Grabs Korean pantheon. Time to take creative liberties with you
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from India
seen from Singapore

seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from Jordan

seen from United States

seen from Indonesia
seen from Jordan

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Sweden
seen from Jordan

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Belarus

seen from Egypt
seen from Thailand
Grabs Korean pantheon. Time to take creative liberties with you
Korean Mythology
Yuhwa (유화부인) was the goddess of willow trees.
Yeongdeung (영등) is the goddess of wind
Sanshin (산신) a guardian spirit residing in mountains, whose cult has been closely associated with mountain tigers.
Samshin-Halmang (삼신 할머니) is the goddess of life and childbirth.
Seonangshin (서낭신) is the goddess of villages, boundaries, and war.
Sang-je (상제) is Heavenly Emperor, and therefore king of the gods.
Paritegi is the goddess who serves as guide to the underworld, leading the souls of the dead to their resting place.
Minshin (문신) is the god of the door.
Kumiho (구미호) is nine-tailed fox. It can freely transform into a beautiful woman often set out to seduce boys, and eat their liver or heart.
Haemosu (해모수신화) is the god of the sun.
Jowangshin (조왕신) is the goddess of fire and the hearth. She protects the warm center of every household, and sometimes, she's viewed as a friendly goddess who visits with women in the kitchen and even offers advice and gossips with the women.
Jameunjang-agi (가믄장 아기) is the goddess of luck and fate.
Jacheongbi (자청비) is the goddess of earth and agricultural.
Eopsin (업신) is the goddess of wealth. She is one of the Gasin, or deities that protect the house.
Dalnim (달님) is the goddess of the moon. In one version of her myth, she climbed so high into the heavens, she reached the moon, becoming the goddess.
Daebyeol (대별) is the king of the Underworld.
Bugeun (부근신) is the god of sexual relationship
all your gods are teenagers
you need to spend time alone, crawling in the shadows to truly appreciate what it is to stand in the sun
( haemosu )