They were said to look after pregnant women, and after giving birth to a child, they determined his fate for the rest of his life. The
rozhanitsy appeared at midnight three days after the birth of the child, at his cradle, when they were supposed to foretell the child's good or bad fate for life. After determining the fate of the child, it was saved as an indelible mark on the forehead. The
rozhanitsy's opinions on the future of the child were often contradictory, and the final, oldest parent makes the final decision. The first, youngest
rozhanitsa spins, the second measures and the third cuts off the thread of life – the longer the thread, the longer life will be. According to
Procopius, Slavs did not believe in destiny: According to sources, a trapezoidal table with bread, honey, cheese and groat (
kutia) was prepared in honor of the
rozhanitsy, sometimes the meal was left in the shrines. The hair cut during a child's
first haircut was also sacrified to the rozhanitsy.
Slovenes and Croats used to put candles, wine, bread and salt in the room where the woman lies the day after delivery. Failure to do so threatened that rozhanitsy would determine a child's bad fortune. Slovenians living in
Istria laid bread under the boulders next to the caves in which
rozhanitsy were said to live, and in Bulgaria suppers were prepared for them. In Czechia, a table was prepared at which white clothes and chairs were waiting for the
rozhanitsy along with a chair on which bread, salt and butter were laid, and sometimes cheese and beer. One of Rod and the
rozhanitsy's holidays was said to be
December 26, which after Christianization was replaced by the
Orthodox Church with the
Feast of the Mother of God. The
rozhanitsy were said to live at the end of the world in the palace of the Sun, which could connect them to the solar deity. In many European religions, there are three female figures foretelling the child's future, which indicates the
Indo-European origin of the
rozhanitsy: •
Roman:
Parcae •
Greek:
Moirai •
Albanian:
Ora or
Fatia •
Norse:
Norns •
Celtic:
Brigid in three persons or three
Matres •
Baltic:
Laima, who sometimes appeared in three forms == Goddess Rozhanitsa ==