Which one? A large number of deities have called that land their home....
* Anat, virgin goddess of war and strife, sister and putative mate of Ba'al Hadad
* Athirat, "walker of the sea", Mother Goddess, wife of El (also known as Elat and after the Bronze Age as Asherah)
* Athtart, better known by her Greek name Astarte, assists Anat in The Myth of Ba'al
* Baalat or Baalit, the wife or female counterpart of Baal (also Belili)
* Ba'al Hadad, storm god, perhaps superseded El as head of the Pantheon
* Baal Hammon, god of fertility and renewer of all energies in the Phoenician colonies of the Western Mediterranean
* Dagon, god of crop fertility and grain, father of Baal or Hadad
* El Elyon (lit. God Most High) and El; also transliterated as Ilu
* Eshmun, god, or as Baalat Asclepius, goddess, of healing
* Kotharat, goddesses of marriage and pregnancy
* Kothar wa Hasis, the skilled, god of craftsmanship
* Lotan, serpent ally of Yam
* Melqart, king of the city, the underworld and cycle of vegetation in Tyre
* Molech, putative god of fire
* Mot or Mawat, god of death (not worshiped or given offerings)
* Nikkal-wa-Ib, goddess of orchards and fruit
* Qadeshtu, lit. "Holy One", putative goddess of love, modernly thought to be a sacred prostitute, although there is no evidence of sacred prostitution in ancient Canaanite cities
* Resheph, god of plague and of healing
* Shalim and Shachar, twin gods of dawn and dusk
* Shamayim, the god of the heavens
* Shapash, also transliterated Shapshu, goddess of the sun; sometimes equated with the Mesopotamian sun god Shemesh whose gender is disputed
* Yahweh or Yah, for a short time, a son of El and brother of Baal, sometimes married to Asherah.
* Yam-nahar or Yaw, also called Judge Nahar
* Yarikh, god of the moon and husband of Nikkal
* And of course G_D, Yahweh, Jehovah, Allah, Christ, etc..