The sacred mountain in Romanian are:
"Mount Kogaionon was the sacred mountain of the Dacians."[1] This
sacred mountain was inhabited and dominated by the Dacians.
Mount Ceahlau
is a mountain considered holy by the Orthodox Romanians. The Romanians
attributed it as a feast to this mountain "The Feast of Transfiguration of our Lord Jesus Christ,
which is actually the Feast of Ceahlau Mountain - the Holy
Mountain."[2]
"On the day of the feast, videlicet, at the Feast of
the Transfiguration of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Orthodox Christians and
hierarchs ascended"[3] [4] and
ascend to the Ceahlau Mountain in pilgrimage.
In the romanian fairy tales appear the mythical mountains
knock in the heads.
A fairy tale
showing the mountains that knock in the heads is the Wolf-with-head-iron[5] and another fairy
tale is Brave fatherless[6]
[1] Kogaionon, www.ro.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kogaionon
, accesat la data de 31.10.2017.
[2] Ceahlăul, Istorii despre Muntele Sfânt, Ana-Maria Bălaş: „Ziua Muntelui Ceahlău“,
www.ceahlaul.wordpress.com/, accesat la data de 7.11.2017.
[3] Pelerin pe muntele sacru, www.jurnalul.ro/timp-liber/culinar/pelerin-pe-muntele-sacru-300568.html,
accesat la data de 7.11.2017.
[4] Preot Profesor Dumitru Chițimuș, Schimbarea la Faţă a Domnului
nostru Iisus şi Muntele Sfânt Ceahlău, în „Ziarul Ceahlăul” www.ziarulceahlaul.ro/schimbarea-la-fata-a-domnului-nostru-iisus-si-muntele-sfant-ceahlau/
, accesat la data de 7.11.2017.
[6] Petre Ispirescu, Basme, Editura Eduard,
Constanța, 2015, p. 252.
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