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Ilya Muromets or Murometz,

(2015). 9781317459385, Routledge. .
also known as Ilya of Murom,
(2010). 9781108016155, Cambridge University Press. .
is a (hero) in a type of Russian called set during the time of the Kievan Rus'. He is often featured alongside fellow bogatyrs Dobrynya Nikitich and , the three collectively known in Russian culture as "".

Attempts have been made to identify a possible historical nucleus for the character. The main candidate is , a 12th-century monk in the Kiev Pechersk Lavra who was in 1643. His relics are preserved in the monastery.


Ilya in byliny
Ilya Muromets is a major figure in byliny (pl. of bylina), a type of Russian epic folklore collected in the 18th and 19th centuries.
(2025). 9783110825848, Walter de Gruyter. .

The son of a peasant, Ilya was born in the village of Karacharovo, near .

(1998). 9781576074879, Bloomsbury Publishing USA. .
He suffered a serious illness in his youth and was unable to walk until the age of 33. He could only lie on a , until he was miraculously healed by two pilgrims. He was then given superhuman strength by a dying knight, , and set out to liberate the city of Kiev from and to serve Vladimir I of Kiev. Along the way, he single-handedly defended the city of from nomadic invasion (possibly by the ) and was offered by the local ruler, but Ilya declined to stay. In the forests of , he then killed the forest-dwelling monster known as Nightingale the Robber ( Solovei-Razboinik), who murdered travelers with his powerful whistle.

In Kiev, Ilya was made the chief by Vladimir and he defended the country from numerous attacks by the steppe people, including of the . Generous and simple-minded but also temperamental, Ilya once went on a rampage and destroyed all the church in Kiev after Vladimir failed to invite him to a celebration. He was soon appeased when Vladimir sent for him.


Ilya Pechersky
Some suggest that his prototype was , a 12th-century monk in the Kiev Pechersk Lavra who was born in Karacharovo, near , and in 1643. According to hagiography, before taking his monastic vows, Ilya Pechersky was a warrior famous for his strength. His nickname was "Chobotok", meaning "(small) boot", given to him after an incident when Ilya Pechersky, caught by surprise, fought off enemies with only his boot. "Страсти по Илье", , Magazine, January 1994

According to another version, Ilya stemmed from modern-day (earlier known as Moroveysk), a village halfway between Kyiv and Chernihiv (Chernigov) in modern-day Ukraine. It is supported by the notes of Erich Lassota von Steblau, who in 1594 visited the Pechersk Monastery and described the hero ( bohater) buried there as "Elia Morowlin" - "Elijah of Morov".

In 1988, Soviet archeologists exhumed Ilya Pechersky's remains, which were stored in the monastery, and studied them. Their report suggested that at least some parts of the legend may be true: the man was tall, and his bones carried signs of spinal disease at early age and marks from numerous wounds, one of which was fatal.


Legendary status
His character probably does not represent a unique historical persona, but rather a fusion of multiple real or fictional heroes from vastly different epochs. Thus, Ilya supposedly served Vladimir I of Kiev (); he fought , the founder of the (); he saved Constantine the God-Loving, the tsar of Constantinople, from a monster (there were a number of Byzantine emperors named Constantine, one of them a contemporary of Vladimir I, named (); it could also be a reference to Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos (), who encountered Olga of Kiev in the 950s; but the one emperor in Constantinople with this name most likely to be called "God-loving" was , ).


Analysis
The cycle of tales around Ilya Muromets (including the fight against villainous Nightingale the Robber and monster ) is classified under its own type in the East Slavic Folktale Classification (): SUS -650C*, , closely placed with other tale types about strong heroes.Barag, Lev (1979). Сравнительный указатель сюжетов. Восточнославянская сказка ('Comparative Index of Plots. East Slavic Fairy Tale', in Russian). Leningrad: НАУКА ('Nauka'). p. 169. The East Slavic Classification registers variants from Russian, Belarusian and Ukrainian sources.Barag (1979), pp. 169-170.


Depictions
  • 's 1807 opera Ilya Bogatyr (Ilya the Hero)
  • from Alexander Afanasyev's Narodnye russkie skazki. Features Ilya Muromets, Alyosha Popovich, and Foma Berennikov assisting the Prussian king. Ilya ends up defending a city from an army of attackers.
    (2013). 9780307829764, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. .
  • 's 1898 painting (center figure).
  • 's 1910 painting Ilya Muromets
  • Reinhold Glière's 1911 Symphony No. 3 (Ilya Muromets) in B minor, op. 42
  • Viktor Vasnetsov's 1914 painting Ilya Muromets.
  • Aleksandr Ptushko's 1956 live action film Ilya Muromets (known in the U.S. as The Sword and the Dragon).
  • Konstantin Vasilyev's 1974 and 1977 paintings.
  • Ilya Muromets: the Prologue (1975) and Ilya Muromets and Nightingale the Robber (1978), a duology of animated shorts by .
  • Russian-French writer , writing under the pseudonym Elli Kronauer, reinvented the character in "Ilia Mouromietz et le rossignol brigand" (1999), the first of a series of books dedicated to the heroes of Russian byliny.
  • Juraj Červenák's historic fiction Bohatýr trilogy (2006–2008). Bohatier #1: Ocelové žezlo ''Steel
  • The Three Bogatyrs (2004-ongoing), an animated movie franchise by Melnitsa studio.
  • Several have been named Ilya Muromets
  • 's SF novel Nine Layers of Sky (2003) brings Ilya Muromets and Kyrgyz epic hero Manas to modern times. Liz Williams, author's profile at


Notes

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