The deity was named in the
Hypatian Codex and
John Malalas's chronicle of 1261 as
Telvelik. In Lithuanian mythology, the devils (
velniai) first discovered the craft of smithing, which was later taken over by humans.
Velnias elementally represented
chthonic forces and the dead, and can be interpreted as a terrestrial
Wayland the Smith who creates by the method of forging.
Algirdas Julien Greimas believed that Velnias is an archetypal mythological blacksmith, analogous to Teliavelis by its etymology; the prefix
Telia- may be related to
tellus, the Latin word for the Earth, and the suffix
-velis appears to relate to the deity Velnias. According to
Aleksander Brückner, the name Teliavelis means "god of the road". However,
Norbertas Vėlius claimed that instead it meant "god of the Earth". Balticist
Vladimir Toporov suggested that the name is borrowed from
Scandinavian mythology. == References ==