|  |   Slavic Mythology & Goddesses
   
    
      | Akkan(Northern Europe) The Akkan are a quadrinity of Saami Goddesses who 
          oversee conception, birth and destiny. They are Madderakka, Sarakka, 
          Juksakka and Ugsakka.
 
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      | Baba 
        Yaga (Jezi Baba) says, "Intelligence ripens with age." In Slavic 
        oral traditions, Baba Yaga was the old crone of autumn who lived in the 
        last sheaf of harvested grain. Fittingly, the woman who bound that sheaf 
        would bear a child the next spring, for the old Baba was also guardian 
        of the fountain of the waters of life. Her legend suggests she was the 
        preserver of herbal knowledge and medicinal healing. Let us return this 
        wise crone to glory! Conversely, she is called the grandmother of the 
        devil, and a cannibal; a hideous man-eating female demon. Her mouth is 
        said to stretch from earth to the gates of hell.
 
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      | Bereginy The Bereginy, like the Nymphae of Greece and Rome, were spirits of nature. 
        They were honored by women throughout the Slavic regions of Europe even 
        through the Middle Ages.
 
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      | Dazhbog Also known as Dabog (Serbia) and Dazbog (Poland). The sun god. Son of 
        Svarog (god of the sky), and brother of Svarazic (god of fire). In the 
        Igor-song (1185) the Russians are mentioned as his grandchildren. He rides 
        through the sky on his diamond chariot, starting out in the morning as 
        a newborn and ending the day as an old man. Sometimes she is said to be 
        married to Myesyats (the moon goddess) and to be the father of Zvezda 
        Dennitsa, the Morning Star. (In some stories Myesyats is a male moon god 
        and is married to Zvezda Dennitsa.)
 
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      | Dennitsa (Zvezda Dennitsa) The Slavonic goddess of the morning star. Her sister 
        Vechernyaya is the evening star. Together they help Dorya, the Dawn, tend 
        to the Sun's white horses. In some legends, Dennitsa is the wife of Myestas, 
        the moon god. (In slavonic legend, the Moon and the Sun are typically 
        male, but Myestas is sometimes female.)
 
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      | Dolya This spirit was said to live behind the stove. When she was in a fine 
        mood, she was called Dolya, the little old lady who brought good luck; 
        when annoyed, she was Nedolya, the shabbily dressed old hag of bad fortune. 
        Occasionally she appeared as a young woman rather than the usual gray-haired 
        granny; in either shape she presided over birth.
 
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Drac (Draca) An invisible female water spirit which tempts women and children 
        by means of baubles in order to lure them into the water and there devour 
        them.
 
 
 Dugnai
 Slavonic house goddess who ensured that the dough would not spoil.
 
 
 Edji
 The first woman; she had a fur covered body.
 
 
 Erce
 The earth mother who was honored each spring by the pouring of milk, flour, 
        and water into the newly-turned furrows of the tilled farm.
 
 
 Kikimora
 A Slavonic domestic goddess, known in some locations as the wife of the 
        house-god, the Domovi. She would trouble the children at night if the 
        housewife was lazy. To placate her, pots and pans were washed in fern 
        tea.
 
 Krimba
 A house goddess worshipped primarily in Bohemia.
 
 Kupala
 The Slavonic water mother who annually renews her virginity and vitality 
        of nature with baptism. Her worshipers bathed themselves in rivers and 
        purified their souls with the Dew of Kupala, gathered during the night 
        of Her festival. The goddess of herbs, sorcery and sex.
 
 
 Kupula
 A Slavic goddess of water, sorcery and herbal lore. Kupula personifies 
        the magical and spiritual power inherent in water, and Kupula's devotees 
        worshipped her with ritual baths and offerings of flowers cast upon water. 
        Since fire as well as water has powers of purification, her worshippers 
        also danced around and leaped over huge bonfires. Frequently her effigy 
        was burned or cast into pools of water. Kupula's cult preserved an extensive 
        lore of magical plants and herbs which gave men the power to read minds, 
        control evil spirits, find hidden treasures, and win the love of beautiful 
        women.
 
 
 Lady 
        of Beasts
 Surrounded by members of the animal kingdom, this Goddess displays her 
        role in supporting life on earth. Her kinship with animal totems shows 
        she is a driving force for fertility in the natural world and able to 
        assume animal form herself. The lions link Her with an arc of Great Goddesses 
        from Sekmet to Lilith, Cybele, Anahit, across to Durga. The alternating 
        rabbits show the union of opposites and the beginning of the spiral of 
        life.
 
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      | Leshachikha A Slavonic forest goddess (les = forest), wife of the forest god 
        the Leshy and mother of the Leshonki. The Leshies died in October and 
        were reborn in the spring. They were territorial, often leading those 
        who entered their forests astray, but almost always releasing them in 
        the end. To avoid their spells, one must remove their clothes under a 
        tree, then put them on again backwards.
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      | Marina Slavic goddess of the moon.
 
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      | Mati 
        Syra Zemlia Not a name, rather a title which means Moist Mother Earth. An earth goddess, 
        the most ancient and possibly the most important of the Slavic gods. Ever 
        fruitful and powerful, Mati Syra Zemlia was worshipped well into the twentieth 
        century. Mother Earth was an oracle whom anyone could consult without 
        any need for a priest or shaman as a go-between. The Slavs felt the profoundest 
        respect for Mother Earth. Peasants settled property disputes by appealing 
        to Mother Earth to witness the truth of their claims, and oaths were sworn 
        in her name.
 
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      | Mokosh (Mokysha, Mokush) The Slavic goddess who both gives and takes life, the 
        spinner of the thread of life, the giver of the water of life. Mokosh 
        later became Paraskeva-Piatnitsa, a goddess of spinning, water, fertility, 
        health with marriage.
 
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      | Myesyats The moon deity. In some myths he is the cold, baldheaded uncle 
        of the sun-god Dazhbog. In other myths she is a beautiful woman, 
        the consort of Dazhbog and mother by him of the stars.
 
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      | Pereplut Slavic goddess of drink and changing fortunes.
 
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      | Samovila The Eastern European goddess who lived deep in the woods and was a great 
        protector of animals. If anyone harmed any of her creatures, they could 
        be lured into a magical circle and danced to death, or perhaps caught 
        in a landslide or drowned in a river. As a shape shifter, she could be 
        a falcon, swan, snake, horse or whirlwind. She might agree to teach a 
        human her skills if the proper ceremony were performed in the woods on 
        a full moon Sunday before sunrise. A bear mother goddess figure was found 
        at Kosovska-Mitrovica (Fafos II) Yugoslavia, of the Vinca culture, c. 
        5300-4000 BCE.
 The Slavic goddess of the woods who has the ability to shapeshift into 
        a falcon, horse, snake, swan or a whirlwind; and would not hesitate to 
        cause harm to anyone who threatens her creatures. She lives deep in the 
        woods and has great knowledge of plant medicine.
 
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      | Saule The Baltic sun goddess and, according to some myths, the mistress of the 
        thunder god Perkuno. She was worshipped by Lithuanians, Prussians and 
        Letts. Her worship took the form of looking after a harmless green snake. 
        Every house kept one. Apart from ensuring a household's wealth and fertility, 
        the kindness shown to the snake was regarded as a guarantee of Saule's 
        generosity. To kill a snake was an act of sacrilege. Saule was usually 
        depicted as pouring light from a jug. The golden liquid which she gave 
        to the world was the basis of life itself; the warmth so necessary after 
        the cold northeastern European winter.
 
 
 
 
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      | Sudicy The Slovenian fates.
 
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      | Sudjaje Female deities from Slavic myth who control destiny.
 
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      | Tabiti Tabiti was the Scythian Goddess who ruled the realm of animals and fire. 
        The early Eastern Europeans swore their allegiance to her as part of the 
        earth that witnesses everything. She was part of Eastern European culture 
        before the Scythian nomads arrived, at first represented by a Goddess 
        bearing a child and later, adopted by the Scythians, as half serpent with 
        a raven on one side and a canine on the other.
 
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      | Va-Kul Zyrian Mother of Waters, worshipped throughout the Middle Ages as a powerful 
        Goddess Whose displeasure could cause catastrophe.
 
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      | Ved'Ma A Slavic demon goddess who flies over the clouds and mountains on a broom 
        or rake. Ved'ma causes storms, keeps the water of life and death, and 
        knows the magical properties of plants. Ved'ma can be young and beautiful, 
        or old and ugly as she pleases.
 
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      | Vesna Slavic goddess of spring.
 
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      | Vila 
        of the Forest A guardian of the forest animals and plants, Vila was a shape-shifter 
        and might be a swan, horse, snake, falcon or whirlwind. Born on a day 
        of misty rain, she was a winged Goddess whose dress shimmered in the dappled 
        light of the deep forest where she lived. She had a profound knowledge 
        of herbal healing and protected the purity of streams. If anyone brought 
        harm to her creatures, she would cause great harm to them in turn; perhaps 
        they would be caught in an avalanche or even danced to death.
 
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      | Zaria (Zoria) The heavenly bride, goddess of beauty and morning. At down her 
        worshippers greeted her as "the brightest maiden, pure, sublime, 
        honorable."
 
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      | Ziva (Siva) Slavic goddess of life.
 
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      | Zorya They were three Slavic dawn goddesses. There was Utrennyaya, the morning 
        star; Vechernyaya, the evening star; and the midnight Zorya. All have 
        the same job: to guard a chained dog who tries to eat the constellation 
        Ursa Minor, the little bear. If the chain should ever break and the dog 
        should ever get loose, the universe will end. Thus the Zoryas are guardian 
        goddesses.
 
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      | Zvezda 
        Dennitsa The morning star goddess. The wife of the man in the moon.
 
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