thumb|Ugunskrusts (Fire Cross). thumb|Ugunskrusts variants. '''''' (Latvian for 'fire cross', 'cross of fire'; other names — '''''' ('cross of thunder', 'thunder cross), cross of Perkūnas, cross of branches, Cross of Laima) is the swastika as a symbol in Latvian folklore.
thumb|Ugunskrusts (Fire Cross). thumb|Ugunskrusts variants. '''''' (Latvian for 'fire cross', 'cross of fire'; other names — '''''' ('cross of thunder', 'thunder cross), cross of Perkūnas, cross of branches, Cross of Laima) is the swastika as a symbol in Latvian folklore.
The swastika is an ancient Baltic thunder cross symbol (; also fire cross, ), used to decorate objects, traditional clothing and in archaeological excavations. Latvia adopted the swastika, for its Air Force in 1918/1919 and continued its use until the Soviet occupation in 1940. The cross itself was maroon on a white background, mirroring the colors of the Latvian flag. Earlier versions pointed counter-clockwise, while later versions pointed clock-wise and eliminated the white background. Various other Latvian Army units and the Latvian War College (the predecessor of the National Defence Academy) also had adopted the symbol in their battle flags and insignia during the Latvian War of Independence.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).