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Encyclopedia > Byelobog

BELOBOG, BIALBOG, BELUN (bel-oh-bog | byal-bog | bel-oon ) from Slavic bel, byal (white or light as in not dark) and bog (god) literally meaning White God from the Slavic pantheon.


Belobog is one of the archaic gods. He is master of light, source of good, happiness and luck; absolute antagonist of dark, evil, of all negative emotions and activities. Probably Belobog was at first god of highest priority, associated to ancient Slavic cosmogony, as one of the universal demiurgs. With the later development of pagan beliefs he gradually lost his importance, although people's respect towards him never died out. In the advanced Slavic cult, Belobog is god of the waxing year, one of solar god Dajbog's companions, personifying sunshine, warmth and life in general. Peasants believed that Belobog secretly keeps an eye on their wheat and if they praised him, he even helped them in farming, especially in harvest-time. They imagined him as a long-bearded old man, carrying a staff and dressed in white, which was the traditional Slavic costume.


Belobog was said to fight his evil brother Chernobog twice a year for control of that year, with Belobog gaining control of the waxing half of the year and Chernobog control of the waning half.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Byelobog (86 words)
In Slavic mythology (western Slavs) Byelobog ("white god") is a deity of the sun and of fortune.
Modern Russian folklorists V. Ivanov and V. Toporov think that Byelobog is was 'invented' by medieval chroniclers.
Eliade call Byelobog a solar deity which has three manifestations: Khors, Dazsbog and Stribog.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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