god of death
narrative motif documented in Thompson's Motif-Index of Folk Literature
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god of death
Summary
god of death is a narrative motif[1].
Key Facts
- god of death's instance of is recorded as narrative motif[2].
- god of death's instance of is recorded as folklore motif[3].
- god of death's depicts is recorded as deity[4].
- god of death's depicts is recorded as human world[5].
- god of death's depicts is recorded as abstract entity[6].
- god of death's depicts is recorded as death[7].
- god of death's part of is recorded as Buddhist mythology[8].
- god of death's opposite of is recorded as goddess of death[9].
- god of death's catalog code is recorded as A487.[10].
- god of death's facet of is recorded as deities of abstractions[11].
- god of death's facet of is recorded as deities of darkness and light[12].
- god of death's facet of is recorded as death personified[13].
- god of death's described by source is recorded as Motif-Index of Folk-Literature[14].
- god of death's described by source is recorded as The ocean of story, being C. H. Tawney's translation of Somadeva's Katha sarit sagara (or Ocean of streams of story)[15].
- god of death's partially coincident with is recorded as deity of the dead[16].
- god of death's partially coincident with is recorded as god of the world of the dead[17].
- god of death's partially coincident with is recorded as origin of death[18].
- god of death's indigenous to is recorded as Indians[19].
- god of death's indigenous to is recorded as Icelanders[20].
- god of death's indigenous to is recorded as Hindu[21].
- god of death's indigenous to is recorded as Māori[22].
- god of death's indigenous to is recorded as Toba people[23].
- god of death's indigenous to is recorded as Marshallese[24].
- god of death's motif represents is recorded as death deity[25].
- god of death's motif represents is recorded as Yama[26].