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{{Greyhawk Deity|
{{Deity
bgcolor=#000|
|image       = [[Image:Baba Yaga01.jpg]]
fgcolor=#fff|
|caption     = Baba Yaga, as depicted in ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #83 (1984).
image=[[Image:Baba Yaga01.jpg]]|
|name         =  
caption=Baba Yaga, as depicted in ''Dragon'' #83 (1984).|
|alt_spelling =
name=Baba Yaga|
|titles      = Mother of All Witches
title=|
|home         = Murkendraw, in the [[Feywild]]
home=|
|rank        = Quasi-deity or Archfey
power=Quasi-deity|
|gender       = Female
gender=Female|
|class       = Wizard 25/Illusionist 15/Druid 14{{cite dragon|83|50}}
class=Wizard 25/Illusionist 15/Druid 14|
|alignment   = Neutral Evil
alignment=Neutral Evil|
|portfolio   =  
portfolio=|
|domains     =  
domains=|
|alt_name    = Baba Jaga, Jaga Baba, Baba Roga
alias=Baba Jaga, Jaga Baba, Baba Roga|
|super       =  
super=|
}}
}}
'''Baba Yaga''' is a cannibalistic hag in Slavic legend. She cooks children, causes storms, and traverses the country with Death at her side. Some say she is a spirit of the forest. Some say she protects the waters of life. She flies through the sky in a mortar and pestle, carrying a club that turns men to stone. She lives in a hut with chicken legs. She is most notable in the ''[[World of Greyhawk]]'' setting for being the "mother" of [[Iggwilv]].
'''Baba Yaga''' (ba-ba YA-guh)<ref>[[Frank Mentzer|Mentzer, Frank]]. "Ay pronunseeAY shun gyd" ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #93 (TSR, 1985)</ref>is a "truly ancient and terrifying [[hag]]"{{csb|TWBtW|125}} and [[fey|archfey]]. She is most notable in the {{smallcaps|[[World of Greyhawk]]}} setting for being the adoptive mother of [[Iggwilv]].


==Description==
She is inspired by the real-world Baba Yaga, a cannibalistic hag in Slavic legend. She cooks children, causes storms, and traverses the country with Death at her side. Some say she is a spirit of the forest. Some say she protects the waters of life. She flies through the sky in a mortar and pestle, carrying a club that turns men to stone. She lives in a hut with chicken legs.  
Baba Yaga appears as a hideous, old, human-like woman, some five feet tall. She walks crouched over, and her limbs are almost skeletal. Her skin is grayish brown, and tattooed with magical runes. She has a protruding chin, a long nose covered in warts, and ice-cold black eyes framed by stringy white hair. Her fingers end in sharp iron claws, her stony teeth are filed to sharp points, and two large, tusk-like teeth protrude from her jaw.


==Relationships==
== Description ==
Baba Yaga is the foster mother of Iggwilv, originally known as [[Iggwilv|Natasha the Dark]], and by extension, the grandmother of [[Iuz]] and [[Drelnza]]. She has another foster daughter named [[Elena the Fair]]. Baba Yaga is also responsible for providing [[Kostchtchie]] the means to become a [[Demon lord|demon lord]].
The 5ft-tall sorceress is said to be of godlike intelligence and very physically ugly. She has a long warty nose, a skeletal frame, and thin white hair.{{cite dragon|83|31-52|The Dancing Hut}}{{csb|The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga|61}}  She has sharp, iron-like teeth and fingers that curve into claws. On occasion she has a rather plump frame. It was uncertain whether her changing frame was due to having recently eaten or simply on a whim of preference.{{cite dungeon|196|3|Court of Stars: Baba Yaga}}


==Artifacts==
Baba Yaga appears as a hideous, old, human-like woman, some five feet tall. She walks crouched over, and her limbs are almost skeletal.{{cite dragon|83|50}} Her skin is grayish brown and tattooed with magical runes. She has a protruding chin, a long nose covered in warts, and ice-cold black eyes framed by stringy white hair. Her fingers end in sharp iron claws, her stony teeth are filed to sharp points, and two large, tusk-like teeth protrude from her jaw.{{cite dragon|83|50}}
Baba Yaga lives in a mobile hut which travels via a pair of massive chicken legs jutting from its bottom. The hut is far larger on the inside than its exterior size would indicate, due to the fact that it has been built around a tesseract.


==Publishing history==
==Personality==
Baba Yaga was first mentioned in the ''Dungeons & Dragons'' game in the 1979 ''[[Dungeon Master's Guide]]'', where her hut appears as an artifact. Baba Yaga herself would later appear in ''Dragon'' #53 (1981) and in "The Dancing Hut," a 1984 adventure in ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' magazine #83 (1984). A gamebook, ''Nightmare Realm of Baba Yaga'' appeared in 1986. In 1988, Baba Yaga had a brief cameo in ''[[Castle Greyhawk (module)|Castle Greyhawk]],'' (page 60). Baba Yaga's hut was once more described in 1993's ''Book of Artifacts''. A full-length adventure module, ''[[The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga]]'', was released in 1995. In ''Dragon'' #290, author Paul Leach said, "the origin of Baba Yaga (who does not necessarily represent just one witch) is likely to be the Death Crone, a common figure in most pagan mythologies." Leach described the Death Crone in more detail in the same issue. Baba Yaga has since been mentioned in two articles in ''Dragon'' (2005 and 2006), and an adventure in ''[[Dungeon (magazine)|Dungeon]]'' (2007).
She was known to have a fickle nature, being dangerously unpredictable, equally as likely to eat her worshipers as she was to aid them.{{cite dungeon|196|3|Court of Stars: Baba Yaga}} Politeness would not guarantee her favor, nor would rudeness ensure incurring her wrath.{{cite dungeon|196|2|Court of Stars: Baba Yaga}}


==Bibliography==
She was willing to offer people some of her secrets in return for another. The bargains she offered people were also far more dangerously worded than those of any [[fey]].{{csb|MotP4e|45}}
*[[Wolfgang Baur|Baur, Wolfgang]]. "Enemies of my Enemy." ''[[Dungeon]]'' #149. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2007.


*Breault, Mike, and Jon Pickens. ''[[Castle Greyhawk (module)|Castle Greyhawk]]''. Lake Geneva: WI: TSR, 1988.  
== Relationships ==
Baba Yaga is the foster mother of Iggwilv,{{csb|The Wild Beyond the Witchlight|25}}{{csb|TWBtW|171}} originally known as [[Iggwilv|Natasha the Dark]], and by extension, the grandmother of [[Iuz]] and [[Drelnza]]. She has another foster daughter named [[Elena the Fair]]. "Skabatha Nightshade, Bavlorna Blightstraw, and Endelyn Moongrave are [natural] daughters of Baba Yaga."{{csb|TWBtW|161}}{{csb|TWBtW|215}}


*[[Jason Bulmahn|Bulmahn, Jason]], James Jacobs, and [[Erik Mona]]. ''[[Expedition to the Ruins of Greyhawk]]''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2007.
Baba Yaga is also responsible for providing [[Kostchtchie]] the means to become a [[demon lord]].


*[[David "Zeb" Cook|Cook, David]]. ''Book of Artifacts''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1993.
== Worshippers ==
As a quasi-deity,{{cite dragon|83|50}} Baba Yaga has few true worshippers, but she is known to make pacts with warlocks.{{csb|TWBtW|112-113, 158}}


*[[Gygax, Gary]]. ''Dungeon Master's Guide''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1979.
== Realm ==
Baba Yaga's home is her [[Baba Yaga's Hut|hut]], which wanders between planes of existence. She is known to frequent the [[feywild]] in the massive Murkendraw swamp, where she still resides in her hut.


*[[James Jacobs|Jacobs, James]]. "[[Demonomicon of Iggwilv]]: [[Kostchtchie]]." ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' #345. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
Baba Yaga is closely associated with the land of Russia on the world of [[Earth]] and is referred to as having been to both Oerth and Earth.{{cite dragon|83|50}}


*Leach, Paul. "Red Sails Fell and Forlorn Bestiary: Monsters of Eastern Europe." ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001.
== Artifacts ==
*-----. "Red Sails: Bright Sun, Mother Earth." ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001.
* ''Baba Yaga's Dancing Hut''—Baba Yaga lives in a mobile hut which travels via a pair of massive chicken legs jutting from its bottom. The hut is far larger on the inside than its exterior size would indicate, due to the fact that it has been built around a tesseract.  It is able to ''plane shift''.
* ''Baba Yaga’s Mortar and Pestle''—The mortar and pestle are normal apothecary's tools, but can enlarge to hold a creature who can then command the mortar to fly or shift planes by using the pestle.


*[[Mona, Erik]], ed. "Unsolved Mysteries of D&D." ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' #359. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
== Publishing history ==
Baba Yaga was first mentioned in the ''Dungeons & Dragons'' game in the 1979 ''Dungeon Master's Guide'', where her hut appears as an artifact.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gygax|first=Gary|title=[[Dungeon Master's Guide]]|publisher=[[TSR, Inc|TSR]]|year=1979|authorlink=Gary Gygax}}</ref> Baba Yaga herself would appear briefly in Dragon Magazine #53, and in much greater detail in ''The Dancing Hut'', a 1984 adventure in ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' magazine #83.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Moore|first=Roger E|authorlink=Roger E. Moore|title=The Dancing Hut|journal=[[dragmag|Dragon]]|year=1984|issue=83|publisher=[[TSR, Inc|TSR]]}}</ref> An AD&D gamebook, ''Nightmare Realm of Baba Yaga'' appeared in 1986. In 1988, Baba Yaga had a brief cameo in ''[[Castle Greyhawk (adventure)|Castle Greyhawk]]'' where she is in pursuit of [[Professor Why]]..<ref>{{cite book|last=Breault|first=Mike|authorlink=Michael Breault|title=[[Castle Greyhawk (adventure)|Castle Greyhawk]]|year=1988|publisher=TSR|location=Lake Geneva, WI|first2=Jon|last2=Pickens|authorlink2=Jon Pickens |page=60}}</ref> Baba Yaga's hut was once more described in 1993's ''Book of Artifacts''.<ref>{{cite book|last=Cook|first=David|title=[[Book of Artifacts]]|year=1993|publisher=[[TSR, Inc|TSR]]|authorlink=David Cook}}</ref> A full-length adventure, ''[[The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga]]'', was released in 1995.<ref>{{cite book|last=Smedman|first=Lisa|title=[[The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga]]|year=1995|publisher=[[TSR, Inc|TSR]]|authorlink=Lisa Smedman}}</ref>


*[[Moore, Roger E]]. "The Dancing Hut." ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' #83. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1984.
In ''Dragon'' #290, author Paul Leach said, "the origin of Baba Yaga (who does not necessarily represent just one witch) is likely to be the Death Crone, a common figure in most pagan mythologies." Leach described the Death Crone in more detail in the same issue.<ref>Leach, Paul. "Red Sails Fell and Forlorn Bestiary: Monsters of Eastern Europe." ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001</ref><ref>Leach, Paul. "Red Sails: Bright Sun, Mother Earth." ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001</ref> Baba Yaga was mentioned further in two articles in ''Dragon'' (2005 and 2006), and an adventure in ''[[Dungeon (magazine)|Dungeon]]'' (2007).


*Nalle, David. "Larger Than Life." ''Dragon'' #53. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1981.
In the fourth edition ''Manual of the Planes'' (2008), Baba Yaga was re-imagined as a [[hag]] and an arch [[fey]] of the [[Feywild]] disguising herself as an old woman in the Murkendraw swamp and still living in her bird-legged hut. She and her hut were described in the ''Dungeon'' #196 article ''Baba Yaga's Dancing Hut'' (2011).<ref>{{cite journal|last=Campbell|first=Craig|title=Baba Yaga's Dancing Hut|journal=[[Dungeon (magazine)|Dungeon]]|year=2011|issue=196|publisher=[[Wizards of the Coast]]|url=http://www.wizards.com/dnd/Article.aspx?x=dnd/dun/201111yagashut}}</ref>


*Smedman, Lisa. ''[[The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga]]''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1995.
In fifth edition, ''The Wild Beyond the Witchlight'' (2021) confirmed previous lore and brought a little more detail to Baba Yaga, through the lore about [[Tasha]].{{csb|TWBtW|215}}


*Stephens, Owen K.C., and [[Gary Holian]]. "Spellcraft: The [[Demonomicon of Iggwilv]]." ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' #336. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2005.
== References ==
=== Notes ===
<references group="note" />
=== Citations ===
<references />
=== Bibliography ===
* [[Wolfgang Baur|Baur, Wolfgang]]. "Enemies of my Enemy." ''[[Dungeon]]'' #149. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2007.
* Breault, Mike, and Jon Pickens. ''[[Castle Greyhawk (adventure)|Castle Greyhawk]]''. Lake Geneva: WI: TSR, 1988.
* [[Jason Bulmahn|Bulmahn, Jason]], James Jacobs, and [[Erik Mona]]. ''[[Expedition to the Ruins of Greyhawk]]''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2007.
* [[David "Zeb" Cook|Cook, David]]. ''Book of Artifacts''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1993.
* [[Gygax, Gary]]. ''Dungeon Master's Guide''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1979.
* [[James Jacobs|Jacobs, James]]. "[[Demonomicon of Iggwilv]]: [[Kostchtchie]]." ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #345. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
* Leach, Paul. "Red Sails Fell and Forlorn Bestiary: Monsters of Eastern Europe." ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001.
:———. "Red Sails: Bright Sun, Mother Earth." ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001.
* [[Mona, Erik]], ed. "Unsolved Mysteries of D&D." ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #359. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
* [[Moore, Roger E]]. "The Dancing Hut." ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #83. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1984.
* Nalle, David. "Larger Than Life." ''Dragon'' #53. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1981.
* [[Chritopher Perkins|Perkins, Christopher]] (lead designer), Stacey Allan, Will Doyle, Ari Levitch. ''The Wild Beyond the Witchlight''. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2021. Item code WTCC92760000. ISBN 9780786967278
* Smedman, Lisa. ''[[The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga]]''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1995.
* Stephens, Owen K.C., and [[Gary Holian]]. "Spellcraft: The [[Demonomicon of Iggwilv]]." ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #336. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2005.
{{FRwiki}}
{{Wikipedia}}
{{index}}


==External link==
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baba_Yaga_%28Dungeons_%26_Dragons%29 Baba Yaga at Wikipedia].


 
[[Category:Deities of magic]]
[[Category:Gods of magic]]
[[Category:Extraplanar characters]]
[[Category:Greyhawk characters]]
[[Category:Deities]]
[[Category:Greyhawk deities]]
[[Category:Wizards]]

Latest revision as of 06:12, 28 April 2025

Greyhawk Divinity
Baba Yaga
Baba Yaga, as depicted in Dragon #83 (1984).
Names and titles
Alias(es):Baba Jaga, Jaga Baba, Baba Roga
Title(s):Mother of All Witches
General information
Home:Murkendraw, in the Feywild
Alignment:Neutral Evil
Gender:Female
Class:Wizard 25/Illusionist 15/Druid 14[1]
Rules items
Divine rank:Quasi-deity or Archfey

Baba Yaga (ba-ba YA-guh)[2]is a "truly ancient and terrifying hag"[3] and archfey. She is most notable in the World of Greyhawk setting for being the adoptive mother of Iggwilv.

She is inspired by the real-world Baba Yaga, a cannibalistic hag in Slavic legend. She cooks children, causes storms, and traverses the country with Death at her side. Some say she is a spirit of the forest. Some say she protects the waters of life. She flies through the sky in a mortar and pestle, carrying a club that turns men to stone. She lives in a hut with chicken legs.

Description

The 5ft-tall sorceress is said to be of godlike intelligence and very physically ugly. She has a long warty nose, a skeletal frame, and thin white hair.[4][5] She has sharp, iron-like teeth and fingers that curve into claws. On occasion she has a rather plump frame. It was uncertain whether her changing frame was due to having recently eaten or simply on a whim of preference.[6]

Baba Yaga appears as a hideous, old, human-like woman, some five feet tall. She walks crouched over, and her limbs are almost skeletal.[1] Her skin is grayish brown and tattooed with magical runes. She has a protruding chin, a long nose covered in warts, and ice-cold black eyes framed by stringy white hair. Her fingers end in sharp iron claws, her stony teeth are filed to sharp points, and two large, tusk-like teeth protrude from her jaw.[1]

Personality

She was known to have a fickle nature, being dangerously unpredictable, equally as likely to eat her worshipers as she was to aid them.[6] Politeness would not guarantee her favor, nor would rudeness ensure incurring her wrath.[7]

She was willing to offer people some of her secrets in return for another. The bargains she offered people were also far more dangerously worded than those of any fey.[8]

Relationships

Baba Yaga is the foster mother of Iggwilv,[9][10] originally known as Natasha the Dark, and by extension, the grandmother of Iuz and Drelnza. She has another foster daughter named Elena the Fair. "Skabatha Nightshade, Bavlorna Blightstraw, and Endelyn Moongrave are [natural] daughters of Baba Yaga."[11][12]

Baba Yaga is also responsible for providing Kostchtchie the means to become a demon lord.

Worshippers

As a quasi-deity,[1] Baba Yaga has few true worshippers, but she is known to make pacts with warlocks.[13]

Realm

Baba Yaga's home is her hut, which wanders between planes of existence. She is known to frequent the feywild in the massive Murkendraw swamp, where she still resides in her hut.

Baba Yaga is closely associated with the land of Russia on the world of Earth and is referred to as having been to both Oerth and Earth.[1]

Artifacts

  • Baba Yaga's Dancing Hut—Baba Yaga lives in a mobile hut which travels via a pair of massive chicken legs jutting from its bottom. The hut is far larger on the inside than its exterior size would indicate, due to the fact that it has been built around a tesseract. It is able to plane shift.
  • Baba Yaga’s Mortar and Pestle—The mortar and pestle are normal apothecary's tools, but can enlarge to hold a creature who can then command the mortar to fly or shift planes by using the pestle.

Publishing history

Baba Yaga was first mentioned in the Dungeons & Dragons game in the 1979 Dungeon Master's Guide, where her hut appears as an artifact.[14] Baba Yaga herself would appear briefly in Dragon Magazine #53, and in much greater detail in The Dancing Hut, a 1984 adventure in Dragon magazine #83.[15] An AD&D gamebook, Nightmare Realm of Baba Yaga appeared in 1986. In 1988, Baba Yaga had a brief cameo in Castle Greyhawk where she is in pursuit of Professor Why..[16] Baba Yaga's hut was once more described in 1993's Book of Artifacts.[17] A full-length adventure, The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga, was released in 1995.[18]

In Dragon #290, author Paul Leach said, "the origin of Baba Yaga (who does not necessarily represent just one witch) is likely to be the Death Crone, a common figure in most pagan mythologies." Leach described the Death Crone in more detail in the same issue.[19][20] Baba Yaga was mentioned further in two articles in Dragon (2005 and 2006), and an adventure in Dungeon (2007).

In the fourth edition Manual of the Planes (2008), Baba Yaga was re-imagined as a hag and an arch fey of the Feywild disguising herself as an old woman in the Murkendraw swamp and still living in her bird-legged hut. She and her hut were described in the Dungeon #196 article Baba Yaga's Dancing Hut (2011).[21]

In fifth edition, The Wild Beyond the Witchlight (2021) confirmed previous lore and brought a little more detail to Baba Yaga, through the lore about Tasha.[12]

References

Notes

Citations

  1. a b c d e Dragon #83 (Mar 1984), p.50.
  2. Mentzer, Frank. "Ay pronunseeAY shun gyd" Dragon #93 (TSR, 1985)
  3. The Wild Beyond the Witchlight (2021), p.125.
  4. "The Dancing Hut".  Dragon #83 (Mar 1984), p.31-52.
  5. S5 The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga (1995), p.61.
  6. a b "Court of Stars: Baba Yaga". Dungeon #196 (Nov 2011), p.3
  7. "Court of Stars: Baba Yaga". Dungeon #196 (Nov 2011), p.2
  8. Manual of the Planes (2008), p.45.
  9. The Wild Beyond the Witchlight (2021), p.25.
  10. The Wild Beyond the Witchlight (2021), p.171.
  11. The Wild Beyond the Witchlight (2021), p.161.
  12. a b The Wild Beyond the Witchlight (2021), p.215.
  13. The Wild Beyond the Witchlight (2021), p.112-113, 158.
  14. Gygax, Gary (1979) Dungeon Master's Guide, TSR
  15. Moore, Roger E (1984). "The Dancing Hut". Dragon (83). TSR.
  16. Breault, Mike (1988) Castle Greyhawk, Lake Geneva, WI⧼colon⧽ TSR, p. 60
  17. Cook, David (1993) Book of Artifacts, TSR
  18. Smedman, Lisa (1995) The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga, TSR
  19. Leach, Paul. "Red Sails Fell and Forlorn Bestiary: Monsters of Eastern Europe." Dragon #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001
  20. Leach, Paul. "Red Sails: Bright Sun, Mother Earth." Dragon #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001
  21. Campbell, Craig (2011). "Baba Yaga's Dancing Hut". Dungeon (196). Wizards of the Coast.

Bibliography

———. "Red Sails: Bright Sun, Mother Earth." Dragon #290. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2001.
  • Mona, Erik, ed. "Unsolved Mysteries of D&D." Dragon #359. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
  • Moore, Roger E. "The Dancing Hut." Dragon #83. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1984.
  • Nalle, David. "Larger Than Life." Dragon #53. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1981.
  • Perkins, Christopher (lead designer), Stacey Allan, Will Doyle, Ari Levitch. The Wild Beyond the Witchlight. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2021. Item code WTCC92760000. ISBN 9780786967278
  • Smedman, Lisa. The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1995.
  • Stephens, Owen K.C., and Gary Holian. "Spellcraft: The Demonomicon of Iggwilv." Dragon #336. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2005.


This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Baba Yaga on the Forgotten Realms Wiki (view authors.
This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).

Encyclopedia Greyhawkania Index

The Encyclopedia Greyhawkania Index (EGI) is based on previous work of Jason Zavoda through '08, continued by numerous other fans. The EGI article has a list of sources, product names, abbreviations, and a link to the full, downloadable index.

Topic Type Description Product Page/Card/Image

Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Book of Artifacts, AD&D 2e 21-23
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Dragon magazine #053 32
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Dragon magazine #083 50-52
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Dragon magazine #290 54, 55
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Dragon magazine #336 77
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Dragon magazine #345 21
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Dungeon magazine #149 45
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Dungeon magazine #196 7-11, 53-107
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Encyclopedia Magica - Volume II 604-606
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], 'Expedition to the Ruins of Greyhawk' (3.5e) 172
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Monster Manual 1, D&D 5e 36
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Manual of the Planes, D&D 4e 36, 45
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Nightmare Realm of Baba Yaga All
Baba Yaga {Mother of All Witches, Little Grandmother} Non-player character Female, Ogre, [Ftr12/Mu20/Ill15/Drd10], Pathfinder Chronicles: Campaign Setting, Pathfinder 1e 35, 80-81, 174
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Artifact, Artifacts and Legends, Pathfinder 1e 20-23
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Artifact, Book of Artifacts, AD&D 2e 21-23
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Artifact, Dragon magazine #083 31-52
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Artifact, Dragon magazine #299 101
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Artifact, Dungeon magazine #196 7, 9, 10, 53-107
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Artifact, Encyclopedia Magica - Volume II 604-606
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Artifact, Manual of the Planes, D&D 4e 45
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Artifact, Nightmare Realm of Baba Yaga All
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Dungeon Masters Guide 1st Edition 124, 156
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Dragon magazine #299 101
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Eldritch Wizardry 44
Baba Yaga, The Dancing Hut of Item Return of the Eight 43
The Dancing hut of Baba Yaga (ART3, Campaign set) Adventure Adventure - To be determined