Icy Sedgwick's Blog, page 4

January 18, 2025

The Green Children of Woolpit: Fairies, Aliens, or Something Else?

According to legend, two green children wandered into a village in 12th-century Suffolk. No one knew who they were or where they came from. Their refusal to eat and unfamiliar language made locals wary. Over time, they gradually assimilated, and told a fantastic story of their origins. Were they fairies? Lost children with big imaginations? […]

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Published on January 18, 2025 01:30

January 11, 2025

The Folklore of Dowsing, aka Water Witching

Dowsing is a fascinating form of divination since it is often used to find water, minerals, or even lost items. While other forms of divination like tarot or botanomancy seek to provide information, here the information is often of a tangible sort. Rather than telling a fortune, or providing a prophetic dream that must be […]

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Published on January 11, 2025 01:30

January 4, 2025

The Geordie Dialect: Its History and Some Basic Phrases

There can be a tendency to view folklore as antiquated customs, old legends, or outdated practices. Yet folklore is not disconnected from contemporary life, and is an ever-evolving part of our lived experience. Folk music and folk art are two obvious branches, yet dialect and language is another. Louise Pound refers to dialect as “linguistic […]

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Published on January 04, 2025 01:30

December 28, 2024

The Loch Ness Monster: Kelpie, Legend, or Giant Eel?

The Loch Ness Monster is perhaps one of the world’s most enduring mysteries. Does a giant reptile really lurk in a Scottish loch? Has it somehow survived for millennia on its own? Or is it something darker and more dangerous? It is, after all, a monster. Its legend dates to the 7th century, although recorded […]

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Published on December 28, 2024 01:30

December 21, 2024

Legends of RMS Titanic: Mummy Curses and Ghost Captains

Few maritime disasters have captured the public imagination like the RMS Titanic. Perhaps it’s because of the relatively recent nature of its sinking, compared to the loss of the Mary Rose warship. The countless films, documentaries, and exhibitions probably help in prolonging fascination. New theories and reconstructions attempt to pin blame on one factor or […]

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Published on December 21, 2024 01:30

December 14, 2024

Blue Men of the Minch: Scotland’s Storm Kelpies

When we look at types of folkloric creature, we often encounter the same types in different places, such as mermaids or fairies. But occasionally, you encounter a creature so localised that it only appears in a single place. The Blue Men of the Minch are one such example. Feared by sailors, the Blue Men of […]

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Published on December 14, 2024 01:30

December 12, 2024

The Lament (Flash Fiction)

The bow scrapes across the strings, tentative at first, and faltering notes tumble into the twilight. As the prelude gives way to the melody, the bow glides back and forth, and delicate fingers caress the neck of the instrument. I remember those fingers, so long and pale, even in life. The violin sings its mournful […]

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Published on December 12, 2024 00:33

December 7, 2024

Legends of Submerged Villages: Divine Punishment and Drowned Churches

If we think of submerged cities, lost beneath the waves, we’re probably most likely to think of Atlantis, that thought-experiment that took on a life of its own. Closer to home, there’s the lost Welsh kingdom of Cantre’r Gwaelod, believed to lie beneath the water between Bae Ceredigion and Ynys Enlli. Yet there are countless […]

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Published on December 07, 2024 01:30

November 30, 2024

The Mouse in Folklore: Medicine, Omens, and Collecting Teeth

The humble mouse appears in a surprising amount of folklore. Both a harbinger of death if spotted in the house, and a medical remedy for a range of ailments, it seems the mouse both harms and heals. This reputation even stretches back to ancient Egypt, demonstrating just how ambivalent humans have felt about the tiny […]

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Published on November 30, 2024 01:30

November 23, 2024

Horses in Folklore: Black Bess, Hag Riding, and Spectral Steeds

Humans first domesticated horses in around 3500 BC (Tallis 2012). Since then, they’ve pulled our chariots and carts, carried royalty and soldiers, worked on farms, and been steadfast companions. Horses are actually a prey animal, which perhaps explains their vulnerability to supernatural attack by witches and fairies. Yet as the stories in this article will […]

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Published on November 23, 2024 01:30