Type: | Indo-European |
Other Names: | |
Equivalent1: | Perkunas |
Weapons: | , , |
Symbols: | Oak |
Etruscan Equivalent: | Tinia and Hercle |
Greek Equivalent: | Zeus and Heracles |
Hinduism Equivalent: | Parjanya (Indra) |
Norse Equivalent: | Thor |
Roman Equivalent: | Jupiter and Hercules |
Slavic Equivalent: | Perun |
Equivalent1 Type: | Baltic |
Equivalent2 Type: | Celtic |
Equivalent2: | Taranis |
Equivalent3 Type: | Hittite |
Equivalent3: | Tarḫunna |
Contrary to other deities of the Proto-Indo-European pantheon, such as (the sky-god), or (the dawn-goddess), widely accepted cognates stemming from the theonym are only attested in Western Indo-European traditions. The linguistic evidence for the worship of a thunder god under the name as far back as Proto-Indo-European times (4500–2500 BC) is therefore less secured.
The name is generally regarded as stemming from the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) verbal root ('to strike'). An alternative etymology is the PIE noun ('the oak'), attached to the divine nomenclature ('master of'). Various cognates can be found in the Latin oak-nymphs Querquetulanae (from Latin: quercus 'oak-tree'), the Germanic Germanic languages: [[wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/ferhuz|ferhwaz]] ('oak'), the Gaulish erc- ('oak') and [[Quaquerni]] (a tribal name), the Punjabi Panjabi; Punjabi: pargāi ('sacred oak'), and perhaps in the Greek spring-nymph Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Herkyna.
The theonym thus either meant "the Striker" or "the Lord of Oaks". A theory uniting those two etymologies has been proposed in the mythological association of oaks with thunder, suggested by the frequency with which such tall trees are struck by lightning.
The existence of a female consort is suggested by gendered doublet-forms such as those found in South Slavic Slavic languages: [[Perun]]–[[Perperuna]], Old Norse Norse, Old: [[Fjörgyn and Fjörgynn|Fjörgyn–Fjörgynn]], and Lithuanian Lithuanian: [[Perkūnas|Perkūnas–Perkūnija]].
The noun also gave birth to a group of cognates for the ordinary word "thunder", including Old Prussian percunis, Polish Russian: piorun ("thunderbolt"), Latvian Latvian: pērkauns ("thunderbolt"), or Lithuanian Lithuanian: perkūnas ("thunder") and Lithuanian: perkūnija ("thunderstorm").
Other Indo-European theonyms related to 'thunder', through another root, are found in the Germanic Germanic languages: [[Þunraz]] (Thor), the Celtic Celtic languages: [[Taranis]] (from an earlier Celtic languages: *Tonaros), and the Latin epithet Latin: [[Jupiter Tonans|Tonans]] (attached to Jupiter). According to scholar Peter Jackson, "they may have arisen as the result of fossilization of an original epithet or epiclesis" of, since the Vedic weather-god Parjanya is also called Sanskrit: stanayitnú- ("Thunderer").
Another possible epithet was "conquering", from "to overcome", with its descendants being Hittite god Tarḫunna, Luwian Tarḫunz, and Sanskrit तूर्वत् (tūrvat), epithet of a storm-god Indra.[1]
George E. Dunkel regarded as an original epithet of, the Sky-God. It has also been postulated that was referred to as ('son of Dyēus'), although this is based on the Vedic poetic tradition alone.
is usually depicted as holding a weapon, named in the Baltic and Old Norse traditions, which personifies lightning and is generally conceived as a club, mace, or hammer made of stone or metal. In the Latvian poetic expression Latvian: Pērkōns met savu milnu ("Pērkōn throws his mace"), the mace (Latvian: milna) is cognate with the Old Norse Norse, Old: [[mjölnir]], the hammer thrown by the thunder god Thor, and also with the word for 'lightning' in the Old Prussian mealde, the Old Church Slavonic Church Slavic; Old Slavonic; Church Slavonic; Old Bulgarian; Old Church Slavonic: *mlъni, or the Welsh Welsh: mellt.
While his thunder and lightning had a destructive connotation, they could also be seen as a regenerative force since they were often accompanied by fructifying rains. Parjanya is depicted as a rain god in the Vedas, and Latvian prayers included a call for Lithuanian: Pērkōns to bring rain in times of drought. The Balkan Slavs worshipped Perun along with his female counterpart Slavic languages: [[Perperuna]], the name of a ritual prayer calling for fructifying rains and centred on the dance of a naked virgin who had not yet had her first monthly period. The earth is likewise referred to as "menstruating" in a Vedic hymn to Parjanya, a possible cognate of Slavic languages: Perperuna. The alternative name of Slavic languages: Perperuna, Slavic languages: Dodola, also recalls Lithuanian: [[Perkūnas]]' pseudonym Lithuanian: Dundulis, and Zeus' oak oracle located at .[2]
is especially invoked by Albanians in incantations and songs praying for rain. Rituals were performed in times of summer drought to make it rain, usually in June and July, but sometimes also in the spring months when there was severe drought. In different Albanian regions, for rainmaking purposes, people threw water upwards to make it subsequently fall to the ground in the form of rain. This was an imitative type of magic practice with ritual songs.
A mythical multi-headed water-serpent is connected with the thunder-deity in an epic battle. The monstrous foe is a "blocker of waters", and his heads are eventually smashed by the thunder-deity to release the pent-up torrents of rain. The myth has numerous reflexes in mythical stories of battles between a serpent and a god or mythical hero, who is not necessarily etymologically related to , but always associated with thunder. For example, the Vedic Sanskrit: [[Indra]] and Sanskrit: [[Vritra|Vṛtra]] (the personification of drought), the Iranian Persian: Tištry/Sirius and Persian: [[Apaosha|Apaoša]] (a demon of drought), the Albanian Albanian: [[Drangue]] and Albanian: [[Bolla|Kulshedra]] (an amphibious serpent who causes streams to dry up), the Armenian Armenian: [[Vahagn]] and Armenian: [[Vishap]], the Greek Zeus and Typhoeus as well as Heracles and the Hydra, Heracles and Ladon and Apollo and Python, or the Norse Thor and Norse, Old: [[Jörmungandr|Miðgarðsormr]].
The association of with the oak is attested in various formulaic expressions from the Balto-Slavic languages: Lithuanian Lithuanian: Perkūno ąžuolas (Perkūnas's oak), Latvian Latvian: Pērkōna uōzuōls ('Pērkōn's oak'), or Old Russian Perunovŭ dubŭ ('Perun's oak'). In the Albanian language, a word to refer to the lightning—considered in folk beliefs as the "fire of the sky"—is shkreptimë, a formation of shkrep meaning "to flash, tone, to strike (till sparks fly off)". An association between strike, stones and fire, can be related to the observation that one can kindle fire by striking stones against each other. The act of producing fire through a strike—reflected also in the belief that fire is residual within the oak trees after the thunder-god strikes them—indicates the potential of lightning in the myth of creation.The Slavic thunder-god Perūn is said to frequently strike oaks to put fire within them, and the Norse thunder-god Thor to strike his foes the giants when they hide under an oak. Thor famously also had at least one sacred oak dedicated to him. According to Belarusian folklore, Piarun made the first fire ever by striking a tree in which the Demon was hiding.
The striking of devils, demons, or evildoers by is another motif in the myths surrounding the Baltic Perkūnas and the Vedic Parjanya. In Lithuanian and Latvian folkloric material, Lithuanian: Perkunas/Latvian: Perkons is invoked to protect against snakes and illness.[3]
is often portrayed in connection with stone and (wooded) mountains; mountainous forests were considered to be his realm. A cognate relationship has been noted between the Germanic Germanic languages: fergunja ('[mountainous] forest') and the Gaulish (h)ercunia ('[oaks] forests'). The Rus' chronicle describes wooden idols of Perūn on hills overlooking Kyiv and Novgorod, and both the Belarusian Piarun and the Lithuanian Perkūnas were said to dwell on lofty mountaintops. Such places are called Lithuanian: perkūnkalnis in Lithuanian, meaning the "summit of Perkūnas", while the Slavic word Slavic languages: perynja designated the hill over Novgorod where the sanctuary of Slavic languages: Perun was located. Prince Vladimir the Great had an idol of Slavic languages: Perūn cast down into the Dnepr river during the Christianization of Kievan Rus'.
In Germanic mythology, Fjörgynn was used as a poetic synonym for 'the land, the earth', and she could have originally been the mistress of the wooded mountains, the personification of what appears in Gothic as Gothic: fairguni ('wooded mountain'). Additionally, the Baltic tradition mentions a perpetual sacred fire dedicated to Lithuanian: Perkūnas and fuelled by oakwood in the forests or on hilltops. Pagans believed that Perkūnas would freeze if Christians extinguished those fires.
Words from a stem are also attested in the Hittite Hittite: pēru ('rock, cliff, boulder'),[4] the Avestan Avestan: pauruuatā ('mountains'),[5] as well as in the Sanskrit goddess Sanskrit: [[Parvati]] and the epithet Sanskrit: Parvateshwara ('lord of mountains'), attached to her father Sanskrit: [[Himavat]].[6] [7]
A term for the sky, , denoted both 'stone' and 'heaven', possibly a 'heavenly vault of stone' akin to the biblical firmament. The motif of the stony skies can be found in the story of the Greek Akmon ('anvil'), the father of Ouranos and the personified Heaven. The term Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: akmon was also used with the meaning 'thunderbolt' in Homeric and Hesiodic diction. Other cognates appear in the Vedic Sanskrit: áśman ('stone'), the Iranian deity Persian: [[Asman]] ('stone, heaven'), the Lithuanian god Lithuanian: Akmo (mentioned alongside Lithuanian: Perkūnas himself), and also in the Germanic Germanic languages: hemina (German: Himmel, English: heaven) and Germanic languages: hamara (cf. Old Norse: Norse, Old: hamarr, which could mean 'rock, boulder, cliff' or 'hammer'). Lithuanian: Akmo is described in a 16th-century treatise as a Latin: saxum grandius, 'a sizeable stone', which was still worshipped in Samogitia.[8] [9]
Albanians believed in the supreme powers of thunder-stones (kokrra e rrufesë or guri i rejës), which were believed to be formed during lightning strikes and to be fallen from the sky. Thunder-stones were preserved in family life as important cult objects. It was believed that bringing them inside the house could bring good fortune, prosperity and progress in people, in livestock and in agriculture, or that rifle bullets would not hit the owners of the thunder-stones. A common practice was to hang a thunder-stone pendant on the body of the cattle or on the pregnant woman for good luck and to counteract the evil eye.
The mythological association can be explained by the observation (e.g., meteorites) or the belief that thunderstones (polished ones for axes in particular) had fallen from the sky. Indeed, the Vedic word Sanskrit: áśman is the name of the weapon thrown by Indra, Thor's weapon is also called Norse, Old: hamarr, and the thunder-stone can be named Lithuanian: Perkūno akmuõ ('Perkuna's stone') in the Lithuanian tradition. Scholars have also noted that Lithuanian: Perkūnas and Belarusian: Piarun are said to strike rocks instead of oaks in some themes of the Lithuanian and Belarusian folklores, and that the Slavic Slavic languages: Perūn sends his axe or arrow from a mountain or the sky. The original meaning of could thus have been 'stone-made weapon', then 'sky' or 'lightning'.
The following deities are cognates stemming from or related names in Western Indo-European mythologies:
Perkunis,
Parkuns (or Parcuns),[10] [11] [12] [13]
Pārkiuņs (ltg);[14]
Perkūnas, the god of rain and thunder, depicted as an angry-looking man with a tawny beard,
Pērkōns, whose functions are occasionally merged with those of Dievs (the sky-god) in the Latvian dainas (folk songs),
*perunъ[17]
Perūn (Перýн), the 'maker of the lightning',
Perunŭ, Belarusian: Piarun (Пярун),[18] [19] Czech: Peraun,[20]
Perún; Parom;
Perun (Bulgarian: Перун);[21] [22]
Piorun ("lightning");[23]
Peryn, a peninsula in Novgorod, Russia, connected to a historical worship of Slavic Perun.[24]
Perun and Perperuna, a reduplicated feminine derivative from Perun's name which parallels the Old Norse couple Fjörgyn–Fjörgynn and the Lithuanian Perkūnas–Perkūnija,
Uncoded languages: *ferkunyā,
the Hercynian (Hercynia) forest or mountains, ancient name of the Ardennes and the Black Forest,[25] which was also known as Arkunia by the time of Aristotle;[26] Hercuniates (’Ερκουνιατες; attached to the suffix -atis 'belonging to'), the name of a Celtic tribe from Pannonia, as described by Pliny and Ptolemy.[27]
*fergunja, meaning 'mountain', perhaps 'mountainous forest' (or the feminine equivalent of *ferga, 'god'),
Fjörgyn, the mother of the thunder-god Thor, the goddess of the wooded landscape and a poetic synonym for 'land' or 'the earth',
Gothic: fairguni, '(wooded) mountain', and Gothic: fairhus, 'world', Old English: English, Old (ca.450-1100);: firgen, 'mountain', 'wooded hill',
Firgunnea, the Ore Mountains, and Virgundia Waldus, Virgunnia, 'oaks forest',
Uncoded languages: *per(g)ynja, 'wooded hills' (perhaps an early borrowing from Germanic),
Church Slavic; Old Slavonic; Church Slavonic; Old Bulgarian; Old Church Slavonic: prӗgynja, Old East Slavic: peregynja, 'wooded hills'; Polish: Polish: przeginia (toponym),
The name of Perkwunos' weapon *meld-n- is attested by a group of cognates alternatively denoting 'hammer' or 'lightning' in the following traditions:
Uncoded languages: *melh₂-, 'to grind',
*melðunijaz,
mjǫllnir, the hammer of Thor; cf. also myln, 'fire',
*mild-n-,
*mlъldni,
mlъni or mlъnii, Serbo-Croatian: múnja (муња), Slovene mółnja, Bulgarian: Bulgarian: мълния,[28] Macedonian: молња, 'lightning',[29]
mólnija (молния), 'lightning', Ukrainian maladnjá (dial.) 'lightning without thunder', Belarusian: маланка, 'lightning',
Czech: mlna (arch.), Polish Polish: mełnia (dial.), Lusatian: milina (arch.) 'lightning' (modern 'electricity'),[30] [31] [32]
*mildnā,
mealde, 'lightning bolt',
milna, the 'hammer of the Thunderer', Pērkōns,
*meldo-,
Meldos, an epithet of thunder divinity Loucetios;[33] [34] as well as Meldi (*Meldoi), a tribal name, and Meldio, a personal name.
Welsh: mellt, 'lightning, thunderbolts' (sing. Welsh: mellten, 'bolt of lightning'), and Mabon am Melld or Mabon fab Mellt ('Mabon son of Mellt'),
mell, 'hammer',
mell, 'rounded summit, small hill', possibly via semantic contamination from Uncoded languages: *ferkunyā, '(wooded) mountains'.
Another PIE term derived from the verbal root Uncoded languages: *melh₂- ('to grind'), Uncoded languages: *molh₁-tlo- ('grinding device'), also served as a common word for 'hammer', as in Old Church Slavonic mlatъ, Latin malleus, and Hittite malatt ('sledgehammer, bludgeon').
19th-century scholar Francis Hindes Groome cited the existence of the "Gypsy" (Romani) word malúna as a loanword from Slavic molnija.[35] The Komi word molńi or molńij ('lightning') has also been borrowed from Slavic.[36]
*akmen-,
*hemō (gen.*hemnaz, dat. *hemeni), 'heaven',
himins, 'heaven',
heofon, Old Frisian: himel, Old Saxon: heƀan, Old Dutch: himil, Old High German: himil, 'heaven',
himinn, 'heaven',
A metathesized stem *ḱ(e)h₂-m-(r)- can also be reconstructed from Slavic *kamy ('stone'), Germanic *hamaraz ('hammer'), and Greek kamára ('vault').
Parjanya, the god of rain, thunder and lightning (although Sanskrit sound laws rather predict a form; an intermediate form *pergwenyo- has therefore been postulated, possibly descending from *per-kwun-(y)o-).
Pärun (or Pērūneî), a war god worshipped in Kafiristan (present-day Nuristan Province, Afghanistan),
Piran (Viseh), a heroic figure present in the Shahnameh, the national epic of Greater Iran; it has been suggested his name might be related to the Slavic deity Perun,[37]
in the 19th century, Russian folklorist Alexander Afanasyev and French philologist Frédéric-Guillaume Bergmann (fr) mentioned the existence of a Scythian deity named Pirkunas or Pirchunas, an epithet attached to the "Scythian Divus" and meaning 'rainy'.[38] [39]
Erguena (ERGVENA), a personal name thought to mean 'oak-born' (*pérkʷu-genā) or to derive from *pérkʷu-niya 'wooded mountain'.[40] [41]
berkunetakam ('Perkunetaka'), a word attested in the Botorrita Plate I and interpreted as a sacred oak grove,[42] [43]
the theonym Expercennius, attested in an inscription found in Cathervielle and possibly referring to an oak god. His name might mean 'six oaks'.[44]
ercos ('oak'),
references to 'Deus Ercus' (in Aquitania), 'Nymphae Percernae' (Narbonensis), and a deity named 'Hercura' (or Erecura) which appears throughout the provinces of the Roman Empire. Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel argues that Aerecura/Hercura derives from a Celtic *perk(w)ura.[45]
Erc (mac Cairpri), mentioned at the end of Táin Bó Cúailnge, and placed on the throne of Tara by Conchobar mac Nessa in Cath Ruis na Ríg for Bóinn; although an alternative etymology from PIE *perk- ('color') > *perk-no ('[spotted] fish') has been proposed by Hamp and Matasović.
(κεραυνός), the name of Zeus’s thunderbolt, which was sometimes also deified (by metathesis of *; although the root *ḱerh₂-, 'shatter, smash' has also been proposed), and the Herkyna spring-nymph, associated with a river of the same name and identified with Demeter (the name could be a borrowing as it rather follows Celtic sound laws),
the words and are attested in a Hittite text of The Song of Ullikummi, and refer to a female being made of 'Rock' or 'Stone' who gives birth to a rocky creature.[46] [47]
porca, a word meaning 'fir tree' in the Trentino dialect. Mallory and Adams suppose it is a loanword from Raetic.
Porenut, latinized as Porenutius in the work of Saxo Grammaticus. The name is believed to refer to a deity worshipped in the port city of Rügen in ancient times as a possible son of Perun.
inscriptions to the Matronae 'Ala-ferhuiae' found in Bonn, Altdorf, or Dormagen.[48]
Perëndi, a sky and thunder god (from per-en-, an extension of PIE *per, 'to strike', attached to -di, the sky-god Dyēus, thus related to *per-uhₓn-os (see above); although the Albanian perëndoj, 'to set (of the sun)', from Latin parentare, 'a sacrifice (to the dead), to satisfy', has also been proposed as the origin of the deity,[49]
Perkos/Perkon (Περκος/Περκων),[50] a horseman hero depicted as facing a tree surrounded by a snake. His name is also attested as Ήρω Περκω and Περκώνει "in Odessos and the vicinities".[51] [52]
it has been suggested that the characters Пиръон (Piryon) and Пиръа (Pirya) may attest the presence of the thunder god's name in the Caucasus.[53]
Louis Léger stated that the Polabians adopted Perun as their name for Thursday (Perendan or Peräunedån), which is likely a calque of German Donnerstag.[54]
Some scholars argue that the functions of the Luwian and Hittite weather gods Tarḫunz and Tarḫunna ultimately stem from those of Perkwunos. Anatolians may have dropped the old name in order to adopt the epithet *Tṛḫu-ent- ('conquering', from PIE *terh2-, 'to cross over, pass through, overcome'), which sounded closer to the name of the Hattian Storm-god Taru.[55] According to scholarship, the name Tarhunt- is also cognate to the Vedic present participle tū́rvant- ('vanquishing, conquering'), an epithet of the weather-god Indra.[56]
Scholarship indicates the existence of a holdover of the theonym in European toponymy, specially in Eastern European and Slavic-speaking regions.
In the territory that encompasses the modern day city of Kaštela existed the ancient Dalmatian city of Salona. Near Salona, in Late Antiquity, there was a hill named Perun.[57] Likewise, the ancient oronym Borun (monte Borun) has been interpreted as a deformation of the theonym Perun. Their possible connection is further reinforced by the proximity of a mountain named Dobrava, a widespread word in Slavic-speaking regions that means 'oak grove'.[58] [59]
Places in South-Slavic-speaking lands are considered to be reflexes of Slavic god Perun, such as Perunac, Perunovac, Perunika, Perunićka Glava, Peruni Vrh, Perunja Ves, Peruna Dubrava, Perunuša, Perušice, Perudina, and Perutovac.[60] Scholar Marija Gimbutas cited the existence of the place names Perunowa gora (Poland), Perun Gora (Serbia), Gora Perun (Romania), and Porun hill (Istria).[61] Patrice Lajoye associates place names in the Balkans with the Slavic god Perun: the city of Pernik and the mountain range Pirin (in Bulgaria), as well as a location named Përrenjas in South Albania. He also proposes that the German city of Pronstorf is also related to Perun, since it is located near Segeberg, whose former name was Perone in 1199.
The name of the Baltic deity Perkunas is also attested in Baltic toponyms and hydronyms: a village called Perkūniškės in Žemaitija, north-west of Kaunas, and the place name Perkunlauken ('Perkuns Fields') near modern Gusev.[62] [63]
lt:Nijolė Laurinkienė
. Senovés Lietuviu Dievas Perkunas . Vilnius, Lithuania . Lietuvu Literaturos Tautosakos Institutas . 1996 . 9986-513-14-6 . LT.