I hardly ever post oc art here since the way tumblr is I might as well not have but have my resentful fish of the forgotten pond
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I hardly ever post oc art here since the way tumblr is I might as well not have but have my resentful fish of the forgotten pond
[ OCTOBER 25 2019 ]
BOGINKA - Xau Saialdhe
@vysaldhe
Sorry this one is late! I was exhausted last night and didn’t really have the energy to finish all the little details this one required. Anywho! A Boginka is a Slavic water spirit or water nymph. I guess they’re also sometimes hags that hang out in the reeds and steal babies? I had to look this one up because I was unfamiliar with the terms given. I got to learn some new stuff and that’s always a good thing! So thank you for the interesting prompt and thank you for your patience as I took forever to do this one yesterday.
Slavic Demons: Boginka // Water Nymph
Mural inspired by Slavic mythology created in 2013 in Mokotów district of Warsaw, Poland by artists Anna Koźbiel and Adam Walas.
Image source: warszawa.wyborcza.pl
I've had this figurine of a boginka for so long and every once in a while I get the urge to show it to everyone who's willing to look.
Slavic mythology from Poland [part 4/?] » BOGINKI
On the picture: artwork by Paulina Izabela Śliwa / hivesotto.
Boginki [singular form: boginka] were female personifications of the wild forces of the nature in the old-Slavic Polish mythology. They were seen as demons either neutral or hostile to people, often attacking women during childbirth, replacing the newborns with “odmieńce” (changelings), startling the horses and cattle or destroying the fishing nests. Appearing in many forms and subtypes, they could’ve been living in swamps, lakes, rivers, forests, bushwoods or mountains.
In some of the folk beliefs (depending on the region of Poland), a woman who died in childbirth, commited suicide or murdered a child was suffering by becoming a boginka after the death; the kids stolen from cradles could also be turning into boginki or other types of demons. People believed also that witches are able to summon and pray to boginki in order to get help (for example to get a child that boginka was stealing from the inattentive mothers). In other regional beliefs, boginka could also sneak into a woman’s bed to whimper under the bedclothes, appear during a wedding party to treat the guests with poisoned vodka, or lure thier old lovers into dangerous swamps or deep waters. They were sometime believed to have husbands, demons called boginiarze, and give birth to their own children - then they’d capture young human mothers for breastfeeding.
The term boginki is often referred to as the oldest general name for such spirits, one of the oldest traces to the old-Slavic female aspects of the untamed, primeval nature (translated literally as a diminutive form of the word bogini - goddess). That concept had evolved over the time and could’ve gained some of the negative superstitions during the process of Christianization and times of the witch hunt. Over the centuries, boginki gained many new names, some only local, for example the boginki living in rivers and lakes started to be called by the popular name of rusałki, term borrowed from the East Slavic mythology, and the boginki that were specifically stealing children from the cradles gained the name mamuny.
To ensure a protection from boginki, Polish women were preparing special compositions of herbs and flowers, blessed during the Kupala Night (Slavic summer solstice celebrations) or during the feast of the Holy Mother of the Herbs (celebrated on the day of the Assumption of Mary), and putting red caps on the heads or red ribbons around the wrists of their children (red was seen as the most protective color in the old-Slavic beliefs, bringing general safety, beauty and prosperity, strenghtening the powers of the home spirits, and representing the good, warming fire).
My general list of sources / book recommendations [in Polish only].
Check also: ogniki / płanetnicy / zmory / latawce / biesy / południce / strzygi.
Jacek Malczewski (Polish, 1854-1929) "Boginka w dziewannach", part of "Rusałki" cycle, 1888 [source].
boginka replied to your post: icon changE HANG ON OK IS IT A FUCKING...
did u use one of those icon cropper things i tried that once and it was so annoying i had to like screenshot it and crop it again lmao..
YEAH??? has this happened to you too. how the fuck