Category
page 1Epithets of Zeus

Baalshamin
thumb|right|300px|Aglibol, Baalshamin (center), and [[Malakbel (1st century; found near Palmyra, Syria)]]

Trophonius
Trophonius (; Ancient Greek: Τροφώνιος Trophōnios) was a Greek hero or daimon or god—it was never certain which one—with a rich mythological tradition and an oracular cult at Lebadea () in Boeotia, Greece.

Agathodaemon
Agathos Daimon (, , ) originally was a lesser deity (daemon) of classical ancient Greek religion and Graeco-Egyptian religion. In his original Greek form, he served as a household god, to whom, along with Zeus Soter, libations were made after a meal. In later Ptolemaic antiquity he took on two partially distinct roles; one as the Agathos Daimon a prominent serpentine civic god, who served as the special protector of Alexandria. The other as a genus of serpentine household gods, the Agathoi Daimones, individual protectors of the homes in which they were worshipped.
Soter
Soter derives from the Ancient Greek epithet (Sōtḗr), meaning a saviour, a deliverer. The feminine form is Soteira (Σώτειρα, Sṓteira) or sometimes Soteria (Σωτηρία, Sōtería).
Alastor
Alastor (; ) refers to a number of people and concepts in Greek mythology:
Chthonius
In Greek mythology, the name Chthonius or Chthonios (, ) may refer to: