VĀYU “Wind, Atmosphere, Space,” name of a deity and the natural phenomenon.
Vayu; Kanishka honors the wind god, Oado (Kušān coins, 2nd century CE) |
Picture: Kanishka honors the wind god, Oado (Kušān coins, 2nd century CE)
See Also / بیشتر بخوانید
The Encyclopædia Iranica, William W. Malandra:
VĀYU “Wind, Atmosphere, Space,” name of a deity. Indo-Iranian religion recognized two wind gods: Av. vayu, Ved. vāyú, and Av. vāta-, Ved. vā́ta-. In Iranian the latter is both a deity and the natural phenomenon (cf. MPers., Parth. wād, Kušān coins OAΔO, SogdB wʾt, Khot. bāta-; see further, Bailey, p. 276). By contrast, in the Avesta vayu- is always a proper name, never an appellative. Further, the Middle Persian evidence suggests that, as an appellative, OIr. wāyu- included “atmosphere” as the realm of the wind’s activity. In Avestan the name appears as vayu- with shortened a preceding y (cf. Parth. wyw). The peculiar acc. sg. vaēm is a corruption of *vayum, while vayąn of Nyāyišn 1.1 as acc. sg. is perplexing (but see Schwartz, 1975). As H. Humbach observed, SogdB wyšprkr /wēšparkar/ is an EIranian form of an OIr. name plus epithet which is attested in Av. vayuš uparō.kairyō. This then explains the deity found on Kušān coins iconographically identified as Śiva, but whose name is given as OEŠO /wēšo/. more
ويوVayu (در پهلوى: واى = اندرواى)، از "وا" Vā كه بمعنى وزيدن است، مشتق شده؛ در سانسكريت و اوستا، بمعنى عنصر باد و اسم خاص پروردگار و ايزد باد است.
براى دو كلمهٔ Vāta و Vāyu، در زبان آريائى قديم نک به:
يشت ها، جلد دوم، استاد پورداود، ص۱۳۴
و نيز نک به: شناخت اساطير ايران، جان هينلز، ص۳۴
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