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Notus: God of the Southern Wind, God of Summer. He is known to be somewhat bipolar: Most times he is gentle and festive. At other times, he is hot-headed and impatient. That is why amongst the Ancient Greeks, Notus was feared and loved. Notus is a bringer of pleasure and a destroyer of crops. He also has a mild rancor against Boreas, the Northern god.
Euros: God of the East Wind, God of Autumn. Euros is notorious for being unlucky for reasons somewhat unknown. Euros lived near Helios and associated with some of the Olympians, including Aphrodite.
Boreas: God of the North Wind, God of Winter. Boreas is considered the most powerful of the winds, aside from Aeolos. Boreas is the master of Khoine, goddess of snow. He is very enforcing and demanding, but does have a kind-ish soul.
Aura: Goddess/Divine personification of the breeze. She was proud of her virgnity. She was so proud as to compare her body to that of Artemis, goddess of the Moon. Angered, she sought out Nemesis, goddess Revenge, to make balance. Soon afterwards, Aura was raped by Dionysus. She was driven mad. When she gave birth to two sons, she ate one whole and the other was taken by Zeus, king of the gods.
Aparctias: God of the North wind. He is not the same as Bores and has never been associated with him.
Apeliotes: God of the southeast wind, representing refreshing rain and wind. He is often depicted wearing gumboots and carrying fruit, draped in a light cloth. He is cleanshaven, with curly hair and a friendly expression. Because Apeliotes was a minor god, he was often synthesized with Eurus, the east wind.
Lips: Lips is the God of the southwest wind, often depicted holding the stern of a ship.
Kaikias was the Greek deity of the northeast wind. He is shown as a bearded man with a shield full of hailstorm. He was seen as a "dark" wind.
Skeiron: God of the northwest wind. His name is related to Skirophorion, the last of the three months of spring in the Attic festival calendar. He is depicted as a bearded man tilting a cauldron, representing the onset of winter.