slavic mythology

  • 41Perun — This article is about a Slavic god. For historical money, see Perun (money). Perun spring, east, fertility, athmosphere, thunderbolt Symbol fire, oak, iris, eagle, axe Consort Perunika or Mokosh Christian equivalent Elijah …

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  • 42Veles (god) — For the city in the Republic of Macedonia, see Veles (city). Veles (Cyrillic: Велес; pl. Weles; Old Russian and Old Church Slavonic: Велесъ) also known as Volos ( ru. Волосъ) (listed as a Christian saint in Old Russian texts) is a major Slavic… …

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  • 43Jarilo — (Cyrillic: Ярило or Јарило; Polish: Jaryło; Croatian: Jura or Juraj; Serbian: Đorđe; Slavic: Jarovit), alternatively Yarilo, Iarilo, or Gerovit, was a major male Proto Slavic deity of vegetation, fertility and spring, also associated with war and …

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  • 44European dragon — (Wyrm, Worm) The Ljubljana Dragon, protector of Ljubljana, capital of Slovenia Creature Grouping …

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  • 45Shapeshifting — For other uses, see Shapeshifting (disambiguation). Shapeshifting is a common theme in mythology, folklore, and fairy tales. It is also found in epic poems, science fiction literature, fantasy literature, children s literature, Shakespearean… …

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  • 46Belobog — Belobog, Belbog, Bialbog, Byelobog, Bielobog, Belun, Bylun, (all names meaning: White God) is a reconstructed Slavic deity of light and Sun, the counterpart of dark and cursed Czernobog (Black God). It is uncertain whether such a deity was ever… …

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  • 47Prince Marko — Marko Марко King of the Serbian Land (only de jure) King Marko on a fresco above the south entrance to the church of Marko s Monastery near Skopje. He was a ktetor of this monastery …

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  • 48Lada and Lado — Lada or Lado is a fakeloric Slavic pagan deity of harmony, merriment, youth, love and beauty which almost certainly never existed in the ancient Slavic pantheon. It is perhaps the finest example of misconception, confusion or pure invention… …

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  • 49Mat Zemlya — Mat Zemlya, also Matka Ziemia (literally Mother Earth, various other names are in use as well) is the collective term applied to a number of Slavic deities devoted to plants, growth, birth, creation and patrons of field works.[1] In the early… …

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  • 50Chernobog — is a Slavic deity, about whom much has been speculated but little can be said definitively. The name may also be given as Crnobog, Czernobóg, Černobog, Црнобог, Zernebog and Чернобог, meaning black god. The only historical sources, which are… …

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