Baba Yaga
is a witch-like character in Slavic folklore. She flies around on a giant mortar, kidnaps (and presumably eats) small children, and lives in a house which stands on chicken feet. In most Slavic folk tales, she is portrayed as an antagonist; however, some characters in other mythological folk stories have been known to seek her out for her wisdom, and she has been known on occasion to offer guidance to lost souls, although this is seen as rare.
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BABA YAGA TICKETS
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Etymology and origin
The name of Baba Yaga is composed of two elements.
Baba
is a word meaning "old woman, grandmother" used in most
Slavic languages; it derives from child language and often has pejorative connotations.
[1] The second element,
yaga
, is from
Proto-Slavic (j)eg?
, which is probably related to
Lithuanian ingis
'lazybones, sluggard',
Old Norse ekki
'pain', and
Old English inca
'question, scruple, doubt; grievance, quarrel'.
[2] It has also been suggested that Yaga may be a diminutive of the feminine name
Jadwiga.
An early recorded reference to "yaga-baba" is in
Of the Russe Common Wealth
by
Giles Fletcher, the Elder, in the section "About
Permyaks,
Samoyeds and
Lopars",
[3] indicating at a possible
Finno-Ugric influence.
[4]
The name differs within the various
Slavic languages. It is spelled "Baba Jaga" in
Czech,
Slovak and
Polish (though Czech and Slovak also use
Ježibaba
). In
Slovene, the words are reversed, producing
Jaga Baba
. In
Russian,
Bulgarian and
Ukrainian it is
???? ???
transliterated as
Baba Yaga
(or
Baba Yaha
in Ukrainian). In
South Slavic languages and traditions, there is a similar old witch, written
Baba Roga
in
Croatian and
Bosnian, and
???? ????
in
Serbian and
Macedonian. In
Romanian, which is not Slavic but one of the
Romance languages, the name is "Baba Dochia" or "Baba Cloantza" (roughly translated as "old hag with broken teeth").
Folklore
left
In Russian tales, Baba Yaga is portrayed as a
hag who flies through the air in a
mortar, using the
pestle as a rudder and sweeping away the tracks behind her with a broom made out of
silver birch. She lives in a log cabin that moves around on a pair of dancing
chicken legs, and/or surrounded by a palisade with a skull on each pole. The keyhole to her front door is a mouth filled with sharp teeth; the fence outside is made with human bones with skulls on top, often with one pole lacking its skull, leaving space for the hero or heroes. 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
.
In some
tales, the house is connected with three riders: one in white, riding a white horse with white harness, who is Day; a red rider, who is the Sun; and one in black, who is Night. Baba Yaga is served by invisible servants inside the house. She will explain the riders if asked, but may kill a visitor who inquires about the servants.
Baba Yaga is sometimes shown as an antagonist, and sometimes as a source of guidance; there are stories where she helps people with their quests, and stories in which she kidnaps children and threatens to eat them. Seeking out her aid is usually portrayed as a dangerous act. An emphasis is placed on the need for proper preparation and purity of spirit, as well as basic politeness. It is said she ages one year every time she is asked a question, which probably explains her reluctance to help. This effect, however, can be reversed with a special blend of tea made with blue roses.
thumb
In the folk tale
Vasilissa the Beautiful, recorded by
Alexander Afanasyev (
Narodnye russkie skazki
, vol 4, 1862), the young girl of the title is given three impossible tasks that she solves using a magic doll given to her by her mother.
In the Christianised version of the story, Vasilissa 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 Vasilissa to escape because she has been kind to them. In the end, Baba Yaga is turned into a crow. Similarly, Prince Ivan in
The Death of Koschei the Deathless is aided against her by animals whom he has spared.
The version in
Polish folklore differs in details. For example, the Polish Baba Jaga's house has only one chicken leg. Monstrous witches living in gingerbread houses are also commonly named Baba Jaga. Baba Jaga, flying on a mop, wearing black and red striped folk cloth of
Swietokrzyskie Mountains is an unofficial symbol of
Kielce region (it is connected with legendary witches
sabbaths on
Lysa Góra mountain).
Baba Yaga is used as a stock character by authors of modern Russian fairy tales, and from the 1990s in Russian fantasy. In particular, Baba Yaga meets at
Andrey Belyanin's books in his cycle
Secret service of Tsar Pea
, etc. The childhood and youth of Baba Yaga for the first time were described in the A. Aliverdiev's tale
Creek
("Lukomorie").
In some fairy tales, such as
The Feather of Finist the Falcon
, the hero meets not with one but
three Baba Yagas. Such figures are usually benevolent, giving the hero advice or magical presents, or both.
[5]
Other recorded Russian fairy tales that feature Baba Yaga are
Teryoshechka
,
The Enchanted Princess
, and
The Silver Saucer and the Red Apple
.
[6]
Cabin on chicken legs
According to Russian folklore, Baba Yaga dwells, in the words of the preface to
Alexander Pushkin's fantasy poem
Ruslan and Lyudmila
, in a "cabin on chicken legs... with no windows and no doors". Baba Yaga herself usually uses the
chimney to fly in and out on her mortar. Sometimes the door appears at the other side of the hut; to see it, a hero should say "Hut, o hut, turn your back to the woods, your front to me" and thus force the cabin to turn around and discover the door.
This may be an interpretation of an ordinary construction popular among
hunter-
nomadic peoples of
Siberia of
Uralic (
Finno-Ugric) and
Tungusic families, invented to preserve supplies against animals during long periods of absence. A doorless and windowless
log cabin is built upon supports made from the stumps of two or three closely grown trees cut at the height of eight to ten feet. The stumps, with their spreading roots, would give an impression of "chicken legs".
A similar but smaller construction was used by Siberian
pagans to hold
figurines of their gods. Recalling the late
matriarchy among Siberian peoples, a common picture of a bone-carved doll in rags in a small cabin on top of a tree stump fits a common description of Baba Yaga, who barely fits her cabin: her legs lie in one corner, her head in another one, and her nose is grown into the ceiling.
There are indications that ancient Slavs had a funeral tradition of cremation in huts of this type. In 1948 Russian archaeologists Yefimenko and Tretyakov discovered small huts of the described type with traces of corpse cremation and circular fences around them; yet another possible connection to the Baba Yaga myth.
[7] [8]
Modern
fantasy writers, such as
Tad Williams and
Elaine Cunningham use the character of the cabin on chicken legs in their works, as do
Fritz Leiber in
Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser and
Mike Mignola in his portrayal of Baba Yaga in his
Hellboy comics. The
castle in
Hayao Miyazaki's
film version of
Diana Wynne Jones' novel
Howl's Moving Castle
also moves on mechanical chicken legs.
Literature
Baba Yaga is one major character in
Isaac Bashevis Singer’s children story
Joseph & Koza
, where she is described as having a face like a pitch, a red turned up nose with broad nostrils, eyes burning like live coals, thistles instead of hair and a beard. Singer also mentions that the
Mazovians believed in “many lesser
babas
” and “little imps called
dziad
s.”
[9] In his novel
The King of the Fields
, Baba Yaga was a goddess to whom the prehistoric
Poles made sacrifices.
[10]
In popular culture
Baba Yaga is a major character in
Orson Scott Card's novel,
Enchantment (novel). In this novel, Card plays Baba Yaga as the antagonist, and weaves a lot of the folklore and possible origins of the folklore into his novel. In Michael Buckley's
The Sisters Grimm series, Baba Yaga is a supporting character in the fictional town of Ferryport Landing. In the
Primeval
novel
Extinction Event
, Baba Yaga is interpreted to be a Tyrannosaurus which travelled to the present through an
anomaly. In the
Fables (comics)
, Baba Yaga is a spy for the Adversary. Baba Yaga's hut is parodied in Dan Abnett's Warhammer 40,000 novel, Ravenor Rouge, as the "Wych House of Utochre". The Wych House takes the form of a 300m wide metal construct with clawed feet and short legs which it can use to run. The whole House hangs upside down under a frozen ocean, attached to the pack ice above by its feet. One character remarks that the house reminds him of an ancient legend from his home world, the myth of Baba Yaga. He is quickly corrected that this is actually an ancient earth legend.
The witch also features in many
Hellboy stories in which she tries in vain to kill and own his soul.
Film and animation
Baba Yaga is a favorite subject of Russian films and cartoons. The film
Vasilissa the Beautiful
by Aleksandr Rou, featuring Baba Yaga, was the first feature with fantasy elements in the Soviet Union.
[11] Georgy Milliar, a
male
actor, portrayed Baba Yaga in numerous movies from 30's to 60's, among them
Vasilissa the Beautiful
,
Morozko
,
New Adventures of Puss-in-Boots
, and others. He also often portrayed
Koschey the Deathless.
The animated film
Bartok the Magnificent
features Baba Yaga as a main character, but not the antagonist. 'Emily and the Baba Yaga' is an animated short telling a modern version of the classic tale. Instead of combs and handkerchiefs, chainsaws and mangy pets help defeat the hag.
The Soviet film
Jack Frost
featured a character called the "Hunch-Backed Fairy" who was obviously Baba Yaga, to the point that she first appeared in the chicken-legged house, and later was seen flying around in a mortar.
Baba Yaga briefly appears in the 16th episode of Russian animated series "
Nu, pogodi!" Her chicken-legged house contained a magic apple tree that turned a body part of whoever ate from the tree into an animal's. Inside the house there was also a hollow-boxed and stringed instrument that, when played, forces people and the house itself to dance.
The Baba Yaga appears in a
Hellboy short story titled The Baba Yaga, which can be found within the graphic novel Hellboy: The Chained Coffin and Others.
In the manga/anime
Soul Eater, there is a castle named "The Castle of Baba Yaga" used by the Witch
Arachne as a base of operations. Although it shares the name, it does not stand on chicken legs; however it is shaped like a spider, likely to go along with the spider theme that the Witch
Arachne is a part of.
Computer games
In the online game
RuneScape, Baba Yaga is featured in quests and as an integral part of the Lunar Isle where she runs a magic store in her chicken-legged house.
[12]
left
.
Baba Yaga is also a character in the Sierra games, "
Quest for Glory," and "
Quest for Glory 4." In both games she is an evil witch who must be tricked to succeed against, and resides in a hut with chicken legs.
The character of Baba Yaga is featured as a boss character that must be defeated in the facebook game by zynga "Vampire Wars".
Music
Modest Mussorgsky's
Pictures at an Exhibition
, a suite for piano composed in 1874, features "The Hut on Bird's Legs (Baba Yaga)" as its penultimate movement. Mussorgsky's suite has since been set in whole or in part for a variety of instruments. The most famous version for orchestra was made in 1922 by
Ravel. The progressive rock group
Emerson, Lake & Palmer adapted Mussorgsky's suite for an album in 1971 that included the original Baba Yaga movement along with an original track entitled "The Curse of Baba Yaga."
Baba Yaga
(opus 56), a symphonic poem by
Anatoly Lyadov, was composed between 1890 and 1904. The music depicts the witch summoning her mortar, pestle and broomstick, then flying through the forest.
The Gypsy jazz band Sheelanagig's album released in 2007 is called
Baba Yaga's Ball
.
Name in other languages
Baba Yaga is an archetypal character in the culture of many eastern European countries, and is known by different names across the region, including Baba Roga in
Macedonian,
Serbian,
Croatian and
Bosnian; Baba Cloan?a in
Romanian; and Ježibaba in
Czech.
See also
References
- Max Vasmer, ''Etimologicheskii slovar' russkogo yazyka'', Vol. I (Moscow: Progress, 1964), p. 99.
- Max Vasmer, ''Etimologicheskii slovar' russkogo yazyka'', Vol. IV (Moscow: Progress, 1973), p. 542.
- A chapter from Fletcher's book {{ru icon}}
- ""Baba Yaga was a Good Old Northener, by Aleksandr Tutov, ''Energiya'', no.3, 2004
- W. R. S. Ralston ''Songs of the Russian People'' Section III.--Storyland Beings.
- Bonnie Marshall (2004) "The Snow Maiden and Other Russian Tales",ISBN 1563089998, Preface, p. 19.
- ??????? ?.?., ????????? ??????? ???? (Moscow: Nauka, 1987).
- ???????? ?. ?., ????????? ?. ?. ????????? ????????? ? ?. ???????. ???, ? 8. ?.; ?., 1948, ???. 37-42.)
- Isaac Bashevis Singer, ''Stories for Children'', Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1991, p. 146-151.
- Isaac Bashevis Singer, ''A King of the Fields'', Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003, p. 4, 16, 60.
- James Graham, "Baba Yaga in Film"
- "http://www.runescape.com/kbase/viewarticle.ws?article_id=2758", RuneScape Knowledge Base, By Jagex ltd