Bolla

The bolla is a demonic serpent in Albanian mythology and folklore. The bolla's eyes remain shut for the whole year except on Saint George's Day, when it gazes the world and will devour any human on sight.

The female dragon kulshedra is the form the bolla will eventually attain should it live many years without being seen by a human. The bullar and ershaj are considered intermediate forms of this serpent as it goes through a series of metamorphoses according to northern local traditions. These terms also signify serpents; the term bullar merely being a synonym for bolla in Southern Albania. Kulshedra can also appear in the guise of a female human, or other female herps.

Etymologies and forms

The term bolla is etymologically related to Greek Φάλη, Φάλαινα 'monster, whale,' (although the relationship is not certain).[1]

Kulshedra (kulshedër; def. kulshedra) or kuceder (kuçedër; def. kuçedra) derives from the Latin chersydrus, roughly meaning an "amphibious snake".[2][3][4]

The term bullar is given as a Southern Albanian variant by some sources.[5]

Bolla

The bolla is said to remain closed-eyed until Saint George's Day, where it peers into the world, and will devour any human that approaches it. It is explained in folklore that Saint George had cursed the beast to be forever blind except on his feast day.[1][5]

Kulshedra

Kulshedra is generally considered to be a female dragon, like a multi-headed serpent form,[2] but it is known to have pendulous drooping breasts touching the ground,[2] thus some German commentators have stated she might be also regarded as a hag.[4][6] Kulshedra is furthermore said to be covered in wooly red hair, have a long tail, and have seven to twelve heads. It is also said to spit fire.[2][7] > Kulshedra's milk and urine are both considered poisonous.[8] Kulshedra can also appear in the guise of a human female;[2] its appearance in an ordinary woman's guise known locally for example in Dukagjini, Kosovo.[9] It may also appear in the form of a female lizard, turtle, frog, or salamander.[2][9]

At the same time, kulshedra is widely considered to be a storm demon[8][10] Kulshedra is believed to cause drought and other water-related issues for humanity such as torrents, tempests,[10] water shortages,[4] big storms, flooding, or other natural disasters.[7][2] Often to placate it, a human sacrifice must be made, as witnessed in the tale of the hero Qerosi ("Scurfhead").[4][11]

"The male form, called Kulshedër, acts as a devil".[4]

Bolla to kulshedra

According to folk belief, a snake after living a certain number of years will metamorphosize into a bolla and eventually become the monstrous kulshedra.[5][1] The belief that an ancient snake becomes a dragon is not unique to Albanian culture, and similar beliefs can be found for example in Hungary and Romania, as pointed out by Robert Elsie.

In the Kosova town of Prishtina, the kulshedra begins life as a being invisible to mankind for the first twelve years of its life, after which it turns into a bolla ("a kind of serpent"), and afterwards it sprouts wings, becomes hairy, and begins to combat the drangue (dragúa).[12] But the folklore of Malësia and the Northern Mountain Range in Albania provides a more complex life cycle: when the serpent manages to live fifty years without being noticed by anyone, it becomes a bullar, a reptile that feeds milk to snakes, from which these snake derive their poison. If it lives another fifty years without being seen, it becomes an ershaj which coils around its human victim's neck, punctures his chest and eats the heart. When an ershaj (er̄šaj) lives for another century unseen, it finally becomes a kulshedra.[13]

In Tirana, kulshedra was said to begin life as a being hiding in a dark hole which became a snake after six months; the snake must grow an additional six months before it exhibited the behavior for which it could be properly called a kulshedra.[14] Among the Albanian Kastrati tribe, it was believed that a snake sighted by a wren lost its ability to transform into a kulshedra.[1]

Battles with Dragùa

Dragùa, sometimes called drangue or drangoni,[10] is the male conqueror of the female monster kulshedra, whom he must fight to the death in collective beliefs.[7] Their prime aim in life is to combat and slay Kulshedras. They thus spend much of their youth exercising and running around, so as to learn how to avoid kulshedra's urine and milk. When they sense a Kulshedra approaching, dragùas "go completely berserk and their souls depart from their bodies in preparation for the coming battle".[15] When a human is attacked the dragùa will "fly to their assistance and slay kulshedra by pelting it with cudgels, ploughs, yokes, lances and stones, and even with uprooted trees and houses. Such attacks are seen by humans as lightning". Heavy thunderstorms are thought to be the result of the battle.[10]

The dragùas, even as infants, use the cradle to shield themselves from kulshedra's attacks, which consist of her urine and poisonous milk from her breasts. They also use this cradle as weapons.[16][17]

In the Northern Albania, the two are envisioned as battling perpetually in the bend of the Drani River in the Northern Mountain Range. But some folklore speaks of the dragùa accomplishing kulshedra's destruction by drowning, and in Central Albania, the hero is said to have drowned her , knocking her unconscious by throwing trees and boulders at her, and afterwards drowning her in Shkumbin, a river in central Albania.[7]

It should be noted that dragùas are not the only beings said to have defeated Kulshedra. There are multiple folktales (see: Folktales and other stories with Kulshedra) in which saints[18] and folktale heroes not identified as dragùa have defeated Kulshedra.[19]

Saint George and Saint Elias (originally the Old Testament prophet Elijah) both have stories in which they fight (and defeat) a Bolla/Kulshedra according to Robert Elsie's Christian Saints of Albania. Saint Elias, in particular, is identified in some regions with the Dragùa and is also a weather god and provides protection against storms and fire.[1][18]

Some folktales involving the slaying of a Kulshedra from Robert Elsie's Albania's Folktales and Legends include:

  • (3) The three friends and the Earthly Beauty
  • (4) The three brothers and the three sisters
  • (5) The youth and the maiden with stars on their foreheads and crescents on their breasts
  • (7) The girl who became a boy
  • (13) The snake and the king's daughter
  • (17) The barefaced man and the Pasha's brother
  • (22) The maiden who was promised to the sun[19]

Other mentions of Bolla/Kulshedra

On the Greek island Poros, once inhabited by a majority of Albanians, the term Bullar is still used to describe water snakes, and in northern Albania, both Bolla and Bollar are used to describe grass snakes.[1]

In Dungeons & Dragons, it is a level 22 Solo Brute that sometimes forms pacts with other demons or other powerful monsters of chaos and evil.[20]

See also

Explanatory notes

    Sources

    Citations
    1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Elsie (2001a), "Bolla", A Dictionary of Albanian Religion, Mythology, and Folk Culture, pp. 46–47.
    2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Elsie (2001a), "Kulshedra", A Dictionary of Albanian Religion, Mythology, and Folk Culture, pp. 153–156.
    3. Fishta, Elsie & Mathie-Heck (2005), p. 435.
    4. 1 2 3 4 5 Lurker, Manfred (2015). "kulshedra". A Dictionary of Gods and Goddesses, Devils and Demons. Routledge. p. 197.
    5. 1 2 3 Lurker, Manfred (2015). "Bolla". A Dictionary of Gods and Goddesses, Devils and Demons. Routledge. p. 66.
    6. Röhrich, Lutz (1991), Folktales and Reality, Indiana University Press, p. 153, ISBN 025335028X
    7. 1 2 3 4 Doja (2005), p. 451.
    8. 1 2 Doja (2005), p. 453.
    9. 1 2 Doja (2005), p. 454.
    10. 1 2 3 4 Durham, M. Edith (1910), "High Albania and its Customs in 1908", The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 40: 456 (453–472) . doi:10.2307/2843266. 
    11. Uhlisch, Gerda (1987), Die Schone der Erde, p. 154, cited by Elsie.[2]
    12. Lambertz (1922), pp. 10, 102–103 and Doja (2005), p. 454 citing it.
    13. Lambertz (1922), pp. 10–11 (repr. 1973) cited by Doja (2005), p. 454 and Elsie (2001a), p. 47
    14. Lambertz (1922), pp. 10, 102–103 and Doja (2005), p. 454 citing it.
    15. Fishta, Elsie & Mathie-Heck (2005), p. 415.
    16. Doja (2005), p. 452.
    17. Elsie, Robert (2001a), "Dragua", A Dictionary of Albanian Religion, Mythology, and Folk Culture], pp. 74–76.
    18. 1 2 Elsie, Robert (2000), "The Christian Saints of Albania". Balkanistica. 13: 43, 45.
    19. 1 2 Elsie (2001b), Albanian Folktales and Legends
    20. "Monday Monster: Kulshedra | Kobold Press". koboldpress.com. Retrieved 2017-04-11.
    Bibliography

    • Doja, Albert (2005), "Mythology and Destiny", Anthropos, 100 (2): 449–462 . JSTOR 40466549
    • Elsie, Robert (2000), "The Christian Saints of Albania". Balkanistica. 13: 35–57.
    • Elsie, Robert (2001a), A Dictionary of Albanian Religion, Mythology, and Folk Culture, NYU Press, pp. 46–48 .
    • Elsie, Robert (2001b), Albanian Folktales and Legends, Dukagjini Pub. House
    • Fishta, Gjergj; Elsie, Robert; Mathie-Heck, Janice (2005). The highland lute: (Lahuta e malcís) : the Albanian national epic. Centre for Albanian Studies (London, England). I.B.Tauris. ISBN 1-84511-118-4.

    Lambertz, Maximilian (1922). Albanische Märchen und andere Texte zur albanischen Volkskunde. Wien: Alfred Hölder.

    • Lurker, Manfred (2015-04-29). A Dictionary of Gods and Goddesses, Devils and Demons. Routledge. p. 66. ISBN 9781136106200
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