Apsu
An/Anu
Enki
Ki
Kigal
Nammu/Tiamat
Enlil
Ninlil
Nanna
Inanna/Ishtar
Ninurta
Utu
Marduk
Ashur/Assur (Aramaic: ܐܵܫܿܘܪ) / Anshar, patron of Assur
Ishtar, (Astarte/Eshtar), the goddess of love and war, patroness of Nineveh (Aramaic: ܥܸܫܬܵܪ)
Nabu
Nergal - God of the Underworld
Tiamat
Samnuha
Kubaba
Marduk
Ellil
Ninlil
Nisroch
Anu
Ea
Kishar
Sin/Suen
Ishara
Shamash
Adad/Hadad
Dagan/Dagon
Bel
Tammuz
Oannes, Adapa
Gilgamesh
Lugalbanda
Lilitu/Lilith
Pazuzu
Ninurta
Anat, virgin goddess of war and strife, sister and putative mate of Ba'al Hadad
Athirat, “walker of the sea”, Mother Goddess, wife of El (also known as Elat and after the Bronze Age as Asherah)
Athtart, better known by her Greek name Astarte, assists Anat in The Myth of Ba'al
Baalat or Baalit, the wife or female counterpart of Baal (also Belili)
Ba'al Hadad (lit. master of blacksmiths), storm god, perhaps superseded El as head of the Pantheon
Baal Hammon, god of fertility and renewer of all energies in the Phoenician colonies of the Western Mediterranean
Dagon, god of crop fertility and grain, father of Baal or Hadad
El Elyon (lit. God Most High) and El; also transliterated as Ilu
Eshmun, god, or as Baalat Asclepius, goddess, of healing
Ishat, goddess of fire. She was slain by Anat.[1][2][3]
Kotharat, goddesses of marriage and pregnancy
Kothar-wa-Khasis, the skilled, god of craftsmanship
Lotan, the twisting, seven-headed serpent ally of Yam
Marqod, God of Dance
Melqart, king of the city, the underworld and cycle of vegetation in Tyre
Molech or Moloch, putative god of fire[4]
Mot or Mawat, god of death (not worshiped or given offerings)
Nikkal-wa-Ib, goddess of orchards and fruit
Qadeshtu, lit. “Holy One”, putative goddess of love, modernly thought to be a sacred prostitute, although there is no evidence of sacred prostitution in ancient Canaanite cities
Resheph, god of plague and of healing
Shachar and Shalim, twin gods of dawn and dusk, respectively
Shamayim, (lit. skies) the god of the heavens
Shapash, also transliterated Shapshu, goddess of the sun; sometimes equated with the Mesopotamian sun god Shemesh[5] whose gender is disputed[6]
Yam-nahar or Yaw (lit. sea-river) the god of the sea and the river,[7] also called Judge Nahar (judge of the river).[8][9][10]
Yahwi may exist as an ending of some Amorite male names[citation needed], though the only Canaanite mention of Yahweh, found on the Mesha Stele, refers to the God of Israel contrasted with Chemosh.[11]
Yarikh, god of the moon and husband of Nikkal
Jahve/Elohim/Adonais/God/Allah