Water spirit
A water spirit is a kind of supernatural being found in the folklore of many cultures:
African

Some water spirits in traditional African religion include:
- Mami Wata is a transcultural pantheon of water spirits and deities of the African diaspora. For the many names associated with Mami Wata spirits and goddess, see Names of Mami Wata.[1]
- Owu Mmiri of some riverine people of Nigeria are often described as mermaid-like spirit of water.[2]
- A jengu (plural miengu) is a water spirit in the traditional beliefs of the Sawa ethnic groups of Cameroon, particularly the Duala, Bakweri, and related Sawa peoples. Among the Bakweri, the name is liengu (plural: maengu).
- A simbi is a mermaid-like or reptilian spirits from Kongo tribe and related to Vaudou religion.
In Kenya( western Region) also some parts of Uganda we have guys using dead peoples spirits( land spirits)”amaembe”. They are mainly used to help people gain wealth,heal, predict people’s misery and at the same time cause havoc and harm to whoever is in conflict with the master of those spirits… They are unseen but sometimes they take the shape of humans both male or female mostly those who have encountered them say the have hooves like feet’s and incase you notice them they disappear and eventually the person who was in close contact with them might fall sic.[citation, cleanup needed]
Celtic
In Celtic mythology:
- An Each uisge is a particularly dangerous "water horse" supposed to be found in Scotland;[3] its Irish counterpart is the Aughisky.
- The Gwragedd Annwn are female Welsh lake fairies of great beauty.
- A Kelpie is a less dangerous sort of water horse. There are many similar creatures by other names in the mythology including:
- the tangie (Orkney and Shetland)
- the nuggle also known as the shoopiltee or njogel (Shetland)
- the cabbyl-ushtey (Isle of Man)
- the Ceffyl Dŵr (Wales)
- the capaill uisce or the glashtin (Ireland)
- Morgens, Morgans or Mari-Morgans are Welsh and Breton water spirits that drown men.
- Selkie
Germanic
- The Nixie (English) or the Nix/Nixe/Nyx (German) are shapeshifting water spirits who usually appear in human, or horse, form
- The Undine or Ondine is a female water elemental (first appearing the alchemical works of Paracelsus)
- Jenny Greenteeth in the folklore of Lancashire
- Peg Powler said to inhabit the River Tees in Yorkshire
- The grindylow in the folklore of both Lancashire and Yorkshire.
Ancient Greek
In Greek mythology:
Japanese
Oceanic
In the mythology of Oceania:
- Adaro were malevolent merman-like sea spirits found in the mythology of the Solomon Islands.
- Bunyip were evil water spirits said to inhabit watering holes in Indigenous Australian folklore.
Roman
In Roman mythology:
- Camenae were goddesses of springs, wells and fountains, or water nymphs of Venus (mythology).
Slavic
In Slavic mythology:
- A Vodyanoy (also wodnik, vodník, vodnik, vodenjak) is a male water spirit akin to the Germanic Neck.
- A Rusalka (plural: rusalki) was a female ghost, water nymph, succubus or mermaid-like demon that dwelled in a waterway.
- А Berehynia in ancient Ukrainian folklore is a goddess spirit that guarded the edges of waterways, while today it is used as a symbol for Ukrainian nationalism.
- Moryana is a giant sea spirit from Russian folklore.
- For potoplenyk, vila/wila/wili/veela, and vodianyk, see also Slavic fairies.
Thai
- Phi Phraya (ผีพราย, พรายน้ำ), a ghost living in the water.
- Phi Thale (ผีทะเล), a spirit of the sea. It manifests itself in different ways, one of them being St. Elmo's fire, among other uncanny phenomenons experienced by sailors and fishermen while on boats.
References
- Drewal, Henry John (2008). "Introduction: Charting the Voyage". In Drewal, Henry John (ed.). Sacred Waters: Arts for Mami Wata and other divinities in Africa and the diaspora. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-35156-2., p. 1.
- "Serving Two Masters: The Case of the Self-Confessed Christian and Priestess of the Water Goddess". Daily Sun (Nigeria). 2007-07-30. Archived from the original on 2010-02-07. Retrieved 2018-04-28.
- MacPhail, Malcolm (1896). "Folklore from the Hebrides". Folklore. 7 (4): 400–04. doi:10.1080/0015587X.1896.9720386.