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Irish Folklore: The Fairy Wife

Town of Tipperary - Amergin Bard โ€œAre you a witch? Are you a Fairy? Or are you the wife of Michael Cleary?โ€ These are the haunting lines of an Irish childrenโ€™s dancing rhyme still remembered in modern Ireland today. It tells of a brutal murder, madness a strong belief in the Fair Folk. In Tipperary,… Continue reading Irish Folklore: The Fairy Wife

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Slavic Folklore: Samodivi

A samodiva (plural: samodivi) is a wood nymph from the Balkans, specifically in Bulgaria. Samodiva translates โ€˜samoโ€™ (alone) and โ€˜divaโ€™ (wild/divine). The first part of the name signifies avoidance of humans and the second part indicates the wild or divine nature. These nymphs are forest spirits who appear as beautiful young women. But the Samodivi… Continue reading Slavic Folklore: Samodivi

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Shanghai Immortal

Publisherโ€™s Description Half vampire. Half fox-spirit. All trouble.Pawned by her mother to the King of Hell as a child, Lady Jing is half-vampire, half-hulijing fox-spirit and all sasshole. As the Kingโ€™s ward, she has spent the past ninety years running errands, dodging the taunts of the spiteful hulijing courtiers, and trying to control her explosive… Continue reading Shanghai Immortal

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Slavic Folklore: The Likho

Art - Marek Hapon The likho is part of Eastern Slavic fairy tales. Although not as frequently mentioned as the witch Baba Yaga, the likho assumes many guises from an old woman clad in black or a male goblin-like being. The common feature in both is the likho has only one eye. In the pre-Christian… Continue reading Slavic Folklore: The Likho

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Norse Myth: Nidhogg

Nidhogg (Old Norse Nรญรฐhรถggr, โ€œHe Who Strikes with Maliceโ€) is one of several serpents or dragons in the Nine Worlds. The most famous serpent is Jormungand or the Midgard-serpent but Nidhogg is a dragon trapped beneath the Yggdrasil and constantly gnawing at its roots and corpses. Nidhogg is a force for chaos by destroying Yggdrasil,… Continue reading Norse Myth: Nidhogg

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Greek Myth: Sirens

Funerary statue of a siren with a shell lyre, c.โ€‰370 BCE In Ancient Greek mythology, the sirens are vaguely described by various sources but are usually interpreted as being large birds with the heads of women. In the classic Ancient Greek legend The Odyssey attributed to Homer, the hero Odysseusโ€™s ship is attacked by sirens… Continue reading Greek Myth: Sirens

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Viking Women

Publisherโ€™s Description Letโ€™s travel in time together, a thousand or so years back, and meet Viking women in their hearth-lit world. How did these medieval viragoes live, love and die? How can we encounter them as flesh-and-blood beings with fears and feelings โ€“ not just as names in sagas or runes carved into stone? In… Continue reading Viking Women

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Slavic Folklore: Upiรณr

The Upiรณr is present in Slavic and Turkic folklore and resembles the vampire. The Upiรณr is depicted as a ravenous and insatiable creature with vampiric features. Belief in the Upiรณr may have spread across the Eurasian steppes through migrations with its origins in the regions surrounding the Volga River and the Pontic steppes. An Upiรณr… Continue reading Slavic Folklore: Upiรณr