[75] Folklore England Download
Fairy also spelled faerie or faery a mythical being of folklore and romance usually having magic powers and dwelling on earth in close relationship with humans.
[64] Folklore England . Here you will find grouped together articles and features about witches fairies and monsters in british folklore. This section has texts about the folklore and legends of england and other resources at sacred texts about the british isles. They became known as the pendle witches witches in england.
The mythical creature was first mentioned in a newspaper in sheffield england in the 1810s but spring heeled jack became notorious almost overnight after a spate of stories in 1837 and 1838. Some of the english folklore texts on this page were originally transcribed by phillip brown at his now defunct belinus co uk website. It can appear as a dwarf creature typically having green clothes and hair living underground or in stone heaps and characteristically exercising magic powers to benevolent ends.
A black panther like beast seen roaming this wild and isolated landscape in southwest england and not usually a habitat for big cats. Life for the peasants who passed these tales down the generations however was desperately bleak and so. The pendle witches perhaps the most notorious witch trial of the 16th century.
In the year 1612 at lancaster gaol ten people were hanged for the crime of witchcraft. The tale of eilian is recorded by scholar john rhys 1840 1915 who in the 1870s began to research celtic tales from wales and the isle of man. England is particularly rich in folklore and having been colonised by people as diverse as the celts romans saxons and normans over the centuries has inherited a cultural miasma that has produced a wonderfully complicated set of tales.
Spring heeled jack was a mythical creature who terrorized victorian britain particularly london from the 1830s onward. As a diminutive sprite commonly in the shape of a. Practical minded theories suggest that it s an escaped animal and although there is no verifiable evidence the beast has been sighted no.
Rhys had been inspired by another great collector. Due to the country s rich history and its many invaders such as the celts the vikings and the normans england is rife with interesting folklore tales although the telling of them is sadly on the decline. Rhys particularly highlights the problems of translating the tales he heard out of their original welsh into an english that did not properly reflect their subtle non aryan syntax.