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In Greek mythology, one of the most famous tales involving weaving is of Penelope, whose weaving and unraveling allowed her to keep her suitors at bay while her husband Odysseus was away. More in the thread below.
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🎨'Penelope at her Loom'- Sidney Harold Meteyard. https://t.co/OT7zSueJzF
In 1549, Georgius Agricola's "De animantibus subterraneis" divides continental mountain and mine spirits in two categories: daemon subterraneus mitis, benevolent creatures, and daemon subterraneus truculentus, bergteufel, mountain devils!
🎨 J. B. Monge
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Darklings!
Today's #FaustianFriday ends now. And while it's all things #ofdarkandmacabre over here again, share lore of haunted mines and the crafting of cursed gems with #superstitionsat Sam and celebrate dark, weird literature with #bookwormsat!
🖼️ J. Panuška https://t.co/RTY3Y6demH
In Key West, conch shells are placed outside the door to bring good luck and keep the sea out of your house.
art by Jacob de Gheyn (1596–1641)
#superstitionsat✨
A sailor would never turn his shoes upside-down on the deck for fear the boat would copy and turn over too...
#SuperstitionSat 🎨Winslow Homer
St Elmo's Fire, a weather phenomenon not only found on seafaring vessels, was considered a good omen bringing an end to storms and calmer seas. This is something I'd love to witness! I would think a small piece of such a mast would be powerful in weather Work. #SuperstitionSat
An albatross was thought to carry the souls of dead sailors, so it was bad luck to kill one. However, it is considered good luck if you see one. [Engraving by Gustave Doré for an 1876 edition of the Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Coleridge.] #SuperstitionSat
In Slavic and Finno-Ugric beliefs, lakes, rivers, swamps and everything in them belong to water spirits, so “feeding” them for a better catch used to be a common practice.
It was also believed, that those spirits themselves could take the form of a giant fish.
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Some Selkies draw their roots to Irish/Scottish folklore while some say it came from the Norse & Celtic mythology. They are said to be half-human and half seal.
They can shed their seal skin and transform into humans. They also sing beautifully in the water.
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On Durham farms, a goat was kept with the cattle as it was believed they would eat adders who may otherwise have harmed the cows...
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According to 9th Century bishop, Agobard of Lyons, people believed in airship sailing individuals from a region called Magonia. They were said to pay storm makers to raise terrible hail storms, before swooping in to steal grain and other crops for their own uses. #SuperstitionSat
In my adopted Cumbrian dialect, 'fellin-girse' is green hellebore
it was grown on Cumbrian farms as a cure for numerous livestock ailments
in folk magic it's also used to call forth demons and curse enemies
#superstitionsat #farming #magic
art: Adolf Hirémy-Hirschl
At Lammas the Grain Mother/Harvest Queen/Earth Mother/Ceres & Demeter is in her aspect. Demeter, is the ripe corn harvest and her daughter Kore is the grain - the seed in the deep & dark earth, hidden in the winter, re-appearing in the spring as new growth.
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#superstitionsat Irish "Gaoth Sidhe" (Fairy Wind) is a sudden gust of wind rising out of nowhere. Lots of omens and superstitions linked to it. In fact, the word Sidhe,"fairy"also means "gust of wind" My drawing and my song "The Wind Song" Listen 🎵: https://t.co/nF21SJdODb
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In Argentina there is a saying ' viento del este, lluvia como peste' which means: east wind will surely bring rain, cause gusts from the east are usually humid & stormy
Pic by J W Waterhouse
Edward Dimon of Marblehead, MA, was quite a wizard. He would use his powers to watch & call out to ships at sea, encased in violent storms, guiding them thru to safety. He did this miles away from the village cemetery. #SuperstitionSat
In South Wales, Friday was the fairies’ day, it was their whim to make the weather differ
'When the rest of the week is fair, Friday is apt to be rainy, or cloudy; & when the weather is foul, Friday is apt to be more fair.’ (W. Sikes 1880)
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🖼️: M.Tarrant 1924
In Iceland, there's an old belief that dreaming of a white sheep means it's going to snow the next day. Perhaps because of this association, knitting with wool outdoors is traditionally discouraged, as it's believed to prolong winter. #SuperstitionSat
In #JapaneseFolklore kamikiri mushi are a type of magical insect with razor-sharp hands & beak. They sneak into homes & cut off people's hair, often while they're sleeping. Some believe that kamikiri attacks are to prevent people unknowingly marrying a yokai.
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In medieval times ladybirds were symbols of good luck and protection, as they ate the aphids destroying the farmers’ crops. In English folklore, a ladybird landing on your hand means you will be married within the year.
🎨Blanche Fisher Wright