Page:The Mythology of All Races Vol 3 (Celtic and Slavic).djvu/519

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NOTES
353
  1. Saxo Grammaticus, pp. 564 ff.
  2. See supra, pp. 335–36.
  3. Saxo Grammaticus, p. 577; Knytlingasaga, cxxii.
  4. Saxo Grammaticus, p. 578; Knytlingasaga, cxxii.
  5. Saxo Grammaticus, p. 578.
  6. Herbord, iii. 6; Ebbo, iii, 8.
  7. See supra, p. 280.
  8. Chronicle of Pulkawa, in Pontes rerum Bohemicarum, v. 89, Prague, 1893.
  9. The chief sources for Triglav are Herbord, ii. 31; Ebbo, ii. 13, iii. i; Monk of Priefling, Vita Ottonis episcopi Babenhergensis, iii. i.
  10. The name appears in various forms, Rhetari, Redarii, Riaduri, Riediries, etc., as does that of their capital, Riedegost, etc.
  11. vi. 23.
  12. Epistola Brunonis ad Henricum regem, ed. A. Bielowski, in Monumenta Poloniae historica, i. 226, Lwów, 1864.
  13. ii. 18.
  14. i. 2, 21, 52.
  15. For the opposite view, that there actually was a deity Radigast, see Leger, Mythologie, pp. 144–51.
  16. Adam of Bremen, iii. 50; Helmold, i. 23.
  17. i. 52.
  18. Cited by A. Bruckner, in ASP vi. 220–22 (1882).
  19. Priapus was a Graeco-Roman deity of fertility who was represented in obscene form and worshipped licentiously; for Baal-peor cf. Numbers xxv. 1–5, Hosea ix, 10, as well as Numbers xxxi. 16, Revelation ii. 14.
  20. i. 83.
  21. cxxii. Leger, Mythologie, p. 22, regards Tiemoglav as an error for *Carnoglovy ("Black-Headed").
  22. vi. 17.
  23. ib. vii. 47.
  24. i. 52.

Part II

  1. Nestor, xxxviii (tr. Leger, p. 64).
  2. ib. xxvii (tr. Leger, p. 41).
  3. ib. (tr. Leger, p. 37).
  4. See the passages collected by Krek, Einleitung, p. 384, note i.
  5. Nestor, xliii (tr. Leger, pp. 96–97, 98).
  6. Ed. Petrograd, 1879, pp. 1–2.
  7. Cf. Mythology of All Races, Boston, 1916, i. 153, 159–60.
  8. Afanasiyev, i. 250.