of
Pietro Vesconte, 1321. The inscription reads:
Letvini pagani - pagan Lithuanians. and the Holy Fire are depicted in Olaus Magnus'
Carta Marina, above the inscription LITVANIE PARS disk, 3096-2885 BC Early Lithuanian religion and customs were based on oral tradition. Therefore, the first records about Lithuanian mythology and beliefs were made by travellers, Christian missionaries, chronicle writers, and historians. Original Lithuanian oral tradition partially survived in national ritual and festive songs and legends, which started to be written down in the 18th century. Contemporary scholarship posits that few reliable sources on Lithuanian paganism have survived. These sources are often formulaic, limited in informational depth, and subject to standardized interpretations as guessed by Marius Ščavinskas who also says that
the old (pagan) customs (about which we know practically nothing). The oldest known texts about Baltic religion were written by
Herodotus (in which he describes the
Neuri in his
Histories) and
Tacitus (who mentions in
Germania that
Aestii wear boar figures and worship a
mother of gods). The Neuri were mentioned by Roman geographer
Pomponius Mela. In the 9th century, there is one attestation about
Prussian (Aestii) funeral traditions by
Wulfstan. In the 11th century,
Adam of Bremen mentioned Prussians living in Sambia and their holy groves. 12th century Muslim geographer
al-Idrisi mentioned Balts in
The Book of Roger as worshipers of Holy Fire and their flourishing city
Madsun (Mdsūhn, Mrsunh, Marsūna). The first recorded Baltic myth,
The Tale of Sovij, was detected as the complementary insert in the copy of
Chronographia (
Χρονογραφία) of Greek chronicler
John Malalas, from
Antioch, rewritten in 1262 in Lithuania. It is the first recorded Baltic myth and also the first placed among myths of other nations – Greek, Roman and others. The
Tale of Sovij describes the establishing of cremation custom which was common among Lithuanians and other Baltic nations. The names of the Baltic gods
:lt:Andajus,
Perkūnas,
:lt:Žvorūna, and a smith-god
:lt:Teliavelis are mentioned. When the
Prussian Crusade and
Lithuanian Crusade started, more first-hand knowledge about beliefs of Balts were recorded, but these records were mixed with propaganda about "infidels". One of the first valuable sources is the 1249
Treaty of Christburg between the pagan Prussian clans, represented by a papal legate, and the
Teutonic Knights. The treaty mentions the worship of Kurkas (
Curche), the god of harvest and grain, as well as pagan priests (
Tulissones vel Ligaschones) who performed certain rituals at funerals.
Chronicon terrae Prussiae is a major source for information on the Teutonic Order's battles with Old Prussians and Lithuanians. It mentions Prussian religion and the center of Baltic religion –
Romuva, where lived
Kriwe-Kriwajto, a powerful priest who was held in high regard by the Prussians, Lithuanians, and the Balts of Livonia. The
Livonian Rhymed Chronicle, which covers the period 1180 – 1343, contains records about the ethical codex of the Lithuanians and other Baltic peoples.
Descriptiones terrarum was written by an anonymous author in the middle of 13th century. The author was a guest at the coronation of Lithuanian king
Mindaugas. The author mentions that Lithuanians,
Yotwingians, and
Nalsenians embraced Christianity quite easily, since their childhood nuns were usually Christian, but Christianity in
Samogitia was introduced only with a sword.
Die Littauischen Wegeberichte (
The descriptions of Lithuanian routes) is a compilation of 100 routes into the western
Grand Duchy of Lithuania prepared by the Teutonic Knights and their spies in 1384–1402. It contains descriptions of Lithuanian holy groves and sacrificial places (
alkas). The
Hypatian Codex, written in 1425, mentions Lithuanian gods and customs.
Simon Grunau was the author of
Preussische Chronik, written sometime between 1517 and 1529. It became the main source for research of Prussian mythology and one of the main sources of Lithuanian mythology researchers and reconstructors. It was the first source which described the flag of
Vaidevutis. The book however also contained many questionable ideas.
Pierre d'Ailly, French theologian and cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church mentions the Sun (
Saulė) as one of the most important Lithuanian gods, which rejuvenates the world as its spirit. Like Romans, Lithuanians consecrate the Sunday entirely for the Sun. Although they worship the Sun, they have no temples. The astronomy of Lithuanians is, however, based on the lunar calendar. Enea Silvio Bartolomeo Piccolomini, who later became
Pope Pius II, in the section
de Europa of his book
Historia rerum ubique gestarum, cites
Jerome of Prague, who attested Lithuanians worshiping the Sun and the iron hammer which was used to free it from the tower in which it was being held captive. He also mentions Christian missionaries felling the holy groves and sacred oaks, which Lithuanians believed to be the homes of their gods.
Jan Łasicki created
De diis Samagitarum caeterorumque Sarmatarum et falsorum Christianorum (
Concerning the gods of Samagitians, and other Sarmatians and false Christians), written c. 1582 and published in 1615. Although it has some important facts, it also contains many inaccuracies, as he did not know Lithuanian and relied for his sources upon the first-hand accounts of others. The list of Lithuanian gods, provided by Jan Łasicki, is still considered as important and of interest for Lithuanian mythology. Later researchers
Teodor Narbutt,
Simonas Daukantas, and
Jonas Basanavičius relied on his work. , 1691
Matthäus Prätorius, in his two-volume
Deliciae Prussicae oder Preussische Schaubühne, written in 1690, collected facts about Prussian and Lithuanian rituals. He idealises the culture of Prussians and considers it belonging to the culture of the Antique world. Folklore collections by, among others,
Mečislovas Davainis-Silvestraitis (collected about 700 Samogitian fairy-tales and tales (
sakmės)) and
Jonas Basanavičius (collected hundreds of songs, tales, melodies and riddles). ==Scholarship==