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  2. Enji (deity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enji_(deity)

    In the Illyrian pantheon the fire deity would have expanded his function considerably, therefore ousting the cosmic-heavenly deity, becoming the most distinguished Illyrian god in Roman times at the time when the weekday names were formed in the Albanian language, as Thursday (e enj-te) was dedicated to him; in this view the Latin Jovis dies ...

  3. Zojz (deity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zojz_(deity)

    Zojz [a] is a sky and lightning god in Albanian pagan mythology. [2] Regarded as the chief god and the highest of all gods, traces of his worship survived in northern Albania until the early 20th century, and in some forms still continue today. [3] The old beliefs in the Sky (Alb. Qielli) are pagan beliefs preserved by Albanians since ancient ...

  4. I Verbti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Verbti

    I Verbti (Albanian: [i ˈveɾbti]) is an Albanian adjectival noun meaning "the blind one", [note 1] which was used in northern Albanian folk beliefs to refer to the god of fire and wind in the Zadrima region, and to the thunderstorm god in Dukagjin and the Malësia e Vogël; in Shala the thunderstorm god was referred to as Rmoria.

  5. Perëndi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perëndi

    The Albanians of Ukraine use Parandí for "God" and parandítë for "gods". [4] The word perëndi means "heaven, sky" in some Albanian dialects, with both direct and figurative meanings. A typical example is an Albanian popular phrase gruri gjer mbë perëndi ("a pile of grain up to the skies"). [3]

  6. Nëna e Vatrës - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nëna_e_Vatrës

    Nëna e Vatrës is a mythological figure of the hearth fire commonly found in the folk beliefs of the Albanians, thus there are many dialectal variations, singular or plural: Nëna e Vatrës/Nana e Votrës, E Ëma e Vatrës/E Ama e Votrës, Mëma e Vatrës/Mama e Vatrës, Shtriga e Vatrës/Votrës, Plaka e Vatrës/Votrës, Mëmat e Vatrës/Mamat e Votrës, Xhuxhet e Vatrës etc. [6] [3] The ...

  7. Albanian traditional tattooing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albanian_traditional_tattooing

    Furthermore, the crosses (including swastikas) have been explained by scholars as symbols of the deified Fire , [15] and in particular of the fire god Enji, [14] who evidently was the most prominent god of the Albanian pantheon in Roman times by interpreting Jupiter, when week-day names were formed in the Albanian language as thursday (e enjte ...

  8. Talas (deity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talas_(deity)

    So the god Talas went after the wife of the highest god and as soon as he reached her, he raped her through the use of brute force. Afterwards the wife of the highest god, despite being above all the other goddesses, decided to take her own life due to the desecration she suffered, [ note 1 ] but only after telling her husband what she had been ...

  9. Ora (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ora_(mythology)

    The Ora (Albanian: orë, definite form: ora, pl.: orë/t) is an Albanian mythological figure that every human possesses from birth, associated with human destiny and fate. [1] [2] The essential function of the ora is to maintain the order of the universe and to enforce its laws.