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[[Image:Teide Tenerife3.jpg|thumb|220px|right|Mount Teide on Tenerife. According to mythology was the home of Guayota.]]
[[Image:Teide Tenerife3.jpg|thumb|220px|right|Mount Teide on Tenerife. According to mythology was the home of Guayota.]]
'''Guayota''', was the principal malignant deity and [[Achamán]]'s adversary. According to [[Guanches|Guanche]] legend, Guayota lived inside the [[Teide]] volcano, one of the gateways to the underworld. Guayota was said to be represented as a black [[dog]] and was accompanied by demons, also in the form of black dogs, known as [[Tibicena]]s.
'''Guayota''', in [[Guanches|Guanche]] mythology, was the principal malignant deity and [[Achamán]]'s adversary. According to Guanche legend, Guayota lived inside the [[Teide]] volcano, one of the gateways to the underworld. Guayota was said to be represented as a black [[dog]] and was accompanied by demons, also in the form of black dogs, known as [[Tibicena]]s.


According to legend, Guayota kidnapped [[Magec]] (the [[sun]]) and shut it up in the [[Teide]], plunging the world into darkness. Humans prayed to [[Achamán]] who saved Magec, and instead locked Guayota up in the Teide. Guayota is the king of [[evil]] [[genie]]s, and was worshiped in the island of [[Tenerife]] in the [[Guanches|Guanche]] religion.
According to legend, Guayota kidnapped [[Magec]] (the [[sun]]) and shut it up in the [[Teide]], plunging the world into darkness. Humans prayed to [[Achamán]] who saved Magec, and instead locked Guayota up in the Teide. Guayota is the king of [[evil]] [[genie]]s, and was worshiped in the island of [[Tenerife]] in the [[Guanches|Guanche]] religion.

Revision as of 10:03, 16 November 2013

Mount Teide on Tenerife. According to mythology was the home of Guayota.

Guayota, in Guanche mythology, was the principal malignant deity and Achamán's adversary. According to Guanche legend, Guayota lived inside the Teide volcano, one of the gateways to the underworld. Guayota was said to be represented as a black dog and was accompanied by demons, also in the form of black dogs, known as Tibicenas.

According to legend, Guayota kidnapped Magec (the sun) and shut it up in the Teide, plunging the world into darkness. Humans prayed to Achamán who saved Magec, and instead locked Guayota up in the Teide. Guayota is the king of evil genies, and was worshiped in the island of Tenerife in the Guanche religion.

Guayota shares features similar to other malignant deities inhabitants of volcanoes, as in the case of the goddess Pele in Hawaiian mythology, who lived in the Kīlauea volcano and was regarded by the native Hawaiians as responsible for the eruptions of the volcano.[1]

References

See also