Radegast is a Slavic god of hospitality, fertility, crops, and farming, revered in the pre-Christian Slavic mythology of Eastern Europe. His name means "the one who feeds," and he is often depicted as a bearded man with a cup or horn of beer or mead in his hand, surrounded by wild animals. He was often invoked as the patron god of hospitality during feasts and celebrations, and farmers would seek his protection and blessings for a good harvest. Radegast was particularly venerated by the West Slavs, including the Czechs and the Poles, and several towns and villages are named after him in these countries. The worship of Radegast declined with the Christianization of Slavic lands in the Middle Ages, but his legacy remains in Slavic folk traditions and mythology.
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