(anc. geog.), a mountain of Sarmatia Europæa, from which the more northern spring of the Borythones is said to take its rise, according to Ptolemy. But this is contradicted by later accounts. Now Podolia.
BUDNÆANS, in ecclesiastical history, so called from the name of their leader, Simon Budneus. They not only denied all kind of religious worship to Jesus Christ, but asserted, that he was not begotten by any extraordinary act of divine power; being born, like other men, in a natural way. Budneus was deposed from his ministerial functions in the year 1584, and publicly excommunicated, with all his disciples; but afterwards abandoning his peculiar sentiments, he was readmitted to the communion of the Socinian feet. Crellius ascribes the origin of the above opinion to Adam Neufert.