Their origin is regarded to be pre-Christian or pagan,[1] but are now a part of a folk tradition existing within the Armenian Church.
Some researchers have linked them to a proto-Indo-European deity cognate with Krishna or Shiva, a mischievous beautiful young man inhabiting the boundary between settlement and wilderness.
[5][6] Pilgrims gather to make offerings or sacrifices for the curing of illnesses and burn candles.
[7] Tukh Manuk is the main character in numerous medieval and modern folk poems, and is mentioned in the Armenian national epic Daredevils of Sassoun.
Its stories are based on oral traditions of the 8th to the 10th century and the acts by a Christian King David in the city Sasun fighting heroically against the Arab invaders.