Smok Wawelski - The Dragon of Cracow
Long ago in Poland’s early history, on
the River Vistula, there was a small settlement of wooden huts inhabited
by peaceful people who farmed the land and plied their trades. Near this
village was Wawel Hill. In the side of Wawel Hill was a deep cave. The
entrance was overgrown with tall, grass, bushes, and weeds. No man had
ever ventured inside that cave, and some said that a fearsome dragon lived
within it.
The young people of the village didn’t believe in the dragon.
The old people of the village said that they had heard their fathers tell
of a dragon who slept in the cave, and no man must dare waken it, or there
would be dire consequences for them all. Some of the youths decided to
explore the cave and put an end to such foolish talk. They thought that
they knew better and dragons were just old stories from the past. A group
of these young people took some torches and went to the cave.
They slowly
entered the cave until they came to a dark mass of scales blocking their
way and the sound of heavy breathing. The boys ran as the dragon awakened
and roared. Fire came from it’s mouth warming the boys heels and backs.
When they were far enough away, they looked back and saw the dragon at the
entrance of the cave, very angry being awakened from it’s sleep. From
that day on, the people knew no peace. Every day the dragon appeared and
carried off a sheep or preferably young virgins. The populace made many
attempts to kill the dragon but nothing succeeded and many of those that
attempted were killed. The hero in this part of the story differs. In the
village lived a wise man, or a shoemaker or a shoe makers apprentice named
Krakus or Krac.
He got some sheep and mixed a thick, yellow paste from
sulfur. Krakus smeared it all over the animals. Then led them to a place
where the dragon would see them. The dragon came out as expected, saw the
sheep, roared, rushed down the hill and devoured the sheep. The dragon had
a terrible fire within him, and a terrible thirst. It rushed to the River
Vistula and started drinking. It drank and drank and could not stop. The
dragon began to swell, but still it drank more and more. It went on
drinking till suddenly there was a great explosion, and the dragon burst.
There was great rejoicing by the people. Krakus, was made ruler of the
village, and they built a stronghold on Wawel Hill. The country prospered
under the rule of Krakus and a city grew up around the hill which was
called Krakow, in honour of Krakus.
When Krakus died, the people gave him
a magnificent burial, and erected a mound over his tomb which can be seen
to this day. The people brought earth with their own hands to the mound,
and it has endured through all the centuries as a memorial to the person
that killed the dragon of Krakow.
The large 200-foot-long cave in Wawel Hill,
Krakow, which has been known for centuries as the monster’s den, now
attracts thousands of visitors each year. Whatever the truth of the dragon
legend, the Dragon’s Cave (Polish ‘Smocza Jama’) is Cracow’s
oldest residence, inhabited by man from the Stone Age through the 16th
century.
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