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Boyan (bard)

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For the Slavic name, see Bojan (name).
Statue of Boyan playing a gusli, in Trubchevsk.
Statue of Boyan playing a gusli, in Trubchevsk.

Boyan or Bayan is the name of a bard who was active at the court of Yaroslav the Wise. He is apostrophized as Veles's grandson in the opening lines of The Lay of Igor's Campaign (probably a reference to Veles as the patron of musicians). Historians have been unable to determine whether Boyan was his proper name (as Nikolai Karamzin and Fyodor Buslayev postulated) or all skalds of Rus were called boyans (Alexander Vostokov). A bayan (accordion) was named after Boyan upon its invention in 1907. Although The Lay is the only authentic source mentioning Boyan, his name became exceedingly popular with later generations. He is mentioned in the Zadonshchina and Pushkin's Ruslan and Lyudmila. The folklorist Alexander Afanasyev considered Boyan a precursor of Ukrainian kobzars. Soviet scholars tended to associate him with the House of Chernigov, assuming that he started his career at the court of Mstislav of Tmutarakan. Boris Rybakov supported this theory and linked his name to a graffito on the wall of Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kiev which mentions a purchase of "Bayan's land" by "Vsevolod's wife".

Trivia

  • The Russian internet slang word "boyan" or "bayan", although commonly thought to be related to Boyan, has an entirely different origin. It is based on an event when a number of Russian joke sites were continuously spammed by the same joke about a mother-in-law burian, at which two bayans (a type of accordion, itself named after Boyan) were torn. Soon after this word started to refer to any overused or old joke, and generallly any old news.

References

  • The Encyclopaedia of The Lay of Igor's Campaign, in five volumes. St. Petersburg, 1995. Volume 1, pages 147-153.


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Boyan (bard) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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