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Background
Slavic pre-Christian religion is one of the least known in comparison to other European peoples. There are no direct accounts which would describe its character. The only surviving sources which give some insight into Slavic paganism are the early Christian chronicles, like Nestor’s chronicle (Повесть временных лет) or Kosmas’ chronicle. Prokopios Kaisareus, the Byzantine historian wrote a brief account of Slavic religion.
Consequently, our knowledge of early Slavic religion is extremely fragmentary and not sufficient to reconstruct the pantheon or the mythology. All we know are general descriptions of single deities and customs distorted and described from a Christian, often non-Slavic, perspective.Religion of the Polabian tribes and East Slavs has been described slightly better than those of others.
Reconstructions of Creation Myth and Pantheon
Slavic creation myth has been reconstructed by ethnographists mostly from the Ukrainian and Bulgarian folklore legends. According to these tales, the world has been created from a primeval ocean or an abyss by Sventovit (who in some versions is replaced by Perun or Rod), as well as Svarog and Weles. These three deities were most likely the three main gods of the Slavic pantheon. Sventovit (or Perun) was most likely the main deity, a god-creator, while Svarog and Weles represented respectively the forces of light and darkness. According to the legends, Svarog and Weles together erected the land above the primeval ocean using the sand from the bottom of the abyss. However, they quarrelled over who will assume the rule over land and, as a result, Sventovit divided the world into two domains.
Weles became the god of magic, lore and riches. He became the ruler of the underworld or “Nawii”, where souls of the dead would go for rest. According to Nestor’s chronicle, written in Medieval Rus, it was a custom among the Slavs to take oaths in the name of Weles, or, in case of warriors, in the name of Perun. An old Russian document called “A word on Igor’s expedition” (Слово о плъку Игоревѣ), indicates that Weles was the patron-deity of sages and fortune-tellers. It is however interesting that Vladimir I, the pagan duke of Kievan Rus, did not list Weles as one of the Slavic gods to whom he erected statues in 980. Accoring to some scholars Weles was also a guardian of cattle. After christianisation Weles became the Devil. Some Slavis sayings refer to the “sins of Weles” or tak form of a curse - “go to the Weles!” – as in go to the Devil, go to hell.
Svarog on the other hand was an ancient god of fire. He was also the god of blacksmiths and sun. The root of the word “swar” is also common in Sanskrit and Iranian words referring to sky or fire. Svarog is probably a variant of a common fire/solar deity which the Slavs shared with the Indo-Aryans and the Iranians. According to some legends Svarog was the father of gods and the main god-creator.
It is interesting to note that the opposition between Svarog and Weles, or light and darkness, has its parallels in the Indo-Aryan worship of Mitra and Waruna, and Iranian worship of Ahuramazda and Aryman.
In Kievan Rus Swarog was also known as Dadźbóg, Dażbóg, or Dabóg. Alternatively Dadźbóg was the son of Swarog. Kievan dukes regarded themselves as “grandsons of Dadźbóg”.
In Polabie, Swarog was known under the name of Swarożyc (which can also mean “son of Svarog”). He was worshipped as the god of fire – incluing sacrifical and house fire. According to a German historian, Thietmar, the temple of Swarożyc was in Radogoszcz, or Radegost:
…on the territory of the Lutici, or Wieleci – a Slavic confederation of tribes known for their aggression and staunch devotion to paganism. This was the capital fort of the Redari who were a part of Lutici. It was also mentioned by Helmond and Adam of Bremen.
Thietmar wrote:
“There is, in the land of the Redari, a fort triangular in shape and with three gates leading to the inside, called Radogoszcz, surrounded from all sides by a great forest untouched by the natives and worshipped as sacred. Two of the gates are always opened for the people who enter. The third one, from the East side, is the smallest one and opens to a small pathway that leads to a nearby fearsome-looking lake. Within the for there is a single temple, built masterfully from wood and resting on the fundaments made of horns of wild animals. Its inner walls are adorned with the images of pagan gods and goddesses – which are, as one can notice by looking at them closely – sculptured wonderfully, from wood, while inside the chamber there are statues of gods, made by human hand, with helmets and armours – each with his own name engraved. The first one is called Swarożyc, and he is the subject of a particular worship among the pagans. There are also many banners stored in there, which they never take, except for war expeditions, and then they are carried by foot warriors. For protection of all of this, the natives have appointed special priests.”
Polabians:
Radegost:
/// - Veleti confederation
\\\ - Duchy of the Obodrites
Here is an interesting pdf on Slavic oracles:
http://sms.zrc-sazu.si/pdf/02/SMS_02...cki_Zaroff.pdf
And another one in German:
http://www.folklore.ee/Folklore/vol42/pommern.pdf
Adam of Bremen wrote that the Redari worshipped Radegast/Radogost, which would mean this was another name for Swarożyc. According to Helmond, Radegast was also worshipped by the neighbouring Obodriti. According to the sources, the Slavs kept a white horse in the temple of Swarożyc. This is interesting as horse often symbolised solar deities in other IE religions, like Celts. When the Lutici were defeated by the Saxons and temple burnt down, one of the bishops apparently rode on the sacred horse.
Slavic temple „am Groß Radener See”:
Main Slavic „grads“ and temples:
/// - Lutici
Polabian, Lechitic Slavs
Polabian Tribes:
A website on Polabisn Slavs - the Lutici, their history and religion:
http://www.killikus.de/mecklenburgis...ichen-ivenack/
Google-translated from German:
And an interesting passage on religion of local Slavs:The 1000 year old oak trees Ivenacker "of which today is unfortunately still a few of the once proud, include up to 35 meters high, are pedunculate oak view, to Germany's oldest trees, and embody it in an impressive way the living and almost touching story of the Pomeranian History:
Thus the 1000 year old oak trees Ivenacker could report on the Slavic people of the Vilkinamen and its settlement history, about the Christianization of the Cistercian Order, about the Reformation wars and the Thirty Years War and the development of Western Pomerania under the rule of Prussia until modern times. Next to the cathedral of Bad Doberan in Bad Doberan, the ruins of the monastery, the castle Dargun Ivenacker oaks between Demmin and Stavenhagen, one of the most important medieval and at the same time, recent evidence from the history of Western Pomerania. One can certainly assume that in Ivenack many prominent personalities of Mecklenburg-Pomerania history someday have shaken hands.
The "Thousand Oaks" from Ivenack are not the testimony of a forest, but they tell us in a unique way of farming after the settlement by a Slavic tribe in the 8th Century after Christ until the tourist use of the zoo in the modern era of the 21 Century:
After the end of antiquity, which had established in the north German lowlands Rugii together with the Germanic Goths, the time of the Great Migration, the North German plain, and later West Pomerania abandoned in the south to protest the ruling Roman Empire fought populated Slavic tribes from eastern Poland and Ukraine in the 6 - and 7 Century CE, the Germanic abandoned settlements. The settlements of Germanic tribes had been erected for safety reasons mostly on small islands of the north German lakes or in one of the many bogs. These special circumstances make use of the Slavic peoples and enlarged approaching the abandoned settlements of the former Germanic tribes to some well-known locations (spots).
In the 6 - and 7 Century, from the southeast in the North German plain immigrant Slavic peoples are grouped under the concept of the Elbe and the Baltic Slavs or Wends. The most famous northern German Slavic ethnic group which settled on the southern Baltic Sea between Ribnitz Damgarten and Wismar were Obodrites (Abodriti, Obodrites), based at Castle Mikel Castle (Castle Mechel, etc.), the later village of Mecklenburg. In today's Western Pomerania, the settled communities Rani (RUJAN) on Ruegen and Wilzen/Weleti between Demmin (Latin Civitas; städt center), Stavenhagen and continue to spread south. Mittelvorpommern to settle in Brandenburg, the Slavic Liutizen (Lutizen) and east of the Oder Lagoon and on the island of Usedom, the tribe moved to the Pomeranians. The Slavic peoples, whose head was always a Slavic prince who lived with their own language and religion as a common ethnic groups consisting of various family lines. The Slavic tribes lived mainly by the family livestock, hunting and farming. The Wilzen/Veleti successfully operated horse. Apart from the pagan beliefs with various gods and deities, made the Slav raids of any kind, which made them popular, and not in the Germanic empire in the 9th Century with the first military Auseinadersetzungen "Frankish Empire of the German nation," led by Charles the Great (741-814). The Wilzenfürst rex Wiltorum Dragowit [Mettenses priores Annales, ed B. von Simson (MGH SRG X, 1905), ad a. 789; Genealogy Middle Ages.] (Upper king submitted the Vilkinamen), Charles the Great, by surrender in campaign of 789, and the oath of allegiance [Dragowit - Prince of Wilez/Weleti]. Among the most famous northern German battles between the Germans and the Slavs of this time belongs to the Battle of Verchen of 1164 on the northern shore of Lake Kummerow. Regarding the settlement in place of Wilzen/Weleti Ivenack, it is interesting to know that the Ivenacker lake, like many other Slavs locations, has a small island, where there certainly was the headquarters of the Slavic tribe leader of Ivenack.
The religion of the Slavic ethnic groups had different, sometimes mehrköpfige gods and idols that were worshiped as wooden statues in various temples. Such pagan temples were found on the island of Ruegen and in Neubrandenburg am Tollensesee. The princes of the Slavs lived in forts in inaccessible swampy areas or on the islands of large lakes (see Teterower Burgwall island) Burgwall Krakower See. About 955 west of the Slavic Obodrites living in Saxon territory south of the Baltic Sea invaded and raided the city Cocarescemier which are deemed to have somewhere between Plauer and Güstrow. During the Saxon King Otto I (in Hungary fought battle on the Lech), the Slavs killed all adult men and taking women and children as prisoners. The victorious battle of Recknitz (Recknitz at Ribnitz Damgarten) (WIKIPEDIA) by Otto I over the Slavs, followed by a 30-year period of peace and it developed from 968 a lively Christian missionary activity to the Slavs (CONTACT). With the Slavic uprising of 983 ended for the next 200 years the mission of the German Ostsiedlung. 1250/52, at the Cistercian nunnery was built in Ivenack and Slavic Hudewald much in the hands of the monastery Ivenack, which included the area around Ivenack. The mission of the nuns of Ivenack consisted primarily of missions to the Slavs, the spread of the Western religion, agriculture and medicine through herbal care. Fairly quickly arose in the Cistercian Abbey and the Cistercian monastery in Dargun Althof near Bad Doberan.
At Ivenack lake there was apparently the capital of the Lutici or Veleti – one of the strongest Polabian tribes. Veleti were also called Wilzen – after slav. “Wilcy” – meaning “Wolves”. Ivenack and its oaks groves:
It is interesting that the cult of Swarożyc at the temple of Radegost was by far the key uniting factor bestowing a sense of common identity upon various tribes of Lutici confederation. Swarożyc, like I said, was the god of sun and fire. And also god of war worshipped by the warriors. Cult of Swarożyc was common to all Slavs, and commonly took form of morning prayers to the rising sun.
History of the Veleti confederation:
"... In the late 10th century, the tribes mentioned above formed an alliance known as the Liutizians (also Liutizi, Lyutitzi, or Liutitians; German: Liutizen or Lutizen). The leaders of the Liutizian tribes met at their major stronghold, the fortified temple of Rethra, and decided important matters together. They are believed to have played the key role in the Slavic uprising of 983. However, the alliance fell apart due to internal conflicts in the 1050s; Rethra was raided and destroyed by the Saxons in the winter of 1068/69.
The Kissini and the Circipani were targeted in various attacks from the west, e.g. Saxon raids in 1114 and 1125, and were succeeded by and incorporated into the Obodrite confederacy by Gottschalk.
The Redarier and Tollenser and some Circipani were in part succeeded by the Pomoranians and Poles coming from the east in the 1120s, and in 1147 again invaded by the participants of the Wendish Crusade. The division of the Liutizian lands that took place in the early 12th century is still present in the borderline dividing Mecklenburg, which emerged from the Obodrite state, and Vorpommern to the east.
Territories conquered by the Pommornian duke Wartislav I aided by Polish duke Boleslaw III the Wrymouth became the Duchy of Western Pomernia:
...initially a fiefdom of Poland, later semi-independent and subjected to German Emperor. The Liutizian lands were subject to the Holy Roman Empire until 1164 and, after a period of Danish raids and occupation, settled by Germans in the Ostsiedlung thereafter. The remnants of the Slavic tribes were gradually Germanized and assimilated during the following centuries..."
Svantevit, Świętowit or Światowid was the other chief diety of the Slavic panthenon, symbolised by a swan or a white horse:
His main temple was in the famous Arkona, on the island of Rugia inhabited by a seafaring and expansive tribe of Rani:
There was a temple there, erected upon the cliffs of a little peninsula jutting out into the sea and facing the East. More info here:
http://wanclik.free.fr/Svantevit.htm
Saxo Grammaticusa in his Gesta Danorum wrote that the temple contained an enormous statue of an anthropomorphic creature with four faces. In one hand it was holding a horn, which the priest would fill with honey to perform divinations.
Sventovit was also god of war. His main attribute was sword and his symbol, like that of Swarożyc apparently, was a white horse used for fortune telling.
Arkona:
Other pagan Slavic temples in the vicinity:
Like the temple of Swarożyc in Radogoszcz, the temple of Sventovit in Arkona was wooden. Inside, the walls were adorned with sculptures and paintings. The temple was also a treasury and was guarded by 300 horseman. It was sacked in 1168 by a Christian duke of the Danes - Valdemar I den Store:
…who organized a crusade against pagan Slavs together with bishop Absalon, here supervising the toppling of the statue of Sventovit:
As a result Rani became vassals of the Danes and were forced to adopt Christianity. Teslav, the duke of the Rani, became a vassal of Valdemar I and gave rise to a local Rugian dynasty.
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