Tumgik
#slavic cat slavic cat slavic cat
innovation-daughter · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
babushka cat.... she loves to eat... beets
9K notes · View notes
nocnitsa · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
990 notes · View notes
russianfolklore · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Gennady Novozhilov's illustration for russian tale "The Fox and the Cat".
195 notes · View notes
mrokat-art · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
Hell House Linocut Prints (aka Baba Yaga)
Grab one here!
222 notes · View notes
wieczorynka · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Dziwny świat kota Filemona, odcinek 4. Wielkie pranie
69 notes · View notes
propalitetz · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
what if there were two lesbians from serbia (srem and šumadija respectively) and they had two cats and a kitten. what if. and what if they kissed also
150 notes · View notes
slaviclore · 1 year
Text
cheatsheet to your slav folkloric downfall
Since several people had questions about the lore that inspired this poll, I'll jot some notes down about what I was thinking. All of these have long and complex tradition that can't possibly fit in a tumblr post, but there's tons of great content on tumblr alone, so pls feel free to scroll through my tags for more info (you may like "demons", "witches", or "original art" for contemporary interpretations of the lore...) or use this post as a springboard for more research.
Because much of Slavic folklore was passed down orally and not written down, and because it covers a wide geographical range and is told in different languages, there are many versions of common stories, tropes, characters, etc.
***
Baba Yaga is a witch, super popular, tons of great lore about her, historical and contemporary. She was never just one single entity, but rather a version of herself in many different stories (more like fanfiction than like canon). Her character is inherently unpredictable, existing outside our societal rules and moral compass, and the variability in lore makes her even more impossible to predict. A young woman named Vasilisa did manage to perform all of Baba Yaga's tasks to her instruction, but not without her own magical help. Sometimes Baba Yaga is helpful and reasonable, and sometimes she will just casually eat you like a handful of berries. You never know what you're going to get.
The fern flower is a beautiful mythical flower that offers its holder immense knowledge and magic. It blooms very briefly only once a year during Noc Kupały (in Polish, the EN is Kupala Night). If you want to find it, you'll probably grab your boyfriend (gender neutral) around dusk and poke around your local woods for a while before giving up and just making out and then meeting up with your friends afterwards like "did you find it?" "no we didn't find it :( did you find it?" "nooo :(". Really, this is about seducing the boy you like, since you probably need magic just to see the flower anyway. If you do manage to find it and pick it, tons of greedy demons will appear and chase you to attempt to take it from you (and your life). You have to outrun or outsmart the demons. The demons may be metaphors for the corrupting forces of great power.
There are tons of ways to get lost in the woods. Some people help themselves by tying ribbons to trees as they go, but anything can spook you -- you can run into a demon, a werewolf, a ghost, a witch, a cat, anything -- and if you have to run away, you will most likely lose your way in the process. More specifically, if you have annoyed a leshy (a forest spirit/god-type thing who protects nature), he will use magic to confuse you, and even if you're very good at Not Getting Lost In The Woods, you're kind of screwed. You think YOU won't piss off the Leshy? Oops you just stepped on his favorite beetle -- screwed. Leshy can be placated with offerings of food and drink, but sometimes he needs something bigger...
There are actually lots of hot girls who live in lakes, much to the delight of about 20% of you, but probably the most common are the rusalki -- dead girls who experienced some tragedy in life, probably ending in drowning, and are now exacting revenge on the living, especially men. They will seduce you, take you into the water, and drown you with their hair, or possibly tickle you to death. Baby marry me, amirite? The original rusalka lore was probably nicer to them, treating them more like water spirits than vengeful ghosts. Rusalki are not mermaids and appear as women with legs. We do have mermaids, but usually these are river or sea beings -- the most famous is probably Syrenka Warszawska (the Warsaw Mermaid) who lives in the river Wisła and will not attempt to kill you unless you're trying to invade Warsaw, but also she's a warrior queen and you have no shot.
Slavic mythological entities love riddles, and if you're good at riddles you are really going to help yourself, but you don't want to get into that situation unless you have no other choice. A common demon you meet on the side of the road will probably not give you a hard one, but Poludnica (the Slovak name) will find you at high noon while you're working hard in the fields and the sun's been beating down on your head since dawn and you're feeling woozy and dehydrated, and she'll give you the hardest riddle you've ever heard, and you're going to blow it, and she's going to cut off your head with her scythe or give you heat stroke. If it's any consolation, she may be hot (pun intended). Pro tip: you may also wield riddles to your advantage. Demons are as egoistic as you are and can be enticed into solving your riddle. If you stump them, you may assure your safe getaway.
Human characters in Slavic lore tend to be young and naive, representing the listener of the tale, since they can't use magic or navigate the world they are entering. Knowledge and magic are two sides of the same coin, so if you want to survive, you will need to gain some wisdom (learning some riddles will help). Being nice is not good enough, but! If by being nice you manage to seduce someone who has access to knowledge and magic, or get adopted by a bored witch with an axe to grind, you'll really help yourself out.
The path to the endless dead wood is guarded by a giant magical cat, whose name I never knew but have recently learned that the Russians call him Baiyun (latinized name, obvi). If you ask Vasilisa, she'll tell you that sometimes he lives with Baba Yaga, but generally he hangs out on the boundary to some other dimension. Probably, if you go to meet the cat, it's because somebody sent you there to get rid of you, so if you survive the cat, whoever is trying to kill you will probably keep trying so fyi. Baiyun will purr or tell a tale in such a soothing way that you fall asleep, and then he'll eat you. If you manage not to fall asleep, you may attempt to catch him and earn magic. But probably you're cat food.
***
There you have it. If you learned your story differently, let me know! And if you're ever lost in a Slavic forest, you can put your clothes on inside out and maybe that'll break the magic. Good luck.
190 notes · View notes
thrumbolt · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Look at the cute Ukranian kitty postcards I got today at the Warsaw Pride event!
1K notes · View notes
persephoine · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
at grandma’s house
215 notes · View notes
Text
Life in China #1
Studying at a local coffee shop when I noticed this encyclopedia.
Tumblr media
57 notes · View notes
gracelyngrausamkeit · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Baba Yaga – As you might have guessed – this is from the same series as some of the other black and white drawings I've been uploading every now and then.
As some of you might already know, Baba Yaga is an iconic villain in Easter European fairlytales. An integral part of Slavic folklore, this evil hag loves nothing more than to feast on children. She also sports a sleek house on chicken legs, in which she travels in style. She is often depicted as having a cat (bonus points if it is black), boasts magical powers and usually has a very long nose.
She is one of the many characters parents will use to scare their children if they misbehave.
32 notes · View notes
cherrydoodle · 5 months
Note
Is the Winter King still called the Winter King, or has he been given a new name?
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Frost King, AKA Pasha! No longer frozen over by ice, but the frost in his mind still lingers...
37 notes · View notes
russianfolklore · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Ivan Tsygankov's illustration for russian tale "Baba Yaga".
101 notes · View notes
mrokat-art · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Hell House aka Baba Yaga linocut print
Original prints available in my shop
132 notes · View notes
victusinveritas · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Happy New Year from the folks at Tin Can Forest (they are awesome, go buy their things).
18 notes · View notes
dearmouse · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
МАРИНЫ ФЕДОТОВОЙ Marina Fedotova
51 notes · View notes