Emperor Aleodor, Aleodor Imparat, is a Romanian folktale gathered by Romanian folklorist and writer Petre Ispirescu in 1875 and translated into English in 19th by historian and linguist Robert Nisbet Bain.
Continue reading “Emperor Aleodor, Romanian Folktale #Im4Ro”The Magic of Romanian Folktales Starts with the First Words #Im4Ro
While a grew up I thought that the magic and musicality of Romanian folktales was so much better than that of the Grimm’s fairy tales. Because I was sure of their truthfulness.
Although both sources shared the same well-known prologue, “Once upon a time,” the Romanian ones went on with “for if it didn’t happen it couldn’t be told,” thus proving that some truth was at the bottom of the folktale about to unravel, since nothing can be told that didn’t happen…
Continue reading “The Magic of Romanian Folktales Starts with the First Words #Im4Ro”4 Romanian Myths between Culture, History and the Sacred #Im4Ro
The Romanian Myths draw from a popular culture that is tightly blended with the history and the sacred and it spills into the rich Romanian culture.
Myths have a powerful significance to the cultures who tell them, for they explain sacred origins, bring forward human archetypes, and are a model for future aspirations. A myth unifies cosmic and social events, explaining them in a way that is in touch with the most fundamental values of a community.
Continue reading “4 Romanian Myths between Culture, History and the Sacred #Im4Ro”Orthodox Easter Eggs, folktales, symbolism, traditions #Im4Ro
It was an erstwhile custom that a mother, no matter how elderly or ailing she felt, would take it upon herself to bring food to her lad bided elsewhere as soon as the snow thawed and the first white spring shoots pierced the ground.
Continue reading “Orthodox Easter Eggs, folktales, symbolism, traditions #Im4Ro”Trick or Treat Night Halloween Haiku
Trick or Treat Night, a friendly Halloween Haiku
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