Fun fact, legend tells he or his children could be summoned by whistling, therefore it was forbidden to whistle on ships, out of fear he may crash the boat. He himself was told to whistle when approaching or leaving, and that is how he created winds. He was also son of Perun, god of storm, and Makosh, goddess of Fate/Nature. There is a story when an old man was refused a place to stay at night, he then began to whistle, dissapeared but whistling grew stronger and stronger until the house collapsed, killing everyone inside. The old man being Stribog. He also had a lot of children, and I mean thousands. Viles (women riding wind/giant birds carrying souls to the heaven) and Cloudmen (Men with bird wings who could carry/Summon clouds) were his sons and daughters, but they are also said to be children of Sun god Dazhbog so it Depends on what author you read.
If you can provide a source for the story about the old man and the homeowner, it could be viewed as the oldest version of the 3 Little Pig's story. The earliest published version of the book comes from Dartmoor, Devon in South England, written by James Halliwell-Phillips. As a slav myself, I would LOVE to confirm the existence of a version that predates the England version.
Stribog Is The Russian Version Of Gandalf The Grey Turn Into Gandalf The White. Please 🙏 Do More Russian/ Slavic Mythology, And More Of Filipino, Korean, Spanish, Native American, Mesoamerica, Scottish, Chinese, Saudi Arabian, And Japanese Legends And Mythologies Please 🙏.
The Lord Of winds interesting history looks like it are Odin Used horns Valhalla Calling us very beautiful I love that absolutely I love your video history my brother father.
Each patheon has such great story
Loving these Slavic myths! I had no idea they were this interesting
Fun fact, legend tells he or his children could be summoned by whistling, therefore it was forbidden to whistle on ships, out of fear he may crash the boat. He himself was told to whistle when approaching or leaving, and that is how he created winds.
He was also son of Perun, god of storm, and Makosh, goddess of Fate/Nature. There is a story when an old man was refused a place to stay at night, he then began to whistle, dissapeared but whistling grew stronger and stronger until the house collapsed, killing everyone inside. The old man being Stribog. He also had a lot of children, and I mean thousands. Viles (women riding wind/giant birds carrying souls to the heaven) and Cloudmen (Men with bird wings who could carry/Summon clouds) were his sons and daughters, but they are also said to be children of Sun god Dazhbog so it Depends on what author you read.
So i hate to say this but this is slavic myth where nothing is known and everything made up sooo source?
If you can provide a source for the story about the old man and the homeowner, it could be viewed as the oldest version of the 3 Little Pig's story. The earliest published version of the book comes from Dartmoor, Devon in South England, written by James Halliwell-Phillips. As a slav myself, I would LOVE to confirm the existence of a version that predates the England version.
Slavic mythology is amazing, Blessed Be.
Zeus : I'm suing
What for? This is god of win, not storms, and has a horn instead of lightning bolt.
Half of Greece:
*Counter Sues for unpaid child support*
Good video thanks
❤🤍💙 all your videos mate👍
His beard is as long as Gandalf's, and Dumbledore's
ODIN ZEUS SKYRIM GREY BEARDS SANTA CLAUSE DUMBLEDORE YOU SHALL NOT PASS MEME PIRATE BLACKBEARD SAME STORY XD
Now we know who blew the horn in God of War reboot.
He ain’t got nothing on Fujin💨💨💨💨
Stribog Is The Russian Version Of Gandalf The Grey Turn Into Gandalf The White. Please 🙏 Do More Russian/ Slavic Mythology, And More Of Filipino, Korean, Spanish, Native American, Mesoamerica, Scottish, Chinese, Saudi Arabian, And Japanese Legends And Mythologies Please 🙏.
The Lord Of winds interesting history looks like it are Odin Used horns Valhalla Calling us very beautiful I love that absolutely I love your video history my brother father.
Leave Mom Irish mythology