Ancient Armenian spirit – Grogh or also known as Tir. Grogh translates from Armenian as &ldquo
Ancient Armenian spirit – Grogh or also known as Tir. Grogh translates from Armenian as “writer” or “scribe” (sometimes identified with Armenian deity of literature Tir) was a spirit in ancient Armenian mythology. Grogh was the most punctual writer. As soon as a human was born, Grogh would write the newborn into the book of life, and on the forehead he imprinted the newborn’s faith – chakatagir, predetermining the given lifespan. He keenly observed everyone and entered all the sins and good deeds into his special folio, to read them during the final judgment. If the agony of dying lasted a long time and the soul could not part with the body easily, it was common to take the pillow from beneath the head of the dying person and open wide all the windows and doors, so Grogh could enter freely into the home and take the soul into his bosom and leave. Just as the Russians curse ‘k chorty’ meaning ‘to the devil’ and English ‘to hell with you’, Armenians curse by sending to Grogh: “Grogh kez tani!” (meaning “scribe take you!”) or “Groghu tsots” (“in embrace of the scribe”). Many centuries past and the word “Grogh” became to simply mean ‘writer’ in Armenian. Sources: - Armen Meryzhanyan - http://noev-kovcheg.ru/mag/2011-13/2688.html - PeopleOfAr. (2013, October 10). Ancient Armenian spirit – Grogh. Retrieved from http://tinyurl.com/q37pdvd #Armenia #ancient #deity #history #pagan #God #Tir #Grogh #mythology -- source link
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