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In Scotland Nicnevin is said to be a Queen of the Faeries. According to Walter Scott she's thought to be a sort of mother witch or the Scottish Hecate who 'rode on the storm and marshalled the rambling host of wanderers under her grim banner.'
🎨Thomas Maybank
#FaustianFriday
Irish goddess The Morrígan (phantom/great Queen) incites warriors to battle! Trio of sisters; Badb, Macha & Nemain. Appears as a crow (badb)! When Cú Chulainn died (strapped to standing stone), only when a crow landed on him was his enemy convinced he was dead! #FaustianFriday
Many Ulverston locals will avoid the eerie woods at Plumpton, and lurking in the water of the flooded iron mines nearby, lives Jenny Greenteeth, a 'river hag' who pulls children and the elderly into the water to drown them
#FaustianFriday #cumbria
artist: unknown
If you'd like a daily dose of #folklore, I recommend these hashtags:
#MythologyMonday #FairyTaleTuesday #WyrdWednesday #FolkloreThursday #FaustianFriday #SuperstitionSat #FolkloreSunday #SwampSunday
You may also like:
#JapaneseFolklore #yokai #dontgointothewoods #ofdarkandmacabre
I love the way the Victorians conceived of witch & bat-woman attire —the 19thc had such rich histories surrounding occult hobbyists 🖤🦇#FaustianFriday
@TurtleAndBug Oh yay! I'm Coffee and I'm currently working on a dark fantasy webtoon called Scylla, about a faustian bargain and two star-crossed lovers trying to survive in a forest full of monsters and secrets
https://t.co/IvauK6gSUO
Dressing for the Masquerade by Thomas Rowlandson
Masquerade balls have been a feature of the #carnival season since the 15th century. Full of allegorical costumes, pageants and triumphant processions.
#FaustianFriday
#FaustianFriday
I wonder if shapeshifting counts as dressing up? To this purpose I present the Irish goddess The Morrigan. Her rôle as a symbol of imminent death, and to influence the outcome of war, was achieved by appearing as a crow flying overhead.
#ofdarkandmacabre
Irish folklore tells of Stingy Jack, who never paid his own tab. One night the Devil offered to pay, in exchange for Jack's soul. Jack agreed, if the Devil would transform himself into a sixpence. Jack then put the coin in his pocket, thus trapping the Devil.
#FaustianFriday
"So he went into the forest with the intention of hanging himself from a tree." (Brothers Grimm)
Broke blacksmith met Old Nick thusly in the woods who helped him out of his misery and gets cheated and beaten for his pains. Poor Devil.
#FaustianFriday #dontgointothewoods
"Yet men have found so many methods, sadly,
To cheat the Devil of their souls, or try" (Goethe)
And in the end, Faust is indeed forgiven under some divine volte or the the other and poor Mephisto is left with his binding contract unfulfilled for all his pains
#FaustianFriday
Mistrz Pan Twardowski is a Polish Faustian sorcerer who sells his soul in exchange for dark magic. According to an 1822 ballad, the devil releases the nobleman from the contract after finding a clause requiring the devil to spend a year with Twardowski’s wife.
#FaustianFriday✨
💨According to myth a #DustDevil spinning counter clockwise is a shape-shifting demon drawn to suffering & self-destructive souls seeking release from the pain of their lives.
🌬A Dust Devil spinning clockwise is a benevolent spirit casting out the Devil.
#FaustianFriday
The South African impundulu, with its hamerkop appearance, acts as a familiar to a witch, doing her bidding forever #FaustianFriday
“Ravens are the birds I'll miss most when I die. If only the darkness into which we must look were composed of the black light of their limber intelligence. If only we did not have to die at all. Instead, become ravens.”
-Louise Erdrich #FaustianFriday
In a Flemish legend a girl who refused to marry was imprisoned in a cellar. She was visited daily by two swans who helped her simply by being there. She escaped and gave the city a fortune on condition that they took care of the swans and their offspring.
#FaustianFriday
In Hungarian #folklore the hero is often aided by a táltosló, a flying and speaking magical horse that can foresee the future and eats hot ember to recover from wounds. In other folktales the hero is a shapeshifter who can transform into a táltosló #FaustianFriday🖼️AmyLyn Bihrle
#FaustianFriday Sheridan Le Fanu’s ‘Squire Toby’s Will’: the Squire haunts his son (who has cheated his other son out of his inheritance) with the help of a familiar animal: a grotesque, ghostly dog, circling the squire’s grave, its chilling howls deathly and foreboding.