Linguists have been able to reconstruct the names of some deities in the
Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) from many types of sources. Some of the proposed deity names are more readily accepted among scholars than others. According to philologist
Martin L. West, "the clearest cases are the cosmic and elemental deities: the
Sky-god, his partner
Earth, and his
twin sons; the Sun, the Sun Maiden, and the
Dawn; gods of
storm, wind, water, fire; and terrestrial presences such as the Rivers, spring and forest nymphs, and a god of the wild who guards roads and herds".
Genealogy The most securely reconstructed genealogy of the Proto-Indo-European gods (
Götterfamilie) is given as follows: {{tree chart||DIV|~|~|SOL| | |PER|~|~|DHE| | |HAU
Heavenly deities Sky Father head of
Zeus on a gold
stater from the Greek city of
Lampsacus, c 360–340 BC.|183x183px The head deity of the Proto-Indo-European pantheon was the god , whose name literally means "Sky Father". Regarded as the Sky or Day conceived as a divine entity, and thus the dwelling of the gods, the Heaven,' Dyēws is, by far, the most well-attested of all the Proto-Indo-European deities. As the gateway to the gods and the father of both the
Divine Twins and the goddess of the dawn (
Hausos), Dyēws was a prominent deity in the pantheon. He was however likely not their ruler, or the holder of the supreme power like
Zeus and
Jupiter. Due to his celestial nature, Dyēus is often described as "all-seeing", or "with wide vision" in Indo-European myths. It is unlikely however that he was in charge of the supervision of justice and righteousness, as it was the case for the Zeus or the
Indo-Iranian Mithra–
Varuna duo; but he was suited to serve at least as a witness to oaths and treaties. The Greek god Zeus and the Roman god Jupiter both appear as the head gods of their respective pantheons. is also attested in the as , a minor ancestor figure mentioned in only a few hymns, and in the Illyrian god
Dei-Pátrous, attested once by
Hesychius of Alexandria. The ritual expressions
Debess tēvs in Latvian and
attas Isanus in Hittite are not exact descendants of the formula , but they do preserve its original structure.
Dawn Goddess in her chariot flying over the sea, red-figure
krater from South
Italy, 430–420 BC,
Staatliche Antikensammlungen, Munich. has been reconstructed as the Proto-Indo-European goddess of the dawn. In three traditions (Indic, Greek, Baltic), the Dawn is the "daughter of heaven", . In these three branches plus a fourth (Italic), the reluctant dawn-goddess is chased or beaten from the scene for tarrying. An ancient epithet designating the Dawn appears to have been , "Sky Daughter". Depicted as opening the gates of Heaven when she appears at the beginning of the day, Hausōs is generally seen as never-ageing or born again each morning. Associated with red or golden cloths, she is often portrayed as dancing. Twenty-one hymns in the
Rigveda are dedicated to the dawn goddess and a single passage from the
Avesta honors the dawn goddess Ušå. The dawn goddess
Eos appears prominently in early Greek poetry and mythology. The Roman dawn goddess
Aurora is a reflection of the Greek Eos, but the original Roman dawn goddess may have continued to be worshipped under the cultic title
Mater Matuta. The Anglo-Saxons worshipped the goddess
Ēostre, who was associated with a festival in spring which later gave its name to a month, which gave its name to the Christian holiday of
Easter in English. The name
Ôstarmânôth in
Old High German has been taken as an indication that a similar goddess was also worshipped in southern Germany. The Lithuanian dawn goddess
Aušra was still acknowledged in the sixteenth century.
Sun and Moon holding a child in her arms from between 1400 and 1200 BC. and are reconstructed as the Proto-Indo-European deity of the Sun and deity of the Moon respectively. Their gender varies according to the different mythologies of the Indo-European peoples. The daily course of across the sky on a horse-driven chariot is a common motif among Indo-European myths. While it is probably inherited, the motif certainly appeared after the introduction of the wheel in the
Pontic–Caspian steppe about 3500 BC, and is therefore a late addition to Proto-Indo-European culture. Although the sun was personified as an independent deity, the Proto-Indo-Europeans also visualized the sun as the "lamp of Dyēws" or the "eye of Dyēws";
Divine Twins The
Horse Twins are a set of twin brothers found throughout nearly every Indo-European pantheon who usually have a name that means 'horse', , although the names are not always cognate, and no Proto-Indo-European name for them can be reconstructed., New York). In most traditions, the Horse Twins are brothers of the Sun Maiden or Dawn goddess, and the sons of the sky god, . The
Greek Dioscuri (
Castor and Pollux) are the "sons of
Zeus"; the
Vedic Divó nápātā (
Aśvins) are the "sons of
Dyaús", the sky-god; the
Lithuanian Dievo sūneliai (
Ašvieniai) are the "sons of the God" (
Dievas); and the
Latvian Dieva dēli are likewise the "sons of the God" (Dievs). Represented as young men and the steeds who pull the sun across the sky, the Divine Twins rode horses (sometimes they were depicted as horses themselves) and rescued men from mortal peril in battle or at sea. The Divine Twins are often differentiated: one is represented as a young warrior while the other is seen as a healer or concerned with domestic duties. In most tales where they appear, the Divine Twins rescue the Dawn from a watery peril, a theme that emerged from their role as the solar steeds. At night, the horses of the sun returned to the east in a golden boat, where they traversed the sea to bring back the Sun each morning. During the day, they crossed the sky in pursuit of their consort, the morning star. Other reflexes may be found in the
Anglo-Saxon Hengist and
Horsa (whose names mean "stallion" and "horse"), the Celtic "Dioskouroi" said by
Timaeus to be venerated by Atlantic Celts as a set of horse twins, the
Germanic Alcis, a pair of young male brothers worshipped by the
Naharvali, or the Welsh
Brân and
Manawydan. The horse twins could have been based on the morning and evening star (the planet
Venus) and they often have stories about them in which they "accompany" the Sun goddess, because of the close orbit of the planet Venus to the sun.
Mitra-Varuna Although the etymological association is often deemed untenable, some scholars (such as
Georges Dumézil and S. K. Sen) have proposed or (also the eponymous god in the reconstructed dialogue
The king and the god) as the nocturnal sky and benevolent counterpart of Dyēws, with possible cognates in Greek
Ouranos and Vedic
Varuna, from the PIE root ("to encompass, cover"). Worunos may have personified the firmament, or dwelled in the night sky. In both Greek and Vedic poetry, Ouranos and Varuna are portrayed as "wide-looking", bounding or seizing their victims, and having or being a heavenly "seat". In the three-sky cosmological model, the celestial phenomena linking the nightly and daily skies is embodied by a "Binder-god": the Greek
Kronos, a transitional deity between Ouranos and Zeus in
Hesiod's
Theogony, the Indic
Savitṛ, associated with the rising and setting of the sun in the , and the Roman
Saturnus, whose feast marked the period immediately preceding the
winter solstice.
Other propositions Some scholars have proposed a consort goddess named or , a spouse of
Dyēws with a possible descendant in the Greek goddess
Dione. A thematic echo may also occur in
Vedic India, as both
Indra's wife
Indrānī and
Zeus's consort Dione display a jealous and quarrelsome disposition under provocation. A second descendant may be found in Dia, a mortal said to unite with Zeus in a Greek myth. The story leads ultimately to the birth of the
Centaurs after the mating of Dia's husband
Ixion with the phantom of
Hera, the spouse of Zeus. The reconstruction is however only attested in those two traditions and therefore not secured. The Greek
Hera, the Roman
Juno, the Germanic
Frigg and the Indic
Shakti are often depicted as the protectress of marriage and fertility, or as the bestowal of the gift of prophecy.
James P. Mallory and
Douglas Q. Adams note however that "these functions are much too generic to support the supposition of a distinct PIE 'consort goddess' and many of the 'consorts' probably represent assimilations of earlier goddesses who may have had nothing to do with marriage."
Nature deities The substratum of Proto-Indo-European mythology is
animistic. This native animism is still reflected in the Indo-European daughter cultures. In Norse mythology the
Vættir are for instance reflexes of the native animistic
nature spirits and deities. Trees have a central position in Indo-European daughter cultures, and are thought to be the abode of
tree spirits. In Indo-European tradition, the
storm is deified as a highly active, assertive, and sometimes aggressive element; the fire and water are deified as cosmic elements that are also necessary for the functioning of the household; the deified
earth is associated with fertility and growth on the one hand, and with death and the underworld on the other.
Earth Mother The
earth goddess, , is portrayed as the vast and dark house of mortals, in contrast with Dyēws, the bright sky and seat of the immortal gods. She is associated with fertility and growth, but also with death as the final dwelling of the deceased. She was likely the consort of the sky father, . The duality is associated with fertility, as the crop grows from her moist soil, nourished by the rain of Dyēws. The Earth is thus portrayed as the giver of good things: she is exhorted to become pregnant in an
Old English prayer; and Slavic peasants described Zemlja-matushka, Mother Earth, as a prophetess that shall offer favorable harvest to the community. The unions of Zeus with Semele and Demeter is likewise associated with fertility and growth in
Greek mythology. This pairing is further attested in the Vedic pairing of Dyáus Pitā and
Prithvi Mater, the Greek pairing of
Ouranos and
Gaia, the Roman pairing of Jupiter and
Tellus Mater from
Macrobius's
Saturnalia, and the Norse pairing of
Odin and
Jörð. Although Odin is not a reflex of , his cult may have subsumed aspects of an earlier chief deity who was. The Earth and Heaven couple is however not at the origin of the other gods, as the
Divine Twins and
Hausos were probably conceived by
Dyēws alone.
Cognates include the Albanian
Dheu and Zonja e Dheut, Great Mother Earth and Earth Goddess, respectively;
Žemyna, a Lithuanian goddess of earth celebrated as the bringer of flowers; the Avestan
Zām, the Zoroastrian concept of 'earth'; Zemes Māte ("Mother Earth"), one of the goddesses of death in
Latvian mythology; the Hittite Dagan-zipas ("Genius of the Earth"); the
Slavic Mati Syra Zemlya ("Mother Moist Earth"); the Greek Chthôn (Χθών), the partner of
Ouranos in
Aeschylus'
Danaids, and the
chthonic deities of the underworld. The possibilities of a
Thracian goddess Zemelā () and a
Messapic goddess Damatura (), at the origin of the Greek
Semele and
Demeter respectively, are less secured. The commonest epithets attached to the Earth goddess are (the "Broad One"), attested in the Vedic
Pṛthvī, the Greek Plataia and Gaulish
Litavis, and ("Mother Broad One"), attested in the Vedic and Old English formulas
Pṛthvī Mātā and
Fīra Mōdor. Other frequent epithets include the "All-Bearing One", the one who bears all things or creatures, and the "mush-nourishing" or the "rich-pastured".
Weather deity *Perkʷunos has been reconstructed as the Proto-Indo-European god of lightning and storms. It either meant "the Striker" or "the Lord of Oaks", and he was probably represented as holding a hammer or a similar weapon. Thunder and lightning had both a destructive and regenerative connotation: a lightning bolt can cleave a stone or a tree, but is often accompanied with fructifying rain. This likely explains the strong association between the thunder-god and
oaks in some traditions (oak being among the densest of trees is most prone to lightning strikes). He is often portrayed in connection with stone and (wooded) mountains, probably because the mountainous forests were his realm. The striking of devils, demons or evildoers by Perkʷunos is a motif encountered in the myths surrounding the Lithuanian
Perkūnas and the Vedic
Parjanya, a possible cognate, but also in the Germanic
Thor, a thematic echo of Perkʷunos. The deities generally agreed to be
cognates stemming from are confined to the European continent, and he could have been a motif developed later in Western Indo-European traditions. The evidence include the Norse goddess
Fjǫrgyn (the mother of
Thor), the Lithuanian god
Perkūnas, the Slavic god
Perúnú, and the Celtic
Hercynian (
Herkynío) mountains or forests.
Perëndi, an Albanian thunder-god (from the stem
per-en-, "to strike", attached to -
di, "sky", from ) is also a probable cognate. The evidence could extend to the Vedic tradition if one adds the god of rain, thunder and lightning
Parjánya, although Sanskrit
sound laws rather predict a form. From another root ("thunder") stems a group of cognates found in the Germanic, Celtic and Roman thunder-gods
Thor,
Taranis,
(Jupiter) Tonans and (Zeus) Keraunos. According to Jackson, "they may have arisen as the result of fossilisation of an original epithet or
epiclesis", as the Vedic
Parjanya is also called ("Thunderer"). The Roman god
Mars may be a thematic echo of Perkʷunos, since he originally had thunderer characteristics.
Fire deities statue of
Agni, the Vedic god of fire.|upright Linguistic evidence from Vedic and Balto-Slavic sources suggests that Proto-Indo-Europeans personified fire as a deity . The Vedic god Agni reflects this figure as the divine fire of heaven, earth, and ritual. Cognates in Balto-Slavic, such as Lithuanian
Ugnis and Latvian
Uguns, indicate a parallel tradition of sacred fire. Slavic veneration of fire is attested in medieval sources under names such as
ogonĭ and the deity
Svarožič. Albanian tradition preserves a likely reflex of
h₁n̥gʷnis in the fire god
Enji, whose name appears in the weekday
e enjte ('Thursday'). Fire (
zjarri) is deified in Albanian practice and associated with protection, purification, ancestral continuity, agricultural fertility, and the cults of the Sun (
Dielli) and the hearth (
vatër). In other traditions, as the sacral name of the dangerous fire may have become a
word taboo, the reflexes of the Indo-European root served instead as an ordinary term for fire, as in the Latin
ignis. Scholars generally agree that the cult of the hearth dates back to Proto-Indo-European times. The domestic fire required care, offerings, and was ritually transferred when relocating. Indo-Iranian
Ātar, Albanian
Nëna e Vatrës ('Hearth Mother'), Scythian
Tabiti, and the Greek and Roman hearth goddesses
Hestia and
Vesta all reflect this tradition. Hearth rituals, such as circular hearth-fires and the custom of circling the hearth during marriage or childbirth rites, are shared across Indo-European cultures.
Water deities in the
Padmanabhapuran Palace,
Kerala. Based on the similarity of motifs attested over a wide geographical extent, it is very likely that Proto-Indo-European beliefs featured some sorts of beautiful and sometimes dangerous water goddesses who seduced mortal men, akin to the Greek
naiads, the
nymphs of fresh waters. The Vedic
Apsarás are said to frequent forest lakes, rivers, trees, and mountains. They are of outstanding beauty, and
Indra sends them to lure men. In
Ossetic mythology, the waters are ruled by
Donbettyr ("Water-Peter"), who has daughters of extraordinary beauty and with golden hair. In
Armenian folklore, the Parik take the form of beautiful women who dance amid nature. The Slavonic water nymphs
víly are also depicted as alluring maidens with long golden or green hair who like young men and can do harm if they feel offended. The Albanian mountain nymphs,
Perit and
Zana, are portrayed as beautiful but also dangerous creatures. Similar to the Baltic nymph-like Laumes, they have the habit of abducting children. The beautiful and long-haired Laumes also have sexual relations and short-lived marriages with men. The
Breton Korrigans are irresistible creatures with golden hair wooing mortal men and causing them to perish for love. The Norse
Huldra, Iranian
Ahuraīnīs and Lycian Eliyãna can likewise be regarded as reflexes of the water nymphs. A wide range of linguistic and cultural evidence attest the holy status of the terrestrial (potable) waters , venerated collectively as "the Waters" or divided into "Rivers and Springs". The cults of fountains and rivers, which may have preceded Proto-Indo-European beliefs by tens of thousands of years, was also prevalent in their tradition. Some authors have proposed or as the Proto-Indo-European god of the waters. The name literally means "Grandson [or
Nephew] of the Waters". Linguists reconstruct his name from that of the Vedic god
Apám Nápát, the Roman god
Neptūnus, and the Old Irish god
Nechtain. Although such a god has been solidly reconstructed in
Proto-Indo-Iranian religion, Mallory and Adams nonetheless still reject him as a Proto-Indo-European deity on linguistic grounds. A river goddess has been proposed based on the Vedic goddess
Dānu, the Irish goddess
Danu, the Welsh goddess
Dôn and the names of the rivers
Danube,
Don,
Dnieper, and
Dniester. Mallory and Adams however note that while the lexical correspondence is probable, "there is really no evidence for a specific river goddess" in Proto-Indo-European mythology "other than the deification of the concept of 'river' in Indic tradition". Some have also proposed the reconstruction of a sea god named based on the Greek god
Triton and the Old Irish word , meaning "sea". Mallory and Adams also reject this reconstruction as having no basis, asserting that the "lexical correspondence is only just possible and with no evidence of a cognate sea god in Irish."
Wind deities , Vedic god of the wind, shown upon his antelope
vahana. Evidence for the deification of the wind is found in most Indo-European traditions. The root ("to blow") is at the origin of the two words for the wind: and . The deity is indeed often depicted as a couple in the
Indo-Iranian tradition.
Vayu-Vāta is a dual divinity in the
Avesta, Vāta being associated with the stormy winds and described as coming from everywhere ("from below, from above, from in front, from behind"). Similarly, the Vedic
Vāyu, the lord of the winds, is connected in the
Vedas with
Indra—the king of
Svarga Loka (also called Indraloka)—while the other deity Vāta represents a more violent sort of wind and is instead associated with
Parjanya—the god of rain and thunder. Other
cognates include Hitt.
huwant-, Lith.
vėjas,
Toch. B yente, Lat.
uentus,
PGmc. , or Welsh . The Slavic
Viy is another possible equivalent entity. Based on these different traditions, Yaroslav Vassilkov postulated a proto-Indo-European wind deity which "was probably marked by ambivalence, and combined in itself both positive and negative characteristics". This god is hypothesized to have been linked to life and death through giving and taking breath from people.
Guardian deity The association between the Greek god
Pan and the Vedic god
Pūshan was first identified in 1924 by German linguist
Hermann Collitz. Both were worshipped as pastoral deities, which led scholars to reconstruct ("Protector") as a pastoral god guarding roads and herds. He may have had an unfortunate appearance, a bushy beard and a keen sight. He was also closely affiliated with goats or bucks: Pan has goat's legs while goats are said to pull the car of Pūshān (the animal was also sacrificed to him on occasion).
Cattle deity Jaan Puhvel has proposed a cattle god called which he links to the Slavic god
Veles, the Lithuanian god
Velnias, and less certainly to Old Norse
Ullr.
Other propositions In 1855,
Adalbert Kuhn suggested that the Proto-Indo-Europeans may have believed in a set of helper deities, whom he reconstructed based on the Germanic
elves and the Hindu . Although this proposal is often mentioned in academic writings, very few scholars actually accept it since the
cognate relationship is linguistically difficult to justify. While stories of elves, satyrs, goblins and giants show recurrent traits in Indo-European traditions, West notes that "it is difficult to see so coherent an overall pattern as with the nymphs. It is unlikely that the Indo-Europeans had no concept of such creatures, but we cannot define with any sharpness of outline what their conceptions were." A wild god named has also been proposed, based on the Vedic
Rudrá and the
Old Russian Rŭglŭ. Problematic is whether the name derives from ("rend, tear apart"; akin to Lat.
rullus, "rustic"), or rather from ("howl"). Although the name of the divinities are not cognates, a horse goddess portrayed as bearing twins and in connection with fertility and marriage has been proposed based on the Gaulish
Epona, Irish
Macha and Welsh
Rhiannon, with other thematic echos in the Greek and Indic traditions.
Demeter transformed herself into a mare when she was raped by
Poseidon appearing as a stallion, and she gave birth to a daughter and a horse,
Areion. Similarly, the Indic tradition tells of
Saranyu fleeing from her husband Vivásvat when she assumed the form of a mare. Vivásvat metamorphosed into a stallion and of their intercourse were born the twin horses, the
Aśvins. The Irish goddess Macha gave birth to twins, a mare and a boy, and the Welsh figure Rhiannon bore a child who was reared along with a horse.
Societal deities Fate goddesses It is highly probable that the Proto-Indo-Europeans believed in
three fate goddesses who
spun the destinies of mankind. Although such fate goddesses are not directly attested in the Indo-Aryan tradition, the
Atharvaveda does contain an allusion comparing fate to a
warp. Furthermore, the three Fates appear in nearly every other Indo-European mythology. The earliest attested set of fate goddesses are the
Gulses in Hittite mythology, who were said to preside over the individual destinies of human beings. They often appear in mythical narratives alongside the goddesses Papaya and Istustaya, who, in a ritual text for the foundation of a new temple, are described sitting holding mirrors and spindles, spinning the king's thread of life. In the Greek tradition, the
Moirai ("Apportioners") are mentioned dispensing destiny in both the
Iliad and the
Odyssey, in which they are given the epithet Κλῶθες (
Klothes, meaning "Spinners"). In Hesiod's
Theogony, the Moirai are said to "give mortal men both good and ill" and their names are listed as
Klotho ("Spinner"),
Lachesis ("Apportioner"), and
Atropos ("Inflexible"). In his
Republic,
Plato records that Klotho sings of the past, Lachesis of the present, and Atropos of the future. In Roman legend, the
Parcae were three goddesses who presided over the births of children and whose names were Nona ("Ninth"), Decuma ("Tenth"), and Morta ("Death"). They too were said to spin destinies, although this may have been due to influence from Greek literature. at
Paphos Archaeological Park on
Cyprus showing the three Moirai:
Klotho,
Lachesis, and
Atropos, standing behind
Peleus and
Thetis, the parents of
Achilles. In the Old Norse
Völuspá and
Gylfaginning, the
Norns are three cosmic goddesses of fate who are described sitting by the well of
Urðr at the foot of the world tree
Yggdrasil. In Old Norse texts, the Norns are frequently conflated with
Valkyries, who are sometimes also described as spinning. Old English texts, such as
Rhyme Poem 70, and
Guthlac 1350 f., reference
Wyrd as a singular power that "weaves" destinies. Later texts mention the Wyrds as a group, with
Geoffrey Chaucer referring to them as "the Werdys that we clepyn Destiné" in
The Legend of Good Women. A goddess spinning appears in a
bracteate from southwest Germany and a relief from
Trier shows three mother goddesses, with two of them holding distaffs. Tenth-century German ecclesiastical writings denounce the popular belief in three sisters who determined the course of a man's life at his birth. An Old Irish hymn attests to seven goddesses who were believed to weave the thread of destiny, which demonstrates that these spinster fate-goddesses were present in Celtic mythology as well. A Lithuanian folktale recorded in 1839 recounts that a man's fate is spun at his birth by seven goddesses known as the
deivės valdytojos and used to hang a star in the sky; when he dies, his thread snaps and his star falls as a meteor. In Latvian folk songs, a goddess called the
Láima is described as weaving a child's fate at its birth. Although she is usually only one goddess, the Láima sometimes appears as three. The three spinning fate goddesses appear in Slavic traditions in the forms of the Russian Rožanicy, the Czech and Slovak Sudičky, the Bulgarian Narenčnice or Urisnice, the Polish Rodzanice, the Croatian Rodjenice, the Serbian
Sudjenice, and the Slovene Rojenice. Albanian folk tales speak of the
Fatit, three old women who appear three days after a child is born and determine its fate, using language reminiscent of spinning.
Welfare god A deity of welfare and the community, and/or connected to the building and maintenance of roads or pathways, and/or with healing and the institution of marriage may have existed. Its name may have derived from the noun (a "member of one's own group", "one who belongs to the community", in contrast to an outsider), also at the origin of the
Indo-Iranian *árya, "noble, hospitable", and the
Celtic , "free man" (, "noble, chief";
Gaulish:
arios, "free man, lord"). The Vedic god
Aryaman is frequently mentioned in the
Vedas, and associated with social and marital ties. In the
Gāthās, the Iranian god
Airyaman seems to denote the wider tribal network or alliance, and is invoked in a prayer against illness, magic, and evil. In the mythical stories of the founding of the Irish nation, the hero
Érimón became the first king of the
Milesians (the mythical name of the Irish) after he helped conquer the island from the
Tuatha Dé Danann. He also provided wives to the
Cruithnig (the mythical
Celtic Britons or
Picts), a reflex of the marital functions of . The Gaulish given name Ariomanus, possibly translated as "lord-spirited" and generally borne by Germanic chiefs, is also to be mentioned.
Smith god Although the name of a particular smith god cannot be linguistically reconstructed, smith gods of various names are found in most Proto-Indo-European daughter languages. There is not a strong argument for a single mythic prototype. Mallory notes that "deities specifically concerned with particular craft specializations may be expected in any ideological system whose people have achieved an appropriate level of social complexity". Nonetheless, two motifs recur frequently in Indo-European traditions: the making of the chief god's distinctive weapon (
Indra's and
Zeus' bolt;
Lugh's and
Odin's spear and
Thor's hammer) by a special artificer, and the craftsman god's association with the immortals' drinking.
Love goddess Scholars have suggested a common root or ?, for the
Sanskrit , Greek
Aphrodite,
Mycenaean Greek theonym , likely related
Pamphylian () and Common Germanic
Frijjō, that would point to a Proto-Indo-European love god or goddess. is a root for beloved/friend, whereas means "wife" or "beloved wife" and has descendant forms in many Indo-European languages. It is ancestral to
Sanskrit priya "dear, beloved" and Common Germanic
Frijjō. In Latin
Venus takes her place. Her name is not cognate at all, but Norse descendants of ,
Freyr and
Freyja belong to the race of so-called
Vanir, which comes from the same Proto-Indo-European root . Freyja is possibly worshipped under the name Perun in southern Slavic-speaking areas. Many of these goddesses give their name to the fifth day of the week, Friday. They are also very well known in lesser form such as the Germanic
Elves and the Persian
Peris, charming and seductive beings in folklore.
Other propositions The Proto-Indo-Europeans may also have had a goddess who presided over the
trifunctional organization of society. Various epithets of the Iranian goddess
Anahita and the Roman goddess
Juno provide sufficient evidence to solidly attest that she was probably worshipped, but no specific name for her can be lexically reconstructed. Vague remnants of this goddess may also be preserved in the Greek goddess
Athena. A decay goddess has also been proposed on the basis of the Vedic
Nirṛti and the Roman
Lūa Mater. Her names derive from the verbal roots "decay, rot", and they are both associated with the decomposition of human bodies. Michael Estell has reconstructed a mythical craftsman named based on the Greek
Orpheus and the Vedic
Ribhus. Both are the son of a cudgel-bearer or an archer, and both are known as "fashioners" (). A mythical hero named has also been proposed, from the Greek hero
Prometheus ("the one who steals"), who took the heavenly fire away from the gods to bring it to mankind, and the Vedic
Mātariśvan, the mythical bird who "robbed" (found in the myth as
pra math-, "to steal") the hidden fire and gave it to the
Bhrigus. A medical god has been reconstructed based on a thematic comparison between the Indic god
Rudra and the Greek
Apollo. Both inflict disease from afar thanks to their bows, both are known as healers, and both are specifically associated with rodents: Rudra's animal is the "rat mole" and Apollo was known as a "rat god". Some scholars have proposed a war god named based on the Roman god
Mars and the Vedic
Marutás, the companions of the war-god
Indra. Mallory and Adams reject this reconstruction on linguistic grounds. Likewise, some researchers have found it more plausible that Mars was originally a storm deity, while the same cannot be said of Ares. == Myths ==