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'''Lakanica''' is type of supernatural being from traditional Polish folklore who is a spirit of the fields or marshes. These are reputed to be shy and elusive creatures who can appear in human female form.
'''Lakanica''' is type of supernatural being from traditional Polish folklore who is a spirit of the fields or meadows. These are reputed to be shy and elusive creatures who can appear in human female form.


Scholar Alanna Muniz notes the range of such creatures in stories from western Slavic cultures that share a common non-hierarchical religion. Lakanica was similar to other types ''ovily/[[Rusalka|rusalki]]'' who “are believed to reside in or near lakes, springs, rivers, and marshes, although they are also connected to fields, trees, and woods in some locations.”<ref>Alanna Muniz, The Survival of the Neolithic Goddess in Polish Folklore, Myth, and Tradition. Master of Arts in Women’s Spirituality, Institute of Transpersonal Psychology. Palo Alto, CA. 2010. </ref><ref>Barber, Elizabeth J. W. “On the Origins of the vily/rusalki.” Varia on the Indo-European Past: Papers in Memory of Marija Gimbutas (Journal of Indo-European Studies Monograph Ser. 19). Ed. Miriam Robbins Dexter and Edgar C. Polomé. Washington D.C.: Study of Man, 1997.</ref>
Scholar Alanna Muniz notes the range of such creatures in stories from western Slavic cultures that share a common non-hierarchical religion. Lakanica was similar to other types ''ovily/[[Rusalka|rusalki]]'' who “are believed to reside in or near lakes, springs, rivers, and marshes, although they are also connected to fields, trees, and woods in some locations.”<ref>Alanna Muniz, The Survival of the Neolithic Goddess in Polish Folklore, Myth, and Tradition. Master of Arts in Women’s Spirituality, Institute of Transpersonal Psychology. Palo Alto, CA. 2010. </ref><ref>Barber, Elizabeth J. W. “On the Origins of the vily/rusalki.” Varia on the Indo-European Past: Papers in Memory of Marija Gimbutas (Journal of Indo-European Studies Monograph Ser. 19). Ed. Miriam Robbins Dexter and Edgar C. Polomé. Washington D.C.: Study of Man, 1997.</ref>

Revision as of 15:56, 13 March 2023

Lakanica is type of supernatural being from traditional Polish folklore who is a spirit of the fields or meadows. These are reputed to be shy and elusive creatures who can appear in human female form.

Scholar Alanna Muniz notes the range of such creatures in stories from western Slavic cultures that share a common non-hierarchical religion. Lakanica was similar to other types ovily/rusalki who “are believed to reside in or near lakes, springs, rivers, and marshes, although they are also connected to fields, trees, and woods in some locations.”[1][2]

Lakanica and other mythological creatures play a role in the 21st century novel The Dollmaker of Kraków, set just before World War II.[3]

References

  1. ^ Alanna Muniz, The Survival of the Neolithic Goddess in Polish Folklore, Myth, and Tradition. Master of Arts in Women’s Spirituality, Institute of Transpersonal Psychology. Palo Alto, CA. 2010.
  2. ^ Barber, Elizabeth J. W. “On the Origins of the vily/rusalki.” Varia on the Indo-European Past: Papers in Memory of Marija Gimbutas (Journal of Indo-European Studies Monograph Ser. 19). Ed. Miriam Robbins Dexter and Edgar C. Polomé. Washington D.C.: Study of Man, 1997.
  3. ^ R. M. Romero, The Dollmaker of Kraków. Delacorte Press. 2017.