Religion:Bałwan

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Slavic bałwan, known as Światowid ze Zbrucza (Zbruch Idol, literally, Worldseer (proper given name and a deity) from Zbrucz)

Bałwan (Polish), balvan/балван (Serbian, literally "wood block") or balvan (Kyrgyz) (today, literally indistinguishable from the everyday word for snowman), is an ancient word common to all Slavic languages, describing a statuesque or monolithic depiction or a pillar or a plinth depicting or erected in honor of a deity.[1] This object was worshipped or constituted a tangible representation of a cult image. The Western Slavs transcribed and pronounced the word as bałwan, which is its contemporary and old Polish lexical manifestation, whereas the Southern Slavs and the Eastern Slavs used the just slightly differently-vowelled bołwan (English pronunciation: BOH-van).[1]

In the Kyrgyz language of Central Asia, geographically remote from the territories Slavs are today identified with in Europe, balvan is a "strongman" or a hero, whereas in Persian, pahlevān denotes a militant or a veteran, as well as the plinth or boundary marker erected in his or her honor, or even a cairn, and, by extension, a fool.[1] [better source needed] That latter meaning, at first secondary, became primary after Christianity was imposed on the Slavs, making bałwan acquire a distinctly pejorative primary meaning.[1][better source needed]

Some suggest that the Slavs share throughout their idioms such as they have evolved apart this single entity -- a common term for all cult objects in the form of a statue or cairn -- might suggest that idolatry spread early among the Slavic peoples, perhaps when they came in contact with Turkic peoples or Iranian.[1][better source needed] A word with similar etymology is the Slavic word for God (when capitalized) or deity, bóg, a cognate of Sanskrit "bhaga"/Iranian or Persian bag. In India the concept of a deity or god is often relayed with the word bhagvan, variously transcribed as bhagwan.[1][better source needed]

A derived term from bałwan is the Slavic word for idolatry: bałwochwalstwo.[1]

See also

  • Svetovid
  • Idolatry
  • Proto-Slavic
  • early Slavs
  • Slavic neopaganism
  • Christianization of the Slavs

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Aleksander Gieysztor (1980) (in pl). Mitologia Słowian. Warsaw. p. 186. ISBN 832210152X. "This library book source is used in the Polish Wikipedia article, which has been translated in whole on 2015-02-19" 

Further reading