(Redirected from Bald Mountain)
'Lysa Hora' or 'Bald Mountain' (
Ukrainian: Лиса гора, ''Lysa hora'', pl. ''Lysi hory'';
Russian: Лысая гора, ''Lysaya gora'',
Polish: Łysa Góra) is a concept of
East Slavic, and particularly
Ukrainian,
folk mythology related to
witchcraft. According to
legends,
ravens,
black eagles, witches and other
paranormal creatures periodically gather on the "bald mountains" for their "
Sabbath". Mentions of ''Lysi Hory'' can be found in various historical and
literary sources, such as in the writings of
Nikolai Gogol and
Mikhail Bulgakov (who uses it in ''
The Master and Margarita'' as the mountain where the ''Iyeshua'' (a prototype of the
Christ) was crucified). The exact origins and factual evidences of the concept are unclear.
Researchers list dozens of supposed "bald mountains" sites throughout
Ukraine and
Poland. The most famous among them are the
Lysa Hora and
Zamkova Hora hills in
Kiev,
Ukraine, and
Łysa Góra in
Poland.
See also
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Lysa Hora
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History of Ukraine
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History of Russia
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Night on Bald Mountain
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The Brocken
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Walpurgis