In Ugaritic myth, Mot is a personification of death. The word is cognate with forms meaning 'death' in other Semitic and Afro-Asiatic languages:
There is not a modern Greek god of death, such as the ancient god Hades.
Hades
Death and agriculture.
All ancient peoples, Semitic and non-Semitic, believed in some form of continued life after death. This has been shown all over the world, in ancient writings, burial-practices, art, etc. No one in the ancient world was completely secular. Rather, you might ask what the precise afterlife-beliefs were, among specific branches of the Semitic peoples (or others). Included among the Semites were the Assyrians, Elamites, Arameans, Lyddians, Arabs, Israelite Hebrews, Moabites, Ammonites, Edumeans and others.
The Aramaic name for God is "Elah" or "Eloah." It is significant in religious texts as it is used to refer to the one true God in the Hebrew Bible and other ancient Semitic texts.
Thanatos is the ancient Greek personification of death. A real ancient Greek god.
Anubis, he is the god of mummification and death for all of ancient Egypt
There is no date of birth or death of the ancient Greek god Zeus.
Anubis is the God of Death in Ancient Egyptian Mythology.
Anubis is the God of Death in Ancient Egyptian Mythology.
Some were: Ra-the sun god Anubis-god of death Osiris-god of the dead
Thanatos was a ancient Greek god of death and likely dying.