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Temple of Ọṣun in Oṣogbo, Nigeria. - For the state in Nigeria, see Osun State.
Ọṣun (or Oshun, Oschun) in Yoruba mythology, is a spirit-goddess (Orisha) who reigns over love, intimacy, beauty, wealth and diplomacy.[1] She is worshipped also in Brazilian Candomblé Ketu, with the name spelled Oxum. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ...
In Yoruba mythology as in Santeria, Oshun is an Orisha and goddess of love, maternity and marriage. ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (472x707, 71 KB) Temple of Osun in Osogbo - Africa - Alex Mazzeto File links The following pages link to this file: History of Nigeria Yoruba mythology Osun-Osogbo ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (472x707, 71 KB) Temple of Osun in Osogbo - Africa - Alex Mazzeto File links The following pages link to this file: History of Nigeria Yoruba mythology Osun-Osogbo ...
Location of Osogbo (Oshogbo) in Nigeria Osogbo or Oshogbo is a city in Nigeria. ...
Osun State is an inland state in south-western Nigeria. ...
The mythology of the Yorùbá is sometimes claimed by its supporters to be one of the worlds oldest widely practised religions. ...
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Ceres, the Roman goddess of agriculture. ...
This article is about a type of spirit. ...
Candomblé Ketu (or Queto in Portuguese spelling) is the largest and most influential nation (sect) of Candomblé, an Afro-American religion widely practiced in Brazil. ...
Ọṣun is beneficient and generous, and very kind. She does, however, have a horrific temper, though it is difficult to anger her. She is married to Ṣàngó, the sky god, and is his favorite wife because of her excellent cooking skills. One of his other wives, Oba, was her rival. They are the goddesses of the Ọṣun and Oba rivers, which meet in a turbulent place with difficult rapids. In Yorùbá mythology, Shango (Xango, Shango), or Changó in Latin America, is perhaps the most popular Orisha; he is a Sky Father, god of thunder and the ancestor of the Yoruba. ...
Oba, (pronounced Or-ba), King in Yoruba, is the supreme traditional head of a Yoruba town. ...
River Osun in Osogbo - Africa The á»sÌ£un River (sometimes spelt Oshun flows southwards through the central Yorubaland in southwestern Nigeria into the Lagos lagoon. ...
In Cuban Santeria, she is represented by Our Lady of Charity (La Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre), Cuba's patron saint. Lukumí or Regla de Ocha, most widely known as Santeria, is a set of related religious systems that fuse Catholic beliefs with traditional Yorùbá beliefs. ...
Further reading - Joseph M. Murphy, Mei-Mei Sanford, Osun Across the Waters : A Yoruba Goddess in African and the Americas
References - ^ Ochun at Pantheon.org
External links Afro-American Religions Image File history File links AnimismSymbol. ...
The Afro-American religions are a number of related religions that developed in the Americas among African slaves and their descendants. ...
 Religions: Candomblé • Hoodoo • Kumina • Obeah • Palo • Quimbanda • Santería (Lukumí) • Spiritual Baptist • Umbanda • Vodou Image File history File links Download high resolution version (171x700, 25 KB) Summary Statue of Eshu-Elegbara, the trickster god. ...
Ilê Axé Iya Nassô Oká - Terreiro da Casa Branca Candomblé is an Afro-American religion practiced chiefly in Brazil but also in adjacent countries. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Kumina is both the religion and the music practiced by the people of eastern Jamaica. ...
Obeah is a term used in the West Indies to refer to folk magic or sorcery. ...
Palo Monte, or Regla de Palo is a religion of largely Bantu origin developed by slaves from Central Africa in Cuba. ...
Quimbanda is an Afro-American traditional religion found in Brazil. ...
Lukumà or Regla de Ocha, is most widely known as Santeria, (SanterÃa in Spanish) is a set of related religious systems that fuse Catholic beliefs with traditional Yoruba beliefs. ...
No one across the vast world, truly knows from where the Spiritual/Shouter Baptists of Trinidad and Tobago originated from. ...
Originating in Brazil in the early 20th century, Umbanda is a religion that blends Catholicism, Kardecist Spiritualism and Afro-Brazilian traditions. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Deities: Babalu Aye • Eshu • Iansan • Obàtálá • Ogoun • Ọlọrun • Orunmila • Ọṣun • Shango • Yemaja In the cult of Orishas, Babalu Aye is the spirit of illness and disease. ...
Eshu represented in concrete with his features made with cowrie shells. ...
Painting of Iansan (or Iansã) Iansan or Iansã in portuguese, is an entity of the Afro-Brazilian religious faith of candomblé, identified with the Catholic Saint Barbara. ...
In Yoruba mythology, Obàtálá (alternatively Obatala) was a creator god; he made human bodies, and his father, Olorun (husband of Olokun), breathed life into them. ...
In Haitian Vodun, Ogoun (or Ogun) is a loa who presides over fire, iron, politics and war. ...
In Yorùbá mythology, Olorun is the Sky Father (though occasionally androgynous or female), and a god of peace, purity and harmony. ...
In Yoruba mythology, Orunmila is an Orisha (Orisa), and deity of prophecy. ...
In Yorùbá mythology, Shango (Xango, Shango), or Changó in Latin America, is perhaps the most popular Orisha; he is a Sky Father, god of thunder and the ancestor of the Yoruba. ...
In Yorùbá mythology, Yemoja is a mother goddess; patron deity of women, especially pregnant women; and the Ogun river (the waters of which are said to cure infertility). ...
Roots: Ifá, Oriṣa (Yorùbá) • Lwa (Dahomey) • Nkisi (Kongo) • Catholicism (Spain, Portugal) Ifá is a system of divination that originated in West Africa among the Yoruba people. ...
This article is about a type of spirit. ...
The mythology of the Yorùbá is sometimes claimed by its supporters to be one of the worlds oldest widely practised religions. ...
A loa is a powerful spirit or deity in the voodoo religion. ...
The Dahomey (or Fon) are a nation located in Benin, Africa. ...
An Nkisi (plural Minkisi, also Nkishi/Minkishi), literally translates as (sacred) medicine. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
As a Christian ecclesiastical term, Catholic - from the Greek adjective , meaning general or universal[2] - is described in the Oxford Dictionary as follows: ~Church, (originally) whole body of Christians; ~, belonging to or in accord with (a) this, (b) the church before separation into Greek or Eastern and Latin or Western...
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