NOTES
353
- Saxo Grammaticus, pp. 564 ff.
- See supra, pp. 335–36.
- Saxo Grammaticus, p. 577; Knytlingasaga, cxxii.
- Saxo Grammaticus, p. 578; Knytlingasaga, cxxii.
- Saxo Grammaticus, p. 578.
- Herbord, iii. 6; Ebbo, iii, 8.
- See supra, p. 280.
- Chronicle of Pulkawa, in Pontes rerum Bohemicarum, v. 89, Prague, 1893.
- The chief sources for Triglav are Herbord, ii. 31; Ebbo, ii. 13, iii. i; Monk of Priefling, Vita Ottonis episcopi Babenhergensis, iii. i.
- The name appears in various forms, Rhetari, Redarii, Riaduri, Riediries, etc., as does that of their capital, Riedegost, etc.
- vi. 23.
- Epistola Brunonis ad Henricum regem, ed. A. Bielowski, in Monumenta Poloniae historica, i. 226, Lwów, 1864.
- ii. 18.
- i. 2, 21, 52.
- For the opposite view, that there actually was a deity Radigast, see Leger, Mythologie, pp. 144–51.
- Adam of Bremen, iii. 50; Helmold, i. 23.
- i. 52.
- Cited by A. Bruckner, in ASP vi. 220–22 (1882).
- 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.
- i. 83.
- cxxii. Leger, Mythologie, p. 22, regards Tiemoglav as an error for *Carnoglovy ("Black-Headed").
- vi. 17.
- ib. vii. 47.
- i. 52.
Part II
- Nestor, xxxviii (tr. Leger, p. 64).
- ib. xxvii (tr. Leger, p. 41).
- ib. (tr. Leger, p. 37).
- See the passages collected by Krek, Einleitung, p. 384, note i.
- Nestor, xliii (tr. Leger, pp. 96–97, 98).
- Ed. Petrograd, 1879, pp. 1–2.
- Cf. Mythology of All Races, Boston, 1916, i. 153, 159–60.
- Afanasiyev, i. 250.