A prince from Mazovia region hunted in the forest, where he
got lost. While trying to find his way back, he reached the banks of the
Vistula River, where he saw the most beautiful girl emerging from the water.
She was half-woman half-fish. She shot an arrow for the prince to follow. It
took him to a fisherman’s hut, where he stayed for the night. The elderly
couple were proud parents of twins Wars and Sawa. The little food they had,
they shared with the prince. The prince gifted the lands to the poor couple,
where they built a settlement, which later was named after the twins Warsaw.
The prince never saw the mermaid again. But she was still
there, watching the village grow into a city. As more and more nets were
dropped into the river, one day, she got tangled in one of them. The local
fishermen upon hearing her sing released her. As she was released, she
declared, “From now on, I will protect you with my sword and shield.”
So she stands in the center of the Old Town ready to protect
its citizens.
The twin brothers were taken away from their mother by the
uncle, who abandoned them by the river, since he wanted to rule the kingdom.
The twins were found by a she-wolf, who fed and nursed them until they were
found by a shepherd. Later, they became shepherd warriors during which time
they learned their true identity. They avenged the uncle, but decided to found
their own city. They quarreled over which hill to pick. Remus was killed by his
brother. Romulus settled on one of the hills, which with time grew over the
seven hill and was named after him as Rome.
A shepherd
named Bucur was engaged
to a beautiful young lady named Dambovita.
She was a daughter of a poor woodcutter, who lived in a forest. One day,
Dambovita helped a prince, who lost his way in the forest. He was so charmed by
Dambovita that he asked her to marry him. Since she was already promised to
another, he gave her a penknife and a spinning top to fulfill any wish.
The
shepherd didn’t understand why a prince would give a penknife to a girl.
Dambovita wanting to prove her love for Bucur shoved the penknife to the ground
to show that it meant nothing to her. The knife hit the stone springing out
with water and creating a river. The river was named after the girl and the
settlement, which they built was named after him.
At one of the successful hunting trips of Grand Duke
Gediminas, the party felt tired and camped around the mouth of the River
Vilnia. One night, the Duke had an unusual dream where he saw an iron wolf at
the top of the mountain, where he killed a European bison that day. The iron
wolf stood atop the hill with its head raised and howled towards the moon.
Next day, remembering his dream, he consulted a pagan priest
Lizdejka. The priest explained that the wolf standing on a hill gave a sign to
found a city among those hills. And the howl meant that the city would prosper
greatly and become the capital of the Lithuanian lands.
So the Grand Duke found the city among those hills and the
name given was from the stream of the rapid Vilnia.
Legend has
it that Ljubljana was founded by the Greek mythological hero Jason and his
companions, who had stolen the golden fleece from King Aetes. As they fled they
came across a large lake in the marshes, near the source of the Ljubljanica
River. They stopped to dismantle the ship by the lake, where a monster lived.
Jason fought and defeated the monster. Now, the defeated monster, referred to
as Ljubljana Dragon, decorates the bridge and the Ljubljana coat of arms.
In
the 7th century, Slavic princess Libuše, a woman of great beauty and wisdom,
possessed prophetic powers. Libuše and her husband, prince Přemysl, ruled
peacefully over the Czech lands from the hill of Vyšehrad. A legend says that
one day Libuše had a vision. She stood on a cliff overlooking the Vltava,
pointed to a forested hill across the river, and proclaimed: "I see a
great city whose glory will touch the stars." She instructed her people to
go and build a castle where a man was building the threshold (in Czech práh)
of a house." And because even the great noblemen must bow low before a
threshold, you shall give it the name Praha." Her words were obeyed and
some two hundred years later, the city of Prague became the seat of the
Premyslid dynasty.
Legend
has it that a giant named Menesk settled by the Svisloch River, where he built
a big stone mill with seven wheels. He milled rock and stones to make flower for
bread in order to feed the war-band he had assembled to protect his settlement.
Thus, when the settlement prospered it was named after the giant as Minsk.