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Goldhorn

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fictional animal character
"Goldenhorn" redirects here. For other uses, seeGolden Horn (disambiguation).
"Zlatorog" redirects here. For the indoor sporting arena, seeZlatorog Arena.
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1899 illustration

In Slovene folklore,Goldhorn orGoldenhorn (Slovene:Zlatorog) is alegendary whitechamois buck, or alternatively, anAlpine ibex, that had his realm in the heights of MountTriglav, the highestmountain inSlovenia and the highest peak of theJulian Alps. The legend is well known throughoutSlovenia (specificallyCarinthia),[1] as well as inAustrian Carinthia, andItalianFriuli-Venezia Giulia.

The story about Zlatorog was first written down, adapted to the lateRomantic style and published byKarl Deschmann (Karel Dežman) in theLaibacher Zeitung, no. 43, on 21 February 1868.[2]

Story

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Summary of the story as written by Karl Deschmann

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Goldhorn's goldenhorns were the key to a treasure hidden in the mountains around Triglav. A young and brave hunter from theTrenta Valley fell in love with a beautiful girl and managed to win her heart by bringing her beautiful flowers. However, one day, a rich merchant fromVenice came by and tried to gain her attention by giving her golden jewelry and dancing with her. As the hunter approached the girl, she mocked him. The hunter was desperate and left. Persuaded by another hunter, called the green hunter, who was said to have brought about the fate of several honest boys, he decided to go that very night to find Goldhorn and claim his treasure. In the morning, they found the animal, shot it, and pursued it. The dying animal dragged itself onto a narrow, rocky ledge. Suddenly the boy saw on a dangerous trail the most beautiful and healing flowers. The green hunter forced him on to catch the Goldhorn before it ate the magic Triglav flowers that grew from its blood, but it was too late. The Goldhorn had already eaten one and the flower gave it tremendous life power. It ran towards the hunter, who being blinded by the bliss of its golden horns, lost balance and fell from the mountain. The riverSoča brought his corpse to the vale.

Recasts

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The story of Goldhorn was put into verses byRudolf Baumbach and published in 1877, becoming his most popular work.[3] It was turned into an opera by Camilla and Eduard Lucerna.

Cultural references

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The first Slovene-language, full-length film, recorded in 1931 byJanko Ravnik, was titledIn the Kingdom of the Goldhorn.

Zlatorog is also a brand of beer produced by theLaško Brewery.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Mirkulovska, Bistrica (2001).Zlatorog: Slovenečki narodni prikazni "Goldhorn: Slovenian National Epic". Skopje: Detska radost.ISBN 9989-30-629-X.
  2. ^"EUROPA 1997 - Tales and legends".Post of Slovenia. Retrieved2008-09-12.
  3. ^Gluth, Viktor and Baumbach, Rudolf (1910)Zlatorog Feuchtinger, Stuttgart,OCLC 250241578

External links

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Notes:H historicity of the deity is dubious;F functions of the deity are unclear.
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