silmeth , to linguistics group
@silmeth@mstdn.social avatar

What are good articles (if any) about the relation of (Balto-)Slavic instrumental predicatives to cvi-/gúhā-construction in Sanskrit and Latin rubefaciō?

Is there something looking deeper at the BSl. side (rather than from Skrt. perspective, only mentioning BSl. in passing)?

(Looking for some IE reading more interesting than a millionth take on “default IE word order”)

@linguistics

godsipclub , to mythology group
@godsipclub@thefolklore.cafe avatar

In 2023, in , yet another grave was discovered¹ with several common anti-vampire tracts:

  • The body was placed downward
  • A sickle was placed on the body's neck
  • A lock was placed on its feet

In that case, if the buried one was a , or tried to come back among the living, those gimmicks hopefully would have stopped it.

It wasn't uncommon, in Eastern Europe, to have legends and beliefs about vampires. In mythology:

  • The strzyga, not to be confused with the worshippers of Morana or Striga (Stribog's² female counterpart), was believed some kind of vampire or demon
  • Strigoi³ were vampiric spirits and witches
  • A kresnik⁴ (not the homonymous god) was a shamanic worker who was said to hunt vampires and protect villages form malicious spirits
  • It was common to put some "extra precautions" in some tombs, as copper coins in the mouth of the deceased as expedient against evil

¹ https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/anti-vampire-graves-poland
² https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stribog
³ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strigoi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krsnik_(vampire_hunter)

@mythology

ALT
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