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  • ...pus, Autrimpo, Natrimpe) was named as the god of seas or grain in Prussian mythology. He was one of the three main deities worshiped by the Old Prussians. [[Category: Prussian mythology]]
    773 bytes (119 words) - 05:29, 7 February 2011
  • '''Peckols''' and Patollo were worshipped as gods in pagan Prussian mythology. Both of them were believed as the same gods who takes care of the the unde [[Category: Lithuanian mythology]]
    613 bytes (90 words) - 09:50, 4 February 2011
  • '''Baron Alexander von Humboldt''', the famous Prussian naturalist who mapped over 1,700 miles of the Orinoco River , wrote about [[Category:Nahual mythology]]
    2 KB (286 words) - 14:01, 28 December 2007
  • In the study of [[mythology]] and religion, the '''underworld''' is a generic term approximately equiva ===[[Akkadian mythology]]===
    9 KB (851 words) - 18:36, 18 April 2007
  • 19th-century Prussian coat of arms depicting woodland "wild men" [[Category: Celtic mythology]]
    7 KB (1,085 words) - 22:42, 8 October 2010
  • In Hindu and Buddhist mythology, '''Veda''' is a term that means spirit, demi-god, celestial being, angel, ...unrelated). Also cognate to deva are the Lithuanian Dievas (Latvian Dievs, Prussian Deiwas), Germanic Tiwaz (seen in English "Tuesday") and Latin deus "god" an
    14 KB (2,290 words) - 08:54, 16 April 2008
  • ...ral, northern and eastern European lands by other names: a ''kaukis'' is a Prussian gnome, and ''barbegazi'' are gnome-like creatures with big feet in the trad [[Category:European mythology]]
    15 KB (2,385 words) - 21:27, 23 August 2007
  • A '''werewolf''' (Or '''Lycanthrope''') in [[folklore]] and [[mythology]] is a person who [[Therianthropy|shapeshifts]] into a wolf, either purpose ...g ''man.'' Also thought to be descended from this root are Latin 'vir' Old Prussian: 'wirs', and Irish Irish 'fear' (pl. 'fir'). An alternative etymology looks
    28 KB (4,630 words) - 19:11, 20 January 2011