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World tree

The world tree is a motif present in several religions and mythologies, particularly Indo-European, Siberian, and Native American religions. The world tree is represented as a colossal tree which supports the heavens, thereby connecting the heavens, the terrestrial world, and, through its roots, the underworld. It may also be strongly connected to the motif of the tree of life, but it is the source of wisdom of the ages.

From Northern Antiquities, an English translation of the Prose Edda from 1847. Painted by Oluf Olufsen Bagge.

Specific world trees include égig érő fa in Hungarian mythology, Ağaç Ana in Turkic mythology, Andndayin Ca˙r[1] in Armenian mythology, Modun in Mongol mythology, Yggdrasil in Norse mythology, Irminsul in Germanic mythology, the oak in Slavic, Finnish and Baltic, Jianmu (Chinese: 建木; pinyin: jiànmù) in Chinese mythology, and in Hindu mythology the Ashvattha (a Ficus religiosa).

General description edit

Scholarship states that many Eurasian mythologies share the motif of the "world tree", "cosmic tree", or "Eagle and Serpent Tree".[2] More specifically, it shows up in "Haitian, Finnish, Lithuanian, Hungarian, Indian, Chinese, Japanese, Norse, Siberian and northern Asian Shamanic folklore".[3]

The World Tree is often identified with the Tree of Life,[4] and also fulfills the role of an axis mundi, that is, a centre or axis of the world.[3] It is also located at the center of the world and represents order and harmony of the cosmos.[5] According to Loreta Senkute, each part of the tree corresponds to one of the three spheres of the world (treetops - heavens; trunk - middle world or earth; roots - underworld) and is also associated with a classical element (top part - fire; middle part - earth, soil, ground; bottom part - water).[5]

Its branches are said to reach the skies and its roots to connect the human or earthly world with an underworld or subterranean realm. Because of this, the tree was worshipped as a mediator between Heavens and Earth.[6] On the treetops are located the luminaries (stars) and heavenly bodies, along with an eagle's nest; several species of birds perch among its branches; humans and animals of every kind live under its branches, and near the root is the dwelling place of snakes and every sort of reptiles.[7][8]

A bird perches atop its foliage, "often .... a winged mythical creature" that represents a heavenly realm.[9][4] The eagle seems to be the most frequent bird, fulfilling the role of a creator or weather deity.[10] Its antipode is a snake or serpentine creature that crawls between the tree roots, being a "symbol of the underworld".[9][4]

The imagery of the World Tree is sometimes associated with conferring immortality, either by a fruit that grows on it or by a springsource located nearby.[11][4] As George Lechler also pointed out, in some descriptions this "water of life" may also flow from the roots of the tree.[12]

Similar motifs edit

The World Tree has also been compared to a World Pillar that appears in other traditions and functions as separator between the earth and the skies, upholding the latter.[13] Another representation akin to the World Tree is a separate World Mountain. However, in some stories, the world tree is located atop the world mountain, in a combination of both motifs.[5]

A conflict between a serpentine creature and a giant bird (an eagle) occurs in Eurasian mythologies: a hero kills the serpent that menaces a nest of little birds, and their mother repays the favor - a motif comparativist Julien d'Huy dates to the Paleolithic. A parallel story is attested in the traditions of the indigenous peoples of the Americas, where the thunderbird is slotted into the role of the giant bird whose nest is menaced by a "snake-like water monster".[14][15]

Relation to shamanism edit

Romanian historian of religion, Mircea Eliade, in his monumental work Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy, suggested that the world tree was an important element in shamanistic worldview.[16] Also, according to him, "the giant bird ... hatches shamans in the branches of the World Tree".[16] Likewise, Roald Knutsen indicates the presence of the motif in Altaic shamanism.[17] Representations of the world tree are reported to be portrayed in drums used in Siberian shamanistic practices.[18]

Some species of birds (eagle, raven, crane, loon, and lark) are revered as mediators between worlds and also connected to the imagery of the world tree.[19] Another line of scholarship points to a "recurring theme" of the owl as the mediator to the upper realm, and its counterpart, the snake, as the mediator to the lower regions of the cosmos.[20]

Researcher Kristen Pearson mentions Northern Eurasian and Central Asian traditions wherein the World Tree is also associated with the horse and with deer antlers (which might resemble tree branches).[21]

Possible origins edit

Mircea Eliade proposed that the typical imagery of the world tree (bird at the top, snake at the root) "is presumably of Oriental origin".[16]

Likewise, Roald Knutsen indicates a possible origin of the motif in Central Asia and later diffusion into other regions and cultures.[17]

In specific cultures edit

Indigenous American cultures edit

  • Among Indigenous Mesoamerican cultures, the concept of "world trees" is a prevalent motif in Mesoamerican cosmologies and iconography. The Temple of the Cross Complex at Palenque contains one of the most studied examples of the world tree in architectural motifs of all Mayan ruins. World trees embodied the four cardinal directions, which represented also the fourfold nature of a central world tree, a symbolic axis mundi connecting the planes of the Underworld and the sky with that of the terrestrial world.[22]
  • Depictions of world trees, both in their directional and central aspects, are found in the art and traditions of cultures such as the Maya, Aztec, Izapan, Mixtec, Olmec, and others, dating to at least the Mid/Late Formative periods of Mesoamerican chronology. Among the Maya, the central world tree was conceived as, or represented by, a ceiba tree, called yax imix che ('blue-green tree of abundance') by the Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel.[23] The trunk of the tree could also be represented by an upright caiman, whose skin evokes the tree's spiny trunk.[22] These depictions could also show birds perched atop the trees.[24]
  • A similarly named tree, yax cheel cab ('first tree of the world'), was reported by 17th-century priest Andrés de Avendaño to have been worshipped by the Itzá Maya. However, scholarship suggests that this worship derives from some form of cultural interaction between "pre-Hispanic iconography and [millenary] practices" and European traditions brought by the Hispanic colonization.[24]
  • Directional world trees are also associated with the four Yearbearers in Mesoamerican calendars, and the directional colors and deities. Mesoamerican codices which have this association outlined include the Dresden, Borgia and Fejérváry-Mayer codices.[24] It is supposed that Mesoamerican sites and ceremonial centers frequently had actual trees planted at each of the four cardinal directions, representing the quadripartite concept.
  • World trees are frequently depicted with birds in their branches, and their roots extending into earth or water (sometimes atop a "water-monster", symbolic of the underworld).
  • The central world tree has also been interpreted as a representation of the band of the Milky Way.[25]
  • Izapa Stela 5 contains a possible representation of a world tree.

A common theme in most indigenous cultures of the Americas is a concept of directionality (the horizontal and vertical planes), with the vertical dimension often being represented by a world tree. Some scholars have argued that the religious importance of the horizontal and vertical dimensions in many animist cultures may derive from the human body and the position it occupies in the world as it perceives the surrounding living world. Many Indigenous cultures of the Americas have similar cosmologies regarding the directionality and the world tree, however the type of tree representing the world tree depends on the surrounding environment. For many Indigenous American peoples located in more temperate regions for example, it is the spruce rather than the ceiba that is the world tree; however the idea of cosmic directions combined with a concept of a tree uniting the directional planes is similar.

Greek mythology edit

Like in many other Indo-European cultures, one tree species was considered the World Tree in some cosmogonical accounts.

Oak tree edit

The sacred tree of Zeus is the oak,[26] and the one at Dodona (famous for the cultic worship of Zeus and the oak) was said by later tradition to have its roots furrow so deep as to reach the confines of Tartarus.[27]

In a different cosmogonic account presented by Pherecydes of Syros, male deity Zas (identified as Zeus) marries female divinity Chthonie (associated with the earth and later called Gê/Gaia), and from their marriage sprouts an oak tree. This oak tree connects the heavens above and its roots grew into the Earth, to reach the depths of Tartarus. This oak tree is considered by scholarship to symbolize a cosmic tree, uniting three spheres: underworld, terrestrial and celestial.[28]

Other trees edit

Besides the oak, several other sacred trees existed in Greek mythology. For instance, the olive, named Moriai, was the world tree and associated with the Olympian goddess Athena.

In a separate Greek myth the Hesperides live beneath an apple tree with golden apples that was given to the highest Olympian goddess Hera by the primal Mother goddess Gaia at Hera's marriage to Zeus.[29] The tree stands in the Garden of the Hesperides and is guarded by Ladon, a dragon. Heracles defeats Ladon and snatches the golden apples.

In the epic quest for the Golden Fleece of Argonautica, the object of the quest is found in the realm of Colchis, hanging on a tree guarded by a never-sleeping dragon (the Colchian dragon).[30] In a version of the story provided by Pseudo-Apollodorus in Bibliotheca, the Golden Fleece was affixed by King Aeetes to an oak tree in a grove dedicated to war god Ares.[31] This information is repeated in Valerius Flaccus's Argonautica.[32] In the same passage of Valerius Flaccus' work, King Aeetes prays to Ares for a sign and suddenly a "serpent gliding from the Caucasus mountains" appears and coils around the grove as to protect it.[33]

Roman mythology edit

In Roman mythology the world tree was the olive tree, that was associated with Pax. The Greek equivalent of Pax is Eirene, one of the Horae. The Sacred tree of the Roman Sky father Jupiter was the oak, the laurel was the Sacred tree of Apollo. The ancient fig-tree in the Comitium at Rome, was considered as a descendant of the very tree under which Romulus and Remus were found.[26]

Norse mythology edit

In Norse mythology, Yggdrasil is the world tree.[8] Yggdrasil is attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources, and the Prose Edda, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson. In both sources, Yggdrasil is an immense ash tree that is central and considered very holy. The Æsir go to Yggdrasil daily to hold their courts. The branches of Yggdrasil extend far into the heavens, and the tree is supported by three roots that extend far away into other locations: one to the well Urðarbrunnr in the heavens, one to the spring Hvergelmir, and another to the well Mímisbrunnr. Creatures live within Yggdrasil, including the harts Dáinn, Dvalinn, Duneyrr and Duraþrór, the giant in eagle-shape Hræsvelgr, the squirrel Ratatoskr and the wyrm Níðhöggr. Scholarly theories have been proposed about the etymology of the name Yggdrasil, the potential relation to the trees Mímameiðr and Læraðr, and the sacred tree at Uppsala.

Circumbaltic mythology edit

In Baltic, Slavic and Finnish mythology, the world tree is usually an oak.[8][a] Most of the images of the world tree are preserved on ancient ornaments. Often on the Baltic and Slavic patterns there was an image of an inverted tree, "growing with its roots up, and branches going into the ground".

Baltic beliefs edit

Scholarship recognizes that Baltic beliefs about a World Tree, located at the central part of the Earth, follow a tripartite division of the cosmos (underworld, earth, sky), each part corresponding to a part of the tree (root, trunk, branches).[35][36]

It has been suggested that the word for "tree" in Baltic languages (Latvian mežs; Lithuanian medis), both derived from Proto-Indo-European *medh- 'middle', operated a semantic shift from "middle" possibly due to the belief of the Arbor Mundi.[37]

Lithuanian culture edit

The world tree (Lithuanian: Aušros medis) is widespread in Lithuanian folk painting, and is frequently found carved into household furniture such as cupboards, towel holders, and laundry beaters.[38][39][40] According to Lithuanian scholars Prane Dunduliene and Norbertas Vėlius, the World Tree is "a powerful tree with widespread branches and strong roots, reaching deep into the earth". The recurrent imagery is also present in Lithuanian myth: on the treetops, the luminaries and eagles, and further down, amidst its roots, the dwelling place of snakes and reptiles.[7] The World Tree of Lithuanian tradition was sometimes identified as an oak or a maple tree.[36]

Latvian culture edit

In Latvian mythology the world tree (Latvian: Austras koks) was one of the most important beliefs, also associated with the birth of the world. Sometimes it was identified as an oak or a birch, or even replaced by a wooden pole.[36] According to Ludvigs Adamovičs's book on Latvian folk belief, ancient Latvian mythology attested the existence of a Sun Tree as an expression of the World Tree, often described as "a birch tree with three leaves or forked branches where the Sun, the Moon, God, Laima, Auseklis (the morning star), or the daughter of the Sun rest[ed]".[41]

Slavic beliefs edit

 
Old Russian ornament of the world tree

According to Slavic folklore, as reconstructed by Radoslav Katičić, the draconic or serpentine character furrows near a body of water, and the bird that lives on the treetop could be an eagle, a falcon or a nightingale.[42]

Scholars Ivanov and Toporov offered a reconstructed Slavic variant of the Indo-European myth about a battle between a Thunder God and a snake-like adversary. In their proposed reconstruction, the Snake lives under the World Tree, sleeping on black wool. They surmise this snake on black wool is a reference to a cattle god, known in Slavic mythology as Veles.[43]

Further studies show that the usual tree that appears in Slavic folklore is an oak: for instance, in Czech, it is known as Veledub ('The Great Oak').[44]

In addition, the world tree appears in the Island of Buyan, on top of a stone. Another description shows that legendary birds Sirin and Alkonost make their nests on separate sides of the tree.[45]

Ukrainian scholarship points to the existence of the motif in "archaic wintertime songs and carols": their texts attest a tree at the center of the world and two or three falcons or pigeons sat on its top, ready to dive in and fetch mud to create land (the Earth diver cosmogonic motif).[46][47]

The imagery of the world tree also appears in folk medicine of the Don Cossacks.[48]

Finnic mythology edit

According to scholar Aado Lintrop, Estonian mythology records two types of world tree in Estonian runic songs, with similar characteristics of being an oak and having a bird at the top, a snake at the roots and the stars amongst its branches.[8]

Judeo-Christian mythology edit

 
The Tree of Knowledge depicted, with Adam and Eve, where the Tree of life is described as part of the Garden of Eden in the Hebrew bible.

The Tree of the knowledge of good and evil and the Tree of life are both components of the Garden of Eden story in the Book of Genesis in the Bible. According to Jewish mythology, in the Garden of Eden there is a tree of life or the "tree of souls" that blossoms and produces new souls, which fall into the Guf, the Treasury of Souls.[49] The Angel Gabriel reaches into the treasury and takes out the first soul that comes into his hand. Then Lailah, the Angel of Conception, watches over the embryo until it is born.[50]

Gnosticism edit

According to the Gnostic codex On the Origin of the World, the tree of immortal life is in the north of paradise, which is outside the circuit of the Sun and Moon in the luxuriant Earth. Its height is so great it reaches Heaven. Its leaves are described as resembling cypress, the color of the tree is like the Sun, its fruit is like clusters of white grapes and its branches are beautiful. The tree will provide life for the innocent during the consummation of the age.[51]

Mandaean scrolls often include abstract illustrations of world trees that represent the living, interconnected nature of the cosmos.[52] In Mandaeism, the date palm (Mandaic: sindirka) symbolizes the cosmic tree and is often associated with the cosmic wellspring (Mandaic: aina). The date palm and wellspring are often mentioned together as heavenly symbols in Mandaean texts. The date palm takes on masculine symbolism, while the wellspring takes on feminine symbolism.[53]

Armenian mythology edit

Armenian professor Hrach Martirosyan argues for the presence, in Armenian mythology, of a serpentine creature named Andndayin ōj, that lives in the (abyssal) waters that circundate the World Tree.[54]

Georgian mythology edit

According to scholarship, Georgian mythology also attests a rivalry between mythical bird Paskunji, which lives in the underworld on the top of a tree, and a snake that menaces its nestlings.[55][56][57]

Hittite culture edit

A similar imagery is attested in Hittite literature: a snake encircles the base of a tree, an eagle perches atop it, and a bee occupies its middle,[58][59] which Craig Melchert considers to be a version of the "world tree" or "tree of life" motif.[60]

Mesopotamian traditions edit

Sumerian culture edit

Professor Amar Annus states that, although the motif seems to originate much earlier, its first attestation in world culture occurred in Sumerian literature, with the tale of "Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Netherworld".[2] According to this tale, goddess Innana transplants the huluppu tree to her garden in the City of Uruk, for she intends to use its wood to carve a throne. However, a snake "with no charm", a ghostly figure (Lilith or another character associated with darkness) and the legendary Anzû-bird make their residence on the tree, until Gilgamesh kills the serpent and the other residents escape.[2][4]

Akkadian literature edit

In fragments of the story of Etana, there is a narrative sequence about a snake and an eagle that live on opposite sides of a poplar tree (şarbatu), the snake on its roots, the eagle on its foliage. At a certain point, both animals swear before deity Shamash and share their meat with each other, until the eagle's hatchlings are born and the eagle decides to eat the snake's young ones. In revenge, the snake alerts god Shamash, who agrees to let the snake punish the eagle for the perceived affront. Later, Shamash takes pity on the bird's condition and sets hero Etana to release it from its punishment. Later versions of the story associate the eagle with mythical bird Anzû and the snake with a serpentine being named Bašmu.[61][62]

Iranian mythology edit

 
Two winged bulls are guarding a sacred tree, on a rhyton from Marlik, Iran, currently at the National Museum of Iran

A world tree is a common motif in Persian mythology, the legendary bird Simurgh (alternatively, Saēna bird; Sēnmurw and Senmurv) perches atop a tree in the center of the sea Vourukasa. This tree is described as having all-healing properties and many seeds.[63] In another account, the tree is the very same tree of the White Hōm (Haōma).[64] Gaokerena or white Haoma is a tree whose vivacity ensures continued life in the universe,[65] and grants immortality to "all who eat from it". In the Pahlavi Bundahishn, it is said that evil god Ahriman created a lizard to attack the tree.[10]

Bas tokhmak is another remedial tree; it retains all herbal seeds and destroys sorrow.[66]

Hinduism and Indian religions edit

Remnants are also evident in the Kalpavriksha ("wish-fulfilling tree") and the Ashvattha tree of the Indian religions. The Ashvattha tree ('keeper of horses') is described as a sacred fig and corresponds to "the most typical representation of the world tree in India", upon whose branches the celestial bodies rest.[4][10] Likewise, the Kalpavriksha is also equated with a fig tree and said to possess wish-granting abilities.[67]

Indologist David Dean Shulman provided the description of a similar imagery that appears in South Indian temples: the sthalavṛkṣa tree. The tree is depicted alongside a water source (river, temple tank, sea). The tree may also appear rooted on Earth or reaching the realm of Patala (a netherworld where the Nāga dwell), or in an inverted position, rooted in the Heavens. Like other accounts, this tree may also function as an axis mundi.[68]

North Asian and Siberian cultures edit

The world tree is also represented in the mythologies and folklore of North Asia and Siberia. According to Mihály Hoppál, Hungarian scholar Vilmos Diószegi located some motifs related to the world tree in Siberian shamanism and other North Asian peoples. As per Diószegi's research, the "bird-peaked" tree holds the sun and the moon, and the underworld is "a land of snakes, lizards and frogs".[69]

In the mythology of the Samoyeds, the world tree connects different realities (underworld, this world, upper world) together. In their mythology the world tree is also the symbol of Mother Earth who is said to give the Samoyed shaman his drum and also help him travel from one world to another. According to scholar Aado Lintrop, the larch is "often regarded" by Siberian peoples as the World Tree.[4]

Scholar Aado Lintrop also noted the resemblance between an account of the World Tree from the Yakuts and a Moksha-Mordvinic folk song (described as a great birch).[4]

The imagery of the world tree, its roots burrowing underground, its branches reaching upward, the luminaries in its branches is also present in the mythology of Finno-Ugric peoples from Northern Asia, such as the Khanty and the Mansi.[70]

Mongolic and Turkic folk beliefs edit

The symbol of the world tree is also common in Tengrism, an ancient religion of Mongols and Turkic peoples. The world tree is sometimes a beech,[71] a birch, or a poplar in epic works.[72]

Scholarship points out the presence of the motif in Central Asian and North Eurasian epic tradition: a world tree named Bai-Terek in Altai and Kyrgyz epics; a "sacred tree with nine branches" in the Buryat epic.[73]

Turkic cultures edit

Bai-Terek edit

The Bai-Terek (also known as bayterek, beyterek, beğterek, begterek, begtereg),[74] found, for instance, in the Altai Maadai Kara epos, can be translated as "Golden Poplar".[75] Like the mythological description, each part of tree (top, trunk and root) corresponds to the three layers of reality: heavenly, earthly and underground. In one description, it is considered the axis mundi. It holds at the top "a nest of a double-headed eagle that watches over the different parts of the world" and, in the form of a snake, Erlik, deity of the underworld, tries to slither up the tree to steal an egg from the nest.[74] In another, the tree holds two gold cuckoos at the topmost branches and two golden eagles just below. At the roots there are two dogs that guard the passage between the underworld and the world of the living.[75]

Aal Luuk Mas edit

Among the Yakuts, the world tree (or sacred tree) is called Ál Lúk Mas (Aal Luuk Mas) and is attested in their Olonkho epic narratives. Furthermore, this sacred tree is described to "connect the three worlds (Upper, Middle and Lower)", the branches to the sky and the roots to the underworld.[73] Further studies show that this sacred tree also shows many alternate names and descriptions in different regional traditions.[73] According to scholarship, the prevalent animal at the top of the tree in the Olonkho is the eagle.[76]

Researcher Galina Popova emphasizes that the motif of the world tree offers a binary opposition between two different realms (the Upper Realm and the Underworld), and Aal Luuk Mas functions as a link between both.[77] A spirit or goddess of the earth, named Aan Alahchin Hotun, is also said to inhabit or live in the trunk of Aal Luuk Mas.[77]

Bashkir edit

According to scholarship, in the Bashkir epic Ural-batyr, deity Samrau is described as a celestial being married to female deities of the Sun and the Moon. He is also "The King of the Birds" and is opposed by the "dark forces" of the universe, which live in the underworld. A similarly named creature, the bird Samrigush, appears in Bashkir folktales living atop the tallest tree in the world and its enemy is a snake named Azhdakha.[78][79] After the human hero kills the serpent Azhdakha, the grateful Samrigush agrees to carry him back to the world of light.[80]

Kazakh edit

Scholarship points to the existence of a bird named Samurik (Samruk) that, according to Kazakh myth, lives atop the World Tree Baiterek. Likewise, in Kazakh folktales, it is also the hero's carrier out of the underworld, after he defeats a dragon named Aydakhara or Aydarhana.[81] In the same vein, Kazakh literary critic and folklorist Seyt Kaskabasov [ru] described that the Samruk bird travels between the three spheres of the universe, nests atop the "cosmic tree" (bәyterek) and helps the hero out of the underworld.[82]

Other representations edit

An early 20th-century report on Altaian shamanism by researcher Karunovskaia describes a shamanistic journey, information provided by one Kondratii Tanashev (or Merej Tanas). However, A. A. Znamenski believes this material is not universal to all Altaian peoples, but pertains to the specific worldview of Tanashev's Tangdy clan. Regardless, the material showed a belief in a tripartite division of the world in sky (heavenly sphere), middle world and underworld; in the central part of the world, a mountain (Ak toson altaj sip') is located. Upon this mountain there is "a navel of the earth and water ... which also serves as the root of the 'wonderful tree with golden branches and wide leaves' (Altyn byrly bai terek)". Like the iconic imagery, the tree branches out to reach the heavenly sphere.[83]

Mongolic cultures edit

Finnish folklorist Uno Holmberg reported a tale from the Kalmuck people about a dragon that lies in the sea, at the foot of a Zambu tree. In the Buryat poems, near the root of the tree a snake named Abyrga dwells.[84] He also reported a "Central Asian" narrative about the fight between the snake Abyrga and a bird named Garide - which he identified as a version of Indian Garuda.[84]

East Asia edit

Korea edit

The world tree is visible in the designs of the Crown of Silla, Silla being one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. This link is used to establish a connection between Siberian peoples and those of Korea.

China edit

In Chinese mythology, a manifestation of the world tree is the Fusang or Fumu tree.[85] In a Chinese cosmogonic myth, solar deity Xihe gives birth to ten suns. Each of the suns rests upon a tree named Fusang (possibly a mulberry tree). The ten suns alternate during the day, each carried by a crow (the "Crow of the Sun"): one sun stays on the top branch to wait its turn, while the other nine suns rest on the lower branches.[86]

Tanzania edit

An origin myth is recorded from the Wapangwa tribe of Tanzania, wherein the world is created through "a primordial tree and a termite mound".[87] As a continuation of the same tale, the animals wanted to eat the fruits of this Tree of Life, but humans intended to defend it. This led to a war between animals and humans.[88]

Kenya. In the agikuyu community, the "mūgumo" tree is held sacred and it is a taboo to even fetch firewood from it. In the past, the tree served as a altar to offer sacrifices as well as being a place of prayer. If a mùgumo tree falls, it is believed to be an end of an era for a "god"/dynasty and a ritual should be done by elders to cleanse the area and the community because it might be a bad omen.

In folk and fairy tales edit

ATU 301: The Three Stolen Princesses edit

The imagery of the World Tree appears in a specific tale type of the Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index, type ATU 301, "The Three Stolen Princesses", and former subtypes AaTh 301A, "Quest for a Vanished Princess" (or "Three Underground Kingdoms") and AaTh 301B, "The Strong Man and His Companions" (Jean de l'Ours and Fehérlófia). The hero journeys alone to the underworld (or a subterranean realm) to rescue three princesses. He leads them to a rope that will take them to the surface and, when the hero tries to climb up the rope, his companions cut it and the hero is stranded in the underworld. In his wanderings, he comes across a tree, on its top a nest of eggs from an eagle, a griffin or a mythical bird. The hero protects the nest from a snake enemy that slithers from the roots of the tree.[41][89][90]

Serbian scholarship recalls a Serbian mythical story about three brothers, named Ноћило, Поноћило и Зорило ("Noćilo, Ponoćilo and Zorilo") and their mission to rescue the king's daughters. Zorilo goes down the cave, rescues three princesses and with a whip changes their palaces into apples. When Zorilo is ready to go up, his brothers abandon him in the cave, but he escapes with the help of a bird.[91] Serbian scholar Pavle Sofric (sr), in his book about Serbian folkmyths about trees, noted that the tree of the tale, an ash tree (Serbian: јасен), showed a great parallel to the Nordic tree as not to be coincidental.[92]

While comparing Balkanic variants of the tale type ATU 301, researcher Milena Benovska-Sabkova noticed that the conflict between the snake and the eagle (bird) on the tree "was very close to the classical imagery of the World Tree".[93]

Other fairy tales edit

According to scholarship, Hungarian scholar János Berze Nágy also associated the imagery of the World Tree with fairy tales wherein a mysterious thief comes at night to steal the golden apples of the king's prized tree.[94] This incident occurs as an alternative opening to tale type ATU 301, in a group of tales formerly classified as AaTh 301A,[b] and as the opening episode in most variants of tale type ATU 550, "Bird, Horse and Princess" (otherwise known as The Golden Bird).[96]

Likewise, historical linguist Václav Blažek argued for parallels of certain motifs of these fairy tales (the night watch of the heroes, the golden apples, the avian thief) to Ossetian Nart sagas and the Greek myth of the Garden of the Hesperides.[97] The avian thief may also be a princess cursed into bird form, such as in Hungarian tale Prince Árgyilus (hu) and Fairy Ilona[94] and in Serbian tale The Nine Peahens and the Golden Apples (both classified as ATU 400, "The Man on a Quest for the Lost Wife").[98] This second type of opening episode was identified by Romanian folklorist Marcu Beza as another introduction to swan maiden tales.[99]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Lithuanian scholar Libertas Klimka (lt) indicated that the oak was considered a sacred tree to pre-Christian Baltic religion, including being a tree associated to thunder god Perkunas.[34]
  2. ^ The third revision of the Aarne-Thompson classification system, made in 2004 by German folklorist Hans-Jörg Uther, subsumed both subtypes AaTh 301A and AaTh 301B into the new type ATU 301.[95]

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c Annus, Amar (2009). "Review Article. The Folk-Tales of Iraq and the Literary Traditions of Ancient Mesopotamia". Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions. 9 (1): 87–99. doi:10.1163/156921209X449170.
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Literature edit

  • David Abram. The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World, Vintage, 1997
  • Burkert W (1996). Creation of the Sacred: Tracks of Biology in Early Religions. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-17570-9.
  • Haycock DE (2011). Being and Perceiving. Manupod Press. ISBN 978-0-9569621-0-2.
  • Miller, Mary Ellen; Taube, Karl A. (1993). The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya: An Illustrated Dictionary of Mesoamerican Religion. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-05068-2.
  • Roys, Ralph L., The Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press 1967.

Further reading edit

  • Balalaeva, O.; Pluzhnikov, N.; Funk, D.; Batyanova, E.; Dybo, A.; Bulgakova, T.; Burykin, A. (June 2019). "The Myth of the World Tree in the Shamanism of Siberian Peoples. Comments: Funk, D. A. In Search of the World Tree: Some Thoughts on What, Where, and How We Search [V poiskakh Mirovogo dreva: razmyshleniia o tom, chto, gde i kak my ishchem]; Batyanova, E. P. Trees, Shamans, and Other Worlds [Derev'ia, shamany i inye miry]; Dybo, A. V. The World Tree: Data from Siberian Languages [Mirovoe drevo: dannye sibirskikh yazykov]; Bulgakova, T. D. The "World Tree" in the Shamanic Image of the World among the Nanai ["Mirovoe drevo" v shamanskoi kartine mira nanaitsev]; Burykin, A. A. The "Shamanic Theater" and Its Attributes ["Shamanskii teatr" i ego atributy]; Balalaeva, O. E., and N. V. Pluzhnikov. Response to Commenters: Thinking about the Use of Discussions (One of the Keys) [Otvet opponentam: razmyshleniia o pol'ze diskussii (odin iz kliuchei)]". Etnograficheskoe Obozrenie (3): 80–122. doi:10.31857/S086954150005293-2.
  • Bauks, Michaela (6 May 2012). "Sacred Trees in the Garden of Eden and Their Ancient Near Eastern Precursors". Journal of Ancient Judaism. 3 (3): 267–301. doi:10.30965/21967954-00303001.
  • Butterworth, E. A. S. The Tree - the Navel of the Earth. Berlin: de Gruyter, 1970.
  • Holmberg, Uno. Der Baum des Lebens (= Suomalaisen Tiedeakatemian toimituksia. Sarja B = Series B, 16, 3, ISSN 0066-2011). Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia, Helsinki, 1922 (Auch: Edition Amalia, Bern 1996, ISBN 3-9520764-2-2).

External links edit

  • Cosmology of the Ancient Balts by Vytautas Straižys and Libertas Klimka (Lithuanian.net)

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This article is about the religious motif For other uses see World Tree disambiguation The world tree is a motif present in several religions and mythologies particularly Indo European Siberian and Native American religions The world tree is represented as a colossal tree which supports the heavens thereby connecting the heavens the terrestrial world and through its roots the underworld It may also be strongly connected to the motif of the tree of life but it is the source of wisdom of the ages From Northern Antiquities an English translation of the Prose Edda from 1847 Painted by Oluf Olufsen Bagge Specific world trees include egig ero fa in Hungarian mythology Agac Ana in Turkic mythology Andndayin Ca r 1 in Armenian mythology Modun in Mongol mythology Yggdrasil in Norse mythology Irminsul in Germanic mythology the oak in Slavic Finnish and Baltic Jianmu Chinese 建木 pinyin jianmu in Chinese mythology and in Hindu mythology the Ashvattha a Ficus religiosa Contents 1 General description 1 1 Similar motifs 1 2 Relation to shamanism 1 3 Possible origins 2 In specific cultures 2 1 Indigenous American cultures 2 2 Greek mythology 2 2 1 Oak tree 2 2 2 Other trees 2 3 Roman mythology 2 4 Norse mythology 2 5 Circumbaltic mythology 2 5 1 Baltic beliefs 2 5 1 1 Lithuanian culture 2 5 1 2 Latvian culture 2 5 2 Slavic beliefs 2 5 3 Finnic mythology 2 6 Judeo Christian mythology 2 7 Gnosticism 2 8 Armenian mythology 2 9 Georgian mythology 2 10 Hittite culture 2 11 Mesopotamian traditions 2 11 1 Sumerian culture 2 11 2 Akkadian literature 2 12 Iranian mythology 2 13 Hinduism and Indian religions 2 14 North Asian and Siberian cultures 2 15 Mongolic and Turkic folk beliefs 2 15 1 Turkic cultures 2 15 1 1 Bai Terek 2 15 1 2 Aal Luuk Mas 2 15 1 3 Bashkir 2 15 1 4 Kazakh 2 15 1 5 Other representations 2 15 2 Mongolic cultures 2 16 East Asia 2 16 1 Korea 2 16 2 China 2 17 Tanzania 3 In folk and fairy tales 3 1 ATU 301 The Three Stolen Princesses 3 2 Other fairy tales 4 See also 5 Explanatory notes 6 References 7 Literature 8 Further reading 9 External linksGeneral description editScholarship states that many Eurasian mythologies share the motif of the world tree cosmic tree or Eagle and Serpent Tree 2 More specifically it shows up in Haitian Finnish Lithuanian Hungarian Indian Chinese Japanese Norse Siberian and northern Asian Shamanic folklore 3 The World Tree is often identified with the Tree of Life 4 and also fulfills the role of an axis mundi that is a centre or axis of the world 3 It is also located at the center of the world and represents order and harmony of the cosmos 5 According to Loreta Senkute each part of the tree corresponds to one of the three spheres of the world treetops heavens trunk middle world or earth roots underworld and is also associated with a classical element top part fire middle part earth soil ground bottom part water 5 Its branches are said to reach the skies and its roots to connect the human or earthly world with an underworld or subterranean realm Because of this the tree was worshipped as a mediator between Heavens and Earth 6 On the treetops are located the luminaries stars and heavenly bodies along with an eagle s nest several species of birds perch among its branches humans and animals of every kind live under its branches and near the root is the dwelling place of snakes and every sort of reptiles 7 8 A bird perches atop its foliage often a winged mythical creature that represents a heavenly realm 9 4 The eagle seems to be the most frequent bird fulfilling the role of a creator or weather deity 10 Its antipode is a snake or serpentine creature that crawls between the tree roots being a symbol of the underworld 9 4 The imagery of the World Tree is sometimes associated with conferring immortality either by a fruit that grows on it or by a springsource located nearby 11 4 As George Lechler also pointed out in some descriptions this water of life may also flow from the roots of the tree 12 Similar motifs edit The World Tree has also been compared to a World Pillar that appears in other traditions and functions as separator between the earth and the skies upholding the latter 13 Another representation akin to the World Tree is a separate World Mountain However in some stories the world tree is located atop the world mountain in a combination of both motifs 5 A conflict between a serpentine creature and a giant bird an eagle occurs in Eurasian mythologies a hero kills the serpent that menaces a nest of little birds and their mother repays the favor a motif comparativist Julien d Huy dates to the Paleolithic A parallel story is attested in the traditions of the indigenous peoples of the Americas where the thunderbird is slotted into the role of the giant bird whose nest is menaced by a snake like water monster 14 15 Relation to shamanism edit Romanian historian of religion Mircea Eliade in his monumental work Shamanism Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy suggested that the world tree was an important element in shamanistic worldview 16 Also according to him the giant bird hatches shamans in the branches of the World Tree 16 Likewise Roald Knutsen indicates the presence of the motif in Altaic shamanism 17 Representations of the world tree are reported to be portrayed in drums used in Siberian shamanistic practices 18 Some species of birds eagle raven crane loon and lark are revered as mediators between worlds and also connected to the imagery of the world tree 19 Another line of scholarship points to a recurring theme of the owl as the mediator to the upper realm and its counterpart the snake as the mediator to the lower regions of the cosmos 20 Researcher Kristen Pearson mentions Northern Eurasian and Central Asian traditions wherein the World Tree is also associated with the horse and with deer antlers which might resemble tree branches 21 Possible origins edit Mircea Eliade proposed that the typical imagery of the world tree bird at the top snake at the root is presumably of Oriental origin 16 Likewise Roald Knutsen indicates a possible origin of the motif in Central Asia and later diffusion into other regions and cultures 17 In specific cultures editIndigenous American cultures edit Main article Mesoamerican world tree Among Indigenous Mesoamerican cultures the concept of world trees is a prevalent motif in Mesoamerican cosmologies and iconography The Temple of the Cross Complex at Palenque contains one of the most studied examples of the world tree in architectural motifs of all Mayan ruins World trees embodied the four cardinal directions which represented also the fourfold nature of a central world tree a symbolic axis mundi connecting the planes of the Underworld and the sky with that of the terrestrial world 22 Depictions of world trees both in their directional and central aspects are found in the art and traditions of cultures such as the Maya Aztec Izapan Mixtec Olmec and others dating to at least the Mid Late Formative periods of Mesoamerican chronology Among the Maya the central world tree was conceived as or represented by a ceiba tree called yax imix che blue green tree of abundance by the Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel 23 The trunk of the tree could also be represented by an upright caiman whose skin evokes the tree s spiny trunk 22 These depictions could also show birds perched atop the trees 24 A similarly named tree yax cheel cab first tree of the world was reported by 17th century priest Andres de Avendano to have been worshipped by the Itza Maya However scholarship suggests that this worship derives from some form of cultural interaction between pre Hispanic iconography and millenary practices and European traditions brought by the Hispanic colonization 24 Directional world trees are also associated with the four Yearbearers in Mesoamerican calendars and the directional colors and deities Mesoamerican codices which have this association outlined include the Dresden Borgia and Fejervary Mayer codices 24 It is supposed that Mesoamerican sites and ceremonial centers frequently had actual trees planted at each of the four cardinal directions representing the quadripartite concept World trees are frequently depicted with birds in their branches and their roots extending into earth or water sometimes atop a water monster symbolic of the underworld The central world tree has also been interpreted as a representation of the band of the Milky Way 25 Izapa Stela 5 contains a possible representation of a world tree A common theme in most indigenous cultures of the Americas is a concept of directionality the horizontal and vertical planes with the vertical dimension often being represented by a world tree Some scholars have argued that the religious importance of the horizontal and vertical dimensions in many animist cultures may derive from the human body and the position it occupies in the world as it perceives the surrounding living world Many Indigenous cultures of the Americas have similar cosmologies regarding the directionality and the world tree however the type of tree representing the world tree depends on the surrounding environment For many Indigenous American peoples located in more temperate regions for example it is the spruce rather than the ceiba that is the world tree however the idea of cosmic directions combined with a concept of a tree uniting the directional planes is similar Greek mythology edit Like in many other Indo European cultures one tree species was considered the World Tree in some cosmogonical accounts Oak tree edit The sacred tree of Zeus is the oak 26 and the one at Dodona famous for the cultic worship of Zeus and the oak was said by later tradition to have its roots furrow so deep as to reach the confines of Tartarus 27 In a different cosmogonic account presented by Pherecydes of Syros male deity Zas identified as Zeus marries female divinity Chthonie associated with the earth and later called Ge Gaia and from their marriage sprouts an oak tree This oak tree connects the heavens above and its roots grew into the Earth to reach the depths of Tartarus This oak tree is considered by scholarship to symbolize a cosmic tree uniting three spheres underworld terrestrial and celestial 28 Other trees edit Besides the oak several other sacred trees existed in Greek mythology For instance the olive named Moriai was the world tree and associated with the Olympian goddess Athena In a separate Greek myth the Hesperides live beneath an apple tree with golden apples that was given to the highest Olympian goddess Hera by the primal Mother goddess Gaia at Hera s marriage to Zeus 29 The tree stands in the Garden of the Hesperides and is guarded by Ladon a dragon Heracles defeats Ladon and snatches the golden apples In the epic quest for the Golden Fleece of Argonautica the object of the quest is found in the realm of Colchis hanging on a tree guarded by a never sleeping dragon the Colchian dragon 30 In a version of the story provided by Pseudo Apollodorus in Bibliotheca the Golden Fleece was affixed by King Aeetes to an oak tree in a grove dedicated to war god Ares 31 This information is repeated in Valerius Flaccus s Argonautica 32 In the same passage of Valerius Flaccus work King Aeetes prays to Ares for a sign and suddenly a serpent gliding from the Caucasus mountains appears and coils around the grove as to protect it 33 Roman mythology edit In Roman mythology the world tree was the olive tree that was associated with Pax The Greek equivalent of Pax is Eirene one of the Horae The Sacred tree of the Roman Sky father Jupiter was the oak the laurel was the Sacred tree of Apollo The ancient fig tree in the Comitium at Rome was considered as a descendant of the very tree under which Romulus and Remus were found 26 Norse mythology edit In Norse mythology Yggdrasil is the world tree 8 Yggdrasil is attested in the Poetic Edda compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources and the Prose Edda written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson In both sources Yggdrasil is an immense ash tree that is central and considered very holy The AEsir go to Yggdrasil daily to hold their courts The branches of Yggdrasil extend far into the heavens and the tree is supported by three roots that extend far away into other locations one to the well Urdarbrunnr in the heavens one to the spring Hvergelmir and another to the well Mimisbrunnr Creatures live within Yggdrasil including the harts Dainn Dvalinn Duneyrr and Durathror the giant in eagle shape Hraesvelgr the squirrel Ratatoskr and the wyrm Nidhoggr Scholarly theories have been proposed about the etymology of the name Yggdrasil the potential relation to the trees Mimameidr and Laeradr and the sacred tree at Uppsala Circumbaltic mythology edit In Baltic Slavic and Finnish mythology the world tree is usually an oak 8 a Most of the images of the world tree are preserved on ancient ornaments Often on the Baltic and Slavic patterns there was an image of an inverted tree growing with its roots up and branches going into the ground Baltic beliefs edit Scholarship recognizes that Baltic beliefs about a World Tree located at the central part of the Earth follow a tripartite division of the cosmos underworld earth sky each part corresponding to a part of the tree root trunk branches 35 36 It has been suggested that the word for tree in Baltic languages Latvian mezs Lithuanian medis both derived from Proto Indo European medh middle operated a semantic shift from middle possibly due to the belief of the Arbor Mundi 37 Lithuanian culture edit The world tree Lithuanian Ausros medis is widespread in Lithuanian folk painting and is frequently found carved into household furniture such as cupboards towel holders and laundry beaters 38 39 40 According to Lithuanian scholars Prane Dunduliene and Norbertas Velius the World Tree is a powerful tree with widespread branches and strong roots reaching deep into the earth The recurrent imagery is also present in Lithuanian myth on the treetops the luminaries and eagles and further down amidst its roots the dwelling place of snakes and reptiles 7 The World Tree of Lithuanian tradition was sometimes identified as an oak or a maple tree 36 Latvian culture edit In Latvian mythology the world tree Latvian Austras koks was one of the most important beliefs also associated with the birth of the world Sometimes it was identified as an oak or a birch or even replaced by a wooden pole 36 According to Ludvigs Adamovics s book on Latvian folk belief ancient Latvian mythology attested the existence of a Sun Tree as an expression of the World Tree often described as a birch tree with three leaves or forked branches where the Sun the Moon God Laima Auseklis the morning star or the daughter of the Sun rest ed 41 Slavic beliefs edit nbsp Old Russian ornament of the world tree According to Slavic folklore as reconstructed by Radoslav Katicic the draconic or serpentine character furrows near a body of water and the bird that lives on the treetop could be an eagle a falcon or a nightingale 42 Scholars Ivanov and Toporov offered a reconstructed Slavic variant of the Indo European myth about a battle between a Thunder God and a snake like adversary In their proposed reconstruction the Snake lives under the World Tree sleeping on black wool They surmise this snake on black wool is a reference to a cattle god known in Slavic mythology as Veles 43 Further studies show that the usual tree that appears in Slavic folklore is an oak for instance in Czech it is known as Veledub The Great Oak 44 In addition the world tree appears in the Island of Buyan on top of a stone Another description shows that legendary birds Sirin and Alkonost make their nests on separate sides of the tree 45 Ukrainian scholarship points to the existence of the motif in archaic wintertime songs and carols their texts attest a tree at the center of the world and two or three falcons or pigeons sat on its top ready to dive in and fetch mud to create land the Earth diver cosmogonic motif 46 47 The imagery of the world tree also appears in folk medicine of the Don Cossacks 48 Finnic mythology edit According to scholar Aado Lintrop Estonian mythology records two types of world tree in Estonian runic songs with similar characteristics of being an oak and having a bird at the top a snake at the roots and the stars amongst its branches 8 Judeo Christian mythology edit nbsp The Tree of Knowledge depicted with Adam and Eve where the Tree of life is described as part of the Garden of Eden in the Hebrew bible The Tree of the knowledge of good and evil and the Tree of life are both components of the Garden of Eden story in the Book of Genesis in the Bible According to Jewish mythology in the Garden of Eden there is a tree of life or the tree of souls that blossoms and produces new souls which fall into the Guf the Treasury of Souls 49 The Angel Gabriel reaches into the treasury and takes out the first soul that comes into his hand Then Lailah the Angel of Conception watches over the embryo until it is born 50 Gnosticism edit According to the Gnostic codex On the Origin of the World the tree of immortal life is in the north of paradise which is outside the circuit of the Sun and Moon in the luxuriant Earth Its height is so great it reaches Heaven Its leaves are described as resembling cypress the color of the tree is like the Sun its fruit is like clusters of white grapes and its branches are beautiful The tree will provide life for the innocent during the consummation of the age 51 Mandaean scrolls often include abstract illustrations of world trees that represent the living interconnected nature of the cosmos 52 In Mandaeism the date palm Mandaic sindirka symbolizes the cosmic tree and is often associated with the cosmic wellspring Mandaic aina The date palm and wellspring are often mentioned together as heavenly symbols in Mandaean texts The date palm takes on masculine symbolism while the wellspring takes on feminine symbolism 53 Armenian mythology edit Armenian professor Hrach Martirosyan argues for the presence in Armenian mythology of a serpentine creature named Andndayin ōj that lives in the abyssal waters that circundate the World Tree 54 Georgian mythology edit According to scholarship Georgian mythology also attests a rivalry between mythical bird Paskunji which lives in the underworld on the top of a tree and a snake that menaces its nestlings 55 56 57 Hittite culture edit A similar imagery is attested in Hittite literature a snake encircles the base of a tree an eagle perches atop it and a bee occupies its middle 58 59 which Craig Melchert considers to be a version of the world tree or tree of life motif 60 Mesopotamian traditions edit Sumerian culture edit Professor Amar Annus states that although the motif seems to originate much earlier its first attestation in world culture occurred in Sumerian literature with the tale of Gilgamesh Enkidu and the Netherworld 2 According to this tale goddess Innana transplants the huluppu tree to her garden in the City of Uruk for she intends to use its wood to carve a throne However a snake with no charm a ghostly figure Lilith or another character associated with darkness and the legendary Anzu bird make their residence on the tree until Gilgamesh kills the serpent and the other residents escape 2 4 Akkadian literature edit In fragments of the story of Etana there is a narrative sequence about a snake and an eagle that live on opposite sides of a poplar tree sarbatu the snake on its roots the eagle on its foliage At a certain point both animals swear before deity Shamash and share their meat with each other until the eagle s hatchlings are born and the eagle decides to eat the snake s young ones In revenge the snake alerts god Shamash who agrees to let the snake punish the eagle for the perceived affront Later Shamash takes pity on the bird s condition and sets hero Etana to release it from its punishment Later versions of the story associate the eagle with mythical bird Anzu and the snake with a serpentine being named Basmu 61 62 Iranian mythology edit nbsp Two winged bulls are guarding a sacred tree on a rhyton from Marlik Iran currently at the National Museum of Iran A world tree is a common motif in Persian mythology the legendary bird Simurgh alternatively Saena bird Senmurw and Senmurv perches atop a tree in the center of the sea Vourukasa This tree is described as having all healing properties and many seeds 63 In another account the tree is the very same tree of the White Hōm Haōma 64 Gaokerena or white Haoma is a tree whose vivacity ensures continued life in the universe 65 and grants immortality to all who eat from it In the Pahlavi Bundahishn it is said that evil god Ahriman created a lizard to attack the tree 10 Bas tokhmak is another remedial tree it retains all herbal seeds and destroys sorrow 66 Hinduism and Indian religions edit Remnants are also evident in the Kalpavriksha wish fulfilling tree and the Ashvattha tree of the Indian religions The Ashvattha tree keeper of horses is described as a sacred fig and corresponds to the most typical representation of the world tree in India upon whose branches the celestial bodies rest 4 10 Likewise the Kalpavriksha is also equated with a fig tree and said to possess wish granting abilities 67 Indologist David Dean Shulman provided the description of a similar imagery that appears in South Indian temples the sthalavṛkṣa tree The tree is depicted alongside a water source river temple tank sea The tree may also appear rooted on Earth or reaching the realm of Patala a netherworld where the Naga dwell or in an inverted position rooted in the Heavens Like other accounts this tree may also function as an axis mundi 68 North Asian and Siberian cultures edit The world tree is also represented in the mythologies and folklore of North Asia and Siberia According to Mihaly Hoppal Hungarian scholar Vilmos Dioszegi located some motifs related to the world tree in Siberian shamanism and other North Asian peoples As per Dioszegi s research the bird peaked tree holds the sun and the moon and the underworld is a land of snakes lizards and frogs 69 In the mythology of the Samoyeds the world tree connects different realities underworld this world upper world together In their mythology the world tree is also the symbol of Mother Earth who is said to give the Samoyed shaman his drum and also help him travel from one world to another According to scholar Aado Lintrop the larch is often regarded by Siberian peoples as the World Tree 4 Scholar Aado Lintrop also noted the resemblance between an account of the World Tree from the Yakuts and a Moksha Mordvinic folk song described as a great birch 4 The imagery of the world tree its roots burrowing underground its branches reaching upward the luminaries in its branches is also present in the mythology of Finno Ugric peoples from Northern Asia such as the Khanty and the Mansi 70 Mongolic and Turkic folk beliefs edit The symbol of the world tree is also common in Tengrism an ancient religion of Mongols and Turkic peoples The world tree is sometimes a beech 71 a birch or a poplar in epic works 72 Scholarship points out the presence of the motif in Central Asian and North Eurasian epic tradition a world tree named Bai Terek in Altai and Kyrgyz epics a sacred tree with nine branches in the Buryat epic 73 Turkic cultures edit Bai Terek edit The Bai Terek also known as bayterek beyterek begterek begterek begtereg 74 found for instance in the Altai Maadai Kara epos can be translated as Golden Poplar 75 Like the mythological description each part of tree top trunk and root corresponds to the three layers of reality heavenly earthly and underground In one description it is considered the axis mundi It holds at the top a nest of a double headed eagle that watches over the different parts of the world and in the form of a snake Erlik deity of the underworld tries to slither up the tree to steal an egg from the nest 74 In another the tree holds two gold cuckoos at the topmost branches and two golden eagles just below At the roots there are two dogs that guard the passage between the underworld and the world of the living 75 Aal Luuk Mas edit Among the Yakuts the world tree or sacred tree is called Al Luk Mas Aal Luuk Mas and is attested in their Olonkho epic narratives Furthermore this sacred tree is described to connect the three worlds Upper Middle and Lower the branches to the sky and the roots to the underworld 73 Further studies show that this sacred tree also shows many alternate names and descriptions in different regional traditions 73 According to scholarship the prevalent animal at the top of the tree in the Olonkho is the eagle 76 Researcher Galina Popova emphasizes that the motif of the world tree offers a binary opposition between two different realms the Upper Realm and the Underworld and Aal Luuk Mas functions as a link between both 77 A spirit or goddess of the earth named Aan Alahchin Hotun is also said to inhabit or live in the trunk of Aal Luuk Mas 77 Bashkir edit According to scholarship in the Bashkir epic Ural batyr deity Samrau is described as a celestial being married to female deities of the Sun and the Moon He is also The King of the Birds and is opposed by the dark forces of the universe which live in the underworld A similarly named creature the bird Samrigush appears in Bashkir folktales living atop the tallest tree in the world and its enemy is a snake named Azhdakha 78 79 After the human hero kills the serpent Azhdakha the grateful Samrigush agrees to carry him back to the world of light 80 Kazakh edit Scholarship points to the existence of a bird named Samurik Samruk that according to Kazakh myth lives atop the World Tree Baiterek Likewise in Kazakh folktales it is also the hero s carrier out of the underworld after he defeats a dragon named Aydakhara or Aydarhana 81 In the same vein Kazakh literary critic and folklorist Seyt Kaskabasov ru described that the Samruk bird travels between the three spheres of the universe nests atop the cosmic tree bәyterek and helps the hero out of the underworld 82 Other representations edit An early 20th century report on Altaian shamanism by researcher Karunovskaia describes a shamanistic journey information provided by one Kondratii Tanashev or Merej Tanas However A A Znamenski believes this material is not universal to all Altaian peoples but pertains to the specific worldview of Tanashev s Tangdy clan Regardless the material showed a belief in a tripartite division of the world in sky heavenly sphere middle world and underworld in the central part of the world a mountain Ak toson altaj sip is located Upon this mountain there is a navel of the earth and water which also serves as the root of the wonderful tree with golden branches and wide leaves Altyn byrly bai terek Like the iconic imagery the tree branches out to reach the heavenly sphere 83 Mongolic cultures edit Finnish folklorist Uno Holmberg reported a tale from the Kalmuck people about a dragon that lies in the sea at the foot of a Zambu tree In the Buryat poems near the root of the tree a snake named Abyrga dwells 84 He also reported a Central Asian narrative about the fight between the snake Abyrga and a bird named Garide which he identified as a version of Indian Garuda 84 East Asia edit Korea edit The world tree is visible in the designs of the Crown of Silla Silla being one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea This link is used to establish a connection between Siberian peoples and those of Korea China edit In Chinese mythology a manifestation of the world tree is the Fusang or Fumu tree 85 In a Chinese cosmogonic myth solar deity Xihe gives birth to ten suns Each of the suns rests upon a tree named Fusang possibly a mulberry tree The ten suns alternate during the day each carried by a crow the Crow of the Sun one sun stays on the top branch to wait its turn while the other nine suns rest on the lower branches 86 Tanzania edit An origin myth is recorded from the Wapangwa tribe of Tanzania wherein the world is created through a primordial tree and a termite mound 87 As a continuation of the same tale the animals wanted to eat the fruits of this Tree of Life but humans intended to defend it This led to a war between animals and humans 88 Kenya In the agikuyu community the mugumo tree is held sacred and it is a taboo to even fetch firewood from it In the past the tree served as a altar to offer sacrifices as well as being a place of prayer If a mugumo tree falls it is believed to be an end of an era for a god dynasty and a ritual should be done by elders to cleanse the area and the community because it might be a bad omen In folk and fairy tales editATU 301 The Three Stolen Princesses edit The imagery of the World Tree appears in a specific tale type of the Aarne Thompson Uther Index type ATU 301 The Three Stolen Princesses and former subtypes AaTh 301A Quest for a Vanished Princess or Three Underground Kingdoms and AaTh 301B The Strong Man and His Companions Jean de l Ours and Feherlofia The hero journeys alone to the underworld or a subterranean realm to rescue three princesses He leads them to a rope that will take them to the surface and when the hero tries to climb up the rope his companions cut it and the hero is stranded in the underworld In his wanderings he comes across a tree on its top a nest of eggs from an eagle a griffin or a mythical bird The hero protects the nest from a snake enemy that slithers from the roots of the tree 41 89 90 Serbian scholarship recalls a Serbian mythical story about three brothers named Noћilo Ponoћilo i Zorilo Nocilo Ponocilo and Zorilo and their mission to rescue the king s daughters Zorilo goes down the cave rescues three princesses and with a whip changes their palaces into apples When Zorilo is ready to go up his brothers abandon him in the cave but he escapes with the help of a bird 91 Serbian scholar Pavle Sofric sr in his book about Serbian folkmyths about trees noted that the tree of the tale an ash tree Serbian јasen showed a great parallel to the Nordic tree as not to be coincidental 92 While comparing Balkanic variants of the tale type ATU 301 researcher Milena Benovska Sabkova noticed that the conflict between the snake and the eagle bird on the tree was very close to the classical imagery of the World Tree 93 Other fairy tales edit According to scholarship Hungarian scholar Janos Berze Nagy also associated the imagery of the World Tree with fairy tales wherein a mysterious thief comes at night to steal the golden apples of the king s prized tree 94 This incident occurs as an alternative opening to tale type ATU 301 in a group of tales formerly classified as AaTh 301A b and as the opening episode in most variants of tale type ATU 550 Bird Horse and Princess otherwise known as The Golden Bird 96 Likewise historical linguist Vaclav Blazek argued for parallels of certain motifs of these fairy tales the night watch of the heroes the golden apples the avian thief to Ossetian Nart sagas and the Greek myth of the Garden of the Hesperides 97 The avian thief may also be a princess cursed into bird form such as in Hungarian tale Prince Argyilus hu and Fairy Ilona 94 and in Serbian tale The Nine Peahens and the Golden Apples both classified as ATU 400 The Man on a Quest for the Lost Wife 98 This second type of opening episode was identified by Romanian folklorist Marcu Beza as another introduction to swan maiden tales 99 See also edit nbsp Religion portal nbsp World portal It s a Big Big World TV series which takes place at a location called the World Tree Potomitan Rehue Sidrat al Muntaha Tree of life Quran Ṭuba The FountainExplanatory notes edit Lithuanian scholar Libertas Klimka lt indicated that the oak was considered a sacred tree to pre Christian Baltic religion including being a tree associated to thunder god Perkunas 34 The third revision of the Aarne Thompson classification system made in 2004 by German folklorist Hans Jorg Uther subsumed both subtypes AaTh 301A and AaTh 301B into the new type ATU 301 95 References edit Farnah Indo Iranian and Indo European studies in honor of Sasha Lubotsky Lucien van Beek Alwin Kloekhorst Guus Kroonen Michael Peyrot Tijmen Pronk Michile de Vaan Ann Arbor Beech Stave Press 2018 ISBN 978 0 9895142 4 8 OCLC 1104878206 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link page needed a b c Annus Amar 2009 Review Article The Folk Tales of Iraq and the Literary Traditions of Ancient Mesopotamia Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions 9 1 87 99 doi 10 1163 156921209X449170 a b Crews Judith 2003 Forest and tree symbolism in folklore Unasylva 213 37 43 OCLC 210755951 a b c d e f g h Lintrop Aado 2001 The Great Oak and Brother Sister Folklore 16 35 58 doi 10 7592 FEJF2001 16 oak2 a b c Senkute Loreta Varuna Rigvedoje ir dievo įvaizdzio sasajos su velniu baltu mitologijoje God Varuna o f the Rigveda as related to images in ancient Baltic mythology In Rytai Vakarai Komparatyvistines Studijos XII pp 366 367 ISBN 9789955868552 Usaciovaite Elvyra Gyvybes medzio simbolika Rytuose ir Vakaruose Symbolism of the Tree of Life in the East and the West Life tree symbols in the East and West In Kulturologija Culturology 2005 t 12 p 313 ISSN 1822 2242 a b Straizys Vytautas Klimka Libertas February 1997 The Cosmology of the Ancient Balts Journal for the History of Astronomy 28 22 S57 S81 doi 10 1177 002182869702802207 S2CID 117470993 a b c d Kuperjanov Andres 2002 Names in Estonian Folk Astronomy from Bird s Way to Milky Way Folklore 22 49 61 doi 10 7592 FEJF2002 22 milkyway a b Annus Amar amp Sarv Mari The Ball Game Motif in the Gilgamesh Tradition and International Folklore In Mesopotamia in the Ancient World Impact Continuities Parallels Proceedings of the Seventh Symposium of the Melammu Project Held in Obergurgl Austria November 4 8 2013 Munster Ugarit Verlag Buch und Medienhandel GmbH 2015 pp 289 290 ISBN 978 3 86835 128 6 a b c Norelius Per Johan 2016 The Honey Eating Birds and the Tree of Life Notes on Ṛgveda 1 164 20 22 Acta Orientalia 77 3 70 3 70 doi 10 5617 ao 5356 S2CID 166166930 Paliga Rodica 1994 Le motif du passage La semiotique de l impact culturel pre indoeuropeen et indoeuropeen PDF Dialogues d histoire ancienne 20 2 11 19 doi 10 3406 dha 1994 2172 Lechler George 1937 The Tree of Life in Indo European and Islamic Cultures Ars Islamica 4 369 419 JSTOR 25167048 Tolley Clive 2013 What is a World Tree and Should We Expect to Find One Growing in Anglo Saxon England Trees and Timber in the Anglo Saxon World pp 177 185 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199680795 003 0009 ISBN 978 0 19 968079 5 d Huy Julien 18 March 2016 Premiere reconstruction statistique d un rituel paleolithique autour du motif du dragon Nouvelle Mythologie Comparee in French 3 http nouvellemythologiecomparee hautetfort com archive 2016 03 18 julien Hatt Gudmund 1949 Asiatic influences in American folklore Kobenhavn I kommission hos ejnar Munksgaard p 37 a b c Fournet Arnaud 2020 Shamanism in Indo European Mythologies PDF Archaeoastronomy and Ancient Technologies 8 1 12 29 a b Knutsen Roald 2011 Cultic Symbols Tengu pp 43 50 doi 10 1163 9789004218024 007 ISBN 978 1 906876 22 7 Hultkrantz Ake 1991 The drum in Shamanism some reflections Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis 14 doi 10 30674 scripta 67194 Balzer Marjorie Mandelstam 1996 Flights of the Sacred Symbolism and Theory in Siberian Shamanism American Anthropologist 98 2 305 318 doi 10 1525 aa 1996 98 2 02a00070 JSTOR 682889 Eastham Anne 1998 Magdalenians and Snowy Owls bones recovered at the grotte de Bourrouilla Arancou Pyrenees Atlantiques Les Magdaleniens et la chouette harfang la Grotte de Bourrouilla Arancou Pyrenees Atlantiques PDF Paleo 10 1 95 107 doi 10 3406 pal 1998 1131 Pearson Kristen Chasing the Shaman s Steed The Horse in Myth from Central Asia to Scandinavia Sino Platonic Papers nr 269 May 2017 a b Miller amp Taube 1993 p 186 Roys 1967 100 a b c Knowlton Timothy W Vail Gabrielle 1 October 2010 Hybrid Cosmologies in Mesoamerica A Reevaluation of the Yax Cheel Cab a Maya World Tree Ethnohistory 57 4 709 739 doi 10 1215 00141801 2010 042 Freidel et al 1993 full citation needed a b Philpot Mrs J H 1897 The Sacred Tree or the tree in religion and myth London MacMillan amp Co Philpot Mrs J H 1897 The Sacred Tree or the tree in religion and myth London MacMillan amp Co pp 93 94 Marmoz Julien La Cosmogonie de Pherecyde de Syros In Nouvelle Mythologie Comparee n 5 2019 2020 pp 5 41 Hesperides Britannica online Greek mythology Godwin William Lives of the Necromancers London F J Mason 1876 p 41 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 1 9 1 Translation by Sir James George Frazer Valerius Flaccus Argonautica Translated by Mozley J H Loeb Classical Library Volume 286 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1928 Book V Lines 228ff Valerius Flaccus Argonautica Translated by Mozley J H Loeb Classical Library Volume 286 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1928 Book V Lines 241 and 253ff Klimka Libertas Medziu mitologizavimas tradicineje lietuviu kulturoje Mythicization of the tree in Lithuanian folk culture In Acta humanitarica universitatis Saulensis Acta humanit univ Saulensis Online 2011 t 13 pp 22 25 ISSN 1822 7309 Cepiene Irena Kai kurie mitines pasaulekuros aspektai lietuviu tradicineje kulturoje Certain aspects of mythical world building in Lithuanian traditional culture In Geografija ir edukacija Geography and education 2014 Nr 2 p 57 ISSN 2351 6453 a b c Betakova Marta Eva Blazek Vaclav Encyklopedie baltske mytologie Praha Libri 2012 p 178 ISBN 978 80 7277 505 7 Kalygin Victor 30 January 2003 Some archaic elements of Celtic cosmology Zeitschrift fur celtische Philologie 53 1 doi 10 1515 ZCPH 2003 70 S2CID 162904613 Straizys and Klimka chapter 2 Cosmology of the Ancient Balts 3 The concept of the World Tree from the lithuanian net website Accessed 2008 12 26 Klimka Libertas Baltiskasis Pasaulio modelis ir kalendorius Baltic Model of the World and Calendar In LIETUVA iki MINDAUGO 2003 p 341 ISBN 9986 571 89 8 a b kencis Toms 20 September 2011 The Latvian Mythological Space in Scholarly Time Archaeologia Baltica 15 144 157 doi 10 15181 ab v15i1 28 Smitek Zmago 5 May 2015 The Image of the Real World and the World Beyond in the Slovene Folk TraditionPodoba sveta in onstranstva v slovenskem ljudskem izrocilu Studia mythologica Slavica 2 161 doi 10 3986 sms v2i0 1848 Eckert Rainer January 1998 On the Cult of the Snake in Ancient Baltic and Slavic Tradition based on language material from the Latvian folksongs Zeitschrift fur Slawistik 43 1 doi 10 1524 slaw 1998 43 1 94 S2CID 171032008 Hudec Ivan Myty a baje starych Slovanu s l Slovart 2004 S 1994 ISBN 80 7145 111 8 in Czech Gerasimenko I A Dmutrieva J L 15 December 2015 The Image of the World Tree in the Aspect of Russian Linguistic Culture Russian Language Studies 4 16 22 Goshchytska Tetyana 21 June 2019 The tree symbol in world mythologies and the mythology of the world tree illustrated by the example of the ukrainian Carpathians traditional culture The Ethnology Notebooks 147 3 622 640 doi 10 15407 nz2019 03 622 S2CID 197854947 Szyjewski Andrzej 2003 Religia Slowian Krakow Wydawnictwo WAM pp 36 37 ISBN 83 7318 205 5 in Polish Karpun Mariia 30 November 2018 Representations of the World Tree in traditional culture of Don Cossacks Przeglad Wschodnioeuropejski 9 2 115 122 doi 10 31648 pw 3088 S2CID 216841139 Scholem Gershom Gerhard 1990 Origins of the Kabbalah ISBN 0691020477 Retrieved 1 May 2014 via Google Books The Treasury of Souls for Tree of Souls Scribd The Mythology of Judaism Archived from the original on 30 October 2012 Retrieved 15 June 2015 Marvin Meyer Willis Barnstone 2009 On the Origin of the World The Gnostic Bible Shambhala Retrieved 2022 02 03 Nasoraia Brikha H S 2021 The Mandaean gnostic religion worship practice and deep thought New Delhi Sterling ISBN 978 81 950824 1 4 OCLC 1272858968 Nasoraia Brikha 2022 The Mandaean Rivers Scroll Diwan Nahrawatha an analysis London Routledge ISBN 978 0 367 33544 1 OCLC 1295213206 Martirosyan Hrach 2018 Armenian Andndayin ōj and Vedic Ahi Budhnya Abyssal Serpent In Farnah Indo Iranian and Indo European Studies pp 191 197 Religious Beliefs of the Caucasian Society of the Early Iron Age According to Archaeological Evidence Gesellschaft und Kultur im alten Vorderasien 1982 pp 127 136 doi 10 1515 9783112320860 018 ISBN 9783112309674 Gogiashvili Elene 2013 About Georgian Fairytales Bulletin de l Academie Belge pour l Etude des Langues Anciennes et Orientales 159 171 doi 10 14428 babelao vol2 2013 19913 Gogiashvili Elene 2009 ფრინველისა და გველის ბრძოლის მითოლოგემა უძველეს გრაფიკულ გამოსახულებასა და ზეპირსიტყვიერებაში The Myth about a Conflict Between a Bird and a Snake on the Old Graphics and in Folklore In სჯანი Sjani nr 10 pp 146 156 in Georgian Unal Ahmet Parts of Trees in Hittite According to a Medical Incantation Text KUB 43 62 In Hittite and Other Anatolian and Near Eastern Studies in Honour of Sedat Alp Sedat Alp Festschrift Heinrich Otten Ekrem Akurgal Hayri Ertem Aygul Suel eds Ankara TURK TARlH KURUMU BASIMEVl 1992 p 496 Collins B J 2002 Animals in Hittite Literature In A History of the Animal World in the Ancient Near East Leiden The Netherlands Brill pp 244 245 doi 10 1163 9789047400912 008 Melchert H Craig Hittite antaka loins and an Overlooked Myth about Fire In Hittite Studies in Honor of Harry A Hoffner Jr on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday Edited by Gary Beckman Richard H Beal and Gregory McMahon University Park US Penn State University Press 2003 pp 284 285 doi 10 1515 9781575065434 025 Winitzer Abraham 2013 Etana in Eden New Light on the Mesopotamian and Biblical Tales in Their Semitic Context Journal of the American Oriental Society 133 444 445 doi 10 7817 JAMERORIESOCI 133 3 0441 Valk Jonathan 2021 The Eagle and the Snake or Anzu and basmu Another Mythological Dimension in the Epic of Etana Journal of the American Oriental Society 140 4 889 900 doi 10 7817 jameroriesoci 140 4 0889 S2CID 230537775 Rose Jenny 2019 Near Eastern and Old Iranian myths In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 8150 Schmidt Hanns Peter 2002 Simorgh In Encyclopedia Iranica Philpot Mrs J H 1897 The Sacred Tree or the tree in religion and myth London MacMillan amp Co pp 123 124 Taheri Sadreddin 2013 Plant of life in Ancient Iran Mesopotamia and Egypt Honarhay e Ziba Journal 18 2 Tehran 15 Lechler George 1937 The Tree of Life in Indo European and Islamic Cultures Ars Islamica 4 369 419 JSTOR 25167048 Shulman David 1 January 1979 Murukan the mango and Ekambaresvara Siva Fragments of a Tamil creation myth Indo Iranian Journal 21 1 27 40 JSTOR 24653474 S2CID 189767945 M Hoppal Shamanism and the Belief System of the Ancient Hungarians In Ethnographica et folkloristica carpathica 11 1999 59 Sanjuan Oscar Abenojar 2009 El abedul de hojas doradas representaciones y funciones del Axis Mundi en el folclore finougrio Liburna 2 13 24 The Tree Of Life In Turkic Communities With Its Current Effects ULUKAYIN 2021 10 03 Retrieved 2022 05 11 Lyailya Kaliakbarova 6 May 2018 Spatial Orientations of Nomads Lifestyle and Culture Rupkatha Journal on Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities 10 2 doi 10 21659 rupkatha v10n2 03 a b c Pavlova Olga Ksenofontovna 30 September 2018 Mythological Image in Olonkho of the North Eastern Yakut Tradition Sacred Tree Journal of History Culture and Art Research 7 3 79 doi 10 7596 taksad v7i3 1720 S2CID 135257248 a b Dochu Alina December 2017 Turkic etymological background of the English bird name terek Tringa cinereus PDF Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 70 4 479 483 doi 10 1556 062 2017 70 4 6 S2CID 134741505 a b Zhernosenko I A Rogozina I V WORLDVIEW AND MENTALITY OF ALTAI S INDIGENOUS INHABITANTS In Himalayan and Central Asian Studies New Delhi Vol 18 Ed 3 4 Jul Dec 2014 111 Satanar Marianna T 25 December 2020 K semioticheskoj interpretacii mifologicheskogo obraza dreva Aal Luuk mas v epose olonho Oriental Studies 13 4 1135 1154 doi 10 22162 2619 0990 2020 50 4 1135 1154 S2CID 241597729 a b POPOVA G S 2019 DREVO MIRA AAL LUUK MAS V SOVREMENNOJ KULTURE YaKUTOV SAHA doi 10 24411 2071 6427 2019 00039 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hisamitdinova F g 2014 Bozhestva verhnego mira v mifologii bashkir Oriental Studies 4 146 154 Batyrshin Sh f 2019 Obrazy mificheskih zhivotnyh v russkoj bashkirskoj i kitajskoj lingvokulturah Mir nauki kultury obrazovaniya 2 75 470 472 Ravilovna Husainova Gulnur 2012 Otrazhenie mifologicheskih vozzrenij v bashkirskoj volshebnoj skazke Vestnik Chelyabinskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta 32 286 126 129 Hisamitdinova F 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Formula a Balkan Perspective Edited by Mirjana Detelic and Lidija Delic Belgrade Institute for Balkan Studies Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts 2015 p 67 ISBN 978 86 7179 091 8 Levin Isidor January 1966 Etana Die keilschriftlichen Belege einer Erzahlung Fabula 8 Jahresband 1 63 doi 10 1515 fabl 1966 8 1 1 S2CID 161315794 Medan Maјa Ј 2017 Od nemila do nedraga Milana Dedinca eseјizaciјa lirske proze ili lirizaciјa eseјa Eseј eseјisti i eseјizaciјa u srpskoј kњizhevnosti Forme pripovedaњa u srpskoј kњizhevnosti Nauchni sastanak slavista u Vukove dane Vol 46 2 pp 185 194 doi 10 18485 msc 2017 46 2 ch20 ISBN 978 86 6153 470 6 Vukicevic Dragana BOG KOЈI ODUSTAЈE Iliјa Vukiћeviћ Pricha o selu Vrachima i Simi Stupici i Radoјe Domanoviћ Kraљeviћ Marko po drugi put meђu Srbima The Resigning God In SRPSKI ЈEZIK KЊIZhEVNOST UMETNOST Zbornik radova sa VI meђunarodnog nauchnog skupa odrzhanog na Filoloshko umetnichkom fakultetu u Kraguјevcu 28 29 X 2011 Kњiga II BOG Kraguјevac 2012 p 231 Benovska Sabkova Milena Trimata bratya i zlatnata yablka analiz na mitologicheskata semantika v sravnitelen balkanski plan The three brothers and the golden apple Analysis of the mythological semantic in comparative Balkan aspect In Blgarska etnologiya Bulgarian Ethnology nr 1 1995 90 102 a b Bardos Jozsef Vilag es mas ik vilagok tundermesekben Worlds and Other Worlds in Fairy Tales In Gradus Vol 2 No 1 2015 p 16 ISSN 2064 8014 Uther Hans Jorg The types of International Folktales A Classification and Bibliography Based on the System of Antti Aarne and Stith Thompson Folklore Fellows Communications FFC n 284 Helsinki Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia Academia Scientiarum Fennica 2004 p 177 Tacha Athena Brancusi s Birds New York University Press for the College Art Association of America 1969 p 8 ISBN 9780814703953 BLAZEK Vaclav The Role of Apple in the Indo European Mythological Tradition and in Neighboring Traditions In Lisiecki Marcin Milne Louise S Yanchevskaya Nataliya Power and Speech Mythology of the Social and the Sacred Torun EIKON 2016 pp 257 297 ISBN 978 83 64869 16 7 BLAZEK Vaclav The Role of Apple in the Indo European Mythological Tradition and in Neighboring Traditions In Lisiecki Marcin Milne Louise S Yanchevskaya Nataliya Power and Speech Mythology of the Social and the Sacred Torun EIKON 2016 p 184 ISBN 978 83 64869 16 7 Beza M 1925 The Sacred Marriage in Roumanian Folklore The Slavonic Review 4 11 321 333 JSTOR 4201965 Literature editDavid Abram The Spell of the Sensuous Perception and Language in a More Than Human World Vintage 1997 Burkert W 1996 Creation of the Sacred Tracks of Biology in Early Religions Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 17570 9 Haycock DE 2011 Being and Perceiving Manupod Press ISBN 978 0 9569621 0 2 Miller Mary Ellen Taube Karl A 1993 The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya An Illustrated Dictionary of Mesoamerican Religion Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05068 2 Roys Ralph L The Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1967 Further reading editBalalaeva O Pluzhnikov N Funk D Batyanova E Dybo A Bulgakova T Burykin A June 2019 The Myth of the World Tree in the Shamanism of Siberian Peoples Comments Funk D A In Search of the World Tree Some Thoughts on What Where and How We Search V poiskakh Mirovogo dreva razmyshleniia o tom chto gde i kak my ishchem Batyanova E P Trees Shamans and Other Worlds Derev ia shamany i inye miry Dybo A V The World Tree Data from Siberian Languages Mirovoe drevo dannye sibirskikh yazykov Bulgakova T D The World Tree in the Shamanic Image of the World among the Nanai Mirovoe drevo v shamanskoi kartine mira nanaitsev Burykin A A The Shamanic Theater and Its Attributes Shamanskii teatr i ego atributy Balalaeva O E and N V Pluzhnikov Response to Commenters Thinking about the Use of Discussions One of the Keys Otvet opponentam razmyshleniia o pol ze diskussii odin iz kliuchei Etnograficheskoe Obozrenie 3 80 122 doi 10 31857 S086954150005293 2 Bauks Michaela 6 May 2012 Sacred Trees in the Garden of Eden and Their Ancient Near Eastern Precursors Journal of Ancient Judaism 3 3 267 301 doi 10 30965 21967954 00303001 Butterworth E A S The Tree the Navel of the Earth Berlin de Gruyter 1970 Holmberg Uno Der Baum des Lebens Suomalaisen Tiedeakatemian toimituksia Sarja B Series B 16 3 ISSN 0066 2011 Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia Helsinki 1922 Auch Edition Amalia Bern 1996 ISBN 3 9520764 2 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to World tree Cosmology of the Ancient Balts by Vytautas Straizys and Libertas Klimka Lithuanian net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title World tree amp oldid 1223357720, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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