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Zburător
View on WikipediaZburător or sburător (Romanian word meaning 'flyer') is a supernatural being in Romanian folklore, described as a "roving spirit who makes love to maidens by night".[1]
General description
[edit]The zburător is also likened to an incubus, and described as a malevolent demon[2] active in a "oniric-erotic" manner,[3] i.e., visiting women in their dreams in the guise of a handsome young man.[4]
The zburător is otherwise referred to as a zmeu (another dragon-like creature) in some regions,[5] though perhaps perceived to have more human-like aspects than the zmeu.[1]
History of lore
[edit]Dimitrie Cantemir, writing about the myth concerning it in Descriptio Moldaviae (1714–1716),[a] stated that the "zburator" meant "flyer" (Latin: volatilis), and according to the beliefs of the Moldavan it was "a ghost, a young, handsome man who comes in the middle of the night at women, especially recently married ones and does indecent things with them, although he cannot be seen by other people, not even by the ones who waylay him".[6]
A literary reworking of the myth later appeared in the romantic poem by Ion Heliade Rădulescu Zburătorul ('The Flyer/Flying Incubus', 1843), and the "incubus" with flowing black hair visiting a young girl and inducing her erotic awakening.[b][7] The myth reappears in the late romantic literature, in poems such as Călin (file de poveste) (Călin (story pages)) and Luceafărul (The Evening Star) (1884) by Romanian poet Mihai Eminescu.
The zburător (sburător [8]) myth became one of the four fundamental myths in Romanian folk poetry according to the framework of George Călinescu (1941).[c][9][8]
Explanatory notes
[edit]- ^ Pascu, Giorge tr. (1935), Descrierea Moldovei into Romanian.
- ^ This likely inspired the vampire novel by Bram Stoker, according to Cazacu.
- ^ The other three being the Trajan and Dochia myth, the mytho of Miorița (The Ewe Lamb), and the myth of Meşterul Manole.
See also
[edit]- Fiery serpents – Spirit in Russian folklore
References
[edit]- Citations
- ^ a b Călin, Vera (1 January 1988), Garber, Frederick (ed.), "Irony and World-Creation in the Work of Mihai Eminescu", Romantic Irony, John Benjamins Publishing, pp. 194–195, ISBN 963-05-4844-5
- ^ Vulcănescu (1987), p. 338.
- ^ Vulcănescu (1987), p. 339.
- ^ Zamfir, Georgeta Blendea (2016), Mirobolant Feelings: The Darkness of Love, American Academic Press, p. 104, n16, ISBN 9781631817885
- ^ Candrea, Ion Aurel [in Romanian] (1999), "Zburătorul", Folclorul medical român comparat: privire generală meidcina magică, Colecţia Plural M 26, Polirom, p. 182, ISBN 9789736831829 (in Romanian)
- ^ Candrea (1999), p. 183.
- ^ Cazacu, Matei [in Romanian] (2017), Reinert, Stephen W. (ed.), Dracula: East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 450-1450, BRILL, pp. 265, 299, ISBN 9789004349216
- ^ a b Dobre, Alexandru (1999), "Mitul literar și mitul folcloric. Precizările și sugestiile lui G. Călinescu", Revista de etnografie și folclor [Journal of ethnography and folklore], 44: 217 (in Romanian)
- ^ Cornis-Pope, Marcel (2004), Pope, Marcel; Neubauer, John (eds.), "The Question of Folklore in Romanian Literary Culture", Romantic Irony, vol. 3, no. The Making and Remaking of Literary Institutions, Otilia Hedeşan, History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe: Junctures and Disjunctures in the 19th and 20th Centuries, p. 318, ISBN 9789027234551
- Bibliography
- Vulcănescu, Romulus [in Romanian] (1987), "5. Zburătorul", Mitologie română, Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste România, pp. 338–341 (in Romanian)
Zburător
View on GrokipediaEtymology and Terminology
Name Origin
The term "Zburător" derives directly from the Romanian verb a zbura, meaning "to fly," which itself stems from Vulgar Latin exvolāre (a compound of ex- and volāre, "to fly"). This etymology translates the name literally as "the flyer" or "the one who flies," emphasizing the entity's aerial and nocturnal nature as a roving spirit in Romanian folklore traditions.[3] The earliest documented reference to the Zburător in written sources appears in Dimitrie Cantemir's Descriptio Moldaviae (1714–1716), where the scholar describes it as a supernatural being that enters homes at night in the form of a flyer (volatilis in Latin), tormenting young women, particularly recently married ones, through erotic dreams.[4] Cantemir's account marks the transition of oral folklore into scholarly record, highlighting the creature's role as an incubus-like figure. The concept gained further literary traction in the early 19th century through Ion Budai-Deleanu's epic poem Țiganiada (composed around 1800, published posthumously), which employs variants like zburătoare to evoke flying entities amid satirical depictions of historical events.[5] Scholars have proposed etymological links to pre-Roman Dacian influences, associating the term with the dracone, an ancient military standard depicting a wolf-headed dragon that "flew" on the wind during battles, symbolizing a swift, airborne heraldic emblem possibly inspiring later folklore motifs of flying spirits.[6] This connection underscores how the name may blend linguistic evolution with ancestral symbols of mobility and otherworldliness in the region. The Zburător shares brief terminological overlap with the zmeu, another flying mythical being in Romanian lore, though the latter often carries more draconic connotations.Linguistic Variations and Related Terms
In Romanian folklore, the term "zburător" exhibits spelling variations such as "sburător," which emphasizes the creature's flying nature and derives from the verb "a zbura," meaning "to fly." These orthographic differences reflect historical shifts in Romanian transliteration, particularly in older texts where the initial "z" sound could be softened or elided in certain contexts. Related terms include "zmeu," a dragon-like flying entity often conflated with the zburător due to shared aerial and seductive motifs in regional tales, and "drac," denoting a devilish flyer with demonic attributes that overlap in descriptions of nocturnal visitations. Such terminological overlaps highlight the fluid boundaries between supernatural beings in oral traditions, where the zburător is sometimes portrayed as a variant of these figures.Physical Description and Forms
Demonic Appearance
In Romanian folklore, the Zburător's demonic form is depicted as a monstrous hybrid creature, typically a wolf- or dog-headed dragon with a serpentine body and a flaming or burning tail.[7][8] This portrayal evokes terror and is associated with chaotic supernatural forces, though its visual elements may resemble ancient symbols like the Dacian draco military standard. The creature is described as large and capable of flight, aligning with its name meaning "the flyer," often appearing in the night sky like a shooting star. Folklore accounts emphasize its draconic ferocity, with wings enabling swift aerial movement.[9] Regional variations include bat-like wings for silent gliding or a more pronounced serpentine form, highlighting the Zburător's adaptability while maintaining its core monstrous traits. These depictions blend pre-Christian and medieval influences in rural tales.Humanoid Manifestations
In Romanian folklore, the Zburător often appears in a humanoid form to interact with young women, taking the guise of a handsome young man with black hair, black eyes, and a charismatic presence that conceals its supernatural nature.[9][10] This shape-shifting typically occurs at night, transforming from its winged demonic form—visible as a shooting star—into the human guise to enter homes undetected through open windows using its flight ability.[9][11] The form facilitates seductive encounters, sometimes showing subtle otherworldly hints like an unnatural gaze. Variations may overlap with depictions of the zmeu, a dragon-like being with more human aspects.Behaviors and Supernatural Abilities
Nocturnal Activities
In Romanian folklore, the Zburător is renowned for its nocturnal flights, during which it seeks out unmarried young women or virgins, often entering their homes through open windows to engage in seductive encounters.[12] These visitations typically occur in the dead of night, manifesting as an erotic torment that blurs the line between dream and reality, targeting the sleeping victims to evoke intense romantic or sexual longing.[13] The entity appears in a humanoid form, such as a handsome young man, to facilitate these intimate interactions, which are described as both alluring and distressing for the women involved.[14] The Zburător's entry into dwellings is elusive and supernatural, allowing it to slip through chimneys, doors, or windows undetected by others in the household, sometimes materializing as a small fiery orb or innocuous object like a pear to avoid suspicion.[12] Once inside the bedroom, it induces vivid dreams that simulate physical embraces, leaving the woman exhausted or marked by emotional upheaval upon waking, though no visible wounds are typically reported.[15] This predatory routine underscores the Zburător's role as a roving spirit, drawn to the vulnerability of solitude and the allure of youth during hours of darkness.[13] These activities follow distinct patterns, with the Zburător vanishing at dawn as light breaks, ensuring its elusiveness and preventing direct confrontation.[12] Precursors to its arrival often include induced dreams that foreshadow the encounter, serving as psychological harbingers for the targeted women.[13] While no specific ties to full moons or festivals are consistently documented in folklore accounts, the entity's nocturnal nature aligns with broader traditions of supernatural visitations during times of quiet and repose.[14]Powers and Limitations
The Zburător demonstrates a range of supernatural powers in Romanian folklore, primarily centered on seduction and nocturnal predation. It possesses the ability to render itself invisible, enabling undetected entry into homes through open windows or cracks, and can manipulate the dreams of young unmarried women, inducing vivid erotic visions that exhaust and weaken them physically and emotionally. These dream intrusions often manifest as encounters with a handsome young man, draining the victim's life energy and leaving her pale, ill, and listless upon waking.[9] Its most defining ability is flight, facilitating unhindered aerial travel across vast distances; it is frequently described as streaking through the night sky like a shooting star or comet, sometimes trailed by flames or fire, which underscores its otherworldly and destructive potential. Shape-shifting enables brief disguises as a human for closer interaction, though this is secondary to its spirit-like essence.[9] Despite these formidable powers, the Zburător has notable limitations that render it vulnerable to traditional folk protections. It is repelled by garlic placed on windowsills, a folk remedy believed to safeguard against its ethereal presence.[9] Furthermore, the Zburător weakens significantly in daylight, losing much of its potency and retreating to avoid exposure, confining its activities almost exclusively to nighttime.[9]Role in Folklore and Mythology
Interactions with Humans
In Romanian folklore, the Zburător primarily targets young unmarried women and newlywed brides, manifesting as a nocturnal visitor who enters homes through chimneys or windows to engage in seductive or tormenting encounters.[16] These interactions often occur in the form of dream visitations, where the entity appears as a handsome young man or a loved one, blending illusion with intense erotic temptation, or as physical assaults involving oppressive weight, bites, pinches, and tickling that leave victims in a trance-like state.[16][17] The consequences of these encounters are profoundly debilitating, causing physical exhaustion, paleness, and weakness in the affected women, who often appear withdrawn and frail as if drained of vitality.[16] Victims may also suffer from lovesickness, an obsessive longing that manifests as emotional torment and social isolation; in pregnant women, the Zburător's influence is believed to provoke stillbirths or miscarriage.[16] Repeated visitations can lead to a severe condition known as lipitură, a folk-diagnosed illness characterized by bedridden fatigue and unquenchable desire, interpreted as the Zburător's erotic aggression binding the soul.[18] Societal responses to these afflictions emphasize protective rituals and remedies to expel the entity and restore the victim. Exorcisms involve incantations recited on specific days like Tuesdays and Fridays, combined with fumigations using herbs such as nine varieties of plants boiled in water to break the Zburător's hold and alleviate symptoms.[16][18] In some traditions, men capture and punish the manifested Zburător as if it were a tangible intruder.[16]Symbolic Meanings
In Romanian folklore, the Zburător embodies uncontrolled erotic desire and forbidden passion, manifesting as a spectral lover who disrupts the boundaries between the human and supernatural realms to pursue illicit unions. This figure represents the chaos arising from an imbalance between instinct and restraint, where "demon's wild Eros" overrides rational control, leading to psychological turmoil such as whipped feelings, psychotic disorders, and syndromes of hypersexuality among its victims.[15] Scholars interpret these traits as symbolic of the dangers inherent in unchecked longing, transforming sorrow into a perilous "blue song" of unfulfilled love, distinct from vampiric bloodlust but equally destructive to the victim's vitality.[15] Psychologically, the Zburător personifies adolescent longing and the societal fear of emergent sexuality in rural communities, where its nocturnal visitations evoke dreams that blur fantasy with reality, often resulting in neurasthenic epilepsy or obsessive states. In these interpretations, the entity serves as a cultural metaphor for the internal conflicts of youth, channeling suppressed urges into a narrative of external temptation that warns against the perils of instinctual release outside sanctioned norms.[15] This symbolism underscores the tension between desire and moral restraint, reflecting how rural folklore externalizes the anxieties of maturation in isolated, tradition-bound societies.[14] From a gender dynamics perspective, the Zburător illustrates patriarchal anxieties surrounding female autonomy and purity, portraying women—particularly unmarried maidens—as vulnerable to an invasive masculine force that asserts dominance through seduction. By targeting these figures in their sleep, the myth reinforces societal controls on female sexuality, symbolizing the fear of women straying from prescribed roles and the consequent threat to communal honor and lineage.[15] This interpretive layer highlights how the Zburător's allure functions not merely as erotic temptation but as a cautionary emblem of male authority curbing potential female independence in traditional Romanian culture.Historical Development and Cultural Impact
Ancient Origins and Evolution
The Zburător's origins are traced to pre-Christian Dacian and Thracian traditions, where motifs of flying wolf-dragons symbolized power and protection in ancient heraldry. The Dacian draco, a military standard featuring a wolf-headed dragon that "flew" on the wind during battles, served as a sacred emblem linked to warrior cults and possibly solar worship, evoking the sky's dominion and celestial forces. Etymologically, "zburător" derives from the Romanian verb "a zbura" (to fly), echoing the draco's airborne nature and suggesting continuity from these ancient symbols to later folklore figures.[19] Following the Christianization of the region in the early medieval period, the Zburător evolved through syncretism with demonic entities from Christian theology, particularly the incubus, a male demon believed to seduce women in their sleep. This fusion reframed the pagan flying spirit as a malevolent nocturnal visitor, embodying moral and spiritual threats to chastity and faith. References to such beings appear in ecclesiastical documents from the 16th to 18th centuries, including trial records and sermons addressing supernatural assaults, reflecting the Church's efforts to suppress lingering pre-Christian beliefs.[14] In the 19th century, amid Romania's national awakening and romantic interest in vernacular heritage, the Zburător was revived and documented in folklore collections, transforming from a raw pagan entity into a cautionary symbol of forbidden desire and social norms. Vasile Alecsandri engaged with the myth in his romantic poem "Zburătorul" (c. 1850s), inspired by folk traditions and exploring themes of love and the supernatural. This period marked a shift toward viewing the Zburător as a moral archetype in literature and ethnography.[16]Depictions in Literature and Art
The Zburător features prominently in 19th-century Romanian Romantic literature, where it is often romanticized as a nocturnal lover embodying erotic desire and supernatural allure. In Ion Heliade Rădulescu's 1843 poem Zburătorul, the creature is depicted as a seductive spirit that visits a young maiden in her sleep, leaving bruises and igniting passion, blending folklore with poetic exploration of forbidden love. Similarly, Mihai Eminescu incorporates Zburător motifs in his 1876 narrative poem Călin (File din poveste), portraying the protagonist Călin as a winged suitor who flies to his fairy beloved, transforming the folk demon into a symbol of transcendent romance between humans and the supernatural. These works elevate the Zburător from a mere tormentor in oral traditions to a figure of idealized, ethereal courtship. Petre Ispirescu's 19th-century collections of Romanian folk tales emphasize mythical beings like the zmeu and balaur, integrating elements of enchantment and peril that parallel the Zburător's nocturnal temptations. This integration highlights the creature's role in folk literature as a bridge between everyday fears and mythical adventure, often tied briefly to erotic themes of nocturnal temptation. Visual depictions of the Zburător in 19th-century art are sparse but emerge in illustrations accompanying folklore compilations and Romantic poetry, sometimes rendering it as a fiery, dragon-like form to evoke its aerial and demonic nature. In modern fantasy art, the Zburător blends with vampire tropes, portrayed as a suave, winged incubus with wolfish or draconic features, emphasizing seductive danger in digital illustrations and concept art for horror genres.[20] In contemporary media, the Zburător influences Romanian horror and fantasy, evolving into a seductive antagonist that reflects shifting cultural views on sexuality and the supernatural. The 2014 film Ultimul Zburător (The Last Incubus), directed by Ovidiu Georgescu, reimagines the creature as the last of its kind in a disenchanted modern world, where it pursues a young singer in a tale of magical realism and erotic peril, marking the first such trilogy in Romanian cinema.[21] Literary echoes appear in Mircea Cărtărescu's 2022 novel Theodoros, which draws on the myth to explore an incubus-like entity invading dreams, fusing folklore with encyclopedic narrative innovation.[22] These portrayals underscore the Zburător's enduring appeal as a symbol of irresistible, otherworldly desire.Comparisons and Influences
Similar Beings in Romanian Lore
In Romanian folklore, the Zburător is primarily distinguished from the Zmeu by its role as a spectral incubus focused on nocturnal seduction, though some accounts describe overlaps where the Zburător takes on dragon-like traits while shapeshifting into a handsome man. The Zmeu typically appears as a corporeal, shapeshifting, fire-breathing humanoid dragon embodying destructive forces such as greed and chaos, frequently engaging in heroic or villainous confrontations with human heroes in folk tales, contrasting with the Zburător's ethereal, dream-based predations on women that drain energy without epic battles.[19] Unlike the Iele, who are ethereal female spirits typically depicted in groups as enchanting dancers that induce madness, paralysis, or fertility blessings through their mystical circles and affinity for music, the Zburător is a solitary male entity focused on predatory, intimate visitations that leave victims physically weakened and emotionally detached. The Iele's communal, nature-bound allure contrasts sharply with the Zburător's individualistic, invasive incursions into personal dreams and bedsides. The Zburător also differs from the Strigoi, undead revenants that rise from graves to drain blood or life force from relatives, often shapeshifting into animals or orbs of light and marked by omens like red hair or caul births at creation. In contrast to these vampiric corpses requiring ritualistic destruction such as staking or burning, the Zburător operates as a living demonic visitor without ties to the grave, repelled simply by garlic rather than elaborate exorcisms. A shared motif of flight unites these beings—the Zburător as a shooting star, the Zmeu with wings, the Strigoi as luminous balls, and the Iele through ethereal levitation—but underscores their divergent predatory intents within Romanian lore.Parallels in Global Mythology
The Zburător bears striking resemblances to the incubus of European folklore, a male demon known for visiting women at night to engage in sexual intercourse while they sleep, often causing physical and spiritual harm.[23] This parallel is evident in the Zburător's role as a seductive nocturnal entity that tempts women with forbidden desires, appearing in dreams or visions to exert influence over their passions.[14] Some variations of the Zburător incorporate bestial or draconic traits, such as wings or a serpentine form, setting it apart from the incubus's more uniformly infernal depiction. In Philippine mythology, the aswang offers another analogous figure as a shape-shifting nocturnal predator that emerges at night to target women, particularly pregnant ones, through deceptive or violent means that disrupt their lives and communities. Often manifesting as ordinary humans by day but transforming into monstrous forms after dark, the aswang's nocturnal hunts involve visceral attacks on the vulnerable, mirroring the Zburător's focus on women but emphasizing consumption over mere seduction. This shared theme of hidden, night-bound predation underscores cultural anxieties about unseen threats to female autonomy and safety. The rakshasa from Indian Hindu mythology provides a further parallel through its depiction as a demonic flyer capable of shape-shifting and creating seductive illusions to ensnare victims, particularly in the evening when its powers peak.[24] Female rakshasas, or rakshasis, frequently assume beautiful human forms to lure and deceive, much like the Zburător's alluring appearances, though rakshasas exhibit greater overall malevolence, including cannibalism and opposition to divine order.[24] These beings' ability to vanish at dawn and their use of illusion for manipulation highlight a common motif of deceptive, airborne demons that exploit human desires. The Zburător also shares traits with other Eastern European night spirits, such as certain Slavic entities blending vampiric and seductive elements, reflecting regional folklore traditions of supernatural intruders disrupting sleep and chastity. Across these global traditions, the Zburător and its counterparts reflect universal mythological themes of nocturnal entities embodying fears surrounding sexuality, vulnerability during sleep, and the intrusion of the supernatural into intimate spaces, often tied to experiences interpreted as sleep paralysis in various cultures.[25] Such figures serve as cautionary symbols against the perils of the unknown, blending erotic temptation with peril to reinforce social and moral boundaries.[26]References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/zbura
