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Journal

2017 | 66 | 51-76

Article title

Kujutelmad uleloomulikest olenditest Virumaa rahvausus

Authors

Title variants

EN
IMAGERY OF SUPERNATURAL BEINGS IN THE FOLK BELIEF OF VIRUMAA

Languages of publication

ET

Abstracts

EN
The article discusses folk beliefs and narratives about supernatural beings in Virumaa, one of the regions in north-eastern Estonia. The region under discussion is situated in the area where cultural currents from the West and East intermingle, revealing common features with Germanic and Eastern Slavic traditions, with a noticeable Finno-Ugric substrate. Attitude towards forest fairies is rather neutral; according to the beliefs of indigenous forest belt peoples they often help humans. The water spirit is not always supposed to be hostile but is presented as the ruler of waters and protector of fishes. The beliefs held in the Russian villages in the area of Lake Peipus, on the other hand, feature the water spirit as a demonised, aggressive spirit. The latter is also true about the barn spirit, who tortures the cattle it does not like. By the end of the 19th century mythological fantasies, for example, legends of especially hostile beings – the plague, nightmares, and dog-faced plunderers – in active narrative tradition faded away. Two aetiologies have been presented about the werewolf: a human being either turns into a wolf or is bewitched into one. Imagery of the dead spirit has been rather persistent and even today memorates about experiencing it are narrated.

Contributors

author
  • mall@folklore.ee
  • Estonian Literary Museum, Vanemuise 42, 51003 Tartu, ESTONIA

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-b6f510e3-d79a-4899-8627-7e903119c54d
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