Tengri is the god of the old Turkic, Mongolian and Altaic religion named Tengriism.
The symbols of Tengri were a cross, the skies, and the sun. It is often confused with a sun-worshipping religion, but the sun is merely a symbol of Tengri. The name "Tengri"-(Tana-Gra) means "Ruler, Master of the Land"; no connection with the Sumerian word for god (DINGIR) has been verified. A dramatic pyramidal mountain peak, long believed to be the highest point on the border between Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, is called "Khan Tengri".
Geser is the mythical founder of Tengriism. His story is recounted in a very long epic text, meant to be performed over the course of several days with a horse head fiddle (moriin huur).
Traditionally Turks' ancestors were animists and nature worshippers. Through their Shamanistic beliefs, they revered astral gods and the natural forces on earth that were important to them. In the ancient Turkish world as it is now, the word for god is "Tangri". In their religious beliefs, the sky is identified with Tangri. Tangri is considered to be the chief god who created all things. In addition to this celestial god, they also had minor divinities that served the purposes of Tangri.
In modern Turkish, the derived word "Tanrı" is used as the generic word for "god", also for the Judeo–Christo–Islamic God and is often used today by practicing Muslims to refer to their God in Turkish as an alternative to the word "Allah", the -originally - Islamic word for "God,". It is said to be derived from "Tan" or "Teng" which literally means sky and "ger", which is the name for the Central Asian nomadic tent (yurt). It is also used in other Turkic languages in such forms as Teñri, Teñggri, Teñgeri, Teñir, Teñger, Täñre and Tengere.
Tengriism, a monotheistic religion, replaced an earlier polytheistic Turkic religion, and it was also the religion of the Huns, Eurasian Avars, early Hungarians and Bulgars.
Altaic deities | Creationism | Mythology | Mythemes | Spiritual evolution | Sky and weather gods | Turkic mythology