Category
page 1Guanche gods

Guayota
thumb|220px|right|Mount Teide on Tenerife, according to mythology, was the home of Guayota.
Guayota, in Guanche mythology of Tenerife (the Canary Islands), was the principal malignant deity and Achamán's adversary.
Achamán
Achamán is the supreme god of the Guanches on the island of Tenerife; he is the father god and creator. The name means literally "the skies", in allusion to the celestial vault (the sky).
Achuguayo
Achuguayo is a god in the Guanche religion from Tenerife, in the Canary Islands. The name first appears in the work Historia del Pueblo Guanche (History of the Guanche People) by physician and historian Juan Bethencourt Alfonso, who based much of his work on oral sources.
Achuhucanac
Achuhucanac is the rain god in Guanche religion in Tenerife, identified with the Supreme God (Achamán). Its name comes from: ašu_hu_kanak Guanche language that means "that is in the rain" or "that who is in the rain".
Chijoraji
Chijoraji or Chijoragi is a name given to the infant Jesus carried in the hand of
the Virgin of Candelaria (called by the Guanches Chaxiraxi) in Tenerife. Chijoraji is the name the aboriginal Guanches applied to this representation of Christ.