Warrior Maidens in for
w/Valkyrie from Norse mythology
🎨Brunhilde by Arthur Rackham, 1910
🎨The Valkyrie's Vigil by Edward Robert Hughes, 1914

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Hello, This is Crystal of joining as your host for the next hour. A huge thanks to for hosting before our break. Today’s theme is the folklore of heroines and heroes. Sharing is caring: https://t.co/pgFBNz2LkI. (Image: Rackham)

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Illustrations by Arthur Rackham for a 1936 edition of PEER GYNT.

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Illustration from The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods. Illustration by Arthur Rackham (England, 1867-1939).

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Greetings 🐉

This is - your very last host of the day! A huge thanks to Crystal for being our host before the break 🐦

Our theme this week is the folklore of and Domestic or wild, friend or foe? 🦝

(Arthur Rackham 1912)

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, if you want even more goodness in your feed check out Rackham Arthur . 🙏

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XD I'm keeping it classy. Also get them mixed up a lot, but it turns out if I'd searched for Rackham, there's an even better one

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Good day, This is Crystal of back for another 90 minutes of folklore fun. A hat tip to for hosting before our break. What lore do you have about light, life, and renewal? We'd love to hear it! Use the hashtag and send a tweet! (Rackham)

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'How Arthur Drew his sword Excalibur for the first time' - from 'The Romance of and His Night's of The Round Table' 🗡️ Illustration by Arthur Rackham https://t.co/TgT8b2uPFO

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Many artists have created works based on Wagner's 'The Ring Cycle', but the best known are the 64 plates and 2 frontpiece sketches Arthur Rackham created for the two volume gift editions of 'The Ring of the Nibelung' in 1910 & 1911. https://t.co/A7y6WjsNx0 via

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The young Prince said, ‘I am not afraid; I am determined to go and look upon the lovely Briar Rose’

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Fairies love goats and visit them to comb their beards every Friday. English country-folk believed it wasn't possible to see a goat continuously for 24 hours as, at some point it must visit either the fairies or the Devil, to be combed
🎨Rackham

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Many's the beating he had from the broomstick or the ladle https://t.co/ie5oVWoBjk

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Pandora, from the English artist Arthur Rackham (1867–1939).

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AND The fae in Shakespeare's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' are seen hunting bats to steal their leathery wings for their own Arthur Rackham illustrated the play in 1908.
Hey fae leave those bats alone🦇

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