Showing posts with label russia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label russia. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Russian Soldiers turned to stone.

 


Deadly UFO encounter.   


During the late 80's a group of Soviet soldiers and a terrifying  encounter a downed UFO and it's occupants leaving only two survivers.

 

In the late 1980s a group of Soviet soldiers  encountered a low-flying, saucer-shaped UFO during a training mission in Siberia,  One soldier fired a missile at the object, causing it to crash. 

Soon after  five small, humanoid beings with large heads and black eyes (grey aliensπŸ‘½) reportedly emerged from the wreckage, then somehow merged into a single, spherical object that emitted a bright flash of light.

 All solder's hit by this light ( 23 soldiers ) were turned into stone,  leaving only two survivors who happened to be in a shaded area. 

The KGB seized the petrified soldiers and wreckage of the ET ship, taking them to a secret base near Moscow. Soviet scientists allegedly found the soldiers' bodies had turned into a substance similar to limestone. 

This incident was detailed in a 250-page KGB report, which was reportedly obtained by the CIA after the Soviet Union's fall.






 A declassified CIA document, summarizing newspaper articles, included a quote from a CIA representative calling the report "a horrific picture of revenge on the part of extraterrestrial creatures". 


The CIA concluded that if true, it would be an "extremely menacing case" due to the aliens' advanced weapons and technology. 





Saturday, May 31, 2025

The Mavka 🌳🌲 ☠️

 



The Mavki is a Russian/ Slavic forest  creatures that haunts the caves  and forest of the countryside most popular in Ukraine.


The Mavki (singular: mavka) are typically forest spirits though  in some versions she is a type of rusalka

According to the myth any girl who drown themselves because of an unhappy love life become rusalka similarly any young women that dies a tragic or premature death may become a mavka.

Mavkas  live in the forests, mountains, or caves, they are young attractive often naked female spirits described as  tall with round faces and long hair .

They decorating their homes with rugs and weav thin, almost transparent clothes from stolen flax. They are also known for their love of flowers, which they wear in their hair and plant in the mountains to lure young men in. 



Is  some beliefs, a man could also become a rusalka: in the Sosnytsia Raion of the Chernihiv Oblast it's believed that men and women can become one of these spirits if they died on Trinity week. 


According to myth, they are similar to if not a variant of rusalki or mavki 

Both are depicted as beautiful young women with green moss or reed colored hair, though a more malevolent version of the Mavka is  sometimes said to have  no back or a  transparent back through which all of their internal organs were visible (those were more often called nyavka).

 Like rusalka that lure men into a watery death, the Mavka will lure men into the woods, where she tickles him to death or tangles him in her long hair and drown him 


 

On Pentecost (Navka's Easter), Mavkas are said to hold celebration, dances, and orgies, accompanied by a demon playing a flute or pipes. To save an unbaptized baby's soul, one must throw up a kerchief during Pentecost, say their name, and add "I baptise you

....   

It may be safer to just stay out of the woods and away from creeks and rivers all together lol







Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Christmas Elves....

 



πŸŽ„ Christmas Elves ⛄


We all know of Santa and his workshop of elves, but we're did this story come from what are the  origins of the jolly fat man's helpers?


 The modern elf folklore come  from Norse/Scandinavian mythology, the Nisse or house gnome and the  Γ‘lfar, also called  huldufΓ³lk or  hildafolk 'hidden folk'.

Sweden's gift giver before Santa was the Tomten and the Yule Goat though by 1891, the Good old St Nick had merged with Tomten, who was originally an elf or gnome like farm guardian  (like the Nisse).  following the work of Jenny NystrΓΆm, this new combination of  old and new Christmas figures became  the Jultomten.




In Nordic countries, Nisse are the closest thing you could consider as Christmas Elves even though  nisse are not actually  elves and they will usually  only wear red instead of the green and red outfits that elves are known for in most western  countries.




 Several  Norse legend were likely combined with other Scandinavian and Celtic legends and myths about these small magic beings.

All kinds of stories about elves, fairies  nature spirits and even gnomes can be found from  multiple regions through Europe there are also similar supernatural beings that could be connected to elves, such as kobolds or duende  from Germany Mexico and South America or the Scottish house spirits called brownies. In Medieval Europe, elves were seen as tricksters and were often linked to demons especially after the christianization of Europe most things of a supernatural or otherworldly nature where considered evil.


The modern  Christmas elf + working in Santa's workshop) appeared in literature as early as 1850 when Louisa May Alcott (Little Women ) completed, but never published a book called Christmas Elves. 


Though a earlier reference to Christmas elf's can be found  In the 1823 poem A Visit from St. Nicholas (   'Twas the Night Before Christmas), by  Clement Clarke Moore, Santa Claus himself is described in line 45: "He was chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf".





The image of the elves in the workshop was also popularized by Godey's Lady's Book, with a front cover illustration for its 1873 Christmas issue showing Santa surrounded by toys and elves with the caption "Here we have an idea of the preparations that are made to supply the young folks with toys at Christmas time".




 During this time, Godey's was a very influential figure to the birth of some of our Christmas traditions, having shown the first widely circulated picture of a modern Christmas tree on the front cover of its 1850 Christmas issue. Additional recognition was also given in Austin Thompson's 1876 work "The House of Santa Claus, a Christmas Fairy Show (Christmas play) for Sunday Schools"

A few other versions of elf's or helpers are

Ded Moroz (father Frost / Grandfather Frost )  and his grand daughter Snegurochka (Frost Maiden) from Russia ⛄🎁


Knecht Ruprecht from Germany.πŸ»πŸŽ…

The  Hoesecker in  Luxembourg.🦌

Zwarte Piet (Black Peter) In the Netherlands and Belgium who accompany Saint Nicholas on his global gift giving.πŸŽ„

And lastly the modern Christmas tradition involving that ever watchful snitch The Elf on the Shelf  .🧝‍♂️πŸ‘€


Hopefully none of you are on the naughty list, this year πŸ™‚

Have a great Christmas and happy New Year.

πŸŽ„πŸŽπŸŽ…⛄πŸ¦ŒπŸŽ„


πŸ¦‡MπŸ¦‡

Last Post for the year, thanks for stopping by and have an awesome 2025πŸŽ†πŸŽ‡



Monday, October 7, 2024

Paranormal Russia: The Kamchatka time traveler.





Kamchatka Paranormal event / Time Travel .


On November 8th 1997 a navel officer disappeared in Kamchatka, the last time he was seen was two hours before the end of his watch and he was listed as AWL with a weapon


The officer was found in the mountains two months later and was just a skeleton but there was no sighs of bite marks on the bone's from wild animals.. and the uniform

he was wearing just looked old but was not damaged or torn the remains were taken to Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky for an autopsy / examination....


Apparently Radio Carbon dating said the bone's and the uniform belonged to a 30 year old man but that he had died at least 160 years ago....


The case is still unsolved and unexplained, and is one of the more well know cases of possible Time Travel...



     ...,.....

..Yeti DNA..


There's a lot of Yeti sightings in Russia, and one famous possible attack took place in the 1950's called the Dyatlov Pass incident all the hiker's/ skiers

were found dead ...killed in a brutal fashion but no one knows what actually killed them..


In 2012 lab's in Moscow, St. Petersburg and Idaho analyzed DNA from a clump of fur that had been found in the Azass Cave in Mount Shoriya and confirmed that

the hair samples from the cave belonged an unknown spices neither ape or man. Possible Yeti dna...


,........

The Valley of Death on the western slope of Kikhpinych volcano in Kamchatka where the volcano releases carbon dioxide and cyanide.


There are a lot of UFO sightings in Russia, and the Siberian Explosion in 1916, (One of the largest explosions in history comparable to a nuclear blast )

and it's still unknown what cased it...


Also there are large tunnels in the Medveditskaya Ridge  and in Zhirnovsk District of Volgograd Region.


Another interesting place is Bolshoy Zayatski Island it has series of ancient Labyrinths that are believed to date back as far as 30,000 B.C. or roughly 32, 000 years ago the island is on the far North west region of Russian not too far from Scandinavia...


,... 


New post Monday and Friday πŸŽƒ


Friday, October 4, 2024

Russian myth: The Lake Baikal Swimmers.

 






Did the Soviet Union discover strange lake monster .



Lake Baikal is the deepest rift lake in the world. It is located in southern Siberia, it's home to all I ngs of aquatic life thriving in it's chilly waters. 

But what else could possibly be lurking in the depth of the vast lake?

Lake Baikal is often called the “Galapagos of Russia,” and for a good reason. Thousands of species of animals and plants can only be found in this lake or the surrounding area.


The Swimmers...

According to the legend, in 1982 a team of Russian Navy divers set out to  explore Lake Baikal when, to their surprise and  amazement, they encounter large, humanoid beings possibly as tall as nine feet in hight.


They procided to  try and capture them with nets! This deadly ecounter would eventually be known as The  Swimmers of Lake Baikal.

,........


In 1982. During a regular military dive exercise and working at a depth of 50 meters (164 feet), the divers noticed something strange in the water with them.


The divers reported sightings of humanoid-shaped creatures that had bodies that stretched out 3 meters (9ft) in length..


The divers described these beings as having silver silhouettes, and some had transparent spheres on their heads. These spheres have also been described as looking like an open umbrella being held over the creatures’ heads.


Once the divers surfaced, they reported the sighting to a commander who ordered the men, back into the ice cold lake  and told them to catch one of these strange swimmers.

 Seven divers reentered the water and again encountered the Swimmers, which forcefully threw the soviet divers to the lake’s surface.


There were not enough  decompression chambers on the shore for all seven of the divers, and three unlucky divers were left to die from the caisson disease, aka decompression sickness or “the bends”. The attempt to contact the Lake Baikal Swimmers had turned deadly.


.... 

First telling.. 


The story of the Swimmers first appeared in a book written by Soviet/Russian UFOlogist named Vladimir Azhazha. He has been studying UFOlogy for  decades but is also know for making alleged  false claims about aliens in Russia.

.....


Many people especially those in the government claim this story is nothing more then an urban legend.

The city of Severobaikalsky, near the port of Baikal, did have a special base where dives were conducted by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Ministry of Emergency Situations.


However managers of the base have all said the story of the swimmers is utter  nonsense and that there has never been a single death of a diver at the base, and the town of Severobaikalsky formally became a town in 1984, two years after the supposed navy exercise in the story occurred.


Though if the military had actually encountered otherworldly creatures at the bottom of the lake especially one's that killed some of their personal, do you really think they would admit it?


So what do you think, are the swimmers real or just a cool urban legend?

    





Friday, January 6, 2023

Babuska and the Three Kings.

 

 

                                              Merry Christmas and Happy New Year 



Babushka lived in a small peasant village in Russia. 

 

She always worked hard cleaning and keeping her house tidy; it was the cleanest house in the whole village. But Babushka’s talents didn’t stop there. Her garden was full of flowers and her cooking was fantastic.

One evening she was busy dusting and cleaning away, she was so engrossed in her work that she didn’t hear her neighbors outside talking about a bright new star in sky. She had heard about the star but thought it was a lot of fuss about a star. “I don’t have the time to look because I’m so behind with my work.” she said. “I must work all night!”

She missed the star as it shone in the sky, and she missed the little line of twinkling lights coming down towards the village at dawn. She didn’t hear the sounds of the pipes and drums playing music, and she missed her neighbors whispering in wonder at what the lights were.

                                The Story of the Babushka - Christmas FM

 

And she finally missed when all the villagers went quiet, and didn’t hear when the sound of footsteps came up the path to her door. But she didn’t miss the loud knocking on her front door moments later! “What is that?” she wondered. When the door opened, Babushka’s mouth dropped in amazement. 

 

 

There were three kings at her door with one of their servants! “My masters need a place to rest,” said the servant, “and yours is the best house in the village.” “You want to stay here?” asked Babushka. “Yes”, replied the servant. “It would only be until night falls and the star appears again.” Babushka was nervous, and gulped. “Come in, then.” she said.

                              Tell Me A Story Babushka's Christmas (a Russian Christmas tale)

 

As soon as they walked across the threshold, the three kings were delighted with all the food they saw: home-baked bread, pies and cakes. Babushka dashed about, serving them and offering the best of her hospitality, asking lots of questions.

“Have you come a long way?” Babushka asked. “A very long way”, sighed the first king, Caspar. “Where are you going?” she continued. “We’re following the new star”, said the second king, Melchior. “But where?”, Babushka wondered.

 

 Do We Know the Three Wise Men's Names in the Bible?

The three kings said they didn’t know, but they believed that the star would lead them to a new-born king, a King of Earth and Heaven. “Why don’t you come with us?” asked the third king, Balthazar. “You could bring him a gift like we do. I bring gold, and my colleagues bring spices and perfumes.”

“Oh”, said Babushka, “I’m not sure that he would welcome me” she said. “And what could I bring for a gift? Toys! I know I could bring a toy. I’ve got a cupboard full of toys.” she said sadly. “My baby son died when he was small.”

Balthazar stopped Babushka as she went to tidy the kitchen up. “This new king could be your king too. Come with us when the star appears tonight”, he said. “I’ll think about it”, sighed Babushka.

As the kings slept, Babushka tidied up as quietly as she could. “What a lot of extra work there was!” she thought, “and this new king, what a funny idea, to go off with the kings to find him.”

Babushka shook herself. There was no time for dreaming, all this washing-up and putting away had to be done. “Anyway,” she thought, “how long would she be away? What would she wear? What about the gift?” She sighed. “There is so much to do. The house will have to be cleaned when they’ve gone. I couldn’t just leave it.”

Suddenly it was night-time again and the star was in the sky. “Are you ready, Babushka?” asked Balthazar. “I’ll come tomorrow,” Babushka called, “I must just tidy here first and find a gift.”

The kings went away sadly. Babushka ran back into her house, keen to get on with her work. Finally, she went to the small cupboard, opened the door and gazed at all the toys. But they were very dusty. They weren’t fit for a baby king. Babushka decided that they would all need to be cleaned, and she polished all of the toys until each one shined.

Then Babushka looked through the window: it was morning! The star had came and gone. She knew the kings would have found somewhere else to rest by now, and that she could easily catch them up, but she felt so tired and soon she fell asleep.

The next thing Babushka knew, she was awake and it was dark outside. She had slept all day! Babushka quickly pulled on her cloak, packed the toys in a basket and ran down the road, the same way the kings had gone before her.

Everywhere she went, Babushka asked “Have you seen the kings?” “Oh yes,” everyone told her, “we saw them. They went that way”, as they pointed further down the road. Babushka followed the trail of the kings, as the villages got bigger and became towns. But Babushka never stopped, and soon she came to a city.

“The palace,” she thought. “That’s where the royal baby would be born.” But when Babushka got to the door, she was disappointed. ”No, there is no royal baby here,” said the palace guard when she asked him.

“What about three kings?” she asked. “Oh yes, they came here, but they didn’t stay long” said the doorman. “They were soon on their journey.” “But where to?” asked Babushka. “Bethlehem”, the doorman replied. “But I can’t imagine why. It’s a very poor place.”

Babushka set off towards Bethlehem, and by evening she had arrived and had been traveling for a long time. She went into the local inn and asked about the kings. “Oh yes,” said the landlord, “the kings were here two days ago. They were very excited, but they didn’t even stay the night.”

“And what about a baby?” Babushka asked. “Yes, there was a baby” said the landlord. “The kings asked about a baby, too.” When he saw the disappointment in Babushka’s eyes, he stopped. “If you’d like to see where the baby was,” he said quickly, “it was across the yard there. I couldn’t offer the couple anything better at the time. My inn was really full, so they had to go in the stable.”

 

 Who were the 3 wise men who visited Jesus?

Babushka followed him across the yard. “Here’s the stable.” he said, and left her. “Babushka?” Someone was calling her from the doorway. He looked kindly at her. She wondered if he knew where the family had gone. She knew now that the baby king was the most important thing in the world to her. “They have gone to Egypt, and safety,” he told her. “And the kings have returned to their countries. But one of them told me about you. I am sorry to tell you, but you are too late.”

Babushka was very sad that she had missed the baby. It is said that Babushka is still looking for Jesus today….

 

 Baboushka and The Three Kings is a children's picture book written by Ruth Robbins, illustrated by Nicolas Sidjakov, and published by Parnassus Press in 1960

 

                     Baboushka and the Three Kings Adapted from a Russian Folk Tale: Amazon.com:  Books

Thursday, December 1, 2022

 Zimadevushka, The Snow Woman of Russia..



 

 Zimadevushka, The Snow Woman of Russia.

Winter Cryptids...❆❄❅

The Zimadevushka is similar to the Japanese  Tsurara onna (Icecicle Woman) and the  Yuki onna (Snow Woman).

This icy cryptid spends the warmer months in hibernation especially during Summer
The winter is her hunting season...

Her powers are..

Freezing Breath
Human Appearance
Immune to Cold
and seduction.



A typical  encounter with her usually stars when she see's a potential victim she will the  will approach the man with a sly smile with her full beauty on display.

Then she will walk away, The man fully under her spell, will then follow her out.

Only to be led to an out of site location a back ally, forest's or even the  cold mountains.

Once the man has followed her far enough, she will turn around and exhale her freezing breath. 



 


Her ice-cold breath will cause her prey to freeze and instantly die of hypothermia, though he will see a brief flash of her true appearance
before death.

The Zimidevushka will then feed on his corpse until there is nothing  left but bones.

She will then freeze the skeleton and hide it. 



Afterwards she will pretends to be a doctor and approaches his family with fake sympathy, claiming the man was found dead in the  mountains  and she'd done everything she could to help him, but it hadn't been enough. After that's finished, she moves on to  her next victim.









Thursday, October 14, 2021

The Kamchatka Globster, Sea Monster'S....

 
 

 


                                                     The Kamchatka Globster


EARLY POST THIS WEEK, NEXT WEEK WILL BE BACK TO FRIDAY POSTS :)

,.........................................

Kamchatka in Russia's far east is known for its beautiful landscape and dozens of volcanoes even referred to as the land of volcanoes.

 

But aside from the stunning scenery and giant bears, several paranormal events have taken place in the region throughout the years,  this globster washing up  was just one of the more recent one's.


0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000


A globster is any blob-like creatures without obvious eyes and bones, or a visibly distinct head. 

Cryptozoologists most often attribute the term to the British biologist Ivan Terence Sanderson.

 
He is widely believed to have first coined the term in 1962 to describe a strange Australian blob like-creature.

Globsters can also resemble large octopi and some might even have bones and tentacles, but none of them are usually as completely covered in hair as this  one.
....................


In mid August 2018 a strange  smelly hair covered blob washed ashore on the Kamchatka peninsula in Russia's far east.

This odd find was discovered  and video taped by a local woman, Svetlana Dyadenko.

The “hairy sea monster” that washed up on the shor of the Kamchatka peninsula    is said  to have been more than three times the size of a man and has no distinguishable head or eyes.

It was covered with white and gray hair that Svetlana Dyadenko, the woman who first encountered the beast, says is tubular.

..................................
“The most interesting thing to me is that the creature is covered with tubular fur,” Dyadenko said according to The Siberian Times.
..................................

                                        Svetlana Dyadenko and the creature.


The tubular hair is hollow and colorless, similar to the type of hair found on polar bears. The animal also appears to have a long tail, or possibly a tentacle.


 

 


 

A marine biologist in Kamchatka Sergei Kornev, believes this is nothing more then a large whale chunk, telling The Siberian Times that the creature is most like a whale “Under the influence of the sea, time, and various animals, from smallest to the largest, a whale often takeson bizarre forms,” Kornev said. “This is only part of a whale, not a whole one.”

2018 was a busy year for globsters washing up, more on the other's in  later posts.




So what do you think, was the smelly hairy creature some as of yet unidentified sea monster or just the decaying remains of a dead whale?

 

btw  a few episodes of netflix's Stranger Things were also filmed in Kamchatka. so keep an eye out for the new season in 2022 :)


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Afew other examples of globsters..

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 New posts every friday, all October long..





Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Monsters, cryptids and yokai: The Rusalka..




                                            Rusalka by daekazu
 Rusalka by daekazu on deviantart https://www.deviantart.com/daekazu/art/Rusalka-187551820
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The Russian Mermaid ...
She is as dangerous as she is beautiful 

Rusalka or Pusalka is commonly described as  a water nymph..

The Rusalka is a female spirit in Russian / Slavic folklore and their  equivalent of a mermaid. though she has two leg's insted of a finned tail and in some versions can walk on land and even climb tree's..


She has different names in various cultures: rusalka (in East Slavic cultures) vila (Czech, Slovak), wiΕ‚a (Polish).

According to most accounts the rusalki were a type of fish-women, who lived at the bottom of rivers and lake's.

In some legends she would leave her watery home late at night together with other Rusalki she would walk out to the bank and dance in meadows. If they saw handsome men, they would  enchant them with songs and dancing, mesmerize them, then lead them away to the river and to their inevitable  death.

                                Image result for russian rusalka

                                               Art by Anna Vinogradova Kransndar 1975
=========================
A Rusalka most often  appears as a beautiful young women, she will site by the shore of a lake usually coming her hair or sometimes singing this is done as a means to lure in her prey..

In some version's she is a type of water spirit in other's she is a young woman that was ether murdered by her lover of  who committed suicide by drowning due to an unhappy marriage or who were violently drowned against their will (especially after becoming pregnant with unwanted children), and now  must live out their time on Earth as rusalki.

However,in some  Slavic versions  not all rusalki encounters were linked with death from water It is accounted by most stories that the soul  of a young woman who had died in or near a river or a lake would come back to haunt that waterway.

Though this version of a  rusalka is not invariably malevolent or evil, and would be allowed to rest in peace if her death is avenged.
========
In some versions she has green sea week like hair....





================



Her main purpose is, however, to lure young men, seduced by either her looks or her voice, (Similar  to a Siren or a Succubus)  into the depths of the waterways where she would entangle their feet with her long hair and submerge them. Her body would instantly become very slippery and not allow the victim to cling on to her in order to reach the surface.

                                            Russian mermaids

 ======
She would then wait until the victim had drowned, or, on some occasions, tickle them to death, as she laughed. 



 It is also believed, by a few accounts, that rusalki can change their appearance to match the tastes of men they are about to seduce  although a rusalka is generally considered to represent universal beauty, therefore is highly feared yet respected in Slavic culture.

===================


                                  File:Iwan Nikolajewitsch Kramskoj 002.jpg
                                                Ivan Kramskoi, The Mermaids, 1871
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In some of the older stories the Rusalka was a symbol of fertility and not consider evil in the old pagan beliefes



 They came out of the water in the spring to transfer life-giving moisture to the fields and thus helped nurture the crops.



 =====

=======================
Celebrations: Rusalka Week..
=======================

The Rusalki  are believed to be at their most dangerous during the Rusalka Week in early June. At this time, they were supposed to have left their watery depths in order to swing on branches of birch and willow trees by night. Swimming during this week was strictly forbidden, lest these  mermaids would drag a swimmer down to the river bed.
                                             

                                                    

                                                       Rusalka by Ivan Bilibin - 1934
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A common feature of the celebration of Rusalnaya was the ritual banishment or burial of the rusalki at the end of the week, which remained as entertainment in Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine until the 1930s


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Other mediums ..
============

 The Rusalka trilogy of novels by C. J. Cherryh feature and revolve around a rusalka named Eveshka.

 Rusalka is an opera by Alexander Dargomyzhsky. - 1856

"Rusalka" is a poem by Mikhail Lermontoy 1831.


Nikolai Medtner's Third Piano Concerto is based on Mikhail Lermontov's ballad.

A Rusalkas is the main character in "The Surface Breaks", a YA novel and retelling of Hans Christian Andersen's "The Little Mermaid" by Louise O'Neill.

 Rusalkas appear as monsters in the Action Role playing game The Incredible Adventures of Van Helsing.


 "The Last Wish " by Andrzej Sapkowski, a Polish novel from the Witcher series, in which Geralt briefly encounters a Rusalka that has fallen in love with a cursed man.

 "Fatima Rusalka", a single by alternative metal band Alesana  ..

There are many many other examples of Rusalka in modern media  bedside's the one's i mentioned here.. :)
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Friday, March 12, 2021

Monsters, Cryptids and Yokai, Russian folklor, Alkonost, Gamayun and Shishiga

 

 ......................Today's post is mostly Russian based siren and harpy like cryptids.................

 

pic is by Viktor Vasnetsov's Sirin (left) and Alkonost (right) Birds of Joy and Sorrow (1896)

==========================

Russian myths..

The Alkonost, Gamayun and Shishiga..

================================================

 


                               

In  Russian folklore the Alkonost is a woman-headed bird similar to the Greek Sirens
dangerous creatures, who lured nearby sailors with their enchanting music and singing voices
to shipwreck on the rocky coast of their island..

Like the sirens the Alkonost is said to have a beautiful voice and those who hear these sounds
forget everything they know and want nothing more ever again.

The Alkonost lays her eggs on a beach and then rolls them into the sea. When the  eggs hatch, a thunderstorm
sets in and the sea becomes so rough that it's impossible to traverse.
She is also related to other birds like beings in Slavic mythology, namely the Rarog and Stratim.

The name Alkonost is derived from a Greek demigoddess named Alcyone.

In Greek mythology, Alcyone was transformed by the gods into a kingfisher....
==========

          



The Gamayun...

the Gamayun is usually depicted as a large bird with a woman's head, again simiar to the sirens.

Like the Alkonost, the gamayun is believed to originate from the Greek folklore and siren mythology.

However unlike the dangerous and often malevolent sirens, the Gamayun is a being of prophecy in Russian folklore. She  is a symbol of wisdom and knowledge.

She is said to live on an island in the mythical east, close to paradise.

According to legends she spread divine messages and prophecies, and she knows everything of all creation,  gods, heroes, and man.

 



........
 and our third cryptid is the Shishiga..



Shishiga are  sometimes called leshenka .


 

She is a female swamp (or forest) creature similar to the wood-goblin.


She  is often  described as, white, nude, and has tousled  hair.

She is known to harass people and bring misfortune to the drunkards.

She is also an  important figure in the mythology of the Komi people.

The Shishiga supposedly lives in the Kama River and often goes to the shore to comb her hair.

Seeing her is considered a very bad omen, as those who do sees her will soon drown or die by another cause.


The Shishiga also shares some similarity to the story of Artemis and Actaeon from  Greek mythology..


.........

.....

...




Monday, December 9, 2019

Christmas: Grandfather Frost and the Ice maidens


                                              Image by vukcevic 


Today we talk about Santa...Kind of...

Have you ever wondered what the jolly old elf  is like in other counter's?..

For most of us, at least in the US he is called Santa Claus in others country's Papa Noel and even  Saint Nichole's...
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But have you ever heard of Ded Moroz (Grandfather Frost ) or his granddaughter  Snegurochka - The Ice Maiden ?....No?

Well your in luck this post is dedicated to this frosty family for friendly folk...Try to say that five times fast lol

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Father Frost and his granddaughter Snegurochka – the Snow Maiden.

Originated in Russia.

Each year there are  festivals in celebration of the season   people dress up like Ded Moroz and Snegurochka they join in the parades from all over the country!


                                  Christmas parade in Minsk, Belarus, on Dec 24, 2016

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Ded Moroz like Santa Claus in the West is depicted as bringing presents to good children,  but unlike Santa who  dose his traveling on Christmas Eve Ded Moroz makes his appearance on New Years Eve. and is often accompanied by his Granddaughter / helper Snegurochka the Snow maiden.
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         Ded Moroz
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Ded Moroz Grandfather Frost or Father Frost is a popular holiday figure  in modern Russia.

 The origins of the of Ded Moroz predates Christianity as a Slavic  wizard of winter.

According to some sources in Slavic mythology, Ded Moroz, was also called Morozko or Ded, A ded is a typeof  snow demon.

  However, before the Christianization of Russia the term demon didn't have the negative connotation it dose today.

Though after the christinazation of the region the terms demon, spirit, fairy or anything else that could be described as such was now seen as bad or out right evil 



Under the influence of the  Orthodox church the  traditions relating to  Grandfather Frost  were transformed.

 Ever since the late 1800's the traditions and legend of Ded Moroz have been shaped by literary influences.

The play Snegurochka by Aleksandr Ostrocsky  was largely  influential in popularizing the characters.

Following the Russian Revolution Christmas traditions were actively discouraged because they were considered to be "bourgeois and religious".

In 1928 Ded Moroz was declared "an ally of the priest and Kulak

Though the current image of Ded Moroz was created during soviet times, and would become the main symbol of the New Year's holiday Novy God  that replaced Christmas.

Some Christmas traditions were revived following the famous letter by Pavel Postyshey published in  Pravda on December 28, 1935.

Postyshev believed that the origins of the holiday, which were pre-Christian, were less important than the benefits it could bring to Soviet children.

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 In 1998, the town of Veliku Ustyug in Vologda, Oblast was declared the official home of the  Ded Moroz by Yury Luzhkov then Mayor of Moscow.

You can take  a tain ride there... it's about 500 miles northeast of Moscow in the Taiga Forest in a log cabin.

Between 2003 and 2010, the post office in Veliky Ustyug received roughly 2,000,000 letters from within Russia and from all over the world for Ded Moroz.

 On January 7, 2008, President Putin visited Ded Moroz' residence in the town of Veliky Ustyug as part of the Russian Orthodox Christmas Eve celebration.







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                                        Snegurochka
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 They saw a pretty young girl all dressed in white with flaxen hair and shining blue eyes… Painting of Snow Maiden (1899)  by Viktor M. Vasnetsov
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In 1917, after the Bolshevik Revolution, Ded Moroz  along with Christmas was banned in Russia.

However in 1935  the winter wizard and the silver haired cutie would see a resurgence in popularity with the New Year’s celebrations becoming a more  public event, ever since then Ded Moroz and Snegurochka have appear on New Year’s Eve, putting presents under the tree for good kids all over the country.

 In the late Russian Empire (Late 1800's and Early 1900's) Snegurochka was part of Christmas traditions, in the form of Christmas tree ornimants and figurine.

 In the early Soviet Union, the holiday of Christmas was banned, together with other Christian traditions., until it was reinstated as a holiday of the Russian Federation in 1991, by Russian Federation President Boris N. Yeltsin
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Snow-Maiden-and-Father-Frost 1912 paintings of Snow Maiden and Father Frost by Nicholas Roerich.

In 1878, the composer Ludwig Minkus  and the Balletmaster Marius Petipa staged a ballet adaptation of Snegurochka    called The Daughter of the Snow for the Tsar's Imperial Ballet.

The story was also later adapted into an opera in 1880-81 by  Nikolai Rimsky- Korsakov titled The Snow Maiden: A Spring Fairy Tail

Another version of  the snow maiden is about a girl who was  made of snow named Snegurka (Snezhevinochka ) it was published in 1869 by Alexander Afanasyey  in the second volume of his work The Poetic Outlook on Nature by the Slavs, where he also mentions the German analog, Schneekind ("Snow Child").  In this version, childless Russian peasants Ivan and Marya made a snow doll, which later came to life.

This version was later added to  Contes Populaires Slaves by Louis Leger in 1882.

In the story Snegurka grows up quickly.  She later befrends a  group of girls that invite  her on a walk in the woods, after which they make a small fire and take turns jumping over it; in some variants, this is on St. Jon's Day leaping over a fire is a  St. John's Day tradition.

However when Snegurka's turn comes, she starts to jump, but only gets halfway before evaporating into a small cloud of mist.

This version of the story was called  "Snowflake" and was included in the "The  Pink Fairy Book" by Andrew Lang in 1897.




                                    Snegurochka in the forest (1925) by Boris Zvorykin.

Similar versions of these two figures can be found in other areas in the surrounding country's .

But this version is strictly Russia, so if your in the country during the holidays and you like parades and overall fun  check out some of the local  festivals !!

Merry Christmas everyone!!!! :)




Monday, December 2, 2019

Christmas: Coca Cola and the Santa Connection






 Did you know Santa wasn't always depicted as a jolly bearded fat man ....

In fact the most well know version of Santa we have today is largely thanks to the marketing efforts of the Coca Cola Company...

Before  1931, Santa came in many different form's ranging from  a tall slender man to a very creepy -looking elf and almost everything in between....

In some area's he was seen as  Norse Huntsman in animal skins and in others he was dressed in a similar fashion to that of  a  bishop's robe.



There are regional differences in the type of suit that Santa Claus wears.

Usually in  United Kingdom  and the USA  Santa wears a red jacket and pants with white fur trim,  a broad buckled belt, a matching hat, and black boots.

 In other area's of  European  Austria for instance Santa is called Saint Nicholas  and is seen with a  long robe and a Bishop's mitre.
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 During the American Civil War cartoonist Thomas Nast drew his version of Santa Claus for Harper's Weekly in 1862, Santa was shown as a small gnome or elf like being who supported the Union.

Nast continued to draw Santa for 30 years, changing the color of his coat from tan originally and ending with the red that we know today.


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                                  Nast Santa in red 1881

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The Coca-Cola Company first started there Christmas advertising in the 1920s with  newspaper's and magazines like on of the first was  The Saturday Evening Post.


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In 1930, artist Fred Mizen painted a department-store Santa in a crowd drinking a bottle of Coke. The ad featured the world's largest soda fountain, which was located in the department store Famous Barr Co. in St. Louis, Mo. Mizen's painting was used in print ads that Christmas season, appearing in The Saturday Evening Post in December 1930.
                                           Fred Mizen  - Santa 1930
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 In 1931 Coke began placing Coca-Cola ads in other popular magazines of the time.

Archie Lee, the D'Arcy Advertising Agency executive working with The Coca-Cola Company, wanted to show a Santa who was both realistic and symbolic.

Coca-Cola hired Haddon Sundblom to develop advertising images using Santa Claus — showing Santa himself, not a man dressed as Santa.

One of  Sundblom main source of inspiration was  Clement Clark Moore's 1822 poem  Twas the Night Before Christmas. 
Moore's description of St. Nick led to an image of a warm, friendly, pleasantly plump and human Santa. (And even though it's often said that Santa wears a red coat because red is the color of Coca-Cola, Santa appeared in a red coat before Sundblom painted him.

Sundblom’s Santa first debuted in 1931 in Coke ads in The Saturday Evening Post and appeared regularly in that magazine, as well as in Ladies Home Journal, National Geographic, The New Yorker and many others.


From 1931 to 1964, Coca-Cola showed Santa delivering toys , reading a child's christmas letter and of course enjoy a cold Coke.
 The original oil paintings Sundblom created were adapted for Coca-Cola advertising in magazines and on store displays, billboards, posters, calendars and plush dolls. Many of those items today are sot after by memorabilia collectors.
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Mr. Sundblom created his last version of Santa in 1964, Coca-Cola advertising featured his images of Santa for decades afterwords . 

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These paintings are some of the most prized pieces in the art collection in the Cola  company’s archives department and have been on exhibit around the world, in famous locations..
 Many of his Original paintings can be seen at the World of Coca Cola in Atlanta, Georgia.
Other places they have been featured ...
 The Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago.
The Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Canada.
The Louve in Paris, France.
 The NK Department Store in Stockholm, Sewden.

The Isetan Department Store in Tokyo, Japan.