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Krsnik (vampire hunter)

Character of Slovenian mythology


Summary

Character of Slovenian mythology

In Slavic mythology, a krsnik (female: krsnica The krsniks soul leaves the body, either voluntarily or due to a higher power, to fight evil agents and ensure good harvest, health, and happiness.

The krsnik is taught magic by Vile (fairies), and in traditional medicine has the ability to heal people and cattle. Some postulate the struggle between the kresnik and the kudlak reflects an earlier dualistic tradition inherited from Slavic polytheism; however, a struggle between two tribes of sorcerers over the fate of the harvest is a common mytheme among peoples of the northern Adriatic regardless of their ethnicity. A similar motif is found among the Romance inhabitants of nearby Friuli, who call their equivalent to the Slavic kresnici the Benandanti. After Christianization, the kresnik instead was claimed to have learned magic at the School of Black Magic in Babylon, yet retained benevolent traits as a generous and powerful friend of the poor.

The origin of the name may be from the word krst, which means "cross", and which in Serbia is the word for a stone sign denoting village boundaries. It may also be derived from the same root as the Slav word for "resurrection," so that the word itself means something approximating "resurrector."

Similar beliefs circulated among the Italian Benandanti cult.

References

References

  1. Nada Kerševan, ''Vəkuli riti v garžet: Zgodbe s Kraškega roba do Brkinov, Sežane in Razdrtega'', 2016, {{ISBN
  2. Perkowski, Jan L.. (1989). "The Darkling: A Treatise on Slavic Vampirism". Slavica Publishers.
  3. Šmitek, Zmago. (December 2005). "Shamanism on Slovenian Territory? Dilemmas Concerning the Phenomena of Shamanism, Spirit Possession and Ecstasy". Studia ethnologica Croatica.
  4. Copeland, F.S.. (December 31, 1931). "Slovene Folklore". Folklore.
  5. Vinšćak, Tomo. (December 2005). "On "Štrige", "Štriguni" and "Krsnici" on Istrian Peninsula". Studia ethnologica Croatica.
  6. Copeland, Fanny S.. (April 1933). "Slovene Myths". The Slavonic and East European Review.
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