The Incan Goddesses
Here's a quick run down of the Incan goddesses. I knows it's not a complete list.
- Reblogs please to add to it. Chasca - goddess of the dawn and twilight, she is described as the beautiful wavy haired maiden. Chasca is linked to the planet Venus and is the servant of the Sun God Inti. She is also protects the young maidens. Copacati - The lake goddess. Her worship was centered on Tiahuanaco, near Lake Titicaca. She is often represented by images of serpents or snakes and legend says she sunk a whole town into the waters of the great lake. Mama Allpa -Andean fertility goddess depicted with multiple breasts. Her name translates from Quechua as "earth mother" or "world womb." Mamacocha - goddess of the ocean, her name literally means "mother ocean." She is a source of health and provider of food. She is sometimes shown as a whale goddess. To the Q'eros, many of whom will never even experience the ocean, she represents the largest expression of the living energy of water. Smaller water deities that inhabit lakes rivers and streams are known as Phasi Runa. Mama Kuka - The coca goddess, her name in Quechua means "mother coca". She is associated with health and joy. In Incan mythology Mama Kuka was originally a promiscuous woman who was cut in half by her many lovers. From her body grew the first coca plant the leaves of which are chewed to boost energy and are used by the Andean priests in ritual offerings known as k'intus. Mama Oello - The mother goddess of the Inka who taught the people how to spin and weave. Alternate transliterations include: Mama Ocllo, and Mama Ogllo. Mama Quillya - goddess of the moon, she is the protector of women and is linked with the calendar marking the timings of planting the crops and the start of religious festivals. Mama Quillya is the sister and wife of the sun God Inti. In art she is depicted as a silver disk with the face of a woman. Also known as Mama Kilya. Mama Zara - goddess of grain. Mama Zara is linked with the harvest of maize in particular. In fact when the maize develops in multiple growths that look like the head and limbs of people, they are dressed in fine clothing. These "dolls" are treated as the manifestation of living energy of this goddess Pachamama - goddess of the Earth and the cosmic mother. In Quechua her name translates as our mother in space and time. To the Q'eros she is a living being on whom our physical lives depend. She also represents the element of earth. Pachamama is also the goddess of earthquakes.