Godyssey, to random
@Godyssey@pagan.plus avatar

There is no more famous pirate in East Asia than the woman known in the West as Ching Shih, her true historical name being Zheng Yi Sao, Pirate Queen of the South China Seas. Likely a prostitute who married a well-known pirate, she soon proved a capable commander and soon organized a confederacy of pirates, helping one another against the Qing government and other foes. Taking over for her husband, she proved an even more capable pirate and many flocked to her, women especially, for her egalitarian attitude and redistribution of wealth from the aristocratic Qing Chinese government. Even aided by Portuguese ships, the Chinese could not capture her and could not stop her fleet. At her height, she sailed a fleet of 400 ships with 40 to 60 thousand sailors. When the end came and she surrendered, Zheng Yi Sao could not be killed by the Chinese due to her power and influence, and instead a retirement was negotiated, one that was quite favorable to her and allowed her an easy life: for a pirate career spanning 10 years from 1801 to 1810, that's quite something. She retied to Guangdong, running an infamous gambling house and dying at the comfortable and respectable age of 66 in 1844: hail the Pirate Queen of China!

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

„Probably because fine weather was so important during harvest time, the #Cailleach was seen as a weather spirit, sometimes called the old gloomy woman or envisioned as a crane with sticks in her beak which forecast storms.“
Source: P. Monaghan `Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #folklore

RT @GodysseyPodcast
The Cailleach is the embodiment of winter itself, an old woman and witch who flies like a storm over Ireland and Scotland and wields a powerful hammer that can break trees during a cold snap. A trickster and almost certainly a goddess, she can bless too. #FairyTaleTuesday

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

: High King Art mac Cuinn had a one night stand with Achtan, daughter of a Druid/Smith named Olc Acha. One night, however, as Achtan slept, exhausted from her day’s travelling, her infant, mac Airt, was stolen by a she-wolf and raised alongside her cubs.
Source: Ali Isaac
https://twitter.com/DaraSands/status/1325749794388709376

rorystarr, (edited ) to books
@rorystarr@mstdn.social avatar
NeuKelte, to random German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

RT @FinnFolklorist

Gold-Tree and Silver-Tree (Craobh-Oir agus Craobh-Airgid): a Gaelic tale from Scotland. A king had a wife, Silver-Tree, and a daughter, Gold-Tree. One day they walked by a pond, and Silver-Tree asked a trout if she were the most beautiful queen in the world.

DarkGalloway, to Scotland
@DarkGalloway@mastodon.scot avatar

An' siccan pranks by the haunted thorn
They hae the po'er to play,
That mortal man was never born
Could see , an' live till day!

One stormy night, a young McCulloch gallops away from a hearty gathering at the House of Moure, heading for the old kirk at Kirkmaiden.

He can’t say he wasn’t warned!

https://darkgalloway.wordpress.com/2024/02/27/the-man-wrap-tree/

GaymerGeek, to folklore
@GaymerGeek@mstdn.games avatar

The leannán sídhe Is a fairy from Irish folklore. The name means “The Fairy Lover” She is an etheric beauty that takes a lover and will eventually drain their life force and sanity in exchange for creative Inspiration. So they live a short life but an inspired one.

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

#Fergus Mac Roich was obliged to fight to the death against his own foster son #CúChulainn so that Queen #Medb's army could invade #Ulster. To save face and the life of a hero, they agreed that this time the younger CúChulainn would give way, but next time Fergus would. And so it came to pass.
#nonviolence

RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #FairyTaleTuesday: Muirgen, son of #Ireland’s chief bard, Seanchán Toirpéist, called up the ghost of the great warrior Fergus at his grave.…
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1602675067271405573

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

: The Abbey Lubber haunted the wine cellar of any British abbey where lazy monks were overfond of drink. The best known was a spectral horse who dressed in a monkish robe and lived in a monastery under the name of Friar Rush. The wealthy and dissolute prior attempted to chastise the alleged friar for behavior more alcoholic than was welcome in that liberal establishment, but the Abbey Lubber assumed his real form and vanished, leaving the monks both frightened and chastened.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore
https://twitter.com/artmonogatari/status/1561341989488058372?t=kNiiBcEjFC9H1RoeLD3waQ&s=09

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

: In the fairy tale The King Who Wished to Marry His Daughter from , the Cinderella motif also appears: Here, too, the prince finds the right woman for the rest of his life, with the help of her shoe, which she has lost.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_King_Who_Wished_to_Marry_His_Daughter

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

: Peel Castle on the west coast of the Isle of Man was reputedly haunted by the Moddey Dhoo (Manx Gaelic, meaning "black dog"), a phantom black hound in Manx .
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moddey_Dhoo
https://x.com/GenevievePuttay/status/1679046442483167232?t=yg_RJsb8XCuODW2TYgBj_A&s=09

Peel Castle, photocredit 1. Neu-Kelte

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

: According to ‘The Destruction of Da Derga’s Hostel’ the poet dreamed the future king would arrive in naked and surrounded by birds. Young Mór was out hunting birds, when the leader of the flock suddenly threw off his feathers and revealed himself as the King of Birds, and Conaire’s true father. He advised Conaire of the details of the new prophecy, whereupon the young man immediately removed his clothes and set off for Tara accompanied by the Bird King and his flock. Thus the prophecy was fulfilled.
Source: Ali Isaac „The Aisling | Not so Sweet Dreams in Irish Mythology“

RT @eDIL_Dictionary
Conaire Mór ...in rígh deidhinach berar la siabra i ríge
Conaire Mór, the last king brought into kingship by spectres
[Celtica 28, 1…
https://twitter.com/eDIL_Dictionary/status/866639498586845184

rorystarr, (edited ) to books
@rorystarr@mstdn.social avatar

Folklore read live!

In this odd tale, a great Christian Cathedral is built by the DEVIL at the behest of the town.

Find out why LIVE right NOW: https://youtube.com/live/uE_5uUJimZo

VictorianGothik, to history

In Mary E. Braddon's 'My Wife's Promise' (1868), an explorer on a rescue mission in the arctic sees the ghost of his wife. Before leaving home, she made a promise to him which he thought was impossible to keep, and is heartbroken to find she kept her word.

Serafino Macchiati's painting 'Une Discorde' (1908). It shows a woman in an elegant white dress walking solemnly away from a man, looking back at him. The man is seated and twists round to watch her go.

bevanthomas, to random
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

Though werewolves are usually ravening monsters in European fairy tales, werebears are more sympathetic. They are often people cursed with bear-form who wander the wilderness sad and alone until someone can break the curse and give them back their humanity.
🎨​ Anton Lomaev

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

: High King Art mac Cuinn had a one night stand with Achtan, daughter of a druid/smith named Olc Acha. One night, however, as Achtan slept, exhausted from her day’s travelling, her infant, mac Airt, was stolen by a she-wolf and raised alongside her cubs.
Source: Ali Isaac | Substack
https://twitter.com/DaraSands/status/1325749794388709376

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

: „As the Sun grows warmer, so life begins to show through the soil. Small signs at first – the daffodils and crocuses – then more green as the bluebells and wood anemones spread through the woodland. Plants are seen by some as inanimate greenery with no actual feelings and life force. But see life in all living things, from rocks and stones, to rivers and springs, plants and trees – all life is sacred.“
Source: https://druidry.org/druid-way/teaching-and-practice/druid-festivals/spring-equinox-alban-eilir

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

: „Once, the cat was much admired for its independence, stealth and hunting prowess. In medieval times, this love of cats, particularly black cats, was considered a sign of witchcraft, and the cats were burned alive, along with the women who owned them, or were thought to own them.“
Source: https://aliisaac.substack.com/

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

: For our ancestors, „winter was harsh and bleak, a time of hardship, and a struggle for survival. The return of summer’s warmth and plenty was not, for them, guaranteed...

The Winter Solstice was the turning point upon which their fortunes hinged. Light triumphed over darkness as the days lengthened and the nights grew shorter. The sun was growing stronger in the sky. It was a sign, a promise of better times to come. And that was something worth celebrating.“
Credit @aliisaac_
/
RT @nikhewitt
Grianstad an gheimhridh sona daoibh 😉

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

#Celtic #FairyTaleTuesday: The Dagda had an enchanted harp, in which the music was spell-bound, and he alone could call it forth. When he played, summer would break in bud and blossom all over the land; or winter with its snows and frosts would come; or sleep or laughter or tears would fall on all who heard the music.
Source: Heroes of the Dawn by Violet Russel

bevanthomas, to folklore
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

In his medieval collection of Norse myths, Snorri Sturluson mentions "dark elves," but it's unclear if he means dwarves or a totally different subterranean creature. As no earlier Norse source mentions dark elves, some people think Sturluson invented the term.
🎨 Lorenz Frølich

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

: The thorny nature of furze, also known as gorse or whin, means that it is often viewed as having protective powers. In #Wales it was said to guard against witches.
Source: https://druidry.org/resources/furze

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

: „A buggane was a huge ogre-like creature native to the Isle of Man. A shapeshifter, the buggane is generally described as a malevolent being that can appear as a large black calf or human with ears or hooves of a horse. Its natural form is described as "covered with a mane of coarse, black hair; it had eyes like torches, and glittering sharp tusks". Another tale describes it as a huge man with bull's horns, glowing eyes and large teeth. As magical creatures, bugganes were unable to cross water or stand on hallowed ground.“
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buggane
/
RT @Katinesss
The Buggane, in folklore, is the ultimate baddie: a supernatural ogre-like creature, with long black hair, cloven hooves, claws, tusks, and a blood-red mouth that decapitates its prey. Sometimes the fairies would hire a Buggane to punish a human who displeased them. 3/

rorystarr, (edited ) to books
@rorystarr@mstdn.social avatar

Folklore read live!

These saintly defenders of the High Alp's fauna live under vaults of glittering crystal!
But why do they leave paradise to help us?

Find LIVE right NOW: https://youtube.com/live/6yoYAvMGaXA

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

: One night, a group of merfolk shed their seal skins to play on the shore. A Shetlander found a skin and a beautiful mermaid lamenting its loss. He refused to return it, offering marriage instead. They lived together for years and had children. One day, a child found the hidden skin. The mermaid bid her children goodbye, returned to the sea, and left the human world forever. She confessed to her second husband, who stood miserably on the shore: “I always loved my first husband best.”
Source: The Mermaid Wife - Folklore Scotland

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • JUstTest
  • kavyap
  • DreamBathrooms
  • thenastyranch
  • magazineikmin
  • tacticalgear
  • khanakhh
  • Youngstown
  • mdbf
  • slotface
  • rosin
  • everett
  • ngwrru68w68
  • Durango
  • megavids
  • InstantRegret
  • cubers
  • GTA5RPClips
  • cisconetworking
  • ethstaker
  • osvaldo12
  • modclub
  • normalnudes
  • provamag3
  • tester
  • anitta
  • Leos
  • lostlight
  • All magazines