Meduza (Russian folklore)

Meduza. Russian lubok. XVII-XVIII century.

Meduza (Russian: Медуза), Meluza (Russian: Мелуза, literally «small», «little») or Meluzina (Russian: Мелузина) is a mythical creature in Russian folklore. She was depicted in a Russian lubok of the XVII or XVIII century. She is described as half-woman, half-snake, or as the half-woman, half-fish creature[1][2]. She is also said to be the deity of deception[3].

Appearance

She is represented as a sea monster with the head of a beautiful dark-haired maiden, having the body and belly of a striped beast, a dragon tail with a snake's mouth at the end and legs resembling the legs of an elephant and having the same snake mouths at the end. She also wears a crown. Her snake mouths contained a deadly dragon poison. She is said to live in the «Ocean-Sea near the Ethiopian abyss», in the West Ocean[1][4].

See also

References

Sources

  • Belova, Olga Vladislavovna (1999). Славянский бестиарий: словарь названий и символики [Slavic Bestiary: a dictionary of names and symbols] (in Russian). Indrik. ISBN 5-85759-100-7.
  • Belova, Olga Vladislavovna, Petruhin (2008). Фольклор и книжность: Миф и исторические реалии [Folklore and bookishness: Myth and historical realities] (in Russian). Science. p. 263. ISBN 978-5-02-036228-4.
  • Damskiy, Kipriyan (1801). Любопытный словарь естеств животных [Curious Dictionary of the Natures of Animals] (in Russian). Тип. Ф. Мейера. p. 234.
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