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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Dakhanavar
rdf:type
yago:Vampire109544109 dbo:FictionalCharacter yago:SpiritualBeing109504135 yago:Spirit109545324 yago:Cognition100023271 yago:Belief105941423 yago:Abstraction100002137 yago:EvilSpirit109541919 yago:WikicatVampires yago:Content105809192 yago:PsychologicalFeature100023100
rdfs:label
Даханавар Dakhanavar
rdfs:comment
The dakhanavar (դախանավար) is a vampire in Armenian folklore who protected the valley from intruders, first reported by Baron August von Haxthausen in his mid-19th century account of Armenia and Russian Transcaucasia, the book “Transcaucasia: Sketches of the Nations and Races Between the Black Sea and the Caspian”. The Dakhanavar follows travelers until they stop for a rest, stalking their every move. When they finally stop, the vampire attacks them in their sleep, typically going for their feet. The local legend would often attack travelers in the night, sucking blood from their feet. In one legend, he was outsmarted by two men who had already heard of the vampire's habits and slept with their feet under the other's head. The vampire, thinking that they were one being with two heads and n Даханавар, также Дашнавар (арм. Դախանավար) — в древнеармянской мифологии вампир, который проживает в горах . Он прославился тем, что никогда не убивал жителей, которые жили на его землях.
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dbc:Armenian_folklore dbc:Vampires
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dbr:Caucasus_Viceroyalty_(1801–1917) dbr:Armenia dbr:Dachnavar dbc:Armenian_folklore dbc:Vampires dbr:Culture_of_Armenia dbr:Vampire dbr:August_von_Haxthausen dbr:Dashnavar dbr:Blood
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dbo:abstract
Даханавар, также Дашнавар (арм. Դախանավար) — в древнеармянской мифологии вампир, который проживает в горах . Он прославился тем, что никогда не убивал жителей, которые жили на его землях. The dakhanavar (դախանավար) is a vampire in Armenian folklore who protected the valley from intruders, first reported by Baron August von Haxthausen in his mid-19th century account of Armenia and Russian Transcaucasia, the book “Transcaucasia: Sketches of the Nations and Races Between the Black Sea and the Caspian”. The Dakhanavar follows travelers until they stop for a rest, stalking their every move. When they finally stop, the vampire attacks them in their sleep, typically going for their feet. The local legend would often attack travelers in the night, sucking blood from their feet. In one legend, he was outsmarted by two men who had already heard of the vampire's habits and slept with their feet under the other's head. The vampire, thinking that they were one being with two heads and no feet, ran from the valley and was never heard from again.
gold:hypernym
dbr:Vampire
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