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Quiz about Gods Of The Night
Quiz about Gods Of The Night

Gods Of The Night Trivia Quiz


The gods and goddesses featured in this quiz are all related to the night or to darkness. You may need a flashlight to make your way through this quiz concerning the myths of various regions. I hope you enjoy it!

A multiple-choice quiz by reeshy. Estimated time: 5 mins.
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Author
reeshy
Time
5 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
354,339
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
7 / 10
Plays
340
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Which of these peoples worshiped the Lords of the Night, nine gods who ruled each night in a cycle of nine nights? The Lords include Tlaloc, the god of rain. Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. This primordial Greek god, the personification of darkness, shares his name with a mountain in Antarctica. In "Theogony", Hesiod writes that he was one of the first deities to form from Chaos. What is his name? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Breksta is the goddess of twilight in the mythology of a Baltic country that converted to Christianity in the 14th century, so little is left of its pagan mythology. She is part of a trinity with Austrine and Zleja. Of which country is she a goddess? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. In Norse mythology, Nott is the goddess of night, and gave birth to the day, Dagr, as well as the earth, Joro. Which protector of mankind is Joro's son, and thus Nott's grandson? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Hine-nui-te-po is a goddess of night and death. She also rules the underworld, to which she fled after discovering that the god she had married was also her father. She is a goddess of which people? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Jupiter is usually regarded as the Roman god of thunder; however, this only includes daytime, or diurnal, thunder. Which of these is the god of nocturnal thunder, who was thought to have had an equal, or perhaps even higher, rank to Jupiter? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Although she bore children with her consort, including Hypnos (sleep) and Thanatos (death), this Greek goddess of night also gave birth to many children on her own, such as the Erinyes (or Furies) and the Moirai (or Fates). What is her name, simply the Ancient Greek word for "night"?

Answer: (One Word, Three letters)
Question 8 of 10
8. Metztli was a deity of the night and of the moon, of unknown gender in Aztec mythology, and Queen of the Night to the Otomi people of Mexico. He/she is said to have the face of which animal, which can be seen in the full moon? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. This Ancient Egyptian goddess represented night, while her sister Isis represented day. She was the wife and sister of Set, and although she was generally regarded as infertile, some sources name her as the mother of Anubis; she and Isis are important in funerary rites. Who is she? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. This goddess is the Vedic and Hindi goddess of night. She is featured as a minor character in the Hugo Award-winning science fiction novel "Lord of Light" (1967), by American author Roger Zelazny. What is her name? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Which of these peoples worshiped the Lords of the Night, nine gods who ruled each night in a cycle of nine nights? The Lords include Tlaloc, the god of rain.

Answer: Aztecs

Mesoamerican ritual calendars, such as those of the Aztecs, ran on 260-day cycles, which represents almost 29 sets of nine days (one day short). The Aztecs had a similar set of gods for the day, the Lords of the Day, but there were thirteen of them; the 260-day cycle is split evenly into 20 sets of thirteen days. Thus in each cycle, different night gods represent the night following the day of each day god. It is thought that the number nine represents the nine levels of the underworld, or that 260-day cycles were used as it is the approximate length of human gestation.

The Lords of the Night all had names, as well as a symbol. The nine are: Xiuhtecutli (god of fire and time), Itztli (the sacrificial knife), Pilzintecuhtli (god of the sun), Centeotl (god of maize), Mictlantecuhtli (god of death), Chalchiuhtlicue (goddess of jade water), Tlazoteotl (goddess of purification and confession), Tepeyollotl (god of jaguars), and Tlaloc (god of rain). The gods feature prominently in Aztec and Mayan mythology; the names of the Mayan Lords of the Night are unknown.
2. This primordial Greek god, the personification of darkness, shares his name with a mountain in Antarctica. In "Theogony", Hesiod writes that he was one of the first deities to form from Chaos. What is his name?

Answer: Erebus

Chaos refers to the nothingness that existed before the creation of the universe, and first to spring forth from this, according to Hesiod, were Erebus and Night (or Nyx). The brother and sister are consorts, as is common in Greek mythology, and together bore Aether and Hemera, representing the upper atmosphere and the day.

The name is also used for part of Hades (the underworld), which was split into various regions. Erebus is the darkest region, through which the souls of the dead pass soon after death, and through which one of the five rivers of Hades, the Lethe, flows. This is the river of forgetfulness.
3. Breksta is the goddess of twilight in the mythology of a Baltic country that converted to Christianity in the 14th century, so little is left of its pagan mythology. She is part of a trinity with Austrine and Zleja. Of which country is she a goddess?

Answer: Lithuania

Few sources survive of Lithuanian mythology, and most that do had been heavily mixed with elements of Christianity and written by foreigners, such as Polish theologian Jan Lasicki (also known as Lasicius), who mentioned Breksta as the goddess of twilight.

She rules the passage of time with Austrine (the dawn) and Zleja (the day), as well as being the goddess of dreams. Between sunset and sunrise, she is said to protect people and the night.
4. In Norse mythology, Nott is the goddess of night, and gave birth to the day, Dagr, as well as the earth, Joro. Which protector of mankind is Joro's son, and thus Nott's grandson?

Answer: Thor

Nott is the daughter of Norvi, and was married three times, bearing a child with each husband: Naglfari fathered Audr, Annar fathered Joro (the earth), and Dellingr (twilight) fathered Dagr (the day). Odin placed Nott and Dagr in the sky; Dagr's chariot rides across the daytime sky, pulled by his horse Skinfaxi, while Nott's chariot rides across the night sky, pulled by the horse Hrimfaxi. Hrimfaxi covers the land with dew each morning - his name means "frost-maned".

Thor, perhaps the most famous Norse god, was borne of Joro. He is the god of thunder and lightning, and wields the hammer Mjolnir. He and the serpent Jormungandr are foretold to kill each other during the events of Ragnarok.
5. Hine-nui-te-po is a goddess of night and death. She also rules the underworld, to which she fled after discovering that the god she had married was also her father. She is a goddess of which people?

Answer: Maori

Her name was first Hine-ata-uira, and she was goddess of the dawn. She had no idea that the god she married was also her father, Tane, god of forests. When she discovered the truth, she was devastated and deeply ashamed, and fled to the underworld, where she took on her role as ruler of the underworld, the goddess of night and death. Tane begged her to return, but she insisted that she stay to bring in the dead when death was brought to the world, including the souls of the children they had borne together.

She also married her uncle, Ruaumoko, god of earthquakes, but I think that was in full knowledge of who he was!
6. Jupiter is usually regarded as the Roman god of thunder; however, this only includes daytime, or diurnal, thunder. Which of these is the god of nocturnal thunder, who was thought to have had an equal, or perhaps even higher, rank to Jupiter?

Answer: Summanus

Summanus is an Etruscan or Sabine god, adopted by the Romans into their mythology. His name comes from "summus", meaning "highest": according to Saint Augustine, he was once more exalted than his daytime counterpart Jupiter, until a temple dedicated to Jupiter was built that was much more impressive and beautiful than Summanus's.

The Romans offered small round cakes called summanalia to him on the day preceding the summer solstice, and they also sacrificed to him two black oxen.
7. Although she bore children with her consort, including Hypnos (sleep) and Thanatos (death), this Greek goddess of night also gave birth to many children on her own, such as the Erinyes (or Furies) and the Moirai (or Fates). What is her name, simply the Ancient Greek word for "night"?

Answer: Nyx

Nyx has been previously mentioned as the consort of Erebus. She is said to live in Tartaros, a region of great suffering beneath the underworld, with Hypnos and Thanatos. Nyx possesses great power, to the point that even Zeus was afraid of her; Hypnos ran to his mother in fear after putting the king of the gods to sleep, and Zeus's fear of Nyx was such that Hypnos had a lucky escape from his wrath!

Nyx's children have generally dark and negative associations, as seen in those already mentioned; others include Moros (doom), Oizys (misery), and Lyssa (madness). She gives her own name to an asteroid as well as one of Pluto's moons (spelled Nix).
8. Metztli was a deity of the night and of the moon, of unknown gender in Aztec mythology, and Queen of the Night to the Otomi people of Mexico. He/she is said to have the face of which animal, which can be seen in the full moon?

Answer: Rabbit

Metztli is often equated with other moon deities, including Yohaulticetl, a goddess who is one of the Lords of the Night, and Tecciztecatl, the man in the moon. Tecciztecatl was one of two gods who vied to become the next sun, but he was afraid of its fire, so the other god leaped in first and received the honor; however, Tecciztecatl soon gained courage and became the second sun.

The gods were angered that the sun and the moon would be equally bright, and that proud Tecciztecatl had to bow to the first humble sun, and so they threw a rabbit at the moon, diminishing his brightness so that he would only now be visible at night, and leaving the imprint of the rabbit that can still be seen on the full moon today.
9. This Ancient Egyptian goddess represented night, while her sister Isis represented day. She was the wife and sister of Set, and although she was generally regarded as infertile, some sources name her as the mother of Anubis; she and Isis are important in funerary rites. Who is she?

Answer: Nephthys

Nephthys was also goddess of the air, and so could take the form of a bird; she is usually associated with a hawk, and thus professional mourners in Ancient Egypt were known as "Hawks of Nephthys". She was also associated with vultures, as she was considered infertile (as was Set, who was barren as the desert), and so she became known as the goddess of death and mourning, which fits well with her son, Anubis, who is the guardian of the dead.

Nephthys' family dynamic was an odd one: her husband, Set, murdered Osiris, the husband of her sister Isis. In spite of this, the sisters remained close, even though Nephthys was also unfaithful with Osiris! The sisters can be viewed as a kind of "yin and yang"; day and night, life and death. Also, Isis represented growth and prosperity, while Nephthys, as the vulture, represented decay.
10. This goddess is the Vedic and Hindi goddess of night. She is featured as a minor character in the Hugo Award-winning science fiction novel "Lord of Light" (1967), by American author Roger Zelazny. What is her name?

Answer: Ratri

"Lord of Light" is set on a strange planet, where the crew of a crashed spaceship are able to transfer souls electronically to a different body, like Buddhist reincarnation. The novel incorporates many aspects of Hinduism and Buddhism, although the characters are western; the protagonist Mahasamatman is a god who goes by the name Sam. He is aided by Ratri, who has been punished by the other gods, and can only use her powers for short periods of time.

"Ratri" is the ordinary word for "night" in many Indian languages, such as Tamil and Bengali. The goddess, also called Ratrideva, is the symbol of the embodied human state, and is sister to the goddess of the dawn, Ushas. "Ratrisutka" is a poem written in praise of Ratri, who is a personification of Maya, the "illusion" that we do not directly experience the world, but instead live in a version of it that we ourselves have projected.
Source: Author reeshy

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor looney_tunes before going online.
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