Libation in Baltic Religious Practices
Volume 15 (2011): Archaeology, Religion and Folklore in the Baltic Sea Region, pp. 105–119
Pub. online: 20 September 2011
Type: Article
Open Access
Received
16 January 2011
16 January 2011
Revised
4 May 2011
4 May 2011
Accepted
16 May 2011
16 May 2011
Published
20 September 2011
20 September 2011
Abstract
It is mentioned in 15th to 18th-century written sources that in Lithuania, Prussia and Latvia pagan rituals, during which a certain amount of drink would be poured out for the gods and the dead, were practised. Lithuanian and Latvian ethnographic material from the 19th and 20th centuries supports the continuity of this tradition at community and family feasts. In sources on Baltic religion it is usually emphasised that the drink would be poured out on to the ground. This can be interpreted as a triple offering: to the goddess of the Earth, to the domestic deities, and to the souls of the dead. However, the Balts not only practised pouring drink on the ground, but other libation practices too. In terms of the place on to which the drink would be poured, the following practices can be singled out: pouring on the ground, into fire, into water, and into the air (sprinkling the drink upwards). Pouring on to stones and trees, which is related to elements of sacred places, also deserves special attention.