shekinahcancook, to 13thFloor
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

One of Dracula’s Often Overlooked Inspirations Is the Indian Vetala - It was an English “translation” that turned a wise, if mischievous, figure into a bloodsucker, by Emma Starer Gross October 30, 2020

"...As legend goes, the vetala is a ghoulish trickster...that haunts cemeteries and forests, hanging upside down from trees and waiting for humans to play pranks on. They are said to exist in a realm between life & death, and have the ability to see into the past, present, and future. This boundless knowledge makes them invaluable to sorcerers, who often seek to capture & enslave the vetala to use its powers... “Growing up, my father taught me that the vetala could see everything,” recalls a priest at the Pasadena Hindu Temple in Los Angeles... “They could detect the good and the evil inside you. We were forever cautious around cemeteries. Because you never knew what might be waiting for you...”

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/monster-mythology-vetala

#mythology #History #India #Dracula #Vampire

NeuKelte, to ireland German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

The Dagda encountered the black-winged Mórrigan at the River Unshin (Unius) in #Connacht, who was standing with one foot on each bank and washing the clothes of those about to be killed in the next day’s battle at Mag Tuired. True to form, when the Dagda saw the enormous goddess bending over the stream, he was overcome with desire and engaged her in intercourse. So satisfactory did she find their encounter that she agreed to support his side in the next day’s battle, singing her magical chants from the sidelines as the Tuatha Dé Danann fought their mortal enemies, the monstrous beings called the Fomorians, and finally drove them from #Ireland.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore
https://twitter.com/starwheelastro/status/833432200112648193

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

for : Sea captains were often born from the mating of the Highland . This mermaid—half woman, half salmon—was also known as the maighdean na tuinne or “maiden of the wave.” Like other captured , she was said to grant wishes to her captor. But like any other seagoing siren, she was also capable of capturing humans, who usually lost their lives upon entering her watery domain.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore
https://twitter.com/originsoflaoich/status/1494301676257357827?t=bMpvVKyS6DzIMqrs5wto1Q&s=09

NeuKelte, to ireland German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

#WorldOceansDay: #Fintan mac Bochra lived at least 5000 years after the Deluge, escaping it by turning into a salmon. When the water masses had receded, he turned into an eagle, then a hawk, afterwards into all the different animals of #Ireland and finally back to human form.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

#Dylan sometimes bears the epithet Ail Ton, “son of wave” or Ail Mor, “son of the sea,” and so he has been interpreted as being #Arianrhod’s child with a sea god or merman. (Arianrhod‘s second child, born on the same occasion, was LLeu Llaw Gyffes.) Certainly the sea was Dylan’s element, for he swam like a fish and took great pleasure in feeling the waves under his body. But he was killed by his uncle, the rapist Gilfaethwy.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore #WorldOceansDay

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

#FolkloreThursday for #WorldOceansDay: In the #Scottish #Hebrides the #mermaid did not sport a magical cap as in other lands. Instead she had a magical belt that had to be stolen to tame her. Her descendants were said to have the gift (or curse) of foreseeing who would die at sea.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

RT @93DWTW The Mermaid Sculpture on the King’s Fountain, Linlithgow Palace, Scotland; Barry Caveman https://twitter.com/93DWTW/status/1582243156409856000

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

As Baile Binnbhéarlach (“sweet-spoken Baile”), prince of , traveled alone to a trysting place, a maleficent told the prince—falsely—that his lover was dead, whereupon he died of grief at Baile’s Strand, a seashore near today’s Dundalk. The spiteful sprite then carried the same story (sadly true this time) to Ailinn, a princess, who also fell down dead of grief.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore
https://twitter.com/hidden_grove/status/1580140668617641985

NeuKelte, to ireland German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

lured and Noísiu back to by vowing that he had lost interest in his bride. Noísiu, homesick, agreed to return. Despite premonitions of doom, Deirdre reluctantly agreed. Under an ominous blood-red cloud she sailed for Ireland with the three sons of Uisneach.
„Immediately upon landing, Noísiu and his brothers were set upon by Conchobar’s warriors, who killed them.“
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

NeuKelte, to ireland German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

When #Conaire arrived at Da Derga’s hostel on the magical feast of #Samhain after breaking a series of sacred vows, he faced his doom within it. A hag came to him demanding entrance. When the king of Tara denied it, she stood on one leg like a crane and cursed him. Immediately, Conaire developed an all-consuming thirst, which no water from any source in #Ireland could quench, and died of it.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore
https://x.com/eDIL_Dictionary/status/866639498586845184

shekinahcancook, to 13thFloor
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

The History and Mystery of Yemen’s ‘Well of Hell’ - The first-ever expedition to the bottom of a startling desert sinkhole found wonders—but only natural ones, by Sarah Durn October 20, 2021

"...Actually, there was a concern more sinister than reptiles and spirits when Al-Kindi finally reached the bottom: unexploded ordnance. Since 2014, Yemen has been in the midst of a bloody civil war and, Al-Kindi explains, pilots sometimes drop bombs into caves, since people seek shelter inside. “So that got me worried a bit,” he says. “Apart from that, it was a very enjoyable moment.” ...Al-Kindi estimates the sinkhole could be several million years old, but its origin, too, is the subject of local legend. One legend says an ancient king forced jinn to carve the “well” as a place to hide his treasure. In others, the well has always served to contain evil, uncontrollable jinn..."

TarkabarkaHolgy, to 13thFloor
@TarkabarkaHolgy@ohai.social avatar

So in honor of #PrideMonth

I am reading an article about how every time ancient art depicts a goddess as sexually alluring, they always get labeled a "goddess of fertility". Even when there is no indication of children, pregnancy, or anything fertile.

The article argues that some goddesses were deities of sex and pleasure, without the maternal fertility aspect.

I am like 🤯 🤯 I have a whole entire archaeology degree and we never addressed this...

#mythology #sex #religion #archaeology

mythologymonday, to 13thFloor
@mythologymonday@thefolklore.cafe avatar

Hello, Myth Lovers! Join us for tomorrow's theme: Mythical Places. What myth features a mythical or legendary place, location, or landscape? Use the tag for reposts. See you tomorrow!

📷Ippicture

@mythology @folklore @TarkabarkaHolgy @juergen_hubert @curiousordinary @wihtlore @FairytalesFood @bevanthomas @FinnFolklorist @Godyssey @GaymerGeek @starrytimepod

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

: „The Celts were not dualistic in their view of the world, preferring to speak of balance rather than conflict between winter and summer, male and female, night and day.“
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

#LegendaryWednesday: During a war to support the king of the province, Suibhne, a king of a small region of Ulster, went mad.
Thinking himself a bird, he climbed a yew tree. Each time he was found by his supporters, he fled again, always finding another tree in which to make his home.
During his mad days, Suibhne spoke in sensuous poetry. Finally, while in the process of dictating his adventures to a scribe, he was stabbed with a spear.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore
https://twitter.com/ElvaBJohnston/status/945955162274791425

NeuKelte, to cymru German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

: According to the British historian Geoffrey of Monmouth, Myrdinn Wyllt “Wild Merlin” was a king/hero who went mad and fled to the woods, where he lived in a bird costume (or perhaps actually transformed himself into a bird). The name derives from a Welsh legendary figure who became famous as the magician Merlin.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

RT @GodysseyPodcast
Foundational to the creation of Merlin is Myrddin Wyllt, or Myrddin the Wild, a bard who in Welsh poetry went mad after a battle and fled to the Caledonian Forest far to the north as a wildman, contemplating his former life but gifted with prophecy.
🖼: A. Lee

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

#LegendaryWednesday: During a war to support the king of the province, Suibhne, a king of a small region of Ulster, went mad.
Thinking himself a bird, he climbed a yew tree. Each time he was found by his supporters, he fled again, always finding another tree in which to make his home.
During his mad days, Suibhne spoke in sensuous poetry. Finally, while in the process of dictating his adventures to a scribe, he was stabbed with a spear.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore
https://twitter.com/ElvaBJohnston/status/945955162274791425

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

Daughter of a warrior, #Mis found her father’s bloodied body after a battle and, desperate with sorrow, drank his blood, which drove her mad. Mis went into the mountains and lived by killing animals with her bare hands, until she heard a harper named Dubh Rois singing. His love redeemed her and the towering mountain range in which she had walked during her mental derangement were named after her Slieve Mish.
Source: Patricia Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and Folklore

Shanmonster, to books
@Shanmonster@c.im avatar

@Knightky recorded my public reading of “Sirens Don’t Sing Underwater“ at BookFest on Sunday. It was a noisy venue, but I got good and close to that microphone and used my theatrical projection. #PublicSpeaking #reading #AuthorsOfMastodon #sirens #mermaids #ShortStory #GreekMythology #mythology #Odysseus #SpeculativeFiction #SFF #CanLit #IndigenousCreatives https://youtu.be/_fOz-di71s8?si=qVRGpKAEC2fiE1MD

GaymerGeek, to folklore
@GaymerGeek@mstdn.games avatar

Disney had a lot to answer for. Apart from Ursula. Mermaids are horrible in folklore and mythology. Beautiful woman with the lower half of the body the tail of a fish. They enchant people with their song and lead them to their death by drowning them for shits and giggles. If they do fall in love with a human they drag them underwater as they think they can breath.

EssAeEm, to 13thFloor
@EssAeEm@mastodon.social avatar

The Amazon River is the domain of Iara. Once an indigenous warrior, Iara was drowned as punishment for killing her jealous brothers in self defense, but instead of dying, she became a mermaid. Now, Iara gets her revenge by luring men into the river to drown them.

📷: Nsey Benajah

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

Clytemnestra, in Greek mythology, was the wife of Agamemnon, and the half-sister of Helen of Troy.

In Aeschylus' Oresteia, she murders Agamemnon – said by Euripides to be her second husband – and the Trojan princess Cassandra, whom Agamemnon had taken as a war prize following the sack of Troy; however, in Homer's Odyssey, her role in Agamemnon's death is unclear and her character is significantly more subdued.

https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14417

https://gutenberg.org/ebooks/1728

#books #literature #mythology

SteveMcCarty, to Japan
@SteveMcCarty@hcommons.social avatar

Two Shintō shrines on Awaji Island are associated with the creation myth of Japan (国生み神話) in the earliest chronicles Kojiki and Nihon Shoki. At Onokoro Island Shrine (自凝島神社), visitors are encouraged to perform rituals to sacred stones for good fortune. The sekirei stone (鶺鴒石) is for couples, with a white and red cord, and I was surprised that my wife grasped my hand and prayed as we held the cords.

We also went to Izanagi Shrine (伊弉諾神宮), dedicated to the two founding gods or pillars (二神、又は二柱) of the archipelago. Worshippers believe that the founding gods dwell in the 900-year-old husband-and-wife camphor tree (夫婦楠). We have seen a similar tree at Ōmiwa Jinja in Nara (大神神社) where two trees merged into one at the base. We also noticed a connection to the Onokoro Island Shrine at the Izanagi Shrine, a small sekirei monument to married couples (夫婦鶺鴒像), and both sites included a bird motif.


@mythology @religion

Izanagi Shrine, dedicated to the founding gods of the Japanese archipelago
Sacred husband-and-wife camphor tree
Nature and culture at the Izanagi Shrine

TarkabarkaHolgy, to Brussels Hungarian
@TarkabarkaHolgy@ohai.social avatar

Everyone in Brussels is all Manneken Pis this and that. But no one tells you about Ridiculously Jacked Baby Hermes 😶

Flipboard, (edited ) to fediverse
@Flipboard@flipboard.social avatar

Today is , a day to feature work from newsrooms that have an active presence in the . If you like what you see in the thread below, follow the profiles and boost their stories. If you're a journo or newsroom that we don't know about (or there's someone that should be on our radar), please comment below.

⤵️

Flipboard,
@Flipboard@flipboard.social avatar

From @gbhnews here's the tale of the Gloucester Sea Serpent, a monster that's arguably older and more widely witnessed than Nessie.

https://www.wgbh.org/news/local/2024-05-22/regaling-tales-of-the-gloucester-sea-serpent-a-forgotten-legend-of-cryptozoology

NeuKelte, to ireland German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

You can see Eddie Lennihan, an Irishman famous for his tales of ’s folklore and , in action here and here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQe9bDPF2-E
Source: Ali Isaac | Substack

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