Kupala Night
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Kupala Night
Summary
Kupala Night is a Slavic holiday[1]. It draws 502 Wikipedia views per month (slavic_holiday category, ranking #2 of 17).[2]
Key Facts
- Kupala Night is in the country of Ukraine[3].
- Kupala Night is in the country of Belarus[4].
- Kupala Night is in the country of Podlachia[5].
- Kupala Night's image is recorded as Соколов Ночь-на-Ивана-Купалу 1856.jpg[6].
- Kupala Night's image is recorded as Ivankupala.jpg[7].
- Kupala Night's image is recorded as Na Kupalu by Andrey Shishkin.jpg[8].
- Kupala Night's instance of is recorded as Slavic holiday[9].
- Kupala Night's instance of is recorded as tradition[10].
- John the Baptist is named after Kupala Night[11].
- Kupala Night's Commons category is recorded as Ivan Kupala Day[12].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as ritual bonfire[13].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as Kupala song[14].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as Kupala Wreath[15].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as bathing[16].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as varenyky[17].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as cheese[18].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as Q12109320[19].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as babka[20].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as herb[21].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as cold borscht[22].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as alcoholic beverage[23].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as Q16668839[24].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as Gorelki[25].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as tag[26].
- Kupala Night's has part is recorded as Q4182874[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Things named for Kupala Night include Sobótka bonfire[28], a ritual bonfire[29].
Why It Matters
Kupala Night draws 502 Wikipedia views per month (slavic_holiday category, ranking #2 of 17).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[31]
Entities named for it include Sobótka bonfire[28], a ritual bonfire[29].