The Sacred Lakes of the Dvina Region (northwest Belarus)
Volume 15 (2011): Archaeology, Religion and Folklore in the Baltic Sea Region, pp. 61–68
Pub. online: 20 September 2011
Type: Article
Open Access
Received
20 December 2008
20 December 2008
Revised
18 April 2010
18 April 2010
Accepted
16 May 2011
16 May 2011
Published
20 September 2011
20 September 2011
Abstract
The subject of research is the sacral geography of the Dvina region (in northwest Belarus), the sacred lakes situated in this region, and place-legends about vanished churches relating to these lakes. The author bases his research on the analytical method, and interprets folkloric sources, historical facts and data collected during ethnographic field trips. The main conclusion of the article attests to the fact that place-legends about a vanished church (they relate to the majority of the lakes) indicate the sacrality of these bodies of water. In the past, sacrality might have contained two closely interrelated planes: an archaic one, which originated from pre-Christian times, and that of the Early Middle Ages, related to the baptism of the people of the Duchy of Polotsk.