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"When the wind makes the straws and leaves whirl as it passes, that is the fairies, and the peasantry take off their hats and say, 'God bless them'”.
~Fairy & Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry (1888)
#FolkloreSunday
In West African myth, the Aziza are a supernatural race that lives in anthills & silk cotton trees. They taught humans how to use fire, & use magic to aid hunters. Originally described as little hairy folk, they're now commonly portrayed as resembling fairies. #FolkloreSunday
Hi everyone, hope you are all having a great week so far! A reminder that this Sunday’s theme is:
FAIRIES, GOBLINS, ELVES, BOGGARTS & OTHER CREATURES
of the OTHERWORLD.
Retweets after 10:30 am BST #FolkloreSunday Maude xx
Moths are Viewed as a Symbol of Death or as messengers for the Dead. They are sometimes thought of as witches or A need to clean your soul. Either way this sibling of the butterfly has some interesting legends that you should explore. #FolkloreSunday #AI
https://t.co/2utzDqFnrg
#FolkloreSunday @FolkloreSunday; In multiple Native American mythologies, Deer Woman appears as a beautiful woman with deer feet or just a deer. She's normally associated with fertility and love, however she is known to take vengeance on men who hurt women and children.
"I used to meet her in the garden, the ravine, and in the manor fields. She was always picking flowers and herbs, those she knew her father could use for healing drinks and potions."
- Hans Christian Andersen's,
The Wind's Tale
🎨 Illustrated by Edmund Dulac
#FolkloreSunday
🌿🪶🌿Celandine was sometimes known as Swallow-wort, from the belief that swallows would feed the plant to their young to cure weak eyesight.
#FolkloreSunday
“When daisies pied and violets blue
And lady-smocks all silver-white
And cuckoo-buds of yellow hue
Do paint the meadows with delight..”
Love’s Labour’s Lost
#ShakespeareSunday #FolkloreSunday
Image: The Lady’s-Smock Flower Fairy by Cicely Mary Barker
#FolkloreSunday
Toadflax (Linaria Vulgaris) is also known as Trwyn y Llo or Calf’s Nose in Wales.
In England, three Toadflax seeds strung on a linen thread were said to ward off evil.
#FlowerFairy #folklore #plantfolklore #botanicalfolklore
🖼️The Estate of Cicely Mary Barker
In Mersin, Turkey, it was once believed that if a woman couldn't get pregnant, she should sit in the steam of a whole sunflower being boiled 🌻
#FolkloreSunday
🎨 Jessica Roux
#FolkloreSunday
Marsh mallow, a perennial plant found growing in damp marshland. Its pink & white flowers bloom in August/September signalling summer’s transition into autumn. Valued for its healing properties and in folklore for its links to benevolent fairy spirits.
#FolkloreSunday #Armenia @LACMA Marriage of an Armenian woman, 1797, Jacques Grasset de Saint-Sauveur
Shamshir-e Zomorrodnegār (translation: "Emerald-Studded Sword") appears in the Persian epic The Shahnameh. Only a magic potion can heal injuries caused by this sword. It's guarded by the demon Fulad-Zereh, because it's the only thing that can kill him. #FolkloreSunday
In the Syrian tale "The Cat Who Went to Mecca," a mouse tries to congratulate a cat on his holy pilgrimage, believing it means he'll stop hunting mice. The cat tries to attack & the mouse declares, "He may pray like a Hajji, but he still pounces like a cat." #FolkloreSunday
#FolkloreSunday
The Camino de Santiago, or "The Way of St. James" is a walk of pilgrims to what is believed to be the remains of St James located in the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, northwestern Spain. There are several routes in Spain, France and Portugal.
#FolkloreSunday My drawing "The Green Fairy" linked to the green liquor Absinthe which green colour was enhanced originally with copper sulfate and antimony trichloride which caused toxicity and poisoning, and thus cause hallucinations (and green fairies of course)
🍎🌗🍓Accepting even the smallest morsel of food or drop of drink in the Otherworld means you will be trapped there forever - but within the mortal realm, declining such generosity from the Fae will cause great offence and end in curses or death for the refuser.
#FolkloreSunday
NEVER EAT FAIRY FOOD It is transformed by their use of GLAMOUR & made up of weeds or rotten fruit. Fairies themselves prefer stalks of heather & the milk of red deer🎨Mary Evans, A human girl is fed night mist scented with flowers; Rackham #FolkloreSunday
Morning all, @frome_maude here, welcoming you to this Sunday’s theme:
REFRESHMENTS & ALCOHOL
Serve up your tweets about tea, cucumber sandwiches, Victoria sponge, gin & tonic & other delights to #FolkloreSunday for a retweet!
(Image: Charles Maciver Grierson, c.1900)
In Germany it was believed that if you did not wash your face after seeing the first cuckoo of the year you would become sunburnt and covered in freckles. #FolkloreSunday