Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Svetovid was among the most widespread pagan gods worshiped in Poland.
Svetovid may serve as the opposite god.
The ancient totem-god Svetovid had four faces.
Gabriel learns that Project Svetovid has been restarted, but not in Russia, the destructive program is now run from Area 51.
The Slavic god Svetovid (Vid) was transformed into the Christian saint Vitus.
The pillar is commonly associated with the Slavic deity Svetovid, although opinions on the exact meaning of all the bas-reliefs and their symbols differ.
Following Potocki, he identified the deity as a representation of the Slavic four-headed god Svetovid, until then primarily associated with the island of Rügen.
The Slavs erected sanctuaries, created statues and other sculptures including the four-faced Svetovid, whose carvings symbolize various aspects of the Slavic cosmology model.
In 2011, in Serbian village of Mokra a group of enthusiasts, led by journalist Dragan Jovanović, erected a wooden statue of Svetovid.
The Slavs built a new town on the ruins of Narona, and erected a monument to their Slavic god Svetovid, on the ruins of Roman temples.
The Serbs in particular held strongly onto their old Slavic mythology; the last pagan temple in Serbia, in Svetovid, was destroyed by Stefan Dušan in the 14th century.
However, the main character of this song does not bear the name Ivan, but rather Vid, in which one can easily recognise the name of Svetovid, a major Slavic god of war, prophecies and harvest.
When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, the Colonel in charge of Project Svetovid became Russia's first capitalist and sold the Sleepers to the highest bidders: criminal gangs and terrorists all over the world.
Gabriel was created as part of Project Svetovid, a secret Soviet program initiated during the Cold War that was designed to develop extremely destructive beings who could be embedded in Western societies and activated in the event of nuclear war.
The museum was established in 2008 as a division of the Warsaw Museum of Polish History, and is located at a former movie house owned by the state, called Światowid (Svetovid), in the Nowa Huta district of Kraków.
Vidovdan (28 June) is sacred to ethnic Serbs (Serbian Orthodox Christians) and the cult was especially active among the South Slavs, who had transformed the pagan Slavic god Svetovid into the Sicilian martyr who exorcized the evil out of Diocletian's son.
According to the contemporary sources of Christian missionaries of the early Middle Ages, particularly of Saxo Grammaticus who gave a detailed account of Svetovid's great temple on the island of Rügen, the pagan Slavs held a great festival each summer in honor of Svetovid.