Flins (mythology)Flins is a Slavic deity, mentioned for the first time in the book Cronecken der Sassen in 1492 by the German writer Konrad Bothe.[1][2] People believe it was not really worshipped. People believe the name of the Polish town, Świeradów-Zdrój also known as Flinsberg in German, came from Flins.[2] Bothe said Flins was worshipped by people in the Harz Mountains and in Lusatia.
The described statue was supposed to be destroyed by Prince Lothair.[2] Bothe's information was spread all across Europe and many people drew Flins.[1]
Theories about his originThere are a variety of theories about his origin, almost all consider him to have never been a real Slavic God. According to Elias Schedius (1605–1641), the name of the deity was in fact a corrupted name of a supposed king of the Vandals : Vitzlauw (Wisław? )→Vlitzauw→Vlintz.[1]
Christian Wilhelm Bronisch (1788–1881) believed that it was derived from the Sorbian mrlinjec, mrlinjc – "dead".[2]
Leonhard Franz argued the description was related to St. Christopher rather than a Slavic deity.[1] The figure of a Slavic necromancer holding a staff, but without a name, is also mentioned in the description of the shrines of the Western Slavs by Al-Masudi, a traveler from the middle east who visited the region in the 10th century. He recorded the following cult in the temple / healing place. [3] :
ReferencesWikimedia Commons has media related to Flins (mythology).
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