readable:db.jarilo-vi:jarilo.god.spring.war
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| ====== Jarilo: God of Spring and War ====== | ====== Jarilo: God of Spring and War ====== | ||
| The story and expert analyses of a traditional legend from the northern region of Nycatha. | The story and expert analyses of a traditional legend from the northern region of Nycatha. | ||
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| + | ==== Mythological Tales ==== | ||
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| + | Jarilo: God of Spring and War | ||
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| + | Perun, the god of thunder and lightning and the one ranked the highest in the Pantheon, is fashioned with a beard made of bronze and armed with a shield and an ax which he uses to slay sinners and evil spirits. He hurls his ax at his enemies and summons bolts of lightning before it returns to his hand. Perun exterminates demons that scourge across the skies with fiery arrows from his war chariot — what later became known as thunder and lightning to the world. | ||
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| + | Veles, a sworn enemy of Perun and previously also the god of war, now oversees the land, water, forest, and the underworld. Veles takes a half-human and half-snake form, with horns of bulls on his head, a thick coat of fur, and a long beard. He herds cattle in the Land of Death while controlling wealth, rewards, music, and the night. He is an expert in magic and trickery. | ||
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| + | Pursuing Veles across the Earth, the enraged Perun cares not for the things that Veles shapeshifts to hide behind and strikes them down with indifference, | ||
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| + | On the last night of February, Perun' | ||
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| + | Jarilo didn't like to spend his life underground. He is the god of youth and life with the powers of reproduction and plant growth. At the end of winter, Jarilo would return to Earth and use the full extent of his powers as the god of springtime and war to drive the cold and darkness away. This process was difficult but necessary to bring about spring to the world. | ||
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| + | Jarilo was first noticed and welcomed by the goddess of nature and death, Morana, who is Perun' | ||
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| + | However, Jarilo was not a faithful husband. In retaliation for his disloyalty, Morana killed Jarilo and used his corpse to build a new home. Without her husband, Morana gradually became a depressed old witch. The frightening and dangerous goddess of death would bring about a cold bitter winter. Morana would die at the year's end, being reborn as Vesna. At the same time, Jarilo would be reborn and the myth would start all over again. | ||
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| + | The endless cycle of life and death continued for a long time. The unfaithful Jarilo getting killed after the autumn harvest and the lonely Morana dying at the end of the year. The two gods were reborn and fell in love again, ensuring the bountiful harvest every year. It wasn't until one year when Morana killed Jarilo as usual, but the house she built was weak and collapsed. With no shelter in the frigid winter, Morana' | ||
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| + | The curse worked. This time, while Morana did become a dangerous witch in her solitude, she didn't die at the end of the year. The cold and darkness raged on, far greater than ever before. It even continued to span across the following year. When Jarilo was reborn into this desolate place, Morana finally died, never to be reborn. Faced with the ruthless winter, Jarilo realized that he had made a mistake. Spring would not come this year, and Jarilo could not face the cold nights alone. | ||
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| + | In his desperation, | ||
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| + | The proud Jarilo fell into a deep depression, and the cold storm continued to rage on even till the autumn harvest. At the end of the story, the remorseful Jarilo offers to sacrifice his reincarnation, | ||
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| + | ==== Explanation ==== | ||
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| + | //Jarilo: God of Spring and War// Analysis | ||
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| + | Folklore Expert: Chico | ||
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| + | One of the earliest historical references to the god is the biography of a diplomat from the Saya kingdom, about 1,800 years before the Eternal Freeze. On his expedition, he came across a tribe who happened to be celebrating the god of war, Jarroway. Experts from before the Eternal Freeze believed Jarroway to be the precursor of Jarilo. | ||
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| + | Around 1,200 years ago, in the northern region of Nycatha, a festival known as " | ||
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| + | The death of a god was seen as a ritualistic sacrifice, and carries heavy symbolic meaning. Similar metaphors can be found in other mythologies: | ||
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| + | It is clear the myth's ending was influenced by the Eternal Freeze and the new religions. Before the Eternal Freeze, Jarilo was the typical " | ||
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| + | It's worth mentioning that in the story, Jarilo goes on a journey from an unfaithful bum to a loyal husband. By the end of the story, he sought redemption from Perun, paying a heavy price for his indiscretions. The changes in Jarilo here were thought to be related to the changing lunar phases, a projection of human understanding on natural phenomena. This understanding continued to hold after the Eternal Freeze emerged and people could no longer observe the moon's phase changes. There was a lack of understanding of such astronomical phenomena, so people were more inclined to draw a moral conclusion to the story — this god's endless cycle of birth-death-rebirth was the price to pay for his love. | ||
readable/db.jarilo-vi/jarilo.god.spring.war.1761211063.txt.gz · Last modified: by anadmin
