80:, the menk are presented as "formidable forest spirits". The Hero-Prince typically inflicts many "pseudo-deaths" on a menk until he is able to inflict a "total death". Menk are protected by gods who intervene to prevent their deaths, however the laws of the gods can be bypassed by humans. In the epics, menk occur in sevens, such as seven menk from one mother, or seven menk with one soul. According to the mythology, menk's eyes cannot look down, so the Hero-Princes often attack them from below while fighting in rivers.
76:. These beliefs were retained by the Khanty and Mansi people, even though they became, or were compelled to become Russian Orthodox Christians in the 17th and 18th centuries. In the Khanty
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ancestry are aligned with menk, who they believe to be "just like humans, only spirits of the parallel forest world".
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The World of the Khanty Epic Hero-Princes: An
Exploration of a Siberian Oral Tradition
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204:"Discovery's Mountain of Mystery Mongering: The Mass Murdering Yeti - CSI"
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The
Tenacity of Ethnicity: A Siberian Saga in Global Perspective
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program that suggested a menk was responsible for deaths in the
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is "a textbook example of modern cable TV mystery-mongering".
191:. The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire.
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is a forest spirit of these peoples' mythology. The
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133:. Cambridge University Press. pp. 243–.
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16:Forest spirit of Khanty and Mansi mythology
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55:Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug
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69:The menk is part of the
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185:"THE MANSIS"
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