Ursitoare


The three Ursitoare, in Romanian mythology, are supposed to appear three nights after a child's birth to determine the course of its life. They are most similar to the Roman Parcae, the Latin equivalent of the Greek Fates or Moirai.
The Fates appearing to baptize children has been part of Romanian tradition for hundreds of years. In recent years there has been a "physical materialization" too of this tradition through the show presented during the name party.

Names

Their most common names are ursitori and ursitoare, but variations appear locally, like ursători, ursoaie, ursońi, urzoaie, ursite. Similarly, in the Oltenia region, they are dialectally known as ursătóri, ursitóri, ursătoáre. They are also euphemisticaly called albe, fecioare, babe, Albe Caşmete, and Hărăzite.
The great variety in their names, according to Rolf Wilhelm Brednich, attests the "ancient popularity" of the belief.

Etymology

According to, the term originates from the expression a ursi, from Latin ordior 'predeterminate, weave', also found in Modern Greek orizo and Bulgarian urisram.

Role

The Ursitoari equal three beings, but are variably described as three girls, three virgins, three sisters, three women, or three apparitions.
They come at night to the newborn's cradle, three nights after their birth, and weave their fate. During the same period, the child's mother and the midwife work to propitiate the Ursiotare in order to earn their goodwill. These beings also assign a fated partner to a person.
In Moldova, the ursitoare are good fairies clad in white and equal three: the ursitoarea, who holds a spindle and a loom; the soarta, who weaves the thread, and the moartea, who cuts the thread. Likewise, in Romanian popular belief, the Ursitoare are three beings that come to weave the child's fate, each of them having separate functions: Torcătoarea, who furnishes the life thread; Depănătoarea, who spins it into the spindle, and Curmătoarea, who cuts it with scissors, representing the allotted time for the person.

Parallels

Among Slavic peoples

Scholarship indicates that similar beings also exist in South Slavic folklore, among the Serbians, Macedonians, Slovenes, Croatians, Bulgarians and Montenegrinians.
In Bulgaria, there is the belief in орисници, three women that come at night to bless the newborn child and decree their fate. They are sometimes described as elderly women wearing black, or three women of differing ages.