Divine twins

Last updated
The Vedic Hindu twin gods - Ashvins. Ashwini Kumaras-L.jpg
The Vedic Hindu twin gods - Ashvins.

The Divine Twins are youthful horsemen, either gods or demigods, who serve as rescuers and healers in Proto-Indo-European mythology. [1]

Contents

Like other Proto-Indo-European divinities, the Divine Twins are not directly attested by archaeological or written materials, but scholars of comparative mythology and Indo-European studies generally agree on the motifs they have reconstructed by way of the comparative method. [2] [3]

Common traits

Scholar Donald Ward proposed a set of common traits that pertain to divine twin pairs of Indo-European mythologies: [4] [5]

Name

Although the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) name of the Divine Twins cannot be reconstructed with certainty based on the available linguistic evidence, the most frequent epithets associated with the two brothers in liturgic and poetic traditions are the "Youthful" and the "Descendants" (sons or grandsons) of the Sky-God (Dyēus). [6] [7] [3]

Two well-accepted reflexes of the Divine Twins, the Vedic Aśvins and the Lithuanian Ašvieniai, are linguistic cognates ultimately deriving from the Proto-Indo-European word for the horse, *h1éḱwos. They are related to Sanskrit áśva and Avestan aspā (both from Indo-Iranian *Haćwa), and to Old Lithuanian ašva, which all share the meaning of "mare". This may point to an original PIE divine name *h1éḱw-n-, although this form could also have emerged from later contacts between Proto-Indo-Iranian and Proto-Balto-Slavic speakers, which are known to have occurred in prehistoric times. [8] [9]

Role

Represented as young men rescuing mortals from peril in battle or at sea, the Divine Twins rode the steeds that pull the sun across the sky and were sometimes depicted as horses themselves. [10] They shared a sister, the Dawn (*H2éwsōs), who is also portrayed as the daughter of the Sky-God (*Dyēus) in Indo-European myths. [11] The two brothers are generally depicted as healers and helpers, travelling in miraculous vehicles to save shipwrecked mortals. [1] They are often differentiated: one is represented as a physically strong and aggressive warrior, while the other is seen as a healer who rather gives attention to domestic duties, agrarian pursuits, or romantic adventures. [3]

In the Vedic, Greek and Baltic traditions, the Divine Twins similarly appear as the personifications of the morning and evening star. [1] They are depicted as the lovers or the companions of a solar female deity, preferably the Sun's daughter but sometimes also the Dawn. In the majority of the stories where they appear, the Divine Twins rescue the Dawn from a watery peril, a theme that emerged from their role as the solar steeds. [12] [3]

During the night, the Divine Twins were said to return to the east in a golden boat, where they traversed a sea [lower-alpha 1] to bring back the rising sun each morning. During the day, they crossed the nocturnal sky in pursuit of their consort, the morning star. In what seems to be a later addition confined to Europe, they were said to take a rest at the end of the day on the "Isles of the Blessed", a land seating in the western sea which possessed magical apple orchards. [3] By the Bronze Age, the Divine Twins were also represented as the coachmen of horse-driven solar chariots. [11]

Evidence

Linguistic cognates

Pair of Roman statuettes (3rd century AD) depicting the Dioscuri as horsemen. Dioskouroi Met L.2008.18.1-2 n03.jpg
Pair of Roman statuettes (3rd century AD) depicting the Dioscuri as horsemen.

Three Indo-European traditions (Greek, Indic and Baltic) attest the mytheme of equestrian twins, all associated with the dawn or the sun's daughter. Although their names do not form a complete group of cognates, they nonetheless share a similar epithet leading to a possible ancestral name or epithet: the 'sons or descendants of Dyēus', the sky-god. [7] [3] [6]

Possible reflexes

Since they cannot be linked together to a common linguistic origin, other reflexes found in the Indo-European myths are less secure, although their motifs can be compared to that of the Divine Twins. [19]

Celtic

The Gaulish Divanno  [ de ] and Dinomogetimarus are said to be protective deities and "the Gallic equivalents" of the Greek Dioskouroi. [20] They seem to be represented in monuments and reliefs in France flanked by horses, [21] which would make them comparable to Gaulish Martes and the Germanic Alcis. [22] Scholars suggest that the numerous Gallo-Roman dedicatory epigraphs to Castor and Pollux, more than any other region of the Roman Empire, attest a cult of the Dioskoroi. [23]

Greek historian Timaeus mentions that Atlantic Celts venerated the "Dioskouroi" above all other gods and that they [Dioskouroi] had visited them from across the Ocean. [19] Historian Diodorus Siculus, in the fourth book of Bibliotheca historica , writes that the Celts who dwelt along the ocean worshipped the Dioscuroi "more than the other gods". [24] The conjecture that it refers to the Gallic gods Divanno and Dinomogetimarus has no firm support. [25]

In one of the Irish myths involving Macha (the Dindsenchas of Ard Macha), she is forced to race against the horses of King of Ulster while in late pregnancy. As a talented rider, she wins the race but starts giving birth to Fír and Fial immediately after crossing the finish line. [26] The archetype is also partly matched by figures such as the Gallic sun god Belenus, whose epithet Atepomarus meant "having good horses"; Grannus, who is associated with the healing goddess Sirona (her name means "star"); Maponos ("Son of God"), considered in Irish mythology as the son of Dagda, associated with healing, [27] [28]

The Welsh Brân and Manawydan may also be reflexes of the Divine Twins. [11]

Comparative mythologist Alexander Haggerty Krappe suggested that two heroes, Feradach and Foltlebar, brothers and sons of the king of Innia, are expressions of the mytheme. These heroes help the expedition of the Fianna into Tir fa Thuinn (a realm on the other side of the sea), in a Orphean mission to rescue some of their members, in the tale The pursuit of the Gilla Decair and his horse . Both are expert navigators: one can build a ship and the other can follow the wild birds. [29]

Other possible candidates are members of Lugh's retinue, Atepomarus and Momorus (fr). [30] Atepomarus is presumed to mean "Great Horseman" or "having great horses", [31] based on the possible presence of Celtic stem -epo- 'horse' in his name. [32] Both appear as a pair of Celtic kings and founders of Lugdunum. They escape from Sereroneus and arrive at a hill. Momorus, who had skills in augury, sees a murder of crows and names the hill Lougodunum, after the crows. This myth is reported in the works of Klitophon of Rhodes and in Pseudo-Plutarch's De fluviis. [33] [32] [34] [31]

Germanic

Tacitus mentions a divine pair of twins called the Alcis worshipped by the Naharvali, whom he compares to the Roman twin horsemen Castor and Pollux. [35] [19] These twins can be associated with the Indo-European myth of the divine twin horsemen (Dioscuri) attested in various Indo-European cultures. [36] Among later Germanic peoples, twin founding figures such as Hengist and Horsa allude to the motif of the divine twins. The Anglo-Saxon heroes are said to have come by the sea in response to a plea from the beleaguered British king Vortigern. Descendants of Odin, their names mean 'Stallion' and 'Horse', respectively, [19] strengthening the connection. [37] [38]

In Scandinavia, images of divine twins are attested from 15th century BCE until the 8th century CE, after which they disappear, apparently as a result of religious change. Norse texts contain no identifiable divine twins, though scholars have looked for parallels among gods and heroes. [39]

The myth of the Icelandic settlers Ingólfr Arnarson and Hjörleifr Hróðmarsson, which appears in the legendary account of the settlement of Iceland, may contain several motifs of the Indo-European twin mytheme (being founders and brothers), also paralleling Hengist and Horsa. [40] [41]

Another founding pair of twins in Germanic tradition is brothers Dan and Angul (Angel), described in the Gesta Danorum by scholar Saxo Grammaticus. [41]

The Haddingjar were two brothers who appear in many versions of Germanic legends.

Graeco-Roman

Amphion and Zethus, another pair of twins fathered by Zeus and Antiope, are portrayed as the legendary founders of Thebes. They are called "Dioskouroi, riders of white horses" (λευκόπωλοι) by Euripides in his play The Phoenician Women (the same epithet is used in Heracles and in the lost play Antiope). In keeping with the theme of distinction between the twins, Amphion was said to be the more contemplative, sensitive one, whereas Zethus was more masculine and tied to physical pursuits, like hunting and cattle-breeding. [42] [43] [44]

The mother of Romulus and Remus, Rhea Silvia, placed them in a basket before her death, which she put in the river to protect them from murder, before they were found by the she-wolf who raised them. [45] The Palici, a pair of Sicilian twin deities fathered by Zeus in one account, may also be a reflex of the original mytheme. [46]

Greek rhetorician and grammar Athenaeus of Naucratis, in his work Deipnosophistae , Book II, cited that poet Ibycus, in his Melodies, described twins Eurytus and Cteatus as "λευκίππους κόρους" ("white-horsed youths") and said they were born from a silver egg, [47] [48] a story that recalls the myth of Greek divine twins Castor and Pollux and their mother Leda. This pair of twins was said to have been fathered by sea god Poseidon and a human mother, Molione. [49] [lower-alpha 2]

Baltic

There is possibility that Ūsiņš (alternately, Ūsinis), a Baltic god mentioned in the dainas , is a reflex of the mytheme in Latvian tradition. He is associated with horses, [51] [52] the light and sun, [53] and possibly one of the sons of Dievs. [54] [55] Historical linguist Václav Blažek argues he is "a functional and etymological counterpart" of a minor Vedic character Auśijá- (a servant of the Vedic twins and related to bees) and the Aśvins themselves. [51] Also, according to David Leeming, Usins appears as a charioteer, conducting a chariot pulled by two horses across the sky. [56]

It has also been argued that Auseklis is the other reflex of the mytheme in Latvian. [57] Auseklis is referred to as male in the context of the dainas (folksong), and is seen as the groom of Saules meita ("daughter of the sun"), who came all the way to Germany to court her. [58] In addition, according to scholar Elza Kokare, Auseklis belongs to a group of heavenly deities that take part in a mythological drama about a "celestial wedding". Auseklis is seen as a groom of Saules meita, a daughter of Saule, the female Baltic sun. Sometimes, he is deprived of his bride (Ausekļa līgaviņa and variations) because of Meness's quarreling. In other accounts, he is a guest or member of the bridal cortege [59] at the wedding of Saules meita with another character. [60] He is also said to own a horse, bought by him or for him. [61] According to Marija Gimbutas's analysis, Auseklis is a "dievaitis" ('little god') that appears with a horse the Sun gave him, and falls in love with the daughter of the (female) Sun ("Saules dukterims"). [62]

Slavic

A copy of the twin statue from the island of Fischerinsel Fischerinselgoetze.jpg
A copy of the twin statue from the island of Fischerinsel

The Polish deities Lel and Polel, first mentioned by Maciej Miechowita in 1519, are presented as the equivalents of Castor and Pollux, the sons of the goddess Łada (counterpart of the Greek Leda) and an unknown male god. An idol was found in 1969 on the Fischerinsel island, where the cult centres of the Slavic tribe of Veleti was located, depicting two male figures joined with their heads. Scholars believe it may represent Lel and Polel. Lelek means "strong youth" in Russian dialect. [63] The brightest stars of the Gemini constellation, α Gem and β Gem, are thought to have been originally named Lele and Polele in Belarusian tradition, after the twin characters. [64]

According to Polish professor of medieval history, Jacek Banaszkiewicz, the two Polabian gods, Porevit and Porenut, manifest dioskuric characteristics. According to him, the first part of their names derives from a Proto-Slavic root -por meaning "strength," with first being "Lord of strength" – the stronger one, and the other "Lord in need of support (strength)" – the weaker one. They both have five faces each and appear alongside Rugiaevit, the chief god. [65]

During childbirth, the mother of the Polish hero twins Waligóra ("Mountain Beater") and Wyrwidąb ("Oak Tearer") died in the forest, where wild animals took care of them. [66] Waligóra was raised of by a she-wolf and Wyrwidąb by a she-bear, who fed them with their own milk. Together, they defeated the dragon who tormented the kingdom, for which the grateful king gave each of them half of the kingdom and one of his two daughters as a wife. The sons of Krak: Krak II and Lech II also appear in Polish legends as the killers of the Wawel dragon. [67]

Indo-Iranian

Another possible reflex may be found in Nakula and Sahadeva. Mothered by Princess Madri, who summoned the Aśvins themselves in a prayer to beget her sons (thus them being called Ashvineya (आश्विनेय)), the twins are two of the five Pandava brothers, married to the same woman, Draupadi. In the Mahabharata epic, Nakula is described in terms of his exceptional beauty, warriorship and martial prowess, while Sahadeva is depicted as patient, wise, intelligent and a "learned man". Nakula takes great interest in Virata's horses, and his brother Sahadeva become Virata's cowherd. [68] [69] [70] [71] Scholarship also points out that the Vedic Ashvins had an Avestic counterpart called Aspinas. [72] [73] [74]

Armenian

The Armenian heroes Sanasar and Baldasar appear as twins in the epic tradition, born of princess Tsovinar (as depicted in Daredevils of Sassoun ); [75] Sanasar finds a "fiery horse", is more warlike than his brother, and becomes the progenitor of a dynasty of heroes. [76] [77] In an alternate account, their mother is named princess Saṙan, who drinks water from a horse's footprint and gives birth to both heroes. [78]

Scholar Armen Petrosyan also sees possible reflexes of the divine twins in other pairs of heroic brothers in Armenian epic tradition, e.g., Ar(a)maneak and Ar(a)mayis; Eruand (Yervant) and Eruaz (Yervaz). [79] In the same vein, Sargis Haroutyunian argues that the Armenian heroes, as well as twins Izzadin (or Izaddin) and Zyaddin (mentioned in the Kurdish Sharafnama ), underlie the myth of divine twins: pairs of brother-founders of divine origin. [80]

Albanian

The pair of heroic brothers and main characters of the Albanian legendary epic cycle Kângë Kreshnikësh Muji and Halili – are considered to bear common traits of the Indo-European divine twins. [81] [82] [83]

Legacy

In mythology and religion

The mytheme of the Divine Twins was widely popular in the Indo-European traditions; evidence for their worship can be found from Scandinavia to the Near East as early as the Bronze Age. The motif was also adopted in non-Indo-European cultures, as attested by the Etruscan Tinas Clenar, the "sons of Jupiter". [84] There might also have been a worship of twin deities in Myceanean times, based on the presence of myths and stories about pairs of brothers or male twins in Attica and Boeotia. [85]

The most prevalent functions associated with the twins in later myths are magic healers and physicians, sailors and saviours at sea, warriors and providers of divine aid in battle, controllers of weather and keepers of the wind, assistants at birth with a connection to fertility, divinities of dance, protectors of the oath, and founders of cities, sometimes related to swans. [3] [86] Scholarship suggests that the mytheme of twins has echoes in the medieval legend of Amicus and Amelius . [4] In Belarusian folklore, Saints George and Nicholas are paired up together, associated with horses, and have a dual nature as healers. [42] The veneration of the Slavic saint brothers Boris and Gleb may also be related. [87] [88]

In literature

Literary approaches to the mytheme of the Indo-European Divine Twins can be found in Zeus, a Study in Ancient Religion (1925), by Arthur Bernard Cook. The British scholar posited that some versions of The Dancing Water, the Singing Apple, and the Speaking Bird , collected from Greek and Italian sources, contained some remnants of Helen and her brothers, the Dioskouroi, in the characters of the wonder-children (triplets or two male/one female siblings) with astronomical motifs on their bodies. [89] The idea is reiterated in Angelo de Gubernatis's Zoological Mythology, Vol. 1. [90] The Italian scholar analysed the twins in a variant of The Boys with the Golden Stars format as the "Açvinau" (Asvins) of Vedic lore. [91]

In architecture

Asvieniai, commonly called the little horses, on the rooftop of a house in Nida, Lithuania Nida ThomasMann cottage.jpg
Ašvieniai, commonly called the little horses, on the rooftop of a house in Nida, Lithuania

Ašvieniai, depicted as žirgeliai or little horses, are common motifs on Lithuanian rooftops, [92] [93] [94] placed for protection of the house. [95] Similar motifs can also be found on beehives, harnesses, bed frames, and other household objects. [96]

A similar imagery appears in the decoration of Fachhallenhaus, a type of Low German house: the point of the gables consists of carved wooden boards in the shape of (stylised) horses' heads, often serving to protect the edges of the roof from the wind. The horses' heads are attributed to the symbol of the Saxons, the Saxon Steed. Its distribution as decoration on roof ridges is also reflected in the coats of arms of several north Germany towns and villages. These crossed horseheads are said to be "an old pagan symbol". [97] This symbol, also named "Gable Cross" (de), was possibly associated with legendary founders Hengist and Horsa, since it was called Hengst und Hors. [98]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Solar deity</span> Sky deity who represents the Sun

A solar deity or sun deity is a deity who represents the Sun, or an aspect of it. Such deities are usually associated with power and strength. Solar deities and Sun worship can be found throughout most of recorded history in various forms. The Sun is sometimes referred to by its Latin name Sol or by its Greek name Helios. The English word sun derives from Proto-Germanic *sunnǭ.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Castor and Pollux</span> Greek mythical siblings

Castor and Pollux are twin half-brothers in Greek and Roman mythology, known together as the Dioscuri.

The Palici, or Palaci, were a pair of indigenous Sicilian chthonic deities in Roman mythology, and to a lesser extent in Greek mythology. They are mentioned in Ovid's Metamorphoses V, 406, and in Virgil's Aeneid IX, 585. Their cult centered on three small lakes that emitted sulphurous vapors in the Palagonia plain, and as a result these twin brothers were associated with geysers and the underworld. There was also a shrine to the Palaci in Palacia, where people could subject themselves or others to tests of reliability through divine judgement; passing meant that an oath could be trusted.

Auseklis is a Latvian god, a stellar deity that represents a celestial body, but possibly not the same as Venus - the first "star" to appear in the mornings on the east side of the sky. He is the third most popular deity in Latvian mythology after Saulė and Mēness, but is almost exclusively mentioned in folk songs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Proto-Indo-European mythology</span> Myths attributed to the Proto-Indo-Europeans

Proto-Indo-European mythology is the body of myths and deities associated with the Proto-Indo-Europeans, speakers of the hypothesized Proto-Indo-European language. Although the mythological motifs are not directly attested – since Proto-Indo-European speakers lived in preliterate societies – scholars of comparative mythology have reconstructed details from inherited similarities found among Indo-European languages, based on the assumption that parts of the Proto-Indo-Europeans' original belief systems survived in the daughter traditions.

Lithuanian mythology is the mythology of Lithuanian polytheism, the religion of pre-Christian Lithuanians. Like other Indo-Europeans, ancient Lithuanians maintained a polytheistic mythology and religious structure. In pre-Christian Lithuania, mythology was a part of polytheistic religion; after Christianisation mythology survived mostly in folklore, customs and festive rituals. Lithuanian mythology is very close to the mythology of other Baltic nations – Prussians, Latvians, and is considered a part of Baltic mythology.

Aušrinė is a feminine deity of the morning star (Venus) in the Lithuanian mythology. She is the antipode to "Vakarinė", the evening star.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ašvieniai</span> Divine twins in Lithuanian mythology

Ašvieniai are divine twins in the Lithuanian mythology, identical to Latvian Dieva dēli and the Baltic counterparts of Vedic Ashvins. Both names derive from the same Proto-Indo-European root for the horse – *ék̂wos: Old Lithuanian ašva and Sanskrit ashva mean "horse". Like the Greek Dioscuri Castor and Pollux, they are reflexes of a common Indo-European mytheme, the Divine Twins.

<i>*Dyēus</i> Sky-god in Proto-Indo-European mythology

*Dyḗus, also *Dyḗus ph₂tḗr, is the reconstructed name of the daylight-sky god in Proto-Indo-European mythology. *Dyēus was conceived as a divine personification of the bright sky of the day and the seat of the gods, the *deywṓs. Associated with the vast diurnal sky and with the fertile rains, *Dyēus was often paired with *Dʰéǵʰōm, the Earth Mother, in a relationship of union and contrast.

<i>*H₂éwsōs</i> Dawn-goddess in the Proto-Indo-European mythology

*H₂éwsōs or *Haéusōs is the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European name of the dawn goddess in the Proto-Indo-European mythology.

Baltic mythology is the body of mythology of the Baltic people stemming from Baltic paganism and continuing after Christianization and into Baltic folklore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ashvins</span> Hindu twin gods of medicine

The Ashvins, also known as the Ashvini Kumaras and Asvinau, are Hindu twin gods associated with medicine, health, dawn, and the sciences. In the Rigveda, they are described as youthful divine twin horsemen, travelling in a chariot drawn by horses that are never weary, and portrayed as guardian deities that safeguard and rescue people by aiding them in various situations.

The Alcis or Alci were a pair of divine young brothers worshipped by the Naharvali, an ancient Germanic tribe from Central Europe. The Alcis are solely attested by Roman historian and senator Tacitus in his ethnography Germania, written around 98 AD.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Horse sacrifice</span> Type of animal sacrifice

Horse sacrifice is the ritual killing and offering of a horse, usually as part of a religious or cultural ritual. Horse sacrifices were common throughout Eurasia with the domestication of the horse and continuing up until the spread of Abrahamic religions, or in some places like Mongolia, of Buddhism. The practice is rarely observed in some cultures even today.

In historical Indo-European religion, the concept of an otherworld, also known as an otherside, is reconstructed in comparative mythology. Its name is a calque of orbis alius, a term used by Lucan in his description of the Celtic Otherworld.

The Indo-European cosmogony refers to the creation myth of the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European mythology.

*Manu and *Yemo were a duo in Proto-Indo-European mythology. In the creation myth, Manu kills Yemo as a foundational part of the origin of the universe. Yemo is sometimes also interpreted as a primordial hermaphrodite.

*Trito is a significant figure in Proto-Indo-European mythology, representing the first warrior and acting as a culture hero. He is connected to other prominent characters, such as Manu and Yemo, and is recognized as the protagonist of the myth of the warrior function, establishing the model for all later men of arms. In the legend, Trito is offered cattle as a divine gift by celestial gods, which is later stolen by a three-headed serpent named *H₂n̥gʷʰis ('serpent'). Despite initial defeat, Trito, fortified by an intoxicating drink and aided by the Sky-Father, or alternatively the Storm-God or *H₂nḗr, 'Man', together they go to a cave or a mountain, and the hero overcomes the monster and returns the recovered cattle to a priest for it to be properly sacrificed. He is now the first warrior, maintaining through his heroic deeds the cycle of mutual giving between gods and mortals. Scholars have interpreted the story of Trito either as a cosmic conflict between the heavenly hero and the earthly serpent or as an Indo-European victory over non-Indo-European people, with the monster symbolizing the aboriginal thief or usurper. Trito's character served as a model for later cattle raiding epic myths and was seen as providing moral justification for cattle raiding. The legend of Trito is generally accepted among scholars and is recognized as an essential part of Proto-Indo-European mythology, although not to the level of Manu and Yemo.

<i>*Seh₂ul</i> and <i>*Meh₁not</i> Proto-Indo-European Sun and Moon gods

*Seh₂ul and *Meh₁not are the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European goddess of the Sun and god of the Moon. *Seh₂ul is reconstructed based on the solar deities of the attested Indo-European mythologies, although its gender is disputed, since there are deities of both genders. Likewise, *Meh₁not- is reconstructed based on the lunar deities of the daughter languages, but they differ in regards to their gender.

*Ḱérberos is the reconstructed name of the canine creature guarding the entrance to the Otherworld in Proto-Indo-European mythology. In a recurrent motif, the Otherworld contains a gate, generally guarded by a dog who could also serve as a guide and ensured that the ones who entered could not get out.

References

Footnotes

  1. The northern Black Sea or the Sea of Azov. [13]
  2. Claire Louise Wilkinson seems to agree with the theory that the twin pairs of Greek mythology hark back to a "common root". [50]

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 Jackson 2002, p. 78.
  2. 1 2 3 West 2007, p. 187.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 161.
  4. 1 2 Shapiro, Marianne (1990). ""Ami et Amile" and Myths of Divine Twinship". Romanische Forschungen. 102 (2/3): 131–148. JSTOR   27940080.
  5. Ward, Donald J. "An Indo-European Mythological Theme in Germanic Tradition". In: Indo-European and Indo-Europeans: Papers Presented at the Third Indo-European Conference at the University of Pennsylvania. Edited by George Cardona, Henry M. Hoenigswald and Alfred Senn. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016 [1971]. p. 416. https://doi.org/10.9783/9781512801200-021
  6. 1 2 3 Jackson 2002, p. 67.
  7. 1 2 West 2007, p. 187–191.
  8. Derksen 2015, p. 65.
  9. Lubotsky, Alexander. "Indo-Aryan Inherited Lexicon". Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Project. Leiden University. s.v. áśva-.
  10. West 2007, p. 188.
  11. 1 2 3 Mallory & Adams 2006, p. 432.
  12. 1 2 3 West 2007, p. 189.
  13. West 2007, p. 191.
  14. Beekes 2011, p. 35.
  15. 1 2 3 4 Parpola 2015, p. 109.
  16. Prósper, Blanca María (2011). "The instrumental case in the thematic noun inflection of Continental Celtic". Historische Sprachforschung / Historical Linguistics. 124: 250–267. doi:10.13109/hisp.2011.124.1.250. JSTOR   41553575.
  17. Weinstock, Stefan (1960). "Two Archaic Inscriptions from Latium". The Journal of Roman Studies. 50: 112–118. doi:10.2307/298293. JSTOR   298293. S2CID   161694789.
  18. Adams, J. N. The Regional Diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 . Cambridge University Press, 2007. pp. 55-56. ISBN   9781139468817.
  19. 1 2 3 4 West 2007, p. 190.
  20. Kleiner, Fred S.; Kleiner, Diana E. (1976). "Two Romans Provençal portrait reliefs". Mélanges de l'École française de Rome. Antiquité. 88 (1): 243–257. doi:10.3406/mefr.1976.1057.
  21. Picard, Charles (1943). "Le bas-relief funéraire de Saint-Julien-lès-Martigues". Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. 87 (3): 439–458. doi:10.3406/crai.1943.77671.
  22. Hatt, Jean-Jacques (1965). "Essai sur l'évolution de la religion gauloise". Revue des Études Anciennes. 67 (1): 80–125. doi:10.3406/rea.1965.3739.
  23. Duval, Paul-Marie (1989). "Cultes gaulois et gallo-romains. 3. Dieux d'époque gallo-romaine". Publications de l'École Française de Rome. 116 (1): 259–273.
  24. Diodorus, Siculus. Diodorus of Sicily, with an English translation by C. H. Oldfather. Vol. II. London: Heinemann. 1933. pp. 522-523.
  25. Maier, Bernhard, 1963- (1997). Dictionary of Celtic religion and culture. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press. p. 96. ISBN   0-85115-698-3. OCLC   36074567.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  26. MacLeod, Sharon Paice. “A Confluence of Wisdom: The Symbolism of Wells, Whirlpools, Waterfalls and Rivers in Early Celtic Sources”. In: Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium 26/27 (2006): 348-349. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40732065.
  27. Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 161-162.
  28. Dexter, Miriam Robbins. "The hippomorphic goddess and her offspring". In: JIES 18/3-4 (Fall/Winter, 1990). pp. 285–307.
  29. Krappe, Alexander Haggerty, “La poursuite du Gilla Dacker et les Dioscures celtiques”. In: Revue Celtique 49 (1932): 96-108.
  30. Persigout, Jean-Paul. Dictionnaire de Mythologie Celte. Dieux et Héros. Éditions du Rocher. 1996. p. 103. ISBN   2 268 00968 8.
  31. 1 2 Gricourt, Daniel; Hollard, Dominique (2002). "Lugus et le cheval". Dialogues d'histoire ancienne. 28 (2): 121–166. doi:10.3406/dha.2002.2475.
  32. 1 2 Bousquet, Jean (1971). "Inscriptions de Rennes". Gallia. 29 (1): 109–122. doi:10.3406/galia.1971.2572.
  33. Johnston, Andrew C. The Sons of Remus: Identity in Roman Gaul and Spain . Harvard University Press. 2017. pp. 142, 144. ISBN   9780674660106.
  34. Clavel-Lévêque, Monique (1989). "XIII. Religion, culture, identité. Mais où sont les druides d'autan... ? (DHA, 11, 1985, p. 557-604)". Collection de l'Institut des Sciences et Techniques de l'Antiquité. 396 (1): 389–456.
  35. Simek 1993, p. 7.
  36. Andrén 2020, pp. 1453–1455.
  37. Andrén 2020, pp. 1455–1456.
  38. Simek 1993, pp. 59–60, 139.
  39. Andrén 2020, p. 1463.
  40. Höfig, Verena (1 April 2018). "A Pre-Modern Nation? Icelanders' Ethnogenesis and Its Mythical Foundations". Scandinavian Studies. 90 (1): 110–132. doi:10.5406/scanstud.90.1.0110. S2CID   166118426.
  41. 1 2 Hoefig, Verena (2017). "Foundational Myth in Sturlubók: An Analysis of the Tale of Ingólfr and Hjörleifr". Sturla Þórðarson. pp. 70–82. doi:10.1163/9789004342361_008. ISBN   9789004342361.
  42. 1 2 Sanko, Siarhei (August 2018). "Reflexes of Ancient Ideas about Divine Twins in the Images of Saints George and Nicholas in Belarusian Folklore". Folklore. 72: 15–40. doi: 10.7592/fejf2018.72.sanko .
  43. Roman, Luke; Roman, Monica (2010). Encyclopedia of Greek and Roman Mythology. Infobase Publishing. p. 58. ISBN   978-1-4381-2639-5.
  44. "Apollodorus, Library, book 3, chapter 5, section 5". www.perseus.tufts.edu.
  45. Roman, Luke. (2010). Encyclopedia of Greek and Roman mythology. Román, Mónica. New York: Facts On File. pp. 429–430. ISBN   978-1-4381-2639-5. OCLC   607553701.
  46. Witczak, K. T.; Zawiasa, D. "The Sicilian Palici as representatives of the indo-european divine twins". In: ΜΥΘΟΣ, n. 12, 2004-2005. pp. 93-106.
  47. "Athenaeus, the Deipnosophists, Book II., chapter 50".
  48. "Ibycus".
  49. Wilkinson, Claire Louise. The Lyric of Ibycus: Introduction, Text and Commentary . Sozomena 13. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2013. pp. 209-213. ISBN   978-3-11-029514-6.
  50. Wilkinson, Claire Louise. The Lyric of Ibycus: Introduction, Text and Commentary. Sozomena 13. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2013. p. 213. ISBN   978-3-11-029514-6.
  51. 1 2 Blažek, Václav (29 December 2012). "Latvian Ūsiņš 'bee-god and patron of horses'". Baltistica. 47 (2): 359–366. doi: 10.15388/baltistica.47.2.2123 .
  52. Biezais, Haralds. Lichtgott der alten Letten. Almquist & Wiksell. 1976. pp. 77-79, 155-189.
  53. Priede, Janis. Development of the Study of Religion in Latvian in the 20th Century. In: Studying Religions with the Iron Curtain Closed and Opened: the academia study of religion in eastern Europe. Leiden: Brill. 2015. p. 225.
  54. Christensen, Lisbeth Bredholt; Hammer, Olav; Warburton, David (2014). The Handbook of Religions in Ancient Europe. Routledge. p. 368. ISBN   978-1-317-54452-4.
  55. Leeming, David Adams (2003). From Olympus to Camelot: The World of European Mythology. Oxford University Press. pp. 125–126. ISBN   0-19-514361-2.
  56. Leeming, David. The Oxford Companion to World Mythology . Oxford University Press. 2005. pp. 101-102.
  57. Calin, Didier (1996). Indo-European Poetics and the Latvian Folk Songs (Thesis). pp. 62–65.
  58. Pundure, Irena (20 December 2008). "A solar calendar from Latvian dainas". Archaeologia Baltica. 10: 39–44.
  59. Lurker, Manfred (2004). The Routledge dictionary of gods and goddesses, devils and demons. Routledge. p. 25. ISBN   978-0-415-34018-2.
  60. Kokare, Elza. "A survey of the basic structures in Latvian mythology. In: Journal of the Baltic Institute of Folklore (Tallinn), 1996, Nr.1, pp. 65-91.
  61. Běťáková, Marta Eva; Blažek, Václav. Encyklopedie baltské mytologie. Praha: Libri. 2012. pp. 34-35. ISBN   978-80-7277-505-7.
  62. Gimbutienė, Marija (1985). Baltai priešistoriniais laikais: etnogenezė, materialinė kultūra ir mitologija. Vilnius: Mokslas. p. 165.
  63. Gieysztor, Aleksander. (2006). Mitologia Słowian. Modzelewski, Karol, 1937-2019., Słupecki, Leszek Paweł, 1956-, Pieniądz-Skrzypczak, Aneta. (Wyd. 3., zm., rozszerz ed.). Warszawa: Wydawn. Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego. ISBN   83-235-0234-X. OCLC   212627528.
  64. Avilin, Tsimafei (20 December 2008). "Astronyms in Belarussian folk beliefs". Archaeologia Baltica. 10: 29–34.
  65. Banaszkiewicz 1996, p. 81.
  66. Wójcicki, Kazimierz Władysław. Klechdy: starożytne podania i powieści ludu polskiego i Rusi. Tom I. w Warszawie: w Drukarni Piotra Baryckiego. 1837. pp. 167-173 and 203-204.
  67. Niedzielski, Grzegorz. (2011). Królowie z gwiazd : mitologia plemion prapolskich. Sandomierz: Wydawnictwo Armoryka. pp. 108–109. ISBN   978-83-62661-17-6. OCLC   802060512.
  68. Mallory & Adams 1997, pp. 164–165.
  69. The New Comparative Mythology: An Anthropological Assessment of the Theories of Georges Dumézil - Revised Edition. C. Scott Littleton. University of California Press. 1973. p. 209.
  70. Stealing Helen: The Myth of the Abducted Wife in Comparative Perspective. Lowell Edmunds. Princeton University Press. 2016. p. 77
  71. Hindu World: An Encyclopedic Survey of Hinduism. Volume II M-Z. Benjamin Walker. Routledge. 2019. Entry: "Pandava"
  72. Davar, Firoze Cowasji. Iran And India Through The Ages. Bombay, Calcutta, New Delhi, Madras: Asia Publishing House. 1962. pp. 13-14.
  73. Pott, August Friedrich. Etymologische Forschungen auf dem Gebiete der Indo-Germanischen Sprachen. Zwiter Theil. 1836. p. 211.
  74. Walker, Benjamin. Hindu World: An Encyclopedic Survey of Hinduism In Two Volumes. Volume I: A-L. London and New York: Routledge. 2019. p. 72. ISBN   978-0-367-14300-8
  75. Shalian, Artin K. David of Sassoun : the Armenian folk epic in four cycles. Athens: Ohio University Press, 1964. p. xxvi.
  76. Petrosyan, Armen (2002). The Indo‑european and Ancient Near Eastern Sources of the Armenian Epic. Washington, D.C.: Institute for the Study of Man. ISBN   9780941694810.
  77. Anderson, Earl R. with Mark Host. "Genetic and Diffusional Themes in the Armenian Sasna Crer: The Sanasar Cycle". In: Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies Vol. 14 (2005): 11-18.
  78. Petrosyan, Armen (2017). "Armeno-Indian Epic Parallels". The Journal of Indo-European Studies. 45 (1–2): 172–186. ProQuest   1947773418.
  79. Petrosyan, Armen (2012). "First Capitals of Armenia and Georgia: Armawir and Armazi (Problems of Early Ethnic Associations)". The Journal of Indo-European Studies. 40 (3 & 4): 269–270. ProQuest   1448190890.
  80. Haroutyunian, Sargis (1997). "Armenian Epic Tradition and Kurdish Folklore". Iran & the Caucasus. 1: 85–92. doi:10.1163/157338497X00049. JSTOR   4030741.
  81. Çabej 1968, p. 286.
  82. Juka 1984, p. 64.
  83. Neziri 2008, pp. 80–82.
  84. Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 165.
  85. Buck, Robert J. A History of Boeotia. the University of Alberta Press. 1979. p. 57. ISBN   9780888640512
  86. Shapiro 1982.
  87. Reisman, Edward S. (April 1978). "The Cult of Boris and Gleb: Remnant of a Varangian Tradition?". Russian Review. 37 (2): 141–157. doi:10.2307/128465. JSTOR   128465.
  88. Marinas, Enrique Santos. "Communicating an Indo-European Myth to the Christian Kievan Rus’: Boris and Gleb as the Divine Twins". In: The Indo-European legacy in language and culture. Selected issue, scientific editors A. Dudziak, A. Zlobin, M. Payunena. Wydawnictwo UWM, Olsztyn. 2019. pp. 23-36. ISBN   978-83-8100-209-7.
  89. "Appendix F". In: Cook, Arthur Bernard. Zeus, A Study In Ancient Religion. Cambridge University Press. 1925. Vol. II: Zeus, God of the Dark Sky (Thunder and Lightning). Part II: Appendixes and Index. pp. 1003–1019.
  90. de Gubernatis, Angelo. Zoological mythology; or, The legends of animals. London: Trübner & Co. 1872. p. 412.
  91. Jones, W. Henry; Kropf, Lajos. The Folk-Tales of the Magyars. London: Published for the Folk-lore society by Elliot Stock. 1889. Notes on Folk-tale nr. 11. pp. 338.
  92. Tumėnas, Vytautas. ""Žirgelių" ornamento semantinis laukas" [Semantic field of „žirgeliai“ (gable decoration resembling horse’s head)]. In: Liaudies kultūra, 1997, Nr. 2 (53). pp. 22–35.
  93. Hamacher, Duane W. "The Sumerians and Gemini: Sumerian Astronomical Interpretations as Origins of the Divine Horse Twins and Solar Chariots in Indo-European Mythology (Unpublished manuscript)" (PDF). p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-14.
  94. Straižys, Vytautas; Klimka, Libertas (February 1997). "The Cosmology of the Ancient Balts". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 28 (22): S57–S81. Bibcode:1997JHAS...28...57S. doi:10.1177/002182869702802207. S2CID   117470993.
  95. Dundulienė, Pranė (1991). Lietuvių etnologija (in Lithuanian). Mokslas. p. 50. ISBN   5-420-00713-4.
  96. Musteikis, Egidijus (2003-06-09). "Arklys tradicijose" (in Lithuanian). Horse Museum – Branch of A. Baranauskas and A. Vienuolis-Žukauskas Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 2011-05-18. Retrieved 2010-01-07.
  97. Evenden, William L. Deutsche Feuerversicherungs-Schilder [German Fire Marks]. VVW Karlsruhe. 1989. p. 63. ISBN   3-88487-190-0
  98. Simek, Rudolf (2007). Dictionary of Northern Mythology. Translated by Angela Hall. D.S. Brewer. p. 139. ISBN   978-0-85991-513-7

Bibliography

Further reading

General studies:

Indo-Iranian:

Celtic:

Balto-Slavic:

Greek:

Germanic: