//=time() ?>
FAIRIES ENCOUNTER WOODLAND CREATURES – A Thread #fairies are thought to cast an enchantment over woodland animals and birds; in the fantastical world of Jean-Baptiste Monge, the fae hitch rides on birds and are shown delighting in their mode of transport #FolkloreSunday
The endangered Hazel Dormouse is native to the UK. It is nocturnal & hibernates in winter, gathering up its reserves of fat to keep warm. The Elizabethans trapped the hazel dormouse as they valued its fat, rubbing it on the soles of their feet to induce sleep. #FolkloreSunday
#FolkloreSunday
Today the Chinese New Year begins, the year of the Rabbit, the 4th animal in the Chinese Zodiac cycle. The Rabbit is a symbol of longevity, peace & prosperity in Chinese culture. A harbinger of hope for 2023.
Xīn Nián Kuài Lè! 新年快乐 Happy Chinese New Year!
People aren't going to be interested in my OCs if I don't draw them or share any info of them, sooo I came up with an idea~
I'll call it #LoreSunday
Each Sunday I will make quick doodles of one of my OCs to dump a bunch of lore about them.
Let's start with #Cirel
(1/4)
Red-orange vermillion has a deadly past. It was extracted
from the highly toxic mineral cinnabar, which contains
both mercury and sulphur.
However, the Romans used it in cosmetics.
Cinnabar was also known as ‘dragon’s blood’.
#FolkloreSunday Villa of the Mysteries
In Shropshire the colour green is a symbol of the other, the ethereal & mystical realm. Such a colour is associated with the fair folk including the fairy queen Godda who along with her husband Edric the Wild, rides across the Stiperstones as part of the wild hunt
#FolkloreSunday
Idun/Iduna is the Norse Goddess of Spring and the keeper of the apples of immortality that the gods would eat to preserve their youthfulness.
https://t.co/qmE821CCfm
#FolkloreSunday
🎨 Idun and the Apples by James Doyle Penrose (1890)
NINGYO Japanese 'human fish' #Yōkai. Appears first in the Nihonshoki in Osaka in the year 619 as a fish 'shaped like a child'; Ningyō bring good fortune & in some cases immortality; Happyaku bikuni is the myth of an 800 year old nun who ate Ningyō as a child #FolkloreSunday🎨Hsu
Xiwangmu (Queen Mother of the West) is one of China's most ancient goddesses. She lives in the mythical Kunlun Mountains where she tends the peaches of immortality in her garden. More in thread below.
#FolkloreSunday
🎨'Seiobo - Queen of the West' - Takeuchi Keishu, 1907
1/2 https://t.co/i4o8PfRqLI
The end is a new beginning in Ragnarok: the ruins of burnt Yggdrasil protect the last humans, who are guided to rebuilding the Nordic world by a reborn Baldr and Hodr, allowing the world an unscripted new chance. #FolkloreSunday
#MerryChristmas Everyone! #FolkloreSunday is not here this Sunday but will return on #1stJanuary for those who feel up & at ‘em on #NewYearsDay! With the theme of NEW BEGINNINGS!
In the meantime, take care & have a wonderful #Yuletide! Maude xx
(Brita as Iduna by Carl Larsson)
#FolkloreSunday - Vikings believed spirits known as Vættir lived in trees.
To prevent these small creatures from freezing during winter, trees were brought inside and decorated so the spirits could enjoy a warm, cozy home. https://t.co/AO4UplwBhK
🎄💖
#FolkloreSunday Yule was a time associated with the Wild Hunt. The Wild Hunt is a procession of spectral huntsmen that streak across the sky. Some tales claim that the group is made of fairies, others elves, though most settle on the idea devilish beings.
https://t.co/O9knWdZ0St
The Holly King and Oak King fight for control during Midsummer and Midwinter! At the height of his power, the Holly King will be defeated and the world will return once more to sunny days and greenery!
🖼️@JoyAndNoelle (Print available on Etsy)
#folkloresunday #Yule
Oh Northern light!
Cleave this deathless night
Lingering above embroidering the sky
Oh Northern light!
Weave the wispy haze
To behold that eerie beauty in a daze
Painting the Heaven's Vault
My song and art "Northern Lights"
Listen here:
https://t.co/OLmjRAcG8I #folkloresunday
December's @CumbriaMagazine
We have a family tradition of telling ghost stories over the Festive period. I write about it's origin - the Banshee encounter, and tell a few Cumbrian folk tales also
https://t.co/t2GbnlIC9S
#folkloresunday #ghosts #folklore #lakedistrict #cumbria
#FolkloreSunday Dark Beira, the Winter Queen was very old and her anger could be as strong and bitter as the cold north wind and as wild and unforgiving as the storm laden sea. Every winter Beira reigned but as spring approached her subjects grew restless https://t.co/feXM9y6Bps
Once the snow yearned for colour as it had none, & the shy little snowdrop showed it a great kindness by offering up its colour when all the brighter flowers had sneeringly refused. In return the #snow protects the #snowdrop from the harshness of #winter. #FolkloreSunday
In Cumbrian dialect, 'hollin' is holly
During the winter months holly is brought into the home to protect it from malevolent faeries, or allow benevolent ones to shelter therein without friction with the human hosts
#folkloresunday #faeries #cumbria
art: John Anster Fitzgerald
Morana is the feared one. Eastern Slavs Goddess of Winter, death, pestilence, disease, ruling over the dark time of year, bringing coldness with her frosty countenance. She lives in a mirrored palace where two bottomless streams meet, guarded by serpents. ❄️🐍❄️
#FolkloreSunday