*Hausos (h2aus-os-) is conjectured to be the name of goddess of dawn in Proto-Indo-European religion. A goddess is a Female Deity. Many Cultures have goddesses Often deities are part of a polytheistic system that includes several deities Dawn refers to the Twilight before Sunrise. It is recognized by the presence of weak sunlight while the sun itself is still below the horizon The existence of similarities among the deities and religious practices of the Indo-European (IE peoples allows glimpses of a common Proto-Indo-European
Cognate deities in later related religions include Vedic Ushas, Slavic Zorya, Greek Eos, Roman Aurora, Lithuanian Aušra. There are 1028 hymns in the Rigveda, most of them dedicated to specific deities. Ushas (sa उषस् uṣas) Sanskrit for " Dawn " is a Vedic deity, and consequently a Hindu deity as well Slavic mythology is the Mythological aspect of the Religion that was practised by the ancient Slavs. In Slavic mythology, the Zorya (alternately Zarya, Zvezda, Zwezda, Zory) are the three (sometimes two guardian Goddesses Greek mythology is the body of stories belonging to the ancient Greeks concerning their gods and Heroes the nature of the world and the origins and significance For other uses of the name Eos see Eos (disambiguation. For the Slavic goddesses called the Auroras see The Zorya. Roman mythology, or more appropriately Latin mythology, refers to the mythological beliefs of the Italic people inhabiting the region of Latium and its This article is about the Roman goddess of dawn for the asteroid see 94 Aurora. Lithuanian mythology is an example of pagan Mythology containing archaic elements developed by Lithuanians throughout the centuries For the solar power company see Ausra (company Aušra or Auszra (literally dawn) was the first
Also cognate is za ustra, "early morning" in Old Church Slavonic. to make sure old Cyrillic letters are displayed properly (For example instead of just Ѣ write Ѣ
If the Germanic goddess Eostre was historically venerated, a relation to her has also been proposed. Anglo-Saxon paganism refers to the Migration Period religion practiced by the English in 5th to 7th century England. ags Ēostre is the name of an Anglo-Saxon goddess attested by the eighth-century Benedictine monk Bede 's De temporum ratione
As a love goddess, she was also called *Wenos "lust" (c. f. Venus, Vanadis, Vanir). Venus was a major Roman Goddess principally associated with Love, Beauty and fertility, the equivalent of the Greek goddess Freyja (sometimes anglicized as Freya) is a major goddess in Norse Paganism, a subset of Germanic Paganism. Vanir is the name of one of the two groups of gods in Norse mythology, the other and more well known being the Æsir.
The Romans equated the Roman goddess Mater Matuta with Eos. Roman mythology, or more appropriately Latin mythology, refers to the mythological beliefs of the Italic people inhabiting the region of Latium and its Mater Matuta was an indigenous Roman goddess whom the Romans eventually made equivalent to the Dawn goddess Aurora, and the Greek For other uses of the name Eos see Eos (disambiguation. For the Slavic goddesses called the Auroras see The Zorya. Mythographer Georges Dumézil accepts this and from known fragments of the Matralia ritual, Dumézil conjectures that Hausos’ mythological role was as the aunt and foster mother of the Sun. Georges Dumézil ( March 4, 1898 – October 11, 1986) was a French comparative Philologist best known for his analysis of Sovereignty Mater Matuta was an indigenous Roman goddess whom the Romans eventually made equivalent to the Dawn goddess Aurora, and the Greek Georges Dumézil ( March 4, 1898 – October 11, 1986) was a French comparative Philologist best known for his analysis of Sovereignty In Greek mythology the Sun was personified as Helios (ˈhiliˌɑs ( Ἥλιος Latinized as Helius) The hypothetical myth is as follows:
Most other astonomical interpretations of early mythology are now discredited, after being popular in the early 20th century, but this myth may still be worth consideration. The twentieth century of the Common Era began on