Dlucca - Lunna
But local oral traditions in the border regions between Italy and Austria offer a simpler, more haunting translation. In the old dialects, to "dlucca" was to shatter or splinter. Thus, she is , or perhaps, The Moon that Breaks.
The etymology of "Lunna Dlucca" is a subject of debate, largely because her story seems to be a composite—a survival of an older, pre-Christian deity stripped of power and recast as a cautionary spirit. lunna dlucca
If you give me more details (or correct the spelling), I'll gladly produce or locate the detailed content you need. But local oral traditions in the border regions
Legends vary on the specifics, but the core remains the same: Lunna, fearing for his life, lit a massive signal fire to guide him home. The fire, however, caught the dry timber of the valley, creating a blaze that inadvertently guided the ice-hunter off a cliff edge. He fell, and his body was discovered the next morning, broken on the rocks. The etymology of "Lunna Dlucca" is a subject