Krumine

Krūminė is a feminine name, perhaps of a deity, in Lithuanian mythology. Basing on scant sources, some mythologists have reconstructed it as a deity of brushes, bushes and husbandry and an inventor of agriculture. The parallel name in Latvian, if these reconstructions are correct, is Krumu mate. According to Theodor Narbutt, Pykuolis (Prussian: Pykuls; Prussian and Lithuanian: Patulas, master of the underworld) kidnapped the daughter of Krūminė, Nijolė. Krūminė was traveling over the earth, looking for her daughter and teaching people about agriculture. Once she found a stone, where Dievas had inscribed the weird of Nijolė. Krūminė visited her daughter and when she came back to the earth, she saw that the households of people were better than they were before. Krūminė is one of Lithuanian household gods. She is the sister of Perkūnas (or Dievas). In this case, Krūminė should be identical to the Greek goddess Demetra.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
kovas
time stops for no mouse
austrian knot
josep borrell
new york, susquehanna and western railway
motherchurch
edward j. hoffman
poilu
470 (dinghy)
birkbeck station
atc code a04
cap badge
theatre of cruelty (discworld)
sweyn iii of denmark
brondesbury park railway station
protestant work ethic
camden road railway station
henry de montherlant
other ranks
robert hertz
atc code a05
krugis
kriukis
panama california exposition (1915)
atc code a06
stable belt
gnter mller
xilinx
alfred comyn lyall
patrouille de france
officer cadet
optimist (dinghy)
list of popular science books on evolution
louis saha
atc code a07
the great bear
wi fi alliance
simon patterson
american youth congress
atc code a08
ever after
rod liddle
fluconazole
time ball