The list of Russian folk tales is small. List of Russian folk tales. From the history of fairy tales

20.10.2019

- this is one of the oldest forms of storytelling, which in the simplest and most playful form tells children not only about the world around them, but also about manifestations of both the best and the ugliest. General statistics tell us that Russian folk tales are of interest only to children up to school age, but it is these tales that we carry in our hearts and, even if in a slightly modified form, we pass them on to our children. After all, it is impossible to forget about Masha and the Bear, Ryaba the hen or the Gray Wolf; all these images help us learn and understand the reality around us. You can read Russian folk tales online and listen to audio tales for free on our website.

Fairy tale title Source Rating
Vasilisa the Beautiful Russian traditional 380890
Morozko Russian traditional 251842
Porridge from an ax Russian traditional 285839
Teremok Russian traditional 426587
Fox and crane Russian traditional 226029
Sivka-Burka Russian traditional 203808
Crane and Heron Russian traditional 32819
Cat, rooster and fox Russian traditional 138082
Chicken Ryaba Russian traditional 348011
Fox and cancer Russian traditional 93397
Fox-sister and wolf Russian traditional 88825
Masha and the Bear Russian traditional 289249
The Sea King and Vasilisa the Wise Russian traditional 94920
Snow Maiden Russian traditional 58034
Three piglets Russian traditional 1964617
Baba Yaga Russian traditional 135455
Magic pipe Russian traditional 138686
Magic ring Russian traditional 167004
Grief Russian traditional 23266
Swan geese Russian traditional 92104
Daughter and stepdaughter Russian traditional 24763
Ivan Tsarevich and the Grey Wolf Russian traditional 73607
Treasure Russian traditional 50825
Kolobok Russian traditional 174880
Marya Morevna Russian traditional 52187
Wonderful miracle, wonderful miracle Russian traditional 45551
Two frosts Russian traditional 42181
Most expensive Russian traditional 36195
Wonderful shirt Russian traditional 43406
Frost and hare Russian traditional 42172
How the fox learned to fly Russian traditional 52125
Ivan the Fool Russian traditional 39278
Fox and jug Russian traditional 28543
bird tongue Russian traditional 24896
The soldier and the devil Russian traditional 23611
Crystal Mountain Russian traditional 28408
Tricky Science Russian traditional 31245
Smart guy Russian traditional 24036
Snow Maiden and Fox Russian traditional 66884
Word Russian traditional 23703
Fast messenger Russian traditional 23303
Seven Simeons Russian traditional 23382
About the old grandmother Russian traditional 25525
Go there - I don’t know where, bring something - I don’t know what Russian traditional 55965
At the behest of the pike Russian traditional 77613
Rooster and millstones Russian traditional 23059
Shepherd's Piper Russian traditional 43090
Petrified Kingdom Russian traditional 23689
About rejuvenating apples and living water Russian traditional 41588
Goat Dereza Russian traditional 38016
Ilya Muromets and Nightingale the Robber Russian traditional 34570
Cockerel and bean seed Russian traditional 60472
Ivan - peasant son and miracle Yudo Russian traditional 33317
Three Bears Russian traditional 504707
Fox and black grouse Russian traditional 24843
Tar barrel Russian traditional 85245
Baba Yaga and berries Russian traditional 42200
Battle on Kalinov Bridge Russian traditional 24083
Finist - Clear Falcon Russian traditional 57005
Princess Nesmeyana Russian traditional 150808
Tops and roots Russian traditional 63247
Winter hut of animals Russian traditional 43863
flying ship Russian traditional 80400
Sister Alyonushka and brother Ivanushka Russian traditional 41621
Golden comb cockerel Russian traditional 49465
Zayushkin's hut Russian traditional 141169

Types of Russian folk tales

Folk tales are basically divided into three categories. These are tales about animals, everyday life and fairy tales.

Russian folk tales about animals- these are one of the most ancient types of fairy tales that exist, their roots go back to the times of Ancient Rus'. These fairy tales contain vivid and very memorable images; we all remember Kolobok or Turnip from childhood, and thanks to such vivid images, the child learns to understand good and evil. Learns to distinguish character traits and lines of behavior: a fox is cunning, a bear is clumsy, a bunny is cowardly, and so on. Although the world of folk tales is fictional, it is so alive and vibrant that it fascinates and knows how to teach children only good deeds.

Russian everyday tales- these are fairy tales that are filled with the realism of our everyday life. And they are so close to life that when delving into these fairy tales, be careful, because this line is so thin that your growing child will want to embody and experience some of the actions on himself or carry them out in real life.

Russian fairy tales- this is a world in which magic and the evil associated with it takes on very terrible outlines and vital shades. Fairy tales are the search and rescue of a girl, a city or the world entrusted to the shoulders of one hero. But it is the help of many minor characters that teaches us, the readers of these fairy tales, about mutual assistance to each other. Read and listen to folk tales online with us.

If you close your eyes and travel back in time for a moment, you can imagine how ordinary Russian people lived. With large families, they lived in wooden huts, heated the stoves with wood, and the light was provided by home-made dry torches. Poor Russian people had neither television nor the Internet, so what could they do when they weren’t working in the fields? They relaxed, dreamed and listened to good fairy tales!

In the evening, the whole family gathered in one room, the children sat on the stove, and the women did housework. At this time, the turn of Russian folk tales began. In every village or hamlet there lived a woman storyteller; she replaced the radio for people and beautifully chanted ancient legends. The kids listened with their mouths open, and the girls quietly sang along and spun or embroidered while listening to a good fairy tale.

What did the respected storytellers tell the people about?

Good prophets kept in their memory a large number of folk tales, legends and fairy tales. All their lives they brought light to ordinary peasants, and in old age they passed on their knowledge to the next talented storytellers. Most of the legends were based on real life events, but over the years the fairy tales acquired fictitious details and acquired a special Russian flavor.

Note to readers!

The most famous storyteller in Rus' and Finland is a simple serf woman Praskovya Nikitichna, married to Vaska. She knew 32,000 poems and fairy tales, 1,152 songs, 1,750 proverbs, 336 riddles and a large number of prayers. Hundreds of books and poetry collections have been written based on her stories, but for all her talents, Praskovya Nikitichna was poor all her life and even worked as a barge hauler.

Another well-known storyteller throughout Russia is Pushkin’s nanny Arina Rodionovna. It was she who instilled in the poet a love of Russian fairy tales from early childhood, and on the basis of her ancient stories, Alexander Sergeevich wrote his great works.

What do Russian fairy tales tell about?

Fairy tales invented by ordinary people are an encyclopedia of folk wisdom. Through simple stories, workers and peasants presented their vision of the world and passed on information in encrypted form to subsequent generations.

Old Russian fairy tales are divided into three types:

Animal Tales. In folk stories there are funny characters who are especially close to ordinary Russian people. The clumsy bear, little sister fox, runaway bunny, little mouse, and frog frog are endowed with pronounced human qualities. In the fairy tale "Masha and the Bear" Potapych is kind but stupid, in the story about the Seven Little Goats the wolf is cunning and gluttonous, and in the fairy tale "The Boasting Bunny" the little hare is cowardly and boastful. From the age of 2-3, it’s time for children to become familiar with good Russian fairy tales and, using the example of funny characters with distinct personalities, learn to distinguish between positive and negative heroes.

Magical mystical tales. There are many interesting mystical characters in Russian fairy tales that could outshine famous American heroes. Baba Yaga Bone Leg, Serpent Gorynych and Koschey the Immortal are distinguished by their realism and have been living in good folk tales for several centuries. Epic heroes and brave noble princes fought with the mystical heroes who kept the people in fear. And the beautiful needlewomen Vasilisa the Beautiful, Marya, Varvara Krasa fought against evil spirits with intelligence, cunning and ingenuity.

Tales about the life of ordinary Russian people. Through wise fairy tales, the people told about their existence and passed on the accumulated knowledge from generation to generation. A striking example is the fairy tale “Kolobok”. Here an old man and an old woman bake an unusual loaf of bread and call on the clear sun to forever warm our native Earth. The hot sun-bun goes on a journey and meets the winter hare, the spring wolf, the summer bear and the autumn fox. The tasty bun dies in the teeth of a voracious fox, but then is reborn again and begins a new life cycle of eternal Mother Nature.

The page of our website contains the most beloved and popular best Russian fairy tales. Texts with beautiful pictures and illustrations in the style of lacquer miniatures make fairy tales especially enjoyable to read. They bring to children the priceless wealth of the Russian language, and the pictures and large print allow them to quickly memorize stories and new words, and instill a love of reading books. All fairy tales are recommended for bedtime reading. Parents will be able to read aloud to their child and convey to the child the meaning inherent in wise old fairy tales.

The page with Russian folk tales is a collection of children's literature. Teachers can use the library for reading lessons in kindergarten and school, and in the family circle it is easy to perform performances with the participation of heroes from Russian folk tales.

Read Russian folk tales for free online with your children and absorb the wisdom of bygone generations!

We were all children once and all of us, without exception, loved fairy tales. After all, in the world of fairy tales there is a special and extraordinary style, filled with our dreams and fantasies. Without fairy tales, even the real world loses its colors and becomes ordinary and boring. But where did the well-known heroes come from? Perhaps, once upon a time a real Baba Yaga and a goblin walked the earth? Let's figure it out together!

According to V. Dahl’s definition, “a fairy tale is a fictional story, an unprecedented and even unrealistic story, a legend.” But the New Illustrated Encyclopedia gives the following definition of a fairy tale: “this is one of the main genres of folklore, an epic, predominantly prosaic work of a magical, adventurous or everyday nature with a focus on fiction.” And of course, one cannot help but recall the words of our great poet: “A fairy tale is a lie, but there is a hint in it!” A lesson to good fellows!”

That is, whatever one may say, a fairy tale is fiction... But everything in it is unusual, magical and very attractive. There is an immersion in a mysterious, enchanted world, where animals speak in a human voice, where objects and trees move on their own, where good necessarily defeats evil.

Each of us remembers how the Fox was punished for tricking the Bunny out of the hut (“The Fox and the Hare”), how cruelly the stupid Wolf, who took the cunning Fox’s word for it, paid with his tail (“The Wolf and the Fox”), how quickly they got over it with a turnip (“Turnip”), when they decided to pull it together and also did not forget to call the Mouse, just as the strong forgot about the weak in the fairy tale “Teremok” and what this led to...

Smart, kind, correct, highly moral, contained in fairy tales helps to cultivate the best human qualities in our children. The fairy tale teaches life wisdom. And these values ​​are eternal; they make up what we call spiritual culture.

Among other things, the invaluable nature of fairy tales lies in the fact that they provide an opportunity to introduce children to the life and way of life of the Russian people.

What does Russian village mean? What did a tree, a forest mean to a Russian person? And household items: dishes, clothes, shoes (the famous bast shoes alone are worth it!), musical instruments (balalaika, harp). This is our opportunity to tell and show children how people lived in Russia before, how the culture of a great people developed, of which, by the will of fate, we, their parents, grandparents, became a part.

Russian folk tales are also an invaluable assistant in developing a child’s language and speech skills. Words and expressions from fairy tales with their ancient and deep meaning are embedded in our minds and live in us, no matter where we are.

Fairy tales provide an opportunity to expand your vocabulary on any topic (whether it be tales about animals, everyday life or magic). Traditional Russian repetitions, special melody, rare “forgotten” words, proverbs and sayings, which are so rich in Russian speech: all this makes it possible to make a fairy tale accessible, understandable for children’s consciousness, and helps to remember it easily and quickly. And all this develops children’s imagination, teaches them beautiful and coherent speech. (Who knows, maybe those fairy tales that they begin to invent after Russian folk tales will also one day enter the treasury of the language).

A fairy tale is a special literary genre, a story unfolding in a timeless and extra-spatial dimension. The characters in such a story are fictional characters who find themselves in difficult situations and get out of them thanks to assistants, most often endowed with magical properties. At the same time, insidious villains plot various intrigues against them, but in the end good wins. The creation of fairy tales has an ancient history.

FROM THE HISTORY OF FAIRY TALES:

Fairy tales appeared in such ancient times that it is very difficult to accurately determine the time of their birth. We know just as little about their authors. Most likely, the fairy tales were composed by the same peasants and shepherds who often acted as the main characters of the story.

Has anyone wondered whether there are real events behind these tales, whether fairy-tale heroes were the most ordinary people, whose lives and adventures could become the basis for fairy tales. Why not? For example, a goblin could be someone who lived in the forest for a long time, was unaccustomed to communicating with people, but got along well with the forest and its inhabitants. Well, Vasilisa is a beauty - everything is clear here. But Koschey the Immortal looks like an old man who married a young girl.

But the situation is more interesting. Our land is located at the crossroads of roads from Europe to Asia, from south to north and vice versa. That is why we lived in close connection with neighboring peoples. From the north, we were contacted by the Vikings, who were a step higher in development than us. They brought us metal and weapons, their legends and fairy tales - and we brought them clothes, shoes and food, everything that our land is rich in. From there the fairy tale about Baba Yaga, where she was the evil old woman Heel on two bone legs, who lives in a separate hut on the outskirts of the forest, guards the souls of the dead and is a border point in the transition from earthly life to the afterlife. She is not particularly kind and day after day creates a lot of trials and troubles for those who walk this road. That is why the heroes of our fairy tales, driven into a remote corner by their troubles, come to Baba Yaga.

They passed on fairy tales from mouth to mouth, from generation to generation, changing them along the way and adding new details.

Tales were told by adults and - contrary to our current understanding - not only by children, but also by adults.

Fairy tales taught us how to get out of difficult situations, overcome trials with honor, conquer fear - and every fairy tale ended with a happy ending.

Some scientists believe that the origins of fairy tales lie in primitive rituals. The rituals themselves were forgotten, but the stories were preserved as treasures of useful and instructive knowledge.

It is difficult to say when the first fairy tale appeared. This is probably not possible “either to say in a fairy tale or to describe with a pen.” But it is known that the first fairy tales were dedicated to natural phenomena and their main characters were the Sun, the Wind and the Moon.

A little later they took on a relatively human form. For example, the owner of water is Grandfather Vodyanoy, and Leshy is the owner of the forest and forest animals. It is these images that indicate that folk tales were created at a time when people humanized and animated all the elements and forces of nature.


Water

Another important aspect of the beliefs of primitive people, which is reflected in folk tales, is the veneration of birds and animals. Our ancestors believed that each clan and tribe comes from a specific animal, which was the patron of the clan (totem). That is why Voron Voronovich, Falcon or Eagle often act in Russian fairy tales.

Also, ancient rituals (for example, initiation of a boy into hunters and warriors) found their expression in folk tales. It is surprising that it was with the help of fairy tales that they came to us in an almost primordial form. Therefore, folk tales are very interesting for historians.

FAIRY TALES AND NATIONAL CHARACTER

Fairy tales reveal all the most important aspects of Russian life. Fairy tales are an inexhaustible source of information about national character. Their strength lies in the fact that they not only reveal it, but also create it. Fairy tales reveal many individual character traits of a Russian person and the peculiarities of his inner world and ideals.

Here is a typical dialogue (fairy tale “The Flying Ship”):

The old man asks the fool: “Where are you going?”

- “Yes, the king promised to give his daughter to the one who makes a flying ship.”

- “Can you make such a ship?”

- “No, I can’t!” - “So why are you going?” - “God knows!”

For this wonderful answer (because it is honest!) the old man helps the hero get the princess. This eternal wandering “I don’t know where”, in search of “I don’t know what” is inherent in all Russian fairy tales, and indeed in all Russian life in general.

Even in Russian fairy tales, as well as among the Russian people, faith in miracles is strong.

Of course, all fairy tales in the world are based on some extraordinary events. But nowhere does the miraculous dominate the plot as much as in Russians. It piles up, overwhelms the action and is always believed in, unconditionally and without a shadow of a doubt.


Artist: Anastasia Stolbova

Russian fairy tales also testify to the special faith of the Russian person in the meaning of the spoken word. Thus, there is a separate cycle from the category of fairy tales-legends, in which the entire plot is tied to various kinds of accidentally escaped curses. It is characteristic that only Russian versions of such tales are known. Fairy tales also emphasize the importance of the spoken word, the need to keep it: you promised to marry the one who finds the arrow - you must fulfill it; if you kept your word and went to your father’s grave, you will be rewarded; made a promise to marry the one who stole the wings - fulfill it. All fairy tales are filled with these simple truths.

The word opens doors, turns the hut, breaks the spell. The sung song brings back the memory of the husband, who forgot and did not recognize his wife, the little goat with his quatrain (except for him, apparently, he does not know how to say anything, otherwise he would have explained what happened) saves his sister Alyonushka and himself. The word is believed, without any doubt. “I’ll be of use to you,” says some bunny, and the hero lets him go, confident (as is the reader) that this will happen.

Often heroes are rewarded for their suffering. This theme is also especially loved by Russian fairy tales. Often, sympathies are on the side of heroes (even more often - heroines) not because of their special qualities or the actions they perform, but because of the life circumstances - misfortune, orphanhood, poverty - in which they find themselves. In this case, salvation comes from the outside, from nowhere, not as a result of the active actions of the hero, but as the restoration of justice. Such fairy tales are designed to instill compassion, sympathy for one’s neighbor, and a feeling of love for all those who suffer. How can one not recall the thought of F. M. Dostoevsky that suffering is necessary for a person, because it strengthens and purifies the soul.

The attitude of the Russian people to work reflected in fairy tales seems peculiar. Here is a seemingly incomprehensible fairy tale about Emelya the Fool from the point of view of ideals.

He lay on the stove all his life, did nothing, and did not hide the reason, he answered “I’m lazy!” to all requests for help. Once I went out into the water and caught a magic pike. The continuation is well known to everyone: the pike persuaded him to let her go back into the hole, and for this she undertook to fulfill all of Emelya’s wishes. And so, “at the behest of the pike, at my request,” the sleigh without a horse carries the fool to the city, the ax itself chops the wood, and they are put into the oven, the buckets march into the house without outside help. Moreover, Emelya also got the royal daughter, also not without the intervention of magic.

The ending, however, is still hopeful (in children's retellings for some reason it is often omitted): “The fool, seeing that all people are like people, and he alone was bad and stupid, wanted to become better and for this he said: “As a pike by command, and at my request, that I become such a fine fellow, that nothing like this should happen to me, and that I be extremely smart!” And as soon as he had time to speak, at that very moment he became so beautiful, and also smart, that everyone was surprised.”

This tale is often interpreted as a reflection of the eternal tendency of Russian people to laziness and idleness.

She speaks, rather, about the severity of peasant labor, which gave rise to the desire to relax, which made one dream of a magical helper.

Yes, if you are lucky and catch a miracle pike, you can happily do nothing, lie on a warm stove and think about the Tsar’s daughter. All this, of course, is also unrealistic for the man who dreams of it, like a stove driving through the streets, and the usual difficult daily work awaits him, but you can dream about pleasant things.

The fairy tale also reveals another difference in Russian culture - it does not have the sacredness of the concept of labor, that special reverent attitude, on the verge of “work for the sake of work itself,” which is characteristic, for example, of Germany or modern America. It is known, for example, that one of the common problems among Americans is the inability to relax, distract themselves from business, and understand that nothing will happen if they go on vacation for a week. For a Russian person there is no such problem - he knows how to relax and have fun, but perceives work as inevitable.

The famous philosopher I. Ilyin considered such “laziness” of the Russian person to be part of his creative, contemplative nature. “We were taught, first of all, by our flat space,” wrote the Russian thinker, “by our nature, with its distances and clouds, with its rivers, forests, thunderstorms and blizzards. Hence our insatiable gaze, our daydreaming, our contemplating “laziness” (A.S. Pushkin), behind which lies the power of creative imagination. Russian contemplation was given beauty that captivated the heart, and this beauty was introduced into everything - from fabric and lace to residential and fortified buildings.” There may be no zeal and exaltation of work, but there is a feeling of beauty, merging with nature. This also bears fruit - rich folk art, expressed, among other things, in the fairy-tale heritage.

The attitude towards wealth is clear. Greed is perceived as a great vice. Poverty is a virtue.

This does not mean that there is no dream of prosperity: the difficulties of peasant life made us dream of a self-assembled tablecloth, of a stove in which “goose meat, pig meat, and pies - apparently and invisibly! One word to say - whatever the soul wants, everything is there! the bride received was also nice to dream about on long winter evenings.

But wealth comes to the heroes easily, casually, when they don’t even think about it, as an additional prize for a good bride or a saved wife. Those who strive for it as an end in itself are always punished and remain “with nothing.”

Fairy tales are poetic stories about extraordinary events and adventures involving fictional characters. In modern Russian, the concept of the word “fairy tale” has acquired its meaning since the 17th century. Until that point, the word "fable" was supposedly used in this meaning.

One of the main features of a fairy tale is that it is always based on an invented story, with a happy ending, where good defeats evil. The stories contain a certain hint that enables the child to learn to recognize good and evil and to comprehend life through clear examples.

Read children's stories online

Reading fairy tales is one of the main and important stages on your child’s path to life. Various stories make it clear that the world around us is quite contradictory and unpredictable. By listening to stories about the adventures of the main characters, children learn to value love, honesty, friendship and kindness.

Reading fairy tales is useful not only for children. Having grown up, we forget that in the end good always triumphs over evil, that all adversity is nothing, and a beautiful princess is waiting for her prince on a white horse. It’s quite easy to give a little good mood and plunge into a fairy-tale world!

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7. Masha and the Bear

8. Morozko

9. The Man and the Bear (Tops and Roots)

10. Cockerel - Golden comb and millstones

11. At the behest of the pike

13. Sister Alyonushka and brother Ivanushka

14. Sivka-Burka

15. Snow Maiden

16. Teremok

5. Legless and armless heroes

6. Legless and blind heroes

8. Birch and three falcons

9. Hunter Brothers

10. Well done Bulat

11. Bukhtan Bukhtanovich

14. The Witch and the Sun's Sister

15. Prophetic boy

16. Prophetic dream

17. There is a sun in the forehead, a month on the back of the head, stars on the sides

18. Mushroom War

19. Magic water

22. Magic berries

23. Magic horse

24. Clay guy

28. Two from the bag

29. Girl in the well

30. Wooden eagle

31. Elena the Wise

32. Emelya the Fool

33. The Firebird and Vasilisa the Princess

34. The Enchanted Princess

35. Animal milk

36. Golden Slipper

37. Golden Cockerel

38. Dawn, evening and midnight

39. Ivan - widow's son

40. Ivan - son of a cow

41. Ivan - peasant son and Miracle Yudo

42. Ivan - a peasant's son

43. Ivan the Bestalent and Elena the Wise

44. Ivan is a peasant son and a peasant himself with a mustache for seven miles

45. Ivan Tsarevich and the White Polyanin

47. Kikimora

51. Horse, tablecloth and horn

52. Korolevich and his uncle

55. Flying ship

57. Dashing one-eyed

58. Lutonyushka

59. Boy with Thumb

60. Marya Morevna

61. Marya-Krasa - long braid

62. Masha and the Bear

63. Medvedko, Usynya, Gorynya and Duginya heroes

64. Copper, silver and golden kingdoms

67. Wise maiden

68. The wise maiden and the seven thieves

69. Wise wife

70. Wise answers

71. Nesmeyana the Princess

72. Night dancing

73. Petrified Kingdom

74. Shepherd's pipe

75. Cockerel - Golden comb and millstones

76. Feather of Finist the clear falcon

77. Legs up to the knees in gold, arms up to the elbows in silver

78. At the behest of the pike

79. Go there - I don’t know where, bring that - I don’t know what

80. Truth and Falsehood

81. Fake illness

82. About a stupid snake and a smart soldier

83. Bird's tongue

84. Robbers

85. Seven Simeons

86. Silver saucer and pouring apple

87. Sister Alyonushka and brother Ivanushka

88. Sivka-Burka

89. The Tale of Vasilisa, the Golden Braid, and Ivan the Pea

90. The Tale of the Bonebreaker Bear and Ivan, the Merchant's Son

91. The Tale of Rejuvenating Apples and Living Water

92. The Tale of Ivan the Tsarevich, the Firebird and the Gray Wolf

93. Tales of the brave knight Ukrom-Tabunshchik

94. Tablecloth, ram and bag

95. Fast messenger

96. Snow Maiden

97. Snow Maiden and Fox

98. The soldier delivers the princess

99. Sun, Moon and Raven Voronovich

100. Suma, give me some wisdom!

101. Tereshechka

102. Three kingdoms - copper, silver and gold

103. Finist - clear falcon

105. Tricky science

106. Crystal Mountain

107. Princess solving riddles

110. Tsar Maiden

111. Tsar Bear

112. Chivy, chivy, chivychok...

113. Wonderful shirt

114. Wonderful little shoes

115. Wonderful box

8. Wolf, quail and jerk

10. Crow and cancer

11. Where was the goat?

12. Stupid wolf

13. Crane and heron

14. For a little shoe - a chicken, for a chicken - a goose

16. Hares and frogs

17. Animals in the pit

18. Winter quarters of animals

19. Golden horse

20. Golden Cockerel

21. How the wolf became a bird

22. How the fox learned to fly

23. How the fox sewed a fur coat for the wolf

27. Cat - gray forehead, goat and ram

28. Cat and Fox

29. Cat, Rooster and Fox

30. Kochet and chicken

31. Crooked duck

32. Kuzma is soon rich

33. Chicken, mouse and black grouse

34. Lion, pike and man

35. Fox is a wanderer

36. Fox and blackbird

37. Fox and crane

38. Fox and goat

39. Fox and jug

40. Fox and bast shoe

41. Fox and cancer

44. Fox Confessor

45. Fox midwife

46. ​​The fox-maiden and Kotofey Ivanovich

47. Fox-sister and wolf

48. Masha and the Bear

49. Bear - fake leg

50. Bear and fox

51. Bear and dog

52. The Man and the Bear (Tops and Roots)

53. Man, bear and fox

54. Mouse and Sparrow

55. Scared wolves

56. Scared bear and wolves

57. Wrong court of birds

58. No goat with nuts

59. About Vaska - Muska

60. About the toothy pike

61. Sheep, fox and wolf

62. Rooster and bob

63. Rooster and hen

64. Cockerel

65. Cockerel - Golden comb and millstones

66. At the behest of the pike

67. Promised

68. About the toothy mouse and about the rich sparrow

69. About the old lady and the bull

71. Mitten

72. The Tale of Ersha Ershovich, Shchetinnikov’s son

73. The Tale of Ivan the Tsarevich, the Firebird and the Gray Wolf

74. Tar goby

75. The Old Man and the Wolf