Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Svarog can be also understood as meaning a shining, fiery place; a forge.
It is named after the Russian smith god Svarog.
The word 'Raróg' seems to be a late bastardization of the name Svarog.
Through Project Svarog, new forms of electrical weaponry and machinery were developed for use in the war.
Another candidate for supreme deity among at least some Slavs is Svarog.
In Slavic mythology, Svarog, meaning "bright and clear", was the spirit of fire.
Known as swarzyca, it was primarily associated with one of the Slavic gods named Svarog.
Having left Svarog, Blažić quit his musical career.
Sun tzar, son of Svarog, this is Dažbog.
Apparently based on Svarog and Dažbog.
However, the name is very ancient, indicating that Svarog was a deity of the Proto-Slavic pantheon.
Comparison with Vedic Svarga indicates that Svarog simply meant (daylight) sky.
An early variation included Svarog, Perun, and Dajbog.
Prav is the law of Svarog that governs both Yav and Nav.
In Slavic mythology 'Svarga' is Heaven, the residence of god Svarog.
It brought him in behind the jovian planet Svarog, whose gravitational, magnetic, and radiation fields screened the emissions of Hooligan.
Franjo Ledić, on the other hand, simply assumed that Svarog and Dažbog are one and the same god.
On the basis of this text, some researchers conclude that Svarog is the Slavic god of celestial fire and of blacksmithing.
In Neopagan religions, Svarog is often the supreme god-creator and the central part of the (holy) trinity Triglav.
In the meantime, Šola left the band and joined Đuroski's doom metal band Svarog.
Kresnik is the son of the great creator deity, ruler of heaven, who has been identified in various sources as Svarog or Perun.
(Then) began his reign Feosta (Hephaestus), whom the Egyptians called Svarog.
The highest god was called Svarog throughout the Slavic area, as other gods were worshiped too in different regions at different times, often with local names.
He is probably the same deity as Svarožič, son of the Slavic sun god, Svarog, described as having golden hair and golden hands.
Svarožič is simply a diminutive of Svarog's name, and thus it may simply be another aspect (a surname, so to speak) of Dažbog.