Hygieia | Greek goddess | Britannica.
The name Antheia was also given to Hera and connected to the Horae, under which she had a temple at Argos. It was also an epithet of Aphrodite at Knossos. She was the goddess of vegetation, gardens, blossoms, especially worshipped in spring and near lowlands and marshlands, favorable to the growth of vegetation.
While Asclepius was solely the god of medicine, the Egyptian goddess Sekhmet played multiple roles. Not only was she the goddess of health, she was also the goddess of war. Since early times, Egyptian artwork depicted Sekhmet with the head of a lion, symbolizing her ferocity.
Panacea was the goddess associated with herbal lore and the salves and medicines that were made from them.
The beautiful Airmid is the Irish Goddess of Healing Arts, particularly associated with herbal healing. She is one of the Tuatha Dé Danann, the ancient mythological race of magical beings. She is also associated with gardening, nature, family and loyalty.
Flora, in Roman religion, the goddess of the flowering of plants.
Daphne was a Greek dryad, or tree spirit, and daughter of Peneus, the river god.
Demeter was the Ancient Greek goddess of the harvest. She was a very important goddess to Ancient Greek people, who farmed a lot of their food. Demeter had a kind and beautiful daughter, called Persephone, who she loved very much. Persephone, like her mum, loved nature.
Aceso: In Greek mythology, one of the daughters of the god Asclepius. She's the goddess of the healing process, and her name actually means “healing”.
The ancient Greeks worshipped both a god of healing, Asclepius, and a goddess of health, Hygeia.
Shitala Devi. Arguably the best known of all health-giving goddesses in India, Shitala Devi's influence ranges across the country, barring the South.
Daphne, in Greek mythology, the personification of the laurel (Greek daphnē), a tree whose leaves, formed into garlands, were particularly associated with Apollo (q.v.).
KHLORIS (Chloris) was the goddess of flowers and a nymph of the Islands of the Blessed. She was the wife of Zephyros the West-Wind and the mother of Karpos (Carpus), god of fruit. Her Roman name was Flora.
The Greek god of farming and agriculture was known as Demeter. As much of ancient Greece was agrarian, Demeter was worshipped by many for bountiful harvests and fertility.
Aphrodite of the Gardens (Ancient Greek: Αφροδίτη εν Κήποις, romanized: Afroditi en Kipis) is an epithet of the Greek goddess Aphrodite. The epithet describes her patronage over vegetation and garden fertility.
Legend has it that Chloris, the goddess of flowers, stumbled upon a lifeless nymph while walking through the woods one day. Saddened by its death, she turned it into a flower so beautiful that all the gods would consider it the Queen of Flowers.
Gaia was the Greek goddess of Earth, mother of all life, similar to the Roman Terra Mater (mother Earth) reclining with a cornucopia, or the Andean Pachamama, the Hindu, Prithvi, “the Vast One,” or the Hopi Kokyangwuti, Spider Grandmother, who with Sun god Tawa created Earth and its creatures.
Demeter became the goddess of agriculture. She taught humans how to plant, plow, and nurture the earth to provide food. Her Roman name was Ceres, which is where we get the word “cereal” from.
Hygieia: Goddess of Health, Cleanliness and Sanitation.
Ajá (wild wind) is an Orisha, the spirit of the forest, the animals within it and herbal healers. In her forests she would find plants with medicinal properties and mix the herbs and roots and other plant parts together to find cures for the sick.
It is believed that Peony is named after Paeon (also known as Paean), who was a healing deity who had healed Hades' and Ares' wounds. The flower myth related, says that Paeon was a student of Asclepius, the god of medicine and healing.
In Greek mythology, Panacea (Greek Πανάκεια, Panakeia) was the goddess of healing. She was the daughter of Asclepius, god of medicine, and the granddaughter of Apollo, god of healing (among other things).
Airmed or Airmid, is the Celtic goddess of healing and herbs.