Wikipedia:Babel | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Search user languages |
Mythology, medievalia, folklore. Created, contributed significantly to, or otherwise listing for memory's sake, the following articles:
The marks an article I've most recently vetted and revised within the subsection, not a new article I originated; if I revisit such an article and make significant expansions I will mark as "+expanded"
Bestiary
edit(non-cyclical literature)
Japanese bestiary and goblins→yōkai
- al-Mi'raj
- bahamut
- balaur
- fengli (Japanese: fūri)
- fiery serpents (Russian: ognennyi zmei)
- hafgufa
- huoshu (fire rat)
- ichthyocentaurs
- Indus worm
- jiaolong dragon
- kraken
- kujata
- Lagarfljót Worm
- marraco
- odontotyrannos
- peluda
- Rainbow Serpent (Yurlunggur)
- sea monk
- shuihu (water tiger)
- Slavic dragon
- salamander (mythology)
- Storsjöodjuret
- tarasque
- Viy (story)
- Wawel Dragon
- zmei
Humanoids, prodigies and revenants
editCeltic mythology
edit- Irish/Scottish gaelic material
- Aonbharr (Enbarr)
- Balor
- The Boyhood Deeds of Fionn
- Brian (mythology)
- Cethlenn
- Cian
- Conand's Tower
- Echtra Cormaic
- Failinis
- Fionn mac Cumhaill
- Fotha Catha Chunucha (Cumhall)
- Garb mac Stairn
- Glas Gaibhnenn
- Lí Ban (mermaid)
- Lúin of Celtchar
- Mac Da Thó's Pig
- Manannán mac Lir
- Mesgegra
- Mythological Cycle
- Niamh (mythology)
- Silver Branch
- Voyage of Bran
- Manx
Arthuriana
editAlso matière de Bretagne
Biblical
edit(Judeo-Christian)
Charlemagne cycle
editGerman Heldenepos
editNorse mythology and saga
editClassical mythology
editEgyptology
editSinology
edit- Bixia Yuanjun (天仙娘々)
- Dragon king
- Lishan Laomu
- Shentu (deity) (神荼・鬱塁)
- Zongzi (粽, per dragon myth)
Folktale and balladry
editScandinavian
editIrish
editEnglish & Scottish
editRussian & Slavic
editOther European
editWorldwide
editOther Asian
edit- "The Tale of Shim Ch'ŏng"
- Sword of Victory (Thai)
Personages
edit- Mythology and folklore-related
Japan
editJapanese cuisine
edit- Japanese cuisine
- List of Japanese ingredients
- Allium victorialis (gyōja niniku)
- Chinese yam (Dioscorea polystachya)
- gagome (Kjellmaniella)
- habu-cha (Senna obtusifolia /Sicklepod tea)
- hatahata (Arctoscopus japonicus)
- hatomugi (Job's tears )
- ika somen
- kajime (Ecklonia cava)
- kazunoko
- Kibi dango (Okayama) and Kibi dango (millet dumpling)
- Matsumaezuke
- nigorobuna (Carassius auratus grandoculis)
- ōgonkan
- sakura shrimp
- sansai
- shirasu
- sudachi
- tamagoyaki
- tonburi
- unadon and kabayaki
- Perilla, Perilla frutescens and shiso
- yuri-ne (Lilium auratum=yama-yuri, L. maculatum=sukashi-yuri)
- Zanthoxylum piperitum (sanshō (spice))
Japanese mythology, folklore
edit- Japanese folklore
- Japanese mythology
- Acala (Fudō Myōō)
- The Boy Who Drew Cats
- Bunbuku Chagama
- The Dream of a Summer Day
- Emperor Sujin
- Jizo
- karyobinga
- "Kobutori Jiisan"
- Momijigari (play)
- Tawara Tōda Monogatari (My Lord Bag of Rice)
- Namazu-e
- Nezame no toko
- "The Stonecutter"
- Takemikazuchi
- Toyotama-hime
- uchide no kozuchi (magic mallet)
- Urashima Tarō
- Yomotsu-shikome
- Yuriwaka
yūrei & yōkai
edit- akaname
- amabie (mermaid)
- hoyau (Ainu)
- fūri (renamed fengli)
- ikiryō (ghost/spirit of the living)
- ikuchi
- kaijin (folklore) (redirect)
- kuda-gitsune
- kudan (yōkai)
- Matsura Sayohime
- mintuci (Ainu)
- mizuchi
- ningyo
- onryō
- Shippeitaro
- shōjō
- Shuten-dōji
- ushi no toki mairi (curse)
Japanese culture - other
editFood worldwide
editMiscellaneous
editTranslation requests links
editI might take up occasional requests outside my usual area of interest. Looks like the requests get channeled in different places.
- Wikipedia:Pages needing translation into English
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/Hotlist of Mythology & Folklore
- Wikipedia:Requested articles/Japan above, or,
- Category:Articles needing translation from Japanese Wikipedia
Method to discover other lists like this: click on a red link (including the search result "you may create (red link).."), go to toolbox] "What links here". The Wikipedia:Translation page is not very illuminating as to how you go about requesting. Other languages like fr seems to have a nice bureaucratic system in place, that keeps tab on %completion after translating, proofing, etc. phases.
TBD list
editI may or may not ever work on these: