on his three-legged horse in Alagirsky District, North Ossetia–Alania, towering over the main highway connecting North and South Ossetia. A number of modern statues like this one have been erected throughout Ossetia. The
Dzuary Lægtæ and Khetag Morgoyev define Assian theo-cosmology as a
pantheism and
non-dualism. Assianism contemplates the worship of a supreme
God,
Xwytsau (Хуыцау), who is the creator of the universe and of all beings, and is the universe itself, or the universe is "the body of God", comprising both the immanent material world of living and the transcendent spiritual world of God, where the dead make return. It has "no tangible, personal qualities, nor extension in space and time", and it is pure light. The transcendent spiritual dimension of God is the "World of Light" (Рухс Дун,
Rukhs Dun) or "True World" (Æцæг Дун,
Ætsæg Dun), while the immanent material dimension of life is the "Illusory World" (Мæнг Дун,
Mæng Dun). The supreme God may be called upon by a multiplicity of epithets, including simply "Styr Xwytsau" (Стыр Хуыцау), meaning "Great God", but also "Duneskænæg" (Дунескæнæг), "Creator of the Universe", "Meskænæg Xwytsau" (Мескаенаег Хуыцау) and "Xwytsauty Xwytsau" (Хуыцаутты Хуыцау), meaning "God of the Gods". Assian theology affirms that God is within every creature, is "the head of everything", and in humans it manifests as reason, measure and righteousness (
bar).
God and its triune manifestations Lesser gods, including the most important of them,
Uastyrdzhi, are worshipped as intermediaries of Xwytsau. Defined as "forces" and "spirits", they are the "ideas" through which the supreme God governs the universe. In another definition, they are God's "immanent manifestations", elements of the single whole, endowed with form and functions. The supreme God unfolds in triads. The fundamental triad is that of God–matter–spirit: •
Xwytsau /
Xuitsau (Хуыцау, "Heaven") — is the supreme God of the universe, the source of it and of the highest wisdom attainable by humans, creator and patron of worlds, without either image or form, ineffable and omnipresent; •
Iuag (Иуаг) or
Iuæg (Иуæг) — is the substance-matter of everything, both uncreated and created worlds; •
Ud (Уд) — is the universal
self, that is attained by an individual soul when it identifies with
Mon (Мон), the universal mind-spirit, i.e. God's manifestation; ultimately,
Mon and
Ud are the same, and they are Xwytsau's manifestations. On the plane of the phenomenon, God's universal mind-spirit further manifests as the triad of: •
Uas (Уас = "Truth", "Good Word") or
Ard (Ард = "Right", "Law") — the order of God, which produces well-being in reality; •
Uastyrdzhi (Уастырджи) — the good-spell incarnated in humanity, who are bearers of divine reason, enlightened consciousnesses, awareness of God; in other words, Uastyrdzhi is the archetype of the perfected man, follower of the order of God, and is the mediator of all other deities; •
Duagi (дуаги; pl. дауджытæ / дауджита →
daudzhytæ /
daudzhita) or
duag (дуаг) and
barduag (бардуаг) — gods, deities, forces which continuously mould the world alternating forms according to the order of God; the most important among them are the
arvon daudzhita (арвон дауджита), the seven deities of the seven planets. Another distinction is established between the three cosmological states of: •
Zedy (зэды, pl. задтæ →
zadtæ) or
zhad (жад) —
tutelary forces, generative deities, which accompany the birth and development of beings according to the order of God; •
Uayugi (уайуги, pl. уайгуытæ / уайгуыта →
uayguytæ /
uayguyta) or
uayug (уайуг) — destructive forces which violate the order of God and distance from light; in humankind they are the cause of passions, fears, pride and nervous diseases; •
Dalimon (далимон) — the lowest possible state of mind when it identifies with brute matter, chaos; its meaning is "lower (
dali) spirit (
mon)" and is also a category comprising all terrestrial unclear entities, contrasted with
ualimon (уалимон), "upper (
uali) spirit (
mon)", which comprises all celestial clear entities. In the theology of Khetag Morgoyev,
barduag is a general concept comprehending the
zhad and the
dzuar (дзуар), with the former representing the deities as transcendent ideas and the latter their immanent extension. The term
dzuar is indeed used polysemantically for both a given deity and its shrine(s). The activity of the
barduag is called
minzhvar (минжвар), a concept difficult to be translated which means "making connections", "arranging things in the right way". The most important of them are the cycles of nature and of the cycles of human economy, which coalesce and interconnect in the time–space continuum, constituting the calendar of the year. Each thing has its
zhad, there are
zhads of the kins/families, of villages, of natural environments; each phenomenon, event and point of time–space contains a
zhad.
The seven planetary deities and other deities , the Ossetian god of wild animals and patron of hunters, in the Ossetian mountains. Like other
ancient Iranian religions, the ancient Scythian religion contemplated seven deities (арвон дауджита,
arvon daudzhita) as most important among the others, each of which associated to a planet and to certain natural phenomena, living beings and plants. The total number of
daudzhita recorded in traditional Ossetian texts is about ninety.
Uastyrdzhi is the chief among them, as he can access directly the supreme Xwytsau, and all the other deities are introduced by him. They are believed to either favour or punish people, and therefore sacrifices (of bulls, rams, and sometimes goats) are offered to them.
Herodotus attested the seven Scythian gods as: Papaios (corresponding to
Zeus), the sky god; Tabiti (
Hestia), the hearth goddess (today called Safa, and symbolically associated to the sacred chain of the hearth of the house); Api (
Gaia), the earth goddess; Oitosyros (
Apollo), the sun god; Argimpasa (
Aphrodite), the fertility goddess; and "
Herakles" and "
Ares" for whom Herodotus did not provide the Scythian name. In ancient Ossetian, the seven days of the week were still named after the seven deities, and, in the conservative Digor dialect of Ossetian, Monday is still
Avdisar, "Head of the Seven". According to Foltz, "Ares" was probably
Mithra, and the modern Uastyrdzhi; he was widely worshipped through altars in the form of a sword planted in a pile of stones or brushwood. The cult of the sword continued among the Alans as late as the first century CE. Herodotus also mentioned an eighth deity worshipped among the Royal Scythians, Thagimasidas, the water god, equated with
Poseidon. The modern Ossetians have preserved the sevenfold-eightfold structure, though the deities have changed as have their names, which in some cases are adaptations of the names of Christian saints: Uastyrdzhi (whose name derives from "
Saint George"), the god of contracts and war (the Iranian Mithra), but also general archetype of men and of disadvantaged people; Uatsilla ("
Saint Elijah"), the thunder god; Uatstutyr ("Saint Theodore"), the protector of wolves; Fælværa (maybe the conflation of "
Florus and Laurus"), the protector of livestock; Kurdalægon, the blacksmith god (the Iranian
Kaveh, Kawa); Donbettyr, the water god; Mikaelgabyrta (conflation of "
Michael and
Gabriel"), the fertility and underworld god; and Æfsati, the god of the hunt.
Ethics According to Assian doctrines, human nature is the same as the nature of all being. Humankind is a
microcosm within a macrocosm, or broader context, and the same is true for all other beings. The universe is kept in harmony by
Uas or
Ard, the order of God, the foundation of divine reason, measure, and righteousness (
bar). The deities (
daudzhita or
ualimon) form the world according to this universal law, while demons (
uayguyta or
dalimon) are those entities which act disrupting the good contexts of the deities, and are the causes of illness and death. Every entity is governed "by it itself" within its own sphere of responsibility; God and its order are not seen as an external force of coercion. These positive and negative forces also influence humanity's consciousness: A person may take the side of either deities or demons, and this choice will shape this person's life and action. If a person is able to subdue passions, not putting exclusively egoistic material motives in their actions, they become open to the
Uas, or its receptacle (уасдан,
uasdan; good-spell receptacle), a wise noble who perceives the order of God and higher spirits and receives their energy, acting like them by producing good, truth and beauty. On the contrary, if a person's actions are driven by egoistic material ends,
Dalimon and demons own that person, who then becomes a source of evil, lies and ugliness. In the words of Khetag Morgoyev, humankind is endowed with the
free will to choose between good and evil, deities and demons. ==Practices==