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The videogame Quest For Glory IV: Shadows of Darkness, set in the Slavic countryside of a fictional east-European valley, features several Slavic fairies, including the Rusalka, Domovoy, and Leshy. Catherynne Valente's novel Deathless is set in a fantasy version of Stalinist Russia and features vila, rusalka, leshy, and other Slavic fairies.
The Beer Can House is a folk art house in Rice Military, Houston, Texas, [1] covered with beer cans, bottles, and other beer paraphernalia. Houstonian John Milkovisch worked through the late 1960s to transform his Houston home at 222 Malone Street into the Beer Can House. [2] The Beer Can House is now one of Houston's most
Slavic Shamanism is the practice of working and worshipping Slavic spirits and ancestors along with the ancient Slavic gods. There are three main types of Shamans within the modern day Rodnovery hierarchy: volkhv , guszlar (or gushlar), and vedmak (or vidmak).
Miroslav Žiarislav Švický (born in 1967), best known as Žiarislav, is a Slovak musician, writer and organiser within modern Slavic paganism. He writes and performs music inspired by Slovak folk music. He has written books about Slavic spirit and is the founder and leader of the modern pagan organisation Rodný kruh (lit. ' Native Circle ').
Houston: 1966: Annual production of 12 million barrels as of 2013 B-52 Brewing Company [10] Conroe: 2014 Kegs, cans, bottles: Taproom: Barrel-aged beers. Ranked #5 in 2019 Texas Craft Beer Report Bare Arms Brewing [11] Waco: 2015: Kegs: Taproom, crowlers, kegs: Barrow Brewing Company [12] Salado: 2016 Kegs, cans, growlers: Taproom: Blackwater ...
Etymologically related to the Slavic words divide, part. [19] Mat Zemlya: Gaia: Mat Zemlya is a personification of the Earth appearing mainly in East Slavic texts but remaining in most Slavic languages. [21] Perhaps epithet of Mokosh. Rod: Rod is a figure, spirit, or deity often mentioned in minor East and South Slavic texts, generally along ...
Domovoy, by Ivan Bilibin (1934) [1] In the Slavic religious tradition, Domovoy (Russian: Домовой, literally "[the one] of the household"; also spelled Domovoi, Domovoj, and known as Polish: Domowik, Serbian: Домовик (Domovik), Ukrainian: Домовик (Domovyk) and Belarusian: Дамавік (Damavik)) is the household spirit of a given kin. [2]
Its wine and liquor section, taking up 15,000 square feet (1,400 m 2) of space, has over 10,000 varieties of liqueurs, spirits, and wine. The store houses a 95-foot (29 m) beer cooler, which has 35 doors, and a walk-in cigar humidor, which has 900 varieties of cigars. The full service delicatessen takes up 8,000 square feet (740 m 2) of space ...