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         Russian Mythology:     more books (100)
  1. Songs of the Russian People As Illustrative of Slavonic Mythology and Russian Social Life by W. R. S. Ralston, 2004-01-11
  2. The Cossack Hero in Russian Literature: A Study in Cultural Mythology (Studies of the Harriman Institute) by Judith Deutsch Kornblatt, 1993-01-15
  3. Heroes, Monsters and Other Worlds from Russian Mythology (The World Mythology Series) by Elizabeth Warner, 1996-01
  4. Essential Russian Mythology: Stories That Change the World by Pyotr Simonov, 1997-04
  5. Cultural Mythologies of Russian Modernism: From the Golden Age to the Silver Age (California Slavic Studies)
  6. Napoleon in Russian Cultural Mythology by Molly W. Wesling, 2001-02-01
  7. Kitezh: The Russian Grail Legends by Munin Nederlander, 1991-10
  8. Territories of Terror: Mythologies and Memories of the Gulag in Contemporary Russian-American Art by Svetlana Boym, 2007-02-15
  9. Hearlds of Revolution, Russian Students and the Mythologies of Radicalism by Susan K. Morrissey, 1998
  10. Glas 6: Jews and Strangers (New Russian Writing, Vol 6) by Natasha Perova, 1997-03-25
  11. Russian Folk Lyrics
  12. Essays on Russian Folklore and Mythology by Felix J. Oinas, 1985-11
  13. Three Russian Lyric Folk Song Meters by James Bailey, 1993-06
  14. Soviet Russian Literature: Writers and Problems, 1919-1977 by Marc Slonim, 1977-04-14

1. Dazhdbog In Russian Mythology
English translations of the old Russian myth.
http://www.ibiblio.org/sergei/Dazhdbog.html
Dazhdbog in Russian mythology or His story
by (c) Sergei Naumov , 1994. Based on Russian folklore and personal research.
An Internet version adopted for the WWW server "Dazhdbog's Grandchildren"
The picture at the end is taken from the book "Yazichestvo drevnej Rusi" ("Paganism of ancient Rus") by Boris Ribakov.
Roll 10
"Tell, Gamayun, prophetic bird, tell about the birth of Dazhdbog the Kind, the son of Mighty Perun and beautiful mermaid Ros. And about the combat with father of him, as they fought and fraternized, tell about Dazhdbog's victory..." "Of what that know, hide nothing I will..." In the ancient Russian mythology Dazhdbog appears as a son of the Almighty Perun and a mermaid named Ros Perun is a son of Svarog (Vedic Isvara ) who is a top God in Russian pagan beliefs, a kind of an analogue of Cronos of the Greeks, although he did not actually create the World, he only created the living Universe but... this is the different story of cosmological beliefs of Russians. Perun symbolizes a victory (not the war as he is not Mars , and ancient Russians did not have this kind of god) over enemies, lightnings and things of that sort (looks like Zeus of Greeks but not exactly as he shares some other functions). Basically

2. Russian FolkloreLinks
Slavic Paganism Witchcraft. Mythological Encyclopedia (in Russian) Dazhdbog in russian mythology. Russian Paganism. Mythology and Folklore
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

3. Slavic / Russian Mythology
Read the Russian tale of a clever soldier who solves each riddle the tsar giveshim and gains a fortune in the bargain. Find this and other stories from
http://classiclit.about.com/od/russianmythology/
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Slavic / Russian Mythology
Read the Russian tale of a clever soldier who solves each riddle the tsar gives him and gains a fortune in the bargain. Find this and other stories from Russian mythology.
Alphabetical
Recent Up a category Dazhdbog in Russian Mythology "In the ancient Russian mythology Dazhdbog appears as a son of the Almighty Perun and a mermaid named Ros. Perun is a son of Svarog (Vedic Isvara) who is a top God in Russian pagan beliefs, a kind of an analogue of Cronos of the Greeks, although he did not actually create the World, he only created the living Universe..." Russian Fairy Tales: Pagan Gods "The following inventory and discussion of Russian pagan gods is taken from Linda Ivanits, Russian Folk Belief, Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 1989. Russian words are transliterated according to the Library of Congress system, with the stressed vowel indicated by bold type. Numbers in parentheses are page references to Ivanits's book."

4. Regional Folklore And Mythology
Russian. Scottish. Spanish. Turkish. United States. Vietnamese. Here you will find links to information about folklore and mythology topics
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

5. Dazhdbog In Russian Mythology
Dazhdbog in russian mythology or His story, and the relationships of Russian deities. Includes history of russian mythology words and names.
http://metalab.unc.edu/sergei/Dazhdbog.html
Dazhdbog in Russian mythology or His story
by (c) Sergei Naumov , 1994. Based on Russian folklore and personal research.
An Internet version adopted for the WWW server "Dazhdbog's Grandchildren"
The picture at the end is taken from the book "Yazichestvo drevnej Rusi" ("Paganism of ancient Rus") by Boris Ribakov.
Roll 10
"Tell, Gamayun, prophetic bird, tell about the birth of Dazhdbog the Kind, the son of Mighty Perun and beautiful mermaid Ros. And about the combat with father of him, as they fought and fraternized, tell about Dazhdbog's victory..." "Of what that know, hide nothing I will..." In the ancient Russian mythology Dazhdbog appears as a son of the Almighty Perun and a mermaid named Ros Perun is a son of Svarog (Vedic Isvara ) who is a top God in Russian pagan beliefs, a kind of an analogue of Cronos of the Greeks, although he did not actually create the World, he only created the living Universe but... this is the different story of cosmological beliefs of Russians. Perun symbolizes a victory (not the war as he is not Mars , and ancient Russians did not have this kind of god) over enemies, lightnings and things of that sort (looks like Zeus of Greeks but not exactly as he shares some other functions). Basically

6. Dazhdbog In Russian Mythology
Dazhdbog in russian mythology or His story
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

7. Dazhdbog In Russian Mythology
English translations of the old Russian myth.
http://sunsite.unc.edu/sergei/Dazhdbog.html
Dazhdbog in Russian mythology or His story
by (c) Sergei Naumov , 1994. Based on Russian folklore and personal research.
An Internet version adopted for the WWW server "Dazhdbog's Grandchildren"
The picture at the end is taken from the book "Yazichestvo drevnej Rusi" ("Paganism of ancient Rus") by Boris Ribakov.
Roll 10
"Tell, Gamayun, prophetic bird, tell about the birth of Dazhdbog the Kind, the son of Mighty Perun and beautiful mermaid Ros. And about the combat with father of him, as they fought and fraternized, tell about Dazhdbog's victory..." "Of what that know, hide nothing I will..." In the ancient Russian mythology Dazhdbog appears as a son of the Almighty Perun and a mermaid named Ros Perun is a son of Svarog (Vedic Isvara ) who is a top God in Russian pagan beliefs, a kind of an analogue of Cronos of the Greeks, although he did not actually create the World, he only created the living Universe but... this is the different story of cosmological beliefs of Russians. Perun symbolizes a victory (not the war as he is not Mars , and ancient Russians did not have this kind of god) over enemies, lightnings and things of that sort (looks like Zeus of Greeks but not exactly as he shares some other functions). Basically

8. Mythology's Mything Links Eastern Europe / Pan Slavic Traditions
Slavic mythology has a strong focus on the sun, warmth, light, birds The Firebird and Ivan (Courtesy of Russian Sunbirds)
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. MYTHOLOGY
Russian. see also Siberian and Slavic Dazhdbog in russian mythology see alsoRussian, Serbian, or Siberian Mythology of the Divozenky
http://www.greatdreams.com/myth.htm
MYTHOLOGY APOLLO APHRODITE ARES ARTEMIS ... Childrens Mythology By Carol Hurst CHARON CUNEIFORM Day of Rest and Atonement, Azazel, Jarmo, Jericho, and Mythology EGYPTIAN GODS ... Icarus in Flight By Boris Vallejo INDEX to THE SECRET DOCTRINE Internet And Greek Mythology JAYNE'S EGYPTIAN RESEARCH PAGE JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS ...
Time

MYTHOLOGIES
FOR SPECIFIC GEOGRAPHICAL REGIONS:
AFRICA Sub-Saharan Africa Sub-Sahara: General
Sub-Saharan Folklore
...
Virgil
Afghan
Afghan Folklore
Afghan Cultural Ceremonies and Traditions
African
African Mythology in "Things Fall Apart"
African Story Lines

Three Ashanti Folktales

Sango
...
Cape Verde Folktales
Afro-Carribean
OrishaNet
Altaic
Turkish Poems Turkish Folklore
American
Daniel Boone: Myth and Reality in American Consciousness Folktales from Springbranch La Llorona Paul's Babe Page ... The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
Anatolian
Hittite/Hurrian Mythology REF
Anglo-Saxon
Beowulf Bibliography 1979-1994 Resources for Studying Beowulf The Electronic Beowulf Project Beowulf
Arabic
The Story of Djuha and the Figs
Arthurian
King Arthur Arthurian Legend Studies The Arthurian Legends Arthur is not dead!

10. Slavic / Russian Mythology
Slavic / russian mythology. Read the Russian tale of a clever soldier who solves each riddle the tsar gives him and gains a fortune in the bargain.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

11. The Scythian And Sarmatian Sources Of Russian Mythology And Fairytales
The Scythian and Sarmatian Sources of the russian mythology and FairyTales.Sergei V. Rjabchikov. Krasnodar, Russia. srjabchikov@hotmail.com
http://www.anthroglobe.ca/docs/Sergei/scythian-sarmatian-Russian-mythology-fairy
ISSN - 1481-3440 The Scythian and Sarmatian Sources of the Russian Mythology and Fairy-Tales Sergei V. Rjabchikov Krasnodar, Russia srjabchikov@hotmail.com Published July 2001 Last posted 23 September, 2005 Here I study Scythian pictures and a Scythian/Sarmatian inscription which shed new light upon the Russian pagan mythology and plots preserved in Russian fairy-tales. 1. The plot depicted in figure 1 is presented on a wall of a Scythian crypt of the ancient town known as the Scythian Naples, the Crimea, Ukraine (Shtambok 1968: 109, the lower photo). FIGURE 1. I have distinguished a fiery horse, a hut standing on four chicken legs (as in Russian fairy tales!) and a woman (goddess) with the fiery hair. A child is seen in this fairytale hut. These data correspond to the Russian fairy-tales about Baba-Yaga (the old woman Yaga I think that the personage Baba-Yaga corresponds to the Scythian goddess Tabiti . I have counted ten rays at her head in this figure. The face of a goddess is represented on a Scythian brooch discovered in the Belyaus burial ground, the Crimea, Ukraine (Dashevskaya 1991: 121, table 65, figure 10). It is a designation of Tabiti whose head is decorated with nine or ten rays. As has been shown earlier (Rjabchikov 2001a)

12. Tmutarakan' By Sergei V. Rjabchikov - English
Russian version Donate
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

13. Some Remarks On The Scythian And Sarmatian Religion
http//public.kubsu.ru/~usr02898/sl30.htm . Rjabchikov, SV, 2001c. The Scythianand Sarmatian Sources of the russian mythology and FairyTales.
http://www.anthroglobe.ca/docs/Sergei/scythian-sarmatian-religion.htm
Some Remarks on the Scythian and Sarmatian Religion Sergei V. Rjabchikov Krasnodar, Russia srjabchikov@hotmail.com Published 18 April 2002 Last posted 02 January, 2005 Here I investigate several Scythian/Sarmatian artifacts and religious inscriptions. Besides, parallels from the Slavonic world are offered. 1. A Scythian wooden sarcophagus was discovered in a stone sepulchre of a barrow called “Three Brothers” near ancient Panticapeum, the capital of the Kingdom of the Bosporus (Kerch, the Crimea, Ukraine) (Bessonova 1971). It was dated to the second half of the 4th century B.C. A Scythian skilled workman used Greek letters as marks on the sarcophagus ( Bessonova 1971: 218, figure 5). But three marks are not the Greek letters, see figure 1. FIGURE 1 The first sign corresponds to the early Slavonic letter zh (Rjabchikov 1998a: 23, table 1; 1998b: 5-6, table 1). T he same sign is presented in a Scythian/Sarmatian record on a Greek vessel of the 4th century B.C that was discovered at the village Starotitarovskaya, the Taman’ peninsula (the Krasnodar region, Russia

14. Discount Shopping Online Buy Books-Buy Heroes, Monsters And Other
Discount Shopping Online Buy BooksBuy Heroes, Monsters and Other Worlds from russian mythology (Mythology Series). Consumer product reviews and
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

15. Heroes, Monsters, And Other Worlds From Russian Mythology (in
Heroes, monsters, and other worlds from russian mythology. Title
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

16. Bookstore: Mythology: Russian
Heroes, Monsters and Other Worlds from russian mythology Elizabeth Warner, As Illustrative of Slavonic Mythology and Russian Social Life (Studies in
http://www.witchs-brew.org/bookstore/russia.html
Russian Mythology Essential Russian Mythology :
Stories That Change the World
Ships in 2-3 days
Pyotr Simonov / Paperback / Published 1997
Our Price: $9.60 ~ You Save: $2.40 (20%)
Read more about this title...
Heroes, Monsters and Other Worlds from Russian Mythology
Elizabeth Warner, Alexander Koshkin (Illustrator) / Library Binding / Published 1996
Our Price: $24.95
Read more about this title...
Myths of the Sacred Tree :
Myths from Africa America, China, Sumeria, Russia, Greece, India, Scandinavia, Europe, Egypt, South America, Arabia
Moyra Caldecott, Anthea Toorchen (Illustrator) / Paperback / Published 1993
Our Price: $10.36 ~ You Save: $2.59 (20%) Russian Tales and Legends (Oxford Myths and Legends) Ships in 2-3 days
Charles Downing, Joan Kiddell Monroe (Illustrator) / Paperback / Published 1990
Our Price: $10.36 ~ You Save: $2.59 (20%) Common Places :
Mythologies of Everyday Life in Russia
Svetlana Boym / Hardcover / Published 1994
Our Price: $51.95 (Special Order) Common Places : Mythologies of Everyday Life in Russia
Svetlana Boym / Paperback / Published 1994 Our Price: $23.95

17. Comic Book Resources - CBR News - The Comic Reel
I don't know that Russian mythology will figure in so much, but certainly that idea of these ancient creatures that have been kind of shoved
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

18. The Green: Mythological Booklist
Essential russian mythology by Pyotr Simonov, Thorsons. Heroes, Monsters andOther Worlds from russian mythology by Elizabeth Warner.
http://www.thewildhunt.com/thegreen/myth_russian.shtml
Back to Mythological Booklist Greetings African American Aztec and Mayan ... Contact Us Russian Essays on Russian Folklore and Mythology ed. by Felix J. Oinas, Slavica Publishers, Inc., 1985. Essential Russian Mythology by Pyotr Simonov, Thorsons. Heroes, Monsters and Other Worlds from Russian Mythology by Elizabeth Warner. Mother Russia: The Feminine Myth in Russian Culture by Joanna Hubbs, Indiana U. Press, 1988. Russian Fairy Tales trans. by Vera Gissing, Hamlyn Publishing Group, 1975. Russian Fairy Tales Russian Folk Belief by Linda J. Ivanits, M.E. Sharpe, Inc., 1989. Russian Gypsy Tales by James Riordan. Tales and Legends of Old Russia Top Thank you for stopping by, and come again soon to see what's new. Feel free to write to us with any comments, problems, questions, suggestions, or whatever we'd love to hear from you!

19. Slavic Pagan Resources
The Songs of the Russian People, as Illustrative of russian mythology and RussianSocial Life. Heroes, Monsters and Other Worlds from russian mythology.
http://members.aol.com/hpsofsnert/slavres.html
Slavic Pagan Resources
Contacts Books Shops Links ... E-mail Us Contacts:
USA:

Connecticut:
Slavic Pagan Study Group
c/o Avalon Books
9 North Main St
So Norwalk, CT 06854
E-Mail: hpsofsnert@aol.com
Monthly meetings and seasonal celebrations.
New York:
RUNVira OSIDU P.O. Box 147 Spring Glen, NY 12483 Tel/Fax: 1 (908) 647-1215 eMail: marko@cybernex.net Ukranian Native Faith Oregon: Polish Kulturkampf P.O.Box 82435 Portland OR, 97282 E-mail- svarog8814@aol.com Study Group for Polish Heathens Czech Republic RADOST MNV E-mail:Dervan at maiello@ff.cuni.cz http//www.ff.cuni.cz/~maiello Lithuania: Vilnius Romuva Contact: Jonas Trunkunas, Elder email: jontrin@taide.lt Lithunian Paganism (Romuva) Ukraine: RUNVira OSID Bohdan Ostrovs'kyj Kyiv, UKRAINE Tel: 011-380 (44) 228-6987 Ukrainian Native Faith If you would like to be listed as a contact please submit your information here . Any group found to be connected to anti-semitism or white supremacy will be removed. Bibliography for this Site Downing, Charles. Russian Tales and Legends. UK: Oxford University Press, 1956 Drahomaniv, Mykhailo Petrovych. Notes on the Slavic Religio-Ethical Legends. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1961.

20. Slavic Mythology, Paganism & Witchcraft - Books And Reviews
Essential russian mythology Stories that Change the World I found this bookextremely helpful Heroes, Monsters and Other Worlds from russian mythology
http://members.aol.com/hpsofsnert/books.html
Books on Slavic Mythology, Witchcraft, Paganism, Folklore and Ancient Sites
The CT Wiccan/Pagan Resource Pages are now at The CWPN Website
Return to the Homepage
The Bathhouse at Midnight: Magic in Russia

I cannot recommend this book highly enough. It includes a great deal of information on herbal magic, zagorovy (spoken spells), categories of magical practitioners, divination, omens, amulets, animal lore, etc. all from ancient texts previously unavailable to the Western, non-Slavic speaking person.
Encyclopedia of Russian and Slavic Myth and Legend

Although I would not completely steer anyone away from purchasing this book, I found it was not well researched and fairly disappointing. Footnoting is also nearly non-existant so resources cannot even be checked. If you need to own everything out there on Slavic Mythology, by all means buy it. If you don't, save your $45.
Entering the Circle: Ancient Secrets of Siberian Wisdom Discovered by a Russian Psychiatrist
A wonderful story about a Russian psychiatrist's accidental entry and initiation into the world of the Siberian Shaman. This book is supposed to be true and autobiographical. I don't know whether it is or is not, but I found the book valuable anyway. The Russian "Lynn Andrews" story but a bit more believable.
Essays on Russian Folklore and Mythology

I took this book out once on iter-library loan. Most of the information on this website on the Poludnica on the Deities page was received from this book, but other than that my memory of it is rather faint. An out of print item, it may still be found used on Amazon.

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