Latvian fire-cross

Latvian fire-cross

thingiverse

The oldest example ever found of the swastika, ugunskrusts ("fire-cross") in Latvian, is 15,000 years old, carved in mammoth tusk, unearthed in Ukraine. The use of the swastika among the ancestors of the Latvians is surely as ancient because the Slavic and Baltic languages/cultures stem from a common Balto-Slavic proto-ancestor. The swastika appears in many versions in Latvian folk costumes and crafts. Indeed, there is no other culture in which it appears more ornately or in more variations. It is inseparably ingrained in Latvian identity. Different incarnations of the swastika cross symbolize different Latvian deities or aspects of life. The right-facing swastika: Pērkons ("Thunder", thus the "Thunder Cross"), left-facing: Laima ("Good Fortune"), while the multi-pronged Zars ("branch") denoted happiness; lastly, rounded, with narrowing and curved ends, Ķeksis ("hook") — however, we have not yet found documentation as to the significance of this version. In Latvian mythology, the fire-cross ultimately symbolizes the sun's (Saule) never-ending movement, defeating evil while promoting good health and good fortune.

Download Model from thingiverse

With this file you will be able to print Latvian fire-cross with your 3D printer. Click on the button and save the file on your computer to work, edit or customize your design. You can also find more 3D designs for printers on Latvian fire-cross.