• In songs about a "heavenly wedding" Saulė (the Sun) cheats on Perkūnas with Mėnulis (the Moon); Perkūnas splits Mėnulis in half with a sword.
  • Yazılı kaynaklarda Perkūnas. Perkūnas hakkında çoğu bilgi folkloru şarkılarından, efsanelerden ve peri masallarından gelir .
  • ...as "menstruating" in a Vedic hymn to Parjanya, a possible cognate of Perperuna.[15] The alternative name of Perperuna, Dodola, also recalls Perkūnas' pseudonym.
  • ] Perkunas was a warrior-god of the sky, who was originally married to Saulė, the solar goddess, who cheated on his with Mėnulis, the moon god.
  • On songs about "heavenly wedding" is reconstructed a variant of a myth where the sun changes Perkūnas with a Mėnulis, for what Perkūnas splits month a sword.
  • The funny thing though that new religion could not keep Velinas from attending, but the argument with another god could. Perkūnas (Thunder god) the musician.
  • Perkūnas was the god of thunder in Baltic mythology. ... Perkūnas may seem to surpass Dievas because he is visible and has defined mythological functions.
  • Perkunas eventually became the chief Lithuanian deity, protector of the state. (Despite his power, Perkunas is subordinate to Laima and must defer to her.)
  • The sky deity of the Baltic religion, Perkunas, is regarded as a fertility god and the guardian of law and order apart from being the god of thunder and lightning.
  • Perkūnas has stones in the sky (which rumble during storms) - the motive connected to Indo-European mythology. Perkūnas dwells on high hills or mountains.