kuluslik
Kuluslik, sometimes spelled kuluslik, is a term that appears in a handful of historical texts from the Baltic and Central European regions, although its precise meaning remains uncertain. The word is generally classified as a loan‑word in the folklore and legal vocabulary of early medieval Slavic lands. In the surviving manuscripts, it is most often associated with references to agricultural or hunting practices. For example, in a 13th‑century Estonian register, kuluslik is noted as a descriptor for “a particular type of truffle‑flavored bread” brought back by hunters from the far northern woodlands. In another source, a law fragment from the 15th century mentions “kulusliks” as a category of estate livestock permitted for sale by serfs during a designated festival.
Etymologically, scholars suggest a possible link to the Proto‑Baltic root *kul‑, meaning “to collect, gather,” and