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104.247.81.13


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ns2.parkingcrew.net ns1.parkingcrew.net


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☆ vulcanus.it. 600 IN A 104.247.81.13
☆ vulcanus.it. 3600 IN MX 5 mail.h-email.net.
☆ vulcanus.it. 3600 IN NS ns1.parkingcrew.net.
☆ vulcanus.it. 3600 IN CAA 0 issue "letsencrypt.org"
☆ vulcanus.it. 3600 IN NS ns2.parkingcrew.net.
☆ vulcanus.it. 10800 IN SOA ns1.parkingcrew.net. hostmaster.vulcanus.it. 1720305000 28800 7200 604800 86400
☆ vulcanus.it. 3600 IN TXT "v=spf1 ip6:fd1b:212c:a5f9::/48 -all"


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Brief facts about vulcanus:

Vulcan is the god of fire including the fire of volcanoes, deserts, metalworking and the forge in ancient Roman religion and myth. He is often depicted with a blacksmith's hammer. The Vulcanalia was the annual festival held August 23 in his honor. His Greek counterpart is Hephaestus, the god of fire and smithery. In Etruscan religion, he is identified with Sethlans. Vulcan belongs to the most ancient stage of Roman religion: Varro, the ancient Roman scholar and writer, citing the Annales Maximi, records that king Titus Tatius dedicated altars to a series of deities including Vulcan.

Kaveh the Blacksmith - Kaveh the Blacksmith is a figure in Iranian mythology who leads an uprising against a ruthless foreign ruler, Zahāk. His story is narrated in the Shahnameh, the national epic of Iran, by the 10th-century Persian poet Ferdowsi.

Kurdalægon - Kurdalægon, also spelled and known as Kuịrdalägon, Kurd-Alägon, Aläugon, Kurd-Alä-Uärgon, is the heavenly deity of blacksmiths in Ossetian mythology. His epithet is "the heavenly one"; he shoes the dead man's horse, thus helping him on his journey to the other side.

Tlepsh - Tlepsh is a mythological figure who appears in some cycles of the Nart sagas of the Caucasus, in which his Ossetian counterpart is the smith Kurdalægon.

Agni - Agni is the Hindu god of fire. and the guardian deity of the southeast direction, he is typically found in southeast corners of Hindu temples.

Atar - Atar, Atash, Azar or Dāštāɣni, is the Zoroastrian concept of holy fire, sometimes described in abstract terms as "burning and unburning fire" or "visible and invisible fire". It is considered to be the visible presence of Ahura Mazda and his Asha through the eponymous Yazata.

Apam Napat - Apam Napat is a deity in the Indo-Iranian pantheon associated with water. His names in the Vedas, Apām Napāt, and in Zoroastrianism, Apąm Napāt, mean "child of the waters" in Sanskrit and Avestan respectively. Napāt is cognate with Latin nepos and English nephew.

Hephaestus

Smithing gods

Fire gods

Roman gods

 

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