>>508650989 (OP)# Greek
Tiresias lived as both a man and a woman after being transformed by the gods.
Hermaphroditus, child of Hermes and Aphrodite, merged bodies with a nymph, becoming both male and female.
# Roman
Roman Venus was sometimes depicted with male features in cults like Venus Barbata.
Galli, the priestesses of the goddess Cybele, were often assigned male at birth but lived as women.
# Norse
Loki changed gender multiple times, once becoming a mare and giving birth to Sleipnir.
Some Völvas (seers) were AMAB and assumed female roles despite stigma.
Celtic
Ceridwen transformed into different forms, including male animals, during a chase.
The Irish hero Cú Chulainn was trained in warcraft by Scáthach, who had a gender-fluid nature in some tales.
# Slavic
Veles, a shape-shifting god, sometimes took on feminine traits in folktales.
Certain witch spirits in Slavic myth like Baba Yaga embody gender ambiguity or transition themes.
# Baltic (Latvian/Lithuanian)
In some dainas (folk songs), the goddess Laima appears in forms that blur gender roles depending on her role as fate-giver.
# Finnish (Kalevala)
Lemminkäinen, a hero, is raised by a powerful mother figure who performs both fatherly and motherly roles—gender roles are fluid.
Shamanic traditions in Sámi and Finnish folklore included noaidis, some of whom were trans or nonbinary.
# Romanian / Dacian
Zalmoxis, a mystical figure, may have embodied spiritual rebirths that included symbolic gender death and transformation.
Gods bless ;)