From Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth
Akongo, supreme Sky-spirit in the myths of the Ngombe people of the river Congo, created human beings and regretted it.
From Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth Anansi ('spider'), in the myths of many West African peoples, was a trickster. He began his career as a creator-god, spinning the entire world at the request of the Great Sky-spirit, and was a shape-changer. MORE
From Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth
Gauna (also known as Gawa and Gawama), in the myths of the Bushpeople of Botswana, was Death, leader of spirits. He lived in the Underworld, and was forever roaming the Upper World to snatch unwary mortals and carry them below.
From Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth
Mwambu and Sela, in the myths of the Abaluia people of Kenya, were First Man and First Woman. Their father, Wele the creator, made them so that the Sun would have people to shine for.
From Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth
Ogun, the Yoruba war-god, led the other gods on a hunting-expedition, climbing down from Heaven to Earth on a spider-thread.
From Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth
Sudika-Mbambi ('thunderbolt') and Kabundungulu ('thunder-from-the-West'), in the myths of the Mbundu people of Angola, were miraculous twins.
From Bloomsbury Dictionary of MYth
Unkulunkulu ('ancient of days'), in the myths of the Amazulu people of South Africa, and known to the Ndebele people of Zimbabwe as Nkulnkulu, was the first power in existence.
Agwunsi, or Agwu, is the god of healing and divination among the Igbo people of Nigeria. He is also the patron of doctors, because he gives herbs and other medicines their power to cure
One of the world's major religions, it predominates in Europe and the Americas, where it has been a powerful historical force and cultural influence, but it also claims adherents in virtually every country of the world.
Islam, one of the world’s great monotheistic religions, was founded (or restored) by the Prophet Muhammad (570-632 CE), who lived in Mecca and Medina on the Arabian Peninsula.
The practice of putting oneself into, and remaining in, direct relation with God, the Absolute, or any unifying principle of life. Mysticism is inseparably linked with religion.
Religious practitioner in various, generally small-scale societies who is believed to be able to diagnose, cure, and sometimes cause illness because of a special relationship with, or control over, spirits.
A form of animism involving trances and other rituals. Communication with the dead is a principal feature of voodoo. It is most common in the nations of the Caribbean Sea, especially Haiti, where people sometimes mingle voodoo and Christian practices.
A form of sorcery, or the magical manipulation of nature for self-aggrandizement, or for the benefit or harm of a client. This manipulation often involves the use of spirit-helpers, or familiars.
From Dictionary of World Philosophy
From the Latin anima, i.e. soul, the term animism in general denotes the belief that things such as pebbles, rivers, planet Earth, and, some would say, the entire universe are animated or at least embody a life-principle.