Strzyga

Vampires in Slavic culture that had two hearts and two souls, as well as two sets of teeth, but one set growing in normally would pinpoint a Strzyga. When they die, only one soul gets passed on, and the other soul causes the deceased Strzyga to come alive and prey upon other living beings. Burying the body in a separate place than the removed head is said to prevent Strzyga from rising back from the dead; but also burying the body face down with a sickle around its head is said to work as well. A common version of this belief says that a strzyga is an undead newborn child. Any child born dead was believed to become one if certain precautions (like those mentioned in the previous paragraph) were not met. Those undead little creatures would stalk forests at night and attack night-time travellers and people who simply wander off into the woods at night, eating out their insides. See also Polish_mythology

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
professor hubert farnsworth
one hour thanksgiving dinner
walter leake
bannik
barbara dulinsky
boginki
endowment (mormonism)
dogoda
dola
the quibbler
kikimora
church of jesus christ elvis
lakanica
leszi
tengboche
mamona
mora (mythology)
naw
neuri
nocnitsa
odmience
polewiki
polundica
psotnik
rarg
smierna
sudice
topielec
karzelek
wodjanoj
circles in polish mythology
crossroads in polish mythology
floro dery
divination in polish mythology
fire flowers
herbs in polish mythology
ladanki
lechebnik
the magic belt of poland
matka ziemia
pysanka
spoiling in polish mythology
howard baker
zagavory