- In
Slavic mythology,
vodyanoy (Russian: водяной, IPA: [vədʲɪˈnoj]; lit. '[he] from the water' or 'watery') is a
water spirit. In
Czech and
Slovak fairy...
- rites. (Under this theory, male
unclean dead were said to
become vodyanoy.) The
vodyanoy is a male
water spirit of
Slavic origin. The
Czech and
Slovak equivalent...
- leshy, the
vodyanoy was
sometimes pictured with a wife. The
vodyanoy's main
function is
drowning people.
Other stories about the
vodyanoy include him...
- [citation needed]
Borda (legendary creature)
Kappa (folklore)
Nelly Longarms Vodyanoy Skilbeck,
William Wray, ed. (1910). "page 556". The
Nineteenth Century...
- the
dreams of the main
character and his
beloved coincide. Ivan
meets Vodyanoy, who
sings about his
joyless life. The
latter helps Vanya build a flying...
-
swallows it, and the hero
fails to
contact Koshchei. Baba Yaga,
Svetozar and
Vodyanoy, in
order not to
arouse su****ion,
leave the hut near one of the high-rise...
- take Ivan with them to find the Sword.
Escaping the dungeon, they
enlist Vodyanoy the Merman.
Koschei tells Ivan of Vasilisa's backstory:
after she caught...
- fountains, or
water nymphs of
Venus (mythology). In
Slavic mythology: A
Vodyanoy (also wodnik, vodník, vodnik, vodenjak) is a male
water spirit akin to...
- folklore, and the swamp-dwelling
spirit was
often thought of as a kind of
vodyanoy,
leshy or chort. The
image of a
bolotnitsa was
mixed with
those of a rusalka...
- Pan-Ataman
Gritsian Tavrichesky.
Andrei Abrikosov as
Balyasny Senior Mikhail Vodyanoy as
Popandopulo Tamara Nosova as
Komarikha Emma
Treyvas as Tryndychikha...