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Hi everyone, hope your week is going well! A reminder that this Sunday (22/5) the theme is:
CITY vs COUNTRY.
Get those tweets ready with #FolkloreSunday - retweets after 10:30 am. Maude xx
(Images: Vintage Ladybird book covers)
Beatrix Potter based Peter Rabbit & Benjamin Bunny on 2 of her own pets. Her first rabbit was named Benjamin Bouncer. He loved buttered toast & was taken for walks on a lead. He was followed by Peter Piper who performed tricks & accompanied Beatrix everywhere. #FolkloreSunday
The cat-sìth, is a fairy creature from Celtic mythology, said to resemble a large black cat with a white spot on its chest. Legend has it that the spectral cat haunts the Scottish Highlands. It is described as being as large as a dog.
#FolkloreSunday
#FolkloreSunday
Man-Lion, Narasimha, found in Vedic literature, is an Avatar of Vishnu who incarnates to destroy evil & restore Dharma. Also referred to as the “three-eyed lord” [Tryambaka Lord], he is known primarily to his devotees as “The Great Protector.”
#FolkloreSunday
Look and see the saddle markings
Where the fairy warriors rode them.
(As they ride them still at midnight,
On Midsummer's Eve at midnight,
When we mortals all are sleeping.)
–Anne G. Biddlecombe.
This poem fixed the Pembrokeshire Corgi into fairy folklore.
In Cumbrian folklore, a Bargest is a frightening spirit which has the power of foretelling death. It generally appears in the form of a large black dog. A strike from it's paw leaves a wound that never heals
#folkloresunday #cumbria
The Axehandle Hound is a creature of lumberjack folklore in Minnesota & Wisconsin. These forest-dwelling dogs have heads like axe blades & bodies like wooden handles. They feed exclusively on discarded axe handles left in forests. #FolkloreSunday
In Welsh lore, corgis are considered fairy dogs, as fairies ride them like horses & use them to pull coaches. In one legend, a farmer's children bring home two corgi puppies they found in a hollow, & the farmer declares them gifts from the fairy folk. #FolkloreSunday
In Bavaria farmers will tie small baskets of wild strawberries to the horns of their cattle as an offering to the elves. It is believed that by offering the elves their favourite foods they will in return ensure the cows produce plentiful calves and milk. #FolkloreSunday
In #JapaneseFolklore there is definitely a #yokai for every occasion. When it comes to fruit, I present suika no bakemono, which appears as a watermelon-headed samurai. Unfortunately very little is known about this strange supernatural creature. It comes...
#FolkloreSunday
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#FolkloreSunday
Sweetest of the flowers a blooming
In the fragrant vernal days
Is the Lily of the Valley
With its soft, retiring ways.–Paul Laurence Dunbar
A fairy favourite, folklore says this flower’s scent prompts the nightingale to find a mate. It will also avert bad luck.
✨🍀✨Clover lore...
Brings good luck if kept in the house, or worn in buttonholes or hats.
Protects against evil spells and enchantments.
If seen in dreams it foretells a happy and prosperous marriage.
Carrying a four-leafed clover allows you to see the Fae.
#FolkloreSunday
Peter Rabbit loses one shoe among the cabbages & the other amongst the potatoes & his escape from Mr McGregor is impeded by getting caught in a gooseberry net by his buttons. He loses his jacket while escaping a giant sieve & finally runs home in no clothes!! #FolkloreSunday
Beginning with the 15th century Europeans around the world began to revel in exotic clothes, bringing these into their own fashion to show their status as a worldly romantic traveler. Famous examples include the fez, the kimono, and animal skins from the Americas. #FolkloreSunday
Carretero y capatáz by Claudio Gay, 1854
Hats have acted as indicators of social status. In this #painting a foreman (with horse) wears a hat of greater height than the accompanying inquilino (19th-century Chilean labourer).
#FolkloreSunday
The perilous red shoes that won't stop dancing 👠
#FolkloreSunday
🎨Adrien Segur for H.C. Andersen's fairy tale.
To make images of the Greek gods be recognizable by everyone, even people who can't read, each god was given some distinctive piece of clothing or accessory - Athena, Hermes, and Ares each wear a particular helmet, Hera wears a crown, Apollo carries a lyre, etc. #FolkloreSunday
#FolkloreSunday
An old custom on May Day was to give a May basket. Children created the baskets, filling them with flowers they had picked, homemade trinkets and other goodies. On May Day morning the baskets were hung surreptitiously on the front door of their friends’ homes.
#FolkloreSunday
The May Queen, a young girl chosen and crowned in a traditional #MayDay festival. She rides or walks at the front of the parade, leading the celebrations. It is customary for her to wear a white gown symbolising purity, and a crown of flowers in her hair.
#May1
A 'hob-thross' lived in Millom Castle. He slept by the fire during the day, and worked all night, doing the chores the humans didn’t want to do. One harsh winter he was offered clothes, a terrible insult to a hob-thross, so he left.
#folkloresunday #Cumbria
art: Eric Edwards