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Topic: Dyeus



  
 Mars Hill Symposium » The Celts
Teiwaz is the same God, as Dyeus Pater, the God passed down to the Ur people by Noah.
Of course polytheism had by this time firmly established the worship of countless gods and the worship of Dyeus had been grossly neglected and relegated to the position of another god instead of the only One and True God.
This is one and the same as the Indo-European God of the Ur people known as ‘Dyeus pater’ or ‘Sky Father’.
http://mhsymp.com/?cat=52   (6267 words)

  
 Dyaus Pita - Indopedia, the Indological knowledgebase
His origins can be traced to the Indo-European sky god *Dyeus, who is also reflected as Zeus in Greek mythology, Jupiter (from Latin Iove pater, "father-god") in Roman mythology, Div in Slavic mythology and Tyr in Norse mythology.
In vedic religion, Dyaus Pita is the Sky Father, husband of Prthivi and father of Agni and Indra (RV 4.17.4).
Sharing a fate similar to nordic Tyr's, already in the Rig Veda, Dyaus Pita is all but featureless, appearing in hymns 1.89, 1.90, 1.164, 1.191 and 4.1 in simple invocations.
http://www.indopedia.org/Dyaush.html   (282 words)

  
 PS Wiki Encyclopedia
Linguistically, Dyeus became Jupiter to the Romans, as well as the word Deus meaning simply God, Zeus to the Greeks, Dyaus Pita to the vedic religion, which preceeded hinduism, Dia in slavic mythology, and Tiwaz in germanic and scandinavian mythology, who later became Tyr, and Tew, from which we get the name of Tuesday.
Similarly, Africans were anciently understood to be the sons of Ham (and particularly his descendent Cush, as the Cushites are referred to throughout scripture as being the inhabitants of Northeast Africa), and the Yoruba still trace their ancestry through Ham today.
While they agree that there is a shared origin behind some Indo-European gods, they believe this to be due to a common origin in Dyeus, sometimes referred to as Dyeus Pater (sky father).
http://70.84.119.226/~puresear/PSWiki/index.php?title=Genealogies_of_Genesis   (2293 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Proto-Indo-European religion
*Dyeus Ph ter(1), the god of the daylit sky was the chief god of the Indo-European pantheon.
There also seems to have been a god of thunder, maybe originally identical to Dyeus, but later known under other names, as Thor, Taranis, Tarhunt, Perun, Perkūnas and Indra.
The Germanic tribes may have been an exception in allowing women to become priests: the Völvas (see also witches).
http://www.reference.com/browse/wiki/Proto-Indo-European_religion   (542 words)

  
 [b-hebrew] IaBe = YHWH or IaBe = Jove? Dyeus
Jovis and Zeus both derive from the Indo-European root workd *dyeus* meaning Sky or Shine, they were both sky gods.
http://lists.ibiblio.org/pipermail/b-hebrew/2005-July/024199.html   (100 words)

  
 Talk:Dyeus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
*Dyeus appears to have been pretty pale at the time of Indo-Iranian unity already, and the suggested split (not entirely accurately described above) concerned two classes of gods the asuras (Aesir) and the daivas or "heavenly ones".
From him came Thor, Indra and the nameless Hittite Weather God.
Ancient anthropomorphic stone stela (Ukraine), possibly depicting an early variant of a god related to Dyeus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Dyeus   (442 words)

  
 Deva (Hinduism) - Free Encyclopedia of Thelema
Not to be confused is the PIE proper name *Dyeus which while from the same root, may originally have referred to the sky itself, and hence to "Father Sky", the chief god of the Indo-European pantheon, continued in Sanskrit Dyaus, Germanic Tiwaz.
The main deva addressed in the Rigveda is Indra.
http://www.egnu.org/thelema/index.php/Deva_deity   (373 words)

  
 Beliefnet.com
As I understand it, proto-indo-european religion is a theorized ancestor of the various native european faiths and Hinduism.
What about deities in closer cultures, for example, does Thor = Thunor?
http://www.beliefnet.com/boards/message_list.asp?boardID=14287&discussionID=413710   (685 words)

  
 Aryan Gods [Archive] - Japan Forum
It seems that the supreme Aryan god was the god of the daylit sky, aka Dyeus (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyeus).
He became in Greek Zeus (also Dias), Latin Jupiter, Sanskrit Dyaus Pita, Baltic Dievas, Slavic Div and Germanic Tyr (also Tiwaz), and closest to the Hindu god Vishnu.
http://www.jref.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-15883.html   (171 words)

  
 solar
And finally, *dyeus may already have taken on the general meaning of "divinity" or "god" (English deity is derived ultimately from the same word).
Maxwell Müller isolated the name of a god that occurs in a number of I-E languages.
Further, while Müller assumed "father" to refer to the sun's role as impregnator, fertilizer, of Mother Earth (a reference that works even better for a "sky" father), it is quite possible that the term was already metaphorical for the god's role as an authority figure.
http://www.unlv.edu/faculty/jmstitt/Eng480/solar.html   (772 words)

  
 Behind the Name: Roman Mythology Names
Probably derived from an old Indo-European root meaning "heavenly, divine", related to dyeus (see ZEUS)...
From Latin Iupiter, which was from dyeu-pater, composed of the elements dyeus (see ZEUS) and pater "father"...
http://www.behindthename.com/nmc/rom-myth.php   (259 words)

  
 Zeus FAQ
Zeus is the continuation of Dyeus, the supreme god in Indo-European religion, also continued as Vedic Dyaus Pitar (cf.
Zeus, his ancestral name was 'Dyeus' from whence 'tuesday'.
A.B. Cook's conclusion was that Zeus was the bright blue sky, as his name indicates.
http://vinyl2.sentex.ca/~tcc/FAQ/FAQ_AZ.html   (1394 words)

  
 (Type a title for your page here)
Oh, by the way, you can call me Patar Dyeus, Sky Father, or Patar Diwós, Father of the Gods, but Mater Diwós, Mother of Gods is also accurate.
To make communication easy I am using two languages that some of my children gave to you humans a little while ago, and the alphabet of a language that was derived from it.
The Children of Dyeus Patar and Dhéghom Mater
http://people.umass.edu/plewicke/Tablet.html   (1089 words)

  
 The Assembly of Gods: Introduction
The Assembly of Gods is described by the poet Stephen Hawes in The Pastime of Pleasure (1505-06) as one of seven Lydgatian works.
Modern scholars have argued against Lydgate's authorship of The Assembly of Gods, however, despite its retention of the attribution to Lydgate into the twentieth century and its Lydgatian didactic moralism, allegory, and classical mythological figures.
And the poem is often found in early anthologies with Chaucerian poems, such as The Legend of Good Women, or with poems themselves often described as "Chaucerian," such as Lydgate's The Temple of Glass.
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/teams/asint.htm   (8040 words)

  
 MY GOD
The replacement of Varuna is echoed among the Greeks, whose mythology clearly states that Ouranos was emasculated (!?!) and deposed by his son Kronos "the God of Time", who was subsequently deposed by his son Zeus (*Dyeus) "the Sky God".
The Romans also chose to recognise *Dyeus as the Supreme God, under the names Ivp-piter (*Dyeus-Pater "Dyeus the Father") and Iovis (
The Germanic Odin (Norse)/Woden (English)/Wotan (German) also seems to represent a usurper, although it is hard to say what the Supreme God was originally called in the Germanic speech.
http://ca.geocities.com/vellaunos/mygod.html   (4276 words)

  
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http://www.xanga.com/Dyeus/171590752/item.html   (230 words)

  
 Tyr - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
Hangatyr, the "hanged god" as one of Odin's names) and goes back to a Proto-Germanic Tîwaz, continuing Proto-Indo-European Dyeus, originally the chief god, the precursor also of e.
http://www.arikah.net/encyclopedia/Tyr   (952 words)

  
 Rxpress - Tyr - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hangatyr, the "god of the hanged" as one of Odin's names) and goes back to a Proto-Germanic Tîwaz, continuing Proto-Indo-European Dyeus, originally the chief god, the precursor also of e.
http://www.rxpresspharmacy.com/wiki/index/Tyr   (814 words)

  
 Sabazios - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sabazios is the nomadic horseman sky and father god of the Phrygians.
In Indo-European languages, such as Phrygian, the '-zios' element in his name goes back to Dyeus, the common precursor of 'deus' (god) and Zeus.
Though the Greeks associated Phrygian Sabazios with Zeus, representations of him, even into Roman times, show him always on horseback, as a nomadic horseman god, wielding his characteristic staff of power.
http://www.vacilando.org/_cliextra/baghdadmuseumorg/includepage.php?title=Sabazios&action=edit   (874 words)

  
 The Myceneans: Mycenean Religion
This *Dyeus shows up in almost all Indo-European languages, suggesting that this god is a common heritage for all Indo-European peoples.
The Myceneans probably entered Greece with a pantheon of gods headed by some ruling sky-god which linguists speculate might have been called *Dyeus in early Indo-European.
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/MINOA/MYCREL.HTM   (432 words)

  
 Arias Ink - Mortalize Me - Chapter 4
Unfortunately, his family and many other important clans were destroyed in an ugly and chaotic war that shook the universe many millennia ago.
Diamond had had a rightful place among them, but shortly after, he resigned from the position.
However, as time passed, history became muddled and it was assumed that all the surviving ancestors of the great families had become apart of Iole Dyeus.
http://www.ariasink.com/story.php?M_ASHLEE_A~2883-4   (3803 words)

  
 MacNN Forums - View Profile: Dyeus
Dyeus is not a member of any public groups
http://forums.macnn.com/member.php?u=58491   (38 words)

  
 Religion of the PIE's
*Diwos Sunu- the sons of Dyeus Pater patrons of sailors an athletes
Most of the info has been gathered by scholars in historical linguistics, archaeology and comparative mythology.
There are a few more that I will add at a later date.
http://www.ancientworlds.net/aw/Post/492680   (205 words)

  
 FS: Quickcam pro 4000 - MacNN Forums
I prefer paypal but other suggestions are welcome too.
Last edited by Dyeus : 05-23-2005 at 07:45 PM.
http://forums.macnn.com/showthread.php?p=2537651   (76 words)

  
 Who really runs the world? : LA IMC
by dyeus ptar Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2003 at 11:54 AM
http://la.indymedia.org/news/2003/10/90163_comment.php   (157 words)

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