The peoples of the world not only endowed the gods with a name, butalso indicated their responsibilities. For each, the share over which he dominated was determined. God is supreme, the seas and oceans, nature, fertility, love, hunting ... But there is one that differs from the others. He does not have subordinates, but nevertheless without him there would be no plants, animals, people would be sad and not fall in love, they would not see the beauty of the world. It is the sun god who was present in many pagan cultures. Thanks to him, the day gives way to the night, he gives heat to the rays of the fireball, which makes the people of the whole planet happy. So, how did the civilizations of the Sun represent different gods?
The Egyptian god Ra
This god was greatly honored in Egypt. His cult began to form after the unification of the country, significantly displacing the existing religious beliefs. The Sun God Ra began to gain popularity during the reign of the fourth dynasty of the pharaohs.
The Colossus of Rhodes
A glorious Greek religion could not do withoutthe god of the sun. He was Helios, who lived in the east of the ocean in the castle. Every morning the Greek god of the Sun went out on a golden chariot drawn by four horses, and passed through the sky, marking the beginning of the day. In the evening, in exactly the same way, Helios returned from the western part of the ocean to the castle. According to myths, the Sun god could not be present at the division of power in the world because of the strong daily employment in the sky, so he got nothing.
Slavic Dazhdbog
Our ancestors had as many patrons,than the Greeks. One of the most beloved and revered was the Slavic god of the Sun Dazhdbog. His name is not in any way connected with rain, it means "giving God".