翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Dyar Miller
・ Dyar site
・ Dyar's law
・ DYAR-TV
・ Dyas
・ Dyas (disambiguation)
・ Dyas Hexagonal Barn
・ Dyas Island
・ Dyasma
・ Dyatkovo
・ Dyatkovsky
・ Dyatkovsky District
・ Dyatlov
・ Dyatlov Pass incident
・ Dyaul Island
Dyaus Pita
・ Dyavankonda
・ Dyavaprthivi
・ Dyavolska reka
・ Dyavolski most
・ DyBASE
・ Dybawka
・ DYBB-TV
・ Dybbuk
・ Dybbuk (ballet)
・ Dybbuk (comics)
・ Dybbuk (disambiguation)
・ Dybbuk box
・ Dybbøl
・ Dybbølsbro station


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Dyaus Pita : ウィキペディア英語版
Dyaus Pita

(' ), literally "Sky Father" is the ancient sky god of Vedic pantheon, consort of Prithvi Mata "Earth Mother" and father of the chief deities of the Rigveda, Agni (Fire), Indra, and Ushas (Dawn).
In the Rigveda, ''Dyaus Pita'' appears only in verses 1.89.4, 1.90.7, 1.164.33, 1.191.6 and 4.1.10, and only in RV 1.89.4 does ''Pitar Dyaus'' "Father Sky" appear alongside ''Mata Prithvi'' "Mother Earth".
He is thus a very marginal deity in Rigvedic mythology, but his intrinsic importance is visible from his being the father of the chief deities. That Dyaus was seen as the father of Indra is known only from one verse, RV 4.17.4:
:"Thy Father Dyaus esteemed himself a hero: most noble was the work of Indra's Maker / His who begat the strong bolt's Lord who roareth, immovable like earth from her foundation." (trans. Griffith (1888))
He is mainly considered in comparative philology as a last remnant of the chief god of Proto-Indo-European religion.〔"The general opinion respecting Dyaus (Heaven) and Prithivi (Earth) is that they are amongst the most ancient of the Aryan deities, hence they are spoken of in the hymns of the Rig-Veda as the parents of the other gods." W.J. Wilkins, "Dyaus and Prthivi" in ''Hindu Mythology, Vedic and Puranic'' 1900.〕
The name is exactly parallel to the Greek ''Zeus Pater'' etymologically, and closely related to Latin ''Jupiter''. Both ''Dyauṣ'' and ''Zeus'' reflect a Proto-Indo-European ''
*Dyeus''.
Based on this reconstruction, the widespread opinion in scholarship since the 19th century has been that Indra had replaced Dyaus as the chief god of the early Indo-Aryans. While Prthivi survives as a Hindu goddess after the end of the Vedic period, Dyaus Pita became almost unknown already in antiquity.
The noun ''dyaús'' (when used without the ''pitā'' "father") means "sky, heaven" and occurs frequently in the Rigveda, as a mythological entity, but not as a male deity: the sky in Vedic mythology was imagined as rising in three tiers, ''avama , madhyama'', and ''uttama'' or ''tṛtīya'' (RV 5.60.6).
In the Purusha Suktam (10.90.14), the sky is described to have been created from the head of the primaeval being, the Purusha.
==See also==

*Rigvedic deities

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Dyaus Pita」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.