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Understanding Baltic Religion
The interpretation of the ancient Baltic religion, as well as its Prussian, Latvian, and Lithuanian successors, presents four
fundamental theoretical problems.
First, as with the ancient Germanic religion, the Indo-European
tripartite division of sovereign, warrior, and agrarian functions
remains in dispute. Focusing especially on the sovereign function and
in part on the warrior function, scholarship has neglected other
aspects of the comprehensive Dumezilian theory. Furthermore,
scholarship has not yet reached any likeness of a consensus on the
sovereign and warrior functions.
Second, Gimbutas' analysis of Old European civilization, by placing
special emphasis on Lithuanian and Latvian religion, induces the desire
to distinguish Indo-European elements from Old European ones. Such a
differentiation, indeed, enables a more complete and careful analysis
of Baltic mythology. Unfortunately, few scholars have applied Gimbutas'
theory in their work.
The third problem stems from pre-Christian biased scholarship which
also appears in other Indo-European contexts. The fundamental prejudice
of such scholarship involves the belief that Baltic religion had
reached its zenith, and was waiting for the next stage of its
development--Christianity.
Consequentially, some scholarship and popular literature incorrectly
assumes that ancient Baltic religion was monotheistic. For example, in
Latvia, monotheism was envisioned in Dievs, who heads a large family of
divinities. Furthermore, a great deal of scholarship has neglected to
distinguish Christian elements from non-Christian ones, in effect
interpreting a corrupt catalogue of Baltic religion.
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fourth problem counters the problem of definition: what is mythology,
what is folklore, and what is the difference. Most of the underlying
research of Baltic mythology occurred in a folklore context.
Folklorists, collect, categorize, and publish source materials.
Folklore studies tend to interpret myth from a 20th-Century synchronic
perspective, i.e., myth in its collected and recorded form, regardless
of discrepancies and inconsistencies.
In contrast, religious studies and comparative mythology divides myth
into its successive layers, producing a set of synchronic pictures in
diachronic perspective. This approach seeks origins, influences, and a
developmental history. It does not hesitate to research historical,
linguistic, and etymological sources for supportive information. It
also attempts to explain significant variance, as well as consolidate
it in an overall mythological structure. Often the two
approaches--folklore and mythology--contradict.
First published in "Romuva", Issue #10, 1992, by Audrius Dundzila, Ph.D.
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