• VazĂșza and VĂłlga. Similar stories are told of other rivers. The old Russian ballads give names and patronymics to their rivers such as the people use for themselves, e.g. Dněpr SlovĂștich Don IvĂĄnych.
  • The VazĂșza is a short stream crossing the borders of the provinces of Tver and Smolensk, meeting a great bend of the VĂłlga at ZubtsĂłv (in the province of Tver).
  • The Sea of KhvalĂœnsk is the Caspian, so called from an ancient people (the KhvalĂ­si) of the eleventh and tenth centuries, who lived at the mouth of the VĂłlga in the Caspian. There is also a town called KhvalĂœnsk on the VĂłlga in the province of SarĂĄtov, above the city of SarĂĄtov.
  • This particular story is probably a poetization of a geographical fact, but in all the Russian folklore the river-gods play a very great part. Thus Igor in The Word of Igor’s Armament, on the occasion of his defeat, has a very beautiful colloquy with the DonĂ©ts. At least two of the heroes of the ballad cycle, Don IvĂĄnovich and SukhĂĄn OdikhmĂĄntevich, are in some aspects direct personifications of the rivers, whilst the river-gods exercise a direct and vital influence over the fortunes of several others, such as VasĂ­li BuslĂĄvich and DobrĂœnya NikĂ­tich.
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