daklem, ovo je papazjanija mitova o Dabogu i Morani koje ja posedujem.
Dazbog
Dazbog was a major trans-Slavic god associated with the sun and daylight. Different and sometimes conflicting accounts give us a somewhat vague picture of his character, role, and geneology, but a conglomerate view suggests he was originally the Slavic 'clear sky god', though he perhaps later overlapped or was synonymous with the sun-god in many regions. A sixth-century Byzantine chronicler equated him with the Greek sun-god Helios. In the 'Russian Primary Chronicle', his is one of the idols erected by Vladimir at Kiev, along with Perun, Khors, Stribog, Simargl, and Mokosh. His festival was at the summer solstice, when his 'heavenly wedding' to the moon- or dawn- goddess was celebrated. Today this celebration has been Christianized as St. Ivan's day. In Slavic tradition, people swore oaths to him, as the sun was omniscient. As such, Dazbog was the god of law and moral order. His interest was in ensuring justice serves the good and that evil be punished.
In some myths, as the sun-god he is married either to the moon-goddess Myesyats or the morning star goddess Zvezda Dennitsa. In one Russian myth, however, he is thrice married: first to Zlatogorka ('Golden Hill'), daughter of the Underworld god Vij; then to the winter- and/or death-goddess Morana, and finally to Zhiva ('Life').
Of these three, Morana is interesting because her role closely parallels that found in Welsh myth as Blodeuwedd. Both wives conspired to kill their husbands. In Welsh myth, this was Llew Llaw Gyffes, as sun- and summer- fertility god with many similarities to Dazbog. In Russian, it was the death-god Kashchej who sought to destroy Dazbog, aided by Morana, who drugged him before her paramour threw him into the abyss, and finally nailed him to a mountain in the Caucasus. In Welsh myth, meanwhile, Blodeuwedd also tricked Llew into a compromising situation, whereupon her paramour, the death-god Gronwy, wounded him. Llew and Dazbog both survived their misfortunes and finally took revenge upon their persecutors.
Siva, Ziva, Zhiva, Zivenna
West Slavic goddess of life (< Slv zivu, 'life'). She was invoked for good health and long life. She equates to the Polish Zywie, Slovak Zivena.
In one Russian myth, she flies out of Irij, the Slavic Olympus, as a dove, spotting the sun-god Dazhbog nailed to a mountain in the Caucasus. She rescues him, carrying him back to Irij to heal him. The two later create the world and all life, including people.
Svima koji su zainteresovani mogu poslati celi mit o Dabogu i njegovim zenama.
