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In Chinese mythology the Eight Immortals are a legendary group of immortals each with special powers that can bestow life or destroy evil. They are revered by the Taoists and are also popular in the secular Chinese culture and folklore.
#FolkloreThursday #Taoism #heroes
Happy November everyone// Mis Tachwedd Hapus Pawb! Dyma trac gan #vashtibunyan from her 1970 album Just Another Diamond Day #RosehipNovember #tbt #SlowDown #FolkloreThursday #trackoftheday #music https://t.co/758oylCfY1
Slavic Lore: Aitwar is a household ghost that takes the form of a cock with a flaming tail&smoke-filled eyes or a strange lizard with fire for a tail. If you allow it to sleep in a warm corner of a home it will bring you treasure, if not, your home will burn 1/2 #FolkloreThursday
"Finders Keepers" by Chiara Bautista
#tpiotd #love #lovers #pain #suffering #art #ThursdayThoughts #poetic #beautiful #symbolism #mythology #folklore #FolkloreThursday #mermaid #ghost #darkness #light #differences #fairytale
The #penanggalan is a S.E. Asian (Indonesia, Malaysia, etc) #vampire, a detached female head capable of flying around on it's own at night. It's stomach and entrails dangle below it; during the day it behaves like an ordinary human being.😱 #FolkloreThursday (Image: ProdigyDuck)
HIC FUERUNT DRACONES: Three short essays by Natalie Lawrence on the natural history of monsters
@the_manticore_
https://t.co/2owMaqkrhW
#FolkloreThursday
#ThrowbackThursday
Sure, ghosts and bats and spiders are scary, but let's not forget that in Japan you aren't even safe from vegetables! #FolkloreThursday #yokai
According to Romanian #lore, the blood-sucking #Dracula takes origin from the gruseome ruler Vlad the Impaler. Who got his nickname from his excution style; impaling his enemies & guests with giant wooden spikes, watching their still-twitching bodies slowly die. #FolkloreThursday
When the internet is awash with spiteful Trolls, spare a thought for their ancestors!
John Bauer (1915)
#FolkloreThursday
The only sort of Troll we welcome on #FolkloreThursday (OK. it's actually a Goblin, but pretty close!) art-self.
Illustration to #Halloween (1785) by #RobertBurns: ‘some account of the principal charms and spells of that night so big with prophecy to the peasantry in the west of Scotland’ watercolour by Walter Weir 1816 #FolkloreThursday @NatGalleriesSco https://t.co/wA3e7YNF7J
#FolkloreThursday scenes from un-life just off the coast of Hopeless, Maine... Art-self and @Nimue_B
#FolkloreThursday Mythic Appalachia includes everything from haints and hags to Black Shuck himself, talking animals to faceless demons. GHOST DAYS is an illustrated anthology that explores the landscape via the travels of an errant witch:
https://t.co/GXmPmhQE4N @FolkloreThurs
Some terrifying details from ‘Witches at their Incantations’ (c.1646), by Italian artist Salvator Rosa. The painting, kindly loaned to @AshmoleanMuseum by @NationalGallery, is one of many chilling items in our #SpellboundExhibition: https://t.co/eDz3Kuzpw1 #FolkloreThursday
Hello #FolkloreThursday! This is @BenTheEpicure welcoming you to a spooktacular Halloween edition! Click on our account to see the best of the day's folklore.
(Image: via Wikimedia)
The Blackthorn rules the dark half of the year from #Samhain. It is dark moon magic, an "increaser of secrets." Its thorns are the pins in a poppet, its wands used for cursing. A tree protected by faeries, its berries are the sloe. #FolkloreThursday
Image - Cicely Mary Barker
while we're feeling spooky, #FolkloreThursday @FolkloreThurs, how about the story of Jan Coo, who clearly hasn't seen enough horror movies because a *something* in the river calls his name and he goes to investigate! You can read the tiny story here: https://t.co/aJeHXikRYc
#FolkloreThursday was brought to you today by @DeeDeeChainey @WillowWinsham @MythCrafts @HistoriumU and @ShanonSinn. Thanks for a terrifying day, and see you all next week! (Image: The Vampire, by Edvard Munch)
The Guajona is a blood-sucking nocturnal creature of Cantabrian legend. Her hands & feet are gnarled bird legs, skin yellow and wart-covered; she has a single sharp tooth to suck up blood. Her favourite victims are children. #FolkloreThursday
In the 1866 edition of 'The Ingoldsby Legends' we find an apparently more fashion conscious Death.
These 'Legends' were mainly humorous parodies of medieval folklore. #DiscoveringLiterature #FolkloreThursday