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Baba Yaga
Baba Yaga (Czech Baba Jaga, Polish Baba Jaga, Slovene Jaga Baba, Macedonian Баба Рога, Russian Бáба-Ягá, Bulgarian Баба Яга, Ukrainian Баба Яґа, Serbian: Baba Roga) in Slavic mythology is the wild woman, the dark lady and mistress of magic. She is also seen as a forest spirit, leading hosts of spirits. The word baba in most Slavic languages means an older or married woman of lower social class.
Baba Yaga is portrayed as a witch who flies through the air in a mortar using the pestle as a rudder sweeping away the tracks behind her with a broom made out of silver birch. She lives in a log cabin that revolves around by means of a pair of chicken legs that dance. Her fence outside is made with human bones with skulls on top. The keyhole to her front door is a mouth filled with sharp teeth. In another legend the house does not reveal the door until it is told a magical phrase: turn your back to the forest, your front to me.
She aids those who are pure of heart and eats the souls of those that visit her unprepared and unclean of spirit. She is said to be the Guardian Spirit of the fountain of the water of life.
In one folk tale a young girl, Vasilisa, is sent to visit Baba Yaga on an errand and is enslaved by her, but the hag's servants — a cat, a dog, a gate and a tree — help Vasilisa to escape because she has been kind to them. Finally, Baba Yaga is turned into a crow. In another version of the same story recorded by Aleksandr Nikolajevitj Afanasjev in Narodnye russkie skazki (vol 4, 1862) Vasilisa is given three impossible tasks that she solves using a magic doll her mother gave to her.
In Hungarian folklore she was originally a good fairy, but later became a witch.
Baba Yaga - Baba Yaga in arts
Creative works inspired by Baba Yaga include:
- Numerous Russian films and cartoons
- Baba Yaga (Italian film, 1973, by Corrado Farina)
- Baba Yaga (a drawing of Baba Yaga's hut by Viktor Hartmann that features in Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition)
- Baba Yaga (musical release, 1999, by Norwegian folk musician Annbjørg Lien)
- Enchantment (a novel by Orson Scott Card)
- The Sandman and The Books of Magic by Neil Gaiman featured Baba Yaga in a number of stories based on folk tales.
- Baba Yaga appears in Mike Mignola's comic book Hellboy, in the issue Baba Yaga. She is depicted or referenced in other issues, including the Conqueror Worm and Wake the Devil collections.
- Baba Yaga also appears as a character in the Science Fiction novel Belarus (link to Amazon.com) by Lee Hogan
- Koshka's Tales(Stories From Russia) by James Mayhew features Baba Yaga as the main plot's antagonist. (ISBN 1-85697-121-X)
- Studio Ghibli's Spirited Away (originally titled Sen to Chihiro no Kamikakushi) Spirited Away is a retelling of the above folk story, presented in Japanese folk culture wrappings. Here the girl Vasilissa is named Chihiro, spirited away into Baba Yaga's service.
The following Western works bear little or no relation to the "real" Baba Yaga but the name.
- Fables by Bill Willingham occasionally features her.
- In the Role playing game (RPG) series Quest for Glory she is the main villain of the first episode. She briefly reappears in the 4th part.
- In the Vampire: The Masquerade RPG, Baba Yaga was a powerful vampire of the Nosferatu clan which reappeared after the fall of Gorbachev, killing all of the Brujah clan vampires that controlled the Soviet Union
Other related archives1973, 1999, Amazon.com, Bill Willingham, Brujah, Bulgarian, Czech, Enchantment, Fables, Gorbachev, Hellboy, Hungarian, Macedonian, Mussorgsky's, Neil Gaiman, Nosferatu, Orson Scott Card, Pictures at an Exhibition, Polish, Quest for Glory, Role playing game, Russian, Science Fiction, Serbian, Slavic, Slavic mythology, Slovene, Soviet Union, Spirited Away, The Books of Magic, The Sandman, Ukrainian, Vampire: The Masquerade, Viktor Hartmann, chicken, fairy, magic, mortar, witch
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Baba Yaga", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |