Venti): Gods of the wind.

§  Angerona: Protective Goddess who relieves people from pain and sorrow.

§  Angitia: Goddess of healing and patron of snake-charmers.

§  Anna Perenna: Nymph of the New Year and provider of food.

§  Anteros: Daimon of reciprocated love and the avenger of the unrequited.

§  Anthousai: Nymphs of flowers.

§  Aphaia: A Goddess worshiped almost exclusively at a single sanctuary on the island of Aigina.

§  Aphrodite (Venus): Goddess of love.

§  Astarte: Goddess of war & beauty.

§  Cloacina: A ferility Goddess who also presides over sewers.

§  Apollon (Apollo): God of the arts, oracles, knowledge, medicine, light, and plague.

§  Borvo: Lusitanian-Celtic manifestation of Apollon.

§  Arete (Virtus): A Daimon of bravery and military strength, often worshiped alongside Honos within Rome at a temple in the Porta Capena.

§  Ares (Mars): God of destruction, war, courage, soldiers, farmers, and agriculture.

§  Katorix (Caturix): Helvetii manifestation of Ares.

§  Ares Lusitani: Lusitanian manifestation of Ares.

§  Ariadne (Arianna): Goddess of the labyrinths, mazes, paths, vegetation, fertility, wine, and snakes.

§  Aristaios (Aristaeus): Rustic God of beekeeping worshiped in many parts of Greece.

§  Artemis (Diana): Goddess of the hunt, forests and hills, the moon, and archery.

§  Artemis Ephesia: Mother Goddess of Ephesus.

§  Bendis: Thracian cult of Artemis associated with the moon and the hunt.

§  Asklepios (Aesculapius, Vejovis): God of healing, resurrection, and salvation.

§  Asteria (Asterie): The Titaness of nocturnal oracles and falling stars. She is also known as Brizo on the island of Delos, where She is venerated as a protector of mariners, sailors, and fishermen.

§  Athene (Minerva): Goddess of wisdom, civilization, law and justice, inspiration, courage, strength, strategic warfare, strategy, mathematics, the arts, crafts, and skill

§  Anath: Northwestern Semitic manifestation of Athene.

§  Athena-Allāt: Athene of the Near East.

§  Ataegina: Widely worshiped Lusitanian Goddess.

§  Attis: Phrygian solar God of vegetation, fertility, and rebirth.

§  Aura: Goddess of breezes.

§  Aurai: Nymphs of the breeze.

§  Averronkos (Averruncus): A God of avoiding calamity.

§  Bona Dea: Goddess of chastity and fertility in women, healing, and the protection of the Romans; solely worshiped by women.

§  Britomartis: Also called Diktynna, She is Goddess of mountains and hunting.

§  Bubona: Goddess of cattle. It’s possible that the festival of cattle (ludi boum causa) mentioned by Pliny was dedicated to Her. Those who celebrated the rites were called Bubetii.

§  Caca: A hearth Goddess who had a shrine which was likely somewhere in Rome.

§  Camenae: Four Nymphs of wells and springs, whose place of worship was the sacred grove of Carmentis at the Port Capena. These Nymphs are:

§  Carmenta: Nymph of childbirth and prophecy.

§  Egeria: Nymph who was consort to King Numa.

§  Antevorta: Also called Porrima, She is a Nymph of the future.

§  Postverta: Nymph of the past.

§  Candelifera: Goddess of childbirth.

§  Cardea: Goddess of thresholds and door hinges.

§  Carmentes: Also called the Carmentae, they are companions of the Goddess Carmenta. During childbirth, prayers are offered to summon the Carmentes to preside over the labor.

§  Antevorta: Also called Porrima, She is a Nymph of the future. She is present when the feet of the baby come first.

§  Postvorta: She is Nymph of the past, and is present at the birth when the baby is born head-first.

§  Carnea: A Nymph of the door handles, the heart, and other organs. Her festival is on the Kalends of June.

§  Chloris (Flora): Nymph associated with spring, flowers and new growth.

§  Clementia: Goddess of mercy and clemency.

§  Coelus: God of the sky.

§  Collatina: Goddess of hills.

§  Conditor: God of the harvest.

§  Consus: God of grain storage.

§  Convector: God of bringing in of the crops from the fields.

§  Copia: Goddess of wealth and plenty.

§  Cunina: Goddess who watcher over and protects infants in their cradles.

§  Dea Dia: Goddess of growth worshiped during Ambarvalia.

§  Dea Tacita: Goddess of the dead whose worship was established by King Numa.

§  Deo (Ceres): Goddess of agriculture, fertility, harvest, and sacred law.

§  Despoina: Daughter of Deo worshiped in Arcadia.

§  Deverra: A Goddess who protects midwives and women in labour. She is symbolized by a broom which is used to sweep away evil influences, and as such is associated with the brooms which are used to purify temples in preparation for various worship services, sacrifices and celebrations.

§  Dike (Jus, Justitia): Goddess of justice.

§  Dionysos (Liber): God of ecstasy, liberation, and salvation.

§  Iacchos (Iacchus): A minor deity worshiped at Athens and Eleusis in connection with the Eleusinian mysteries.

§  Dioskouroi (Dioscuri): The twins Castor and Pollux, who were transformed into the constellation Gemini.

§  Disciplina: Goddess of discipline worshiped by soldiers.

§  Dius Fidus: God of oaths.

§  Domiduca & Domitius: Marriage divinities who accompanies the bridal procession as the couple arrives at their new home together on the wedding night.

§  Dryades: Tree Nymphs.

§  Hamadryades: Dryad nymphs who are bounded to a specific tree.

§  Durius: The Daimon of the river Douro in modern day Portugal and Spain, depicted bearing a fishing net.

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§  Eileithyia (Lucina): Goddess of childbirth.

§  Eirene (Pax): Goddess of peace.

§  Ekekheiria (Ececheiria): Daimon of truce and armistice. She was honoured at Olympia when a general armistice was declared among the states.

§  Eleos (Misericordia, Clementia): Daimon of mercy, pity and compassion who had an altar in Athens.

§  Eleutheria (Libertas): Goddess of liberty.

§  Elpis (Spes): Goddess of hope.

§  Empanda: Goddess of openness, friendliness and generosity. She had a sanctuary near the gate which led to the capitol.

§  Endovelicus: Chthonic God of medicine.

§  Enyalios: War God who is the son of Ares and Enyo.

§  Enyo (Bellona): Goddess of war.

§  Eos (Aurora): Goddess of the dawn.

§  Matuta: Latin Goddess of the dawn, harbors and the Sea. Patron deity of newborn babies.

§  Epimelides: Nymphs of meadows and pastures who nourish and protect the herds and flocks of cattle, goats and sheep which graze their lands. Guardians of fruit-trees.

§  Epidotes: Daimon of ritual purification worshiped in Sparta.

§  Epona: Protector of equines.

§  Erecura: Chthonic Gallo-Roman Goddess.

§  Erinyes (Dirae): Also called the Furies, Goddesses of vengeance.

§  Eris (Discordia): Goddess of discord and strife.

§  Eros (Cupid): God of attraction.

§  Euboulos: God of ploughing and sowing of seed.

§  Eukleia (Eucleia): Daimon of good repute and glory who is worshiped in Boiotia, Lokris, and Makedonia.

§  Eunomia: One of the Horai, She is a Goddess of good order, civil order, good laws, lawful behaviour.

§  Eurynome: Oceanid Nymph worshiped at a sanctuary near the confluence of rivers called the Neda and the Lymax in the Peloponnese.

§  Eventus Bonus: God of success both in commerce and in agriculture.

§  Fabulinus: God who taught children to speak and receives an offering when a child speaks their first words.

§  Falacer: God of the grove.

§  Fauna: Female counterpart to Pan.

§  Faustitas: Goddess who is the protector of herds of livestock.

§  Febris: Goddess who protected people against fevers.

§  Felicitas: Goddess of good luck.

§  Feronia: Goddess of health, fertility, abundance, wildlife, and freedom. She was often worshiped by ex-slaves who attained freedom.

§  Flora: Goddess of spring and the blooming flowers.

§  Fontus: Also named Fons, He is a God of wells and springs whose religious festival, the Fontinalia, is held on October 13

§  Fornax: Goddess of bread baking and ovens.

§  Fulgora: Goddess of lightning.

§  Furrina: Goddess of springs.

§  Glaukos (Glaucus): Prophetic Purified Soul associated with the seas.

§  Glykon (Glycon): Serpentine God.

§  Gobannos (Gobbanus): Gallo-Roman smithing God.

§  Harmonia (Concordia): Also called Homonoia, She is the Goddess of harmony, agreement, and understanding.

§  Harpocrates: Mystical God of silence.

§  Hebe (Juventas): Goddess of youth.

§  Hedone (Volupta): Goddess of delight and daughter born from the union of Cupid and Psyche.

§  Hekaterides: Goddess of rustic dance.

§  Hekateros: God of dance and handwork.

§  Hephaistos (Vulcanus): God of the forge, metallurgy, and volcanoes.

§  Hera (Juno): Queen of the Gods; Goddess of marriage and protector of women

§  Caelestis (Tanit): Carthaginian Hera.

§  Cinxia: Goddess of marriage.

§  Quiritis: Goddess of motherhood.

§  Herakles (Hercules): God of strength, gatekeeper of Olympus, and the saviour and protector of mankind.

§  Melkarth: Carthaginian Heracles.

§  Hermaphroditos: Also called Aphroditos, He is a God of unions, androgyny, marriage, sexuality and fertility.

§  Hermes (Mercurius): Messenger of the Gods and God of commerce, travel, and shepherds.

§  Hermanubis: Graeco-Egyptian God of the Priests in the search for truth.

§  Hermes Trismegistus: God of mysteries and author of the Hermetic Corpus.

§  Heron: The Thracian rider God, who is worshiped as a saviour deity.

§  Hestia (Vesta): Goddess of the hearth.

§  Hippolytus (Virbius): A forest God whose worship was associated with the cult of Aphrodite.

§  Honos: A Daimon of chivalry, honor and military justice often worshiped alongside the deity Arete.

§  Hora: The Pure Soul of Hersilia, the wife of Romulus.

§  Horai: Goddesses of seasons and the natural portions of time.

§  Hormes: Daimon of effort and eagerness who is worshiped in Athens.

§  Hygieia (Salus): Goddess of good health and sanitation.

§  Hymen: God of weddings, reception, marriage

§  Hypnos (Somnus, Sopor): God of sleep.

§  Iacchos: God who is understood as founder of the Eleusinian mysteries.

§  Iana: Goddess of arches and the moon.

§  Ianos (Janus): God of time, beginnings, and ends.

§  Indiges (Aeneas): Deified soul of Aeneas, the leader of the Trojan refugees.

§  Intercidona: A Goddess who protects midwives and women in labour.

§  Iris (Arcus): Goddess of rainbows and messenger of the Gods. She is worshiped by Delians and offered cakes made of dried figs, wheat, and honey.

§  Jugatinus: A conjugal God.

§  Juturna: Goddess of lakes, wells and springs.

§  Kabiri: Group of chthonic deities.

§  Karme: Goddess of the harvest.

§  Kekropidai: Three sister-Goddesses who were the daughters of Cecrops I, usually worshiped by Athenians.

§  Aglaurus

§  Herse

§  Pandrosus

§  Kharites (Gratiae): Also called the Graces, they are Daimons of beauty, human creativity, charm, nature, and fertility.

§  Aglaia: Also named Kharis and Kale, She is a Daimon of beauty, splendour, glory, magnificence, adornment

§  Euphrosyne: Also named Euthymia, She is a Daimon of joy and mirth.

§  Thalia: A Daimon of festivity and rich banquets.

§  Kheiron (Chiron): Kentaur divinity.

§  Kore (Proserpina): Goddess of the underworld, springtime, flowers and vegetation.

§  Isis: Goddess of motherhood.

§  Korymbos (Corymbus): Rustic Daimon of the fruit of the ivy.

§  Kronos (Saturn): God of agriculture, the harvest, generation, time, dissolution, plenty, wealth, periodic renewal, and liberation.

§  Lacturnus: A deity who infuses crops with “milk” (juice or sap).

§  Lares, Penates & Genii: Gods of the domestic space.

§  Laverna: Chthonic Goddess of gain.

§  Leto (Latona): Goddess of womanly modesty and motherhood.

§  Leucothea: A Nymph of the Sea.

§  Libera: Goddess of liberation and female fertility.

§  Libertas: Goddess of freedom.

§  Libitina: Goddess of funerals whose grove was located on the Esquiline Hill.

§  Lima: Roman Goddess of thresholds.

§  Litavis: Gallo-Roman Goddess who is consort of Ares (Mars).

§  Lubentina: A Goddess of funerals and burial.

§  Manes: Similar to the Lares, Genii and Di Penates. They were the souls of deceased loved ones.

§  Mania: Goddess of the dead.

§  Manturna: A conjugal Goddess who lets a couple remain together.

§  Meditrina: Goddess of wine and health whose festival, the Meditrinalia, is observed on October 11.

§  Mefitas: Goddess of poisonous vapors which emit from the ground in swamps and volcanic vapors who protects people from malaria.

§  Melinoë: Chthonic Nymph.

§  Mellona: Goddess and protector of bees.

§  Men (Lunus): God of lunar months.

§  Mena: Roman Goddess of menstruation.

§  Mens: Roman Goddess of mind and consciousness whose festival was May 8.

§  Messia: Agricultural Goddess. She, along with other harvesting Goddesses Secia and Tutelina, had three pillars with altars before them in the Circus Maximus.

§  Messor: God of agriculture and mowing.

§  Meter Theon (Rhea-Cybele, Ops): Goddess of theurgy, mother of the Gods, and wife of Zeus-Helios.

§  Rhea (Ops): Agricultural mother Goddess.

§  Ge (Terra): Goddess of the Earth.

§  Hekate (Trivia): Goddess of theurgy, crossroads, the magian science, and guardian of roads.

§  Mithras: Solar God of light and salvation.

§  Moirai (Parcae): Also called the Fates, three Goddesses of fate.

§  Mogounos: God of righteousness.

§  Moneta: Goddess of prosperity.

§  Mousai (Musae): Also called the Muses, they are Goddesses of the literature, science, and the arts.

§  Mutunus Tutunus: Fertility God associated with marriage with a shrine at the Velian Hill.

§  Naiades: Also called Hydriades, they are Nymphs of streams, brooks, fountains, wells, springs, and other bodies of fresh water. Some are among the Okeanids, daughters of the earth-encircling river Okeanos, while others are born of local River divinities.

§  Nehalennia: Goddess of trading, shipping, and possibly horticulture and fertility.

§  Nemestrinus: God of groves and the woods.

§  Nemesis (Invidia, Rivalitas): Also named Adrasteia, She is the Goddess of retribution.

§  Nenia: Goddess of funerals who had a sanctuary beyond the Porta Viminalis.

§  Nereides: Nymphs of the Sea and daughters of the God Nereos. They were worshiped in parts of Greece.

§  Nereos: God of the Sea and father of the Nereids, worshiped at Gythium in Laconia.

§  Nikaia: A Nymph and daughter of the Great Mother who is worshiped in the Bithynian town of Nikaia.

§  Nike (Victoria): Goddess of victory.

§  Vica Pota: Another form of the Goddess Nike who is worshiped in early Rome. Her shrine was located at the foot of the Velian Hill.

§  Nodutus: The divinity who causes the “knot” (nodus in Latin) or node to form.

§  Nundina: Goddess of the ninth day, on which the newborn child was given a name.

§  Nymphai: Also called Nymphs, they are a class of worldly spirits in our realm of generation.

§  Nysos: Daimon of Mount Nysa.

§  Nyx (Nox): Goddess of the night. By large She is often associated in the worship of other Gods, however had an oracle on the acropolis at Megara.

§  Obarator: God of ploughing.

§  Occator: God of harrowing.

§  Okeanos: Primordial Titan of the earth-encircling river

§  Okeanids: Nymphs who are three thousand daughters of Okeanos and Tethys. Their numbers include some of the Anthousai, Aurai, Dryades, Epimelides, Leimonides, Naiades, and Nephelai.

§  Oneiroi: Gods and Daimons who rule over dreams, nightmares, and oneiromancy.

§  Orbona: Goddess of parents who lost their children.

§  Oreiades: Nymphs of mountains. Their members include some of the Epimelides, Hamadryades, and Naiades.

§  Ourea: God of mountains.

§  Paean: Physician of the Gods.

§  Palaimon (Portunus): Sea God associated with keys, doors, livestock and ports. He is the guardian of storehouses and locked doors.

§  Palatua: Goddess who guards the Palatine Hill.

§  Pales: God of shepherds, flocks and livestock whose festival, the Parilia, is celebrated on April 21.

§  Pan (Faunus, Lupercus): God of shepherds and flocks, rustic music, the wilds, and the nature of mountain wilds. He is the companion of the nymphs and protector of cattle.

§  Inuus: A deity associated with the Lupercalia festival.

§  Patelana: The Goddess who opens up the grain.

§  Peitho (Suadela): Goddess of persuasion in romance, seduction and love. She is worshiped in conjunction with Aphrodite.

§  Phales: God of phallic processions.

§  Phorkys: Primordial God of the Sea.

§  Picmunus & Pilumnus: Picmunus is a rustic God of agriculture, fertility, matrimony, infants and children. His brother Pilumnus is a rustic God who protects midwives and women in labour who ensures children grow properly and remain healthy.

§  Pistis (Fides): Goddess of faithfulness and good faith.

§  Plouton (Dis Pater, Orcus): God of the underworld and the riches of the earth. Also a God of oaths and punisher of perjurers.

§  Sarapis (Serapis): Alexandrian Plutoun.

§  Ploutos (Plutus): God of wealth apparently important to the Eleusinian Mysteries.

§  Poseidon (Neptunus): Lord of the Sea, storms, earthquakes, soil, and horses.

§  Pomona: Goddess of fruitful abundance.

§  Pontus: Primordial God of the Sea.

§  Porus: God of plenty.

§  Potamoi (Flumina): Gods of rivers and streams worshiped all throughout the Hellenic world.

§  Potina: Goddess of children’s drinks.

§  Priapus: Rustic God of garden fertility.

§  Prometheus: Trickster God and benefactor of mankind.

§  Proteus: Primordial seer of the Sea.

§  Providentia: Goddess of forethought.

§  Pudicitia: Goddess of modesty and chastity.

§  Puta: Goddess of the pruning of vines and trees.

§  Quirinus: A Pure Soul sent to our world as Romulus, He is the national tutelary divinity of the Romans.

§  Robigus: Also called in feminine Robigo, they are a divinity who averts overwhelming heat and blight from young cornfields.

§  Roma: Goddess of Rome.

§  Rosmerta: Goddess of fertility and abundance.

§  Rumina: Goddess of nursing mothers.

§  Runcina: A Goddess of weeding and mowing.

§  Rusina: Goddess of the fields.

§  Sancus: God of oaths and good faith.

§  Saritor: God of weeding and hoeing.

§  Secia: An agricultural Goddess. She, along with other harvesting Goddesses Tutelina and Messia, had three pillars with altars before them in the Circus Maximus.

§  Seia: Goddess who protects the seed once it’s sewn into the earth.

§  Selene (Luna): Goddess of the Moon.

§  Semonia, Setia, and Segetia: Agricultural deities who are Goddesses of sowing.

§  Silenos: Companion and tutor to Dionysos.

§  Silvanus: God of the forests.

§  Sirona: Celtic Goddess associated with healing springs whose attributes are eggs and snakes.

§  Stata Mater: Goddess who guards against fires.

§  Sterquilinus: God of fertilizer.

§  Stimula: Goddess who incites passion in women.

§  Strenua: Goddess of strength and vigor.

§  Suadela: Goddess of persuasion, especially in matters of love.

§  Subigus: Tutelary God of the wedding night.

§  Subrincinator: God of weeding.

§  Soukélous (Sucellus): Khthonic deity and the ancestor and protector of mankind.

§  Summanus: God of nocturnal thunder whose temple was west of the Circus Maximus.

§  Telephos: Son of Herakles and Auge. He is worshiped in Arcadia.

§  Telete: Daimon of the Bacchic initiation rites.

§  Tempestes: Goddesses of storms and sudden weather who had a temple dedicated to Her near the Porta Capena by Lucius Cornelius Scipio, a consul during the First Punic War.

§  Terminus: God who protects boundary markers.

§  Thalassa: Primordial Goddess of the Sea.

§  Theisoa: A Nymph worshiped at Theisoa in Arcadia.

§  Themis: Titan Goddess of divine law and order.

§  Thryiai: Goddess of divination by pebbles and bird omens.

§  Tiberinus: Daimon of the Tiber River.

§  Tityroi: Daimons under the Lord Dionysos.

§  Triptolemos: God of the wheat mill and sowing of the grain.

§  Triton: Messenger God of the Sea.

§  Trophonios: Chthonic God who built the site of the Oracle of Delphi.

§  Tutelina: A Goddess who watches over stored grain and is responsible for protecting crops brought in during harvest time. She, along with other harvesting Goddesses Secia and Messia, had three pillars with altars dedicated for them in the Circus Maximus.

§  Tyche (Fortuna): Usually worshiped more frequently as Eutykhia (Eutychia), She is a Goddess of good fortune, luck, prosperity, and success.

§  Vacuna: Goddess of agriculture worshiped throughout parts of central Italia.

§  Vallonia: Goddess of valleys.

§  Vaticanus: The God who opens a newborn’s mouth to wail.

§  Veritas: Goddess of truth.

§  Vertumnes: God of seasons, change, vegetative growth, gardens and fruit trees.

§  Viduus: God who separated the soul and the body after death.

§  Viriplacaa: Goddess of marital strife who protected women. She had a sanctuary on the Palatine Hill.

§  Vitumnus: God who gave life to children in the womb.

§  Volturnus: God of the waters.

§  Volupia: A divinity whose name appears to signify “willingness.” She had a temple, the Sacellum Volupiae, on the Via Nova by the Porta Romana, where sacrifices were offered to the Angerona.

§  Volutina: A Goddess who induces “envelopes” (Latin involumenta), or leaf sheaths, to form.

§  Volumna: Goddess who protects the nursery.

§  Zeus-Helios (Iuppiter, Iovis, Sol): The Nous, Demiurge, King of Heaven and the All

§  Anxurus: Italian deity understood as a youthful Iuppiter.

§  Sabazios: Phrygian Zeus associated with horses and snakes.

§  Tinia: Etruscan Zeus.

§  Zeus-Ammon: Graeco-Egyptian Zeus.

§  Zeus Brontios (Iuppiter Tonans): Zeus the Thunderer.

§  Zeus Dolikhenos (Iuppiter Dolichenus): Canaanite Zeus.

§  Zeus Kapitolinos (Iuppiter Optimus Maximus Capitolinus): Zeus the Best and the Greatest, as He was traditionally worshiped in Rome.

§  Zeus Ktêsios (Zeus Ctesius): Zeus who protects the household.