- *
Perkʷūnos are only
attested in
Western Indo-European traditions. The
linguistic evidence for the
worship of a
thunder god
under the name *
Perkʷūnos as...
-
ultimately derive from Proto-Indo-European *per-kwun-iyā ('the
realm of
Perkwunos'; i.e., the
wooden mountains). Fjörgyn is
cognate with the
Gothic fairguni...
-
Germanic Thor, a
thematic echo of
Perkʷunos. The
deities generally agreed to be
cognates stemming from *
Perkʷunos are
confined to the
European continent...
- order, fertility, mountains, and oak trees. The name
continues PIE *
Perkwunos,
cognate to *perkwus, a word for "oak", "fir" or "wooded mountain". The...
-
internationally known Finnish curse word. The name is of Indo-European origin;
Perkwunos is the
reconstructed name of the god of thunder. Some
researchers consider...
- 'lightning, hammer', i.e. *
Perkwunos' weapon) and *Fergunja–*Fercunyā (from *perkwun-iyā 'wooded mountains', i.e. *
Perkwunos' realm). The
English w****day...
-
Procopius is
referring is the
storm god Perún,
whose name is
derived from *
Perkwunos, the Proto-Indo-European god of lightning. The
ancient Slavs syncretized...
- Vali and
Arjuna Equivalents Canaanite Ba‘al Gr**** Zeus Indo-European
Perkwunos Norse Thor
Roman Jupiter Slavic Perun Celtic Taranis ****anese Susanoo-no-Mikoto...
-
original epithet (or epiclesis) of the Proto-Indo-European thunder-god *
Perkwunos. The
later form *Toranos is
attested in the
Gaulish divine names Taranis...
-
European thunder god (whose
original name has been
reconstructed as *
Perkʷūnos), or that one of
these cultures borrowed the
deity from the other. The...