{{Short description|Fantastic creature of Romanian folklore and mythology}} {{about||the river|Zmeu River|the village in Iași County|Lungani|the computer scanner|ZmEu (vulnerability scanner)}} {{More citations needed|date=May 2014}} [[File:Nadia Bulighin - Scenă de basm 1927, 1.png|thumb|300px|''Făt-Frumos'' and a ''zmeu'', art by Nadia Bulighin]] The '''''zmeu''''' (plural: ''zmei'', feminine: ''zmeoaică'' / ''zmeoaice'') is a fantastic creature of Romanian folklore and Romanian mythology.
Though referred by some sources as a dragon, the zmeu is nevertheless distinct, because it usually has clear anthropomorphic traits: it is humanoid and has legs, arms, the ability to create and use artifacts such as weapons, and to ride a horse, and has the desire to marry young girls. There are commentators that class it as a giant (equivalent of an ogre), or a devil, or even a vampire.
In some stories, Zmeu appears in the sky and spits fire, or has the ability to change form. In other stories, it has a magical precious stone on its head that shines like the sun. It likes beautiful young girls, whom it kidnaps, usually for the purpose of marrying them. It is almost always defeated by a daring prince or knight-errant.
The zmei has also been conflated with or confused with the ''dracu'' or with the ''balaur'' type dragon.
== Etymology == {{Also|Slavic dragon#Etymology}} Most scholars agree that the Romanian term ''zmeu'' derives from Slavic ''zmey''. However, Václav Machek considered this problematic, leading to Romanian linguists Sorin Paliga and Eugen S. Teodor to propose the hypothesis of an early Slavic loan from the <!--Dacian or -->North Thracian language.<ref name=paliga&teodor2009/><ref name=paliga2015/>
The relation with Romanian ''zmeură'' ‘raspberry’ has been deemed to be possible, but rather unlikely, by {{interlanguage link|Alexandru Ciorănescu|ro}}.<ref>Ciorănescu, Alexandru (1958-1966) ''Dicționarul etimologic român'', Tenerife: Universidad de la Laguna, s.v. ''[http://dexonline.ro/definitie/zmeur%C4%83/50244 Zmeură]'' {{in lang|ro}}.</ref><ref>Cf. also {{harvp|Paliga|Teodor|2009|p=229}}, n27.</ref><!--The word zmeu also refers to the kites that children fly.-->
== Description ==
The zmeu is described by some as a "dragon", but a dragon that may assume the role of a suitor or a lover of a human woman, and in some cases are heroic figures,<ref name=murgoci/> though in other cases, diabolical.{{sfnp|Moldován|1897|p=189}}<ref name=mailand/>
Thus<!-- as it stands to reason --> zmeu has been noted to be "anthropo-ophidian", i.e., possessing both man and dragon/serpent-like features: a "scale-covered, human-like body, a snake's tail, and bat-like wings",<ref name=vulcanescu/> or rather it is a "man's head" sitting on a "bird's trunk, [and a] serpent's tail", according to other accounts.{{efn|This is a description of a creature identified as a zmeu, on a 15th century monumental stove tile, by art collector and folk art writer {{illm|Barbu Slătineanu|ro}}.}}<ref>{{harvp|Prut|1983|p=173}} and {{harvp|Prut|1991|p=133}} ''apud'' {{illm|Barbu Slătineanu|ro}} (1895–1959), son of Alexandru Slătineanu. In Romanian: "Zmeu cu trup de pasăre, coadă de şarpe şi cap de om".</ref>
Indeed, zmeu has been described as a sort of man-eating giant<!--géant antropofage-->, an equivalent of the Western ogre, possessing a "rocky tail"<!--queue rocailleuse-->,<ref name=sainean/> but still able to mount a horse.<ref name=sainean/>{{sfnp|Moldován|1897|p=189}} The zmeu was no more than a creature with human-face, though somewhat taller and thicker-bodied, according to the assertions of some folklorists,<ref>Ion G. Sbiera and {{interlanguage link|Albert Schott (folklorist)|de|Albert Schott (Volkskundler)|lt=Albert Schott}}, cited by {{harvp|Moldován|1897|p=188}}</ref> and are capable of human speech, though in somewhat uncouth a fashion.{{sfnp|Moldován|1897|p=188}}
One paper categorized the zmeu among the Rumanian vampires, alongside the ''vârcolac'' (blood-drinking werewolf),{{sfnp|Murgoci|1926|p=321}} but the latter tends to be confused more with the blood-sucking strigă (pl. ''strigoi'').<ref name=mailand/>
The ''zmei'' are also confused with the ''dracu'' (dragon) among the populace.<ref name=mailand/> The flying creatures ridden by the Șolomonarii are the zmeu, or the balaur, depending on the authority.
But in certain fairytales, the zmeu merely appears as a king of the serpents.{{sfnp|Moldován|1897|p=189}}
== Role and functions == The "zmeu" figures prominently in many Romanian folk tales as the manifestation of the destructive forces of greed and selfishness. Often, the zmeu steals something of great value, which only ''Făt-Frumos'' (the Romanian "Prince Charming"; literally: "handsome youth") can retrieve through his great, selfless bravery. For example, in the ballad of the knight ''Greuceanu'', the zmeu steals the sun and the moon from the sky, thereby enshrouding all humanity in darkness. In the story of ''Prâslea the Brave and the Golden Apples'', the zmeu robs the king of the precious "golden apples"; a parallel can be drawn to the German fairy tale ''The Golden Bird'', the Russian ''Tsarevitch Ivan, the Fire Bird and the Gray Wolf'', and the Bulgarian ''The Nine Peahens and the Golden Apples'' — although in all these other cases, the thief was a bird (nevertheless, in some versions of the Romanian story, the zmeu does transform into a bird to steal the golden apples). Usually, the zmeu resides in the "other world" (''celălalt tărâm'') and sometimes ''Făt-Frumos'' has to descend into his dark kingdom, implying that the zmeu lives underground.
The zmeu has a plethora of magical, destructive powers at his disposal. He can fly, shapeshift, and has tremendous supernatural strength. Ultimately, the abilities of the zmeu are of no avail, as ''Făt-Frumos'' defeats him through martial skill and daring.
The zmeu likes to kidnap a maiden to be his wife in his otherworldly realm.{{sfnp|Moldován|1897|p=189}} After ''Făt-Frumos'' slays the zmeu, he takes the maiden as his own bride-to-be. Similarly, like the giant in the popular British stories of ''Jack and the Beanstalk'', the zmeu returns home to his fortress from his raids into human lands sensing that a human (''Făt-Frumos'') is lying in ambush somewhere nearby. A Zmeu is also sometimes pictured as a flame who goes in the room of a young girl or widow and once inside, becomes a man and seduces her.
There are people who have allegedly seen zmei flying through the sky. They are supposed to look like a living trail of fire, or fireworks.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}
== Explanatory notes == {{notelist}}
== References == ;Citations {{Reflist|30em|refs= <ref name=mailand>{{citation|last=Mailand |first=Oskar |author-link=<!--Oskar Mailand--> |title=Mytische Wesen in dem rumanischen Volksglauben |journal=Das Ausland: Eine Wochenschrift für Kunde des geistigen und sittlichen Lebens der Völker |volume=60 |number=52 |date=26 December 1887 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YUE8AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA1022|page=1022<!--1021–1025--> }}</ref>
<ref name=murgoci>{{citation|last=Murgoci |first=Agnes |author-link=Agnes Murgoci |title=The Vampire in Roumania |journal=Folklore |volume=37|number=4 |date=31 December 1926 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iywCAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA165 |page=341<!--320–349--> |doi=10.1080/0015587X.1926.9718370 |jstor=1256143|url-access=subscription }}. Reprinted in Dundes, Alan ed. (1998), ''The Vampire: A Casebook''. [https://books.google.com/books?id=PpTWQDc0dqEC&pg=PA28 p. 28]</ref>
<ref name=paliga&teodor2009>{{cite book|last1=Paliga |first1=Sorin |author1-link=Sorin Paliga |last2=Teodor |first2=Eugen S. |author2-link=<!--Eugen S. Teodor--> |title=Lingvistica şi arheologia slavilor timpurii: o altă vedere de la Dunărea de Jos |location=Târgovişte |publisher=Editura Cetatea de Scaun |date=2009 |url=https://www.academia.edu/356240 |page=229 |isbn=<!--6065370045, -->9786065370043 |language=ro}}</ref>
<ref name=paliga2015>{{citation|last=Paliga |first=Sorin |author-link=Sorin Paliga |title=Compiling dicgtionaries of defunct (?) languages: Thracian elements in Romanian |editor1-last=Mańczak-Wohlfeld |editor1-first=Elżbieta |editor1-link=<!--Elżbieta Mańczak-Wohlfeld--> |editor2-last=Podolak |editor2-first=Barbara |editor2-link=<!--Barbara Podolak--> |work=Words and Dictionaries: A Festschrift for Professor Stanisław Stachowski on the Occasion of His 85th Birthday |publisher=Wydawnictwo UJ |date=2015 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SoQIDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA246 |page=246<!--237–246--> |isbn=<!--832339315X, -->9788323393153}}</ref>
<ref name=vulcanescu>{{citation|last=Vulcănescu |first=Romulus |author-link=:ro:Romulus Vulcănescu |chapter=15. Zmeul |title=Mitologie română |publisher=Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste România |date=1987 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xsIoAAAAYAAJ&q=zmeu |page=528 |isbn=}}</ref>
<ref name=sainean>{{citation|last=Sainéan |first=Lazare |authorlink=Lazăr Șăineanu |title=Les géants et les nains d'après les traditions roumaines et balkanique |journal=Revue des traditions populaires |volume=16 |number=6 |date=June 1901a |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FwmgAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA296 |page=296<!--293–310-->}}; {{citation|last=Sainéan |first=Lazare |authorlink=Lazăr Șăineanu |author-mask=2 |title=Terminologie folklorique en roumain |journal=La Tradition |volume=11 |date=<!--August?-->1901b |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OeM5AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA227 |page=227<!--225–229-->}}. Also cited in {{citation|author=<!--Anonymous, no byline--> |title=Front Matter |journal=American Anthropologist |volume=New Series, Vol. 4|number=1 |date=January–March 1902 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iywCAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA165 |pages=164–165<!--ii–182--> |jstor=658922}}.</ref>
}}
;Bibliography {{refbegin}} * {{citation|last=Moldován |first=Gergely |authorlink=:ro:Grigore Moldovan |chapter=Solomonar, Balaur, Zmeu, Şpirituş, Vêrcolac, Nălucă |title=Alsófehér vármegye román népe: Néprajzi tanulmány |publisher=Nagyenyedi könyvnyomda |year=1897 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bFpIAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA178 |pages=178–|language=hu}} * {{citation|last=Prut|first=Constantin |authorlink=:ro:Constantin Prut |translator-last=Marcus |translator-first=Sergiu |title=The World of Fabulous Creatures |journal=Romanian Review |volume=37 |number=2–3 |year=1983 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E-csAAAAIAAJ&q=zmeu |pages=165–174}}<!--https://books.google.com/books?id=c6dMAAAAYAAJ&q=zmeu --> * {{citation|last=Prut |first=Constantin |authorlink=:ro:Constantin Prut |author-mask=2 |title=Calea rătăcită: o privire asupra artei populare românești |publisher=Meridiane |year=1991|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ai7aAAAAMAAJ&q=%22zmeu%22 |pages= |isbn=<!--9733300810, -->9789733300816|language=ro}} {{refend}}
Category:European dragons Category:Legendary shapeshifters Category:Romanian legendary creatures Category:Romanian words and phrases Category:Bulgarian folklore