Icy Sedgwick's Blog, page 4
April 19, 2025
Holy Cross Church and the Witches of Wallsend
Churches can be sites of divination, haunted locations, and important community hubs. Yet in Wallsend, Holy Cross Church is notorious for a tale of witches and heroic derring-do. The ruin might not look like it now, but appearances can be deceptive. It’s not just a chapel. Throw in a midnight ritual, grotesque women, a desecrated […]
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April 12, 2025
The Tale of Enon Chapel: London’s Most Notorious Burial Site
Here in the 21st century, death and burial often occur as part of a sanitised process. Death happens away from home, often in hospitals, and funerals are usually tidy, respectful affairs. We can forget that this wasn’t always the case. Our quaint, inner city gardens were sometimes putrescent burial grounds, crammed with rotting remains. Even […]
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April 5, 2025
The Folklore of Lychgates and Popular Burial Monuments
You would absolutely know a lychgate if you saw one. Lychgates make popular backdrops for wedding photos, and provide a quaint air of rustic charm to country churchyards. They’re the wooden or stone gateway, complete with tiled roof, that marks the entry into the churchyard. Not all churches have them, and they’re far more common […]
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March 29, 2025
Folklore and Church Names: Preserving Local History
I started out with the intention of looking at unusual church names. The problem was, this offered the potential to accidentally poke fun at their congregations. It also didn’t help that most churches in the UK have pretty similar names. They’re named for individual saints, like St Nicholas’ Cathedral in Newcastle, or even all saints […]
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March 22, 2025
Origins of Sports Team Names: Preserving Folklore and History
This month, we’ve been exploring the origins of various names; streets, places, and even pubs. Looking at the origins of sports team names might seem antithetical to folklore. Yet sport forms part of the ritual calendar for many people, whether on a personal or a mass scale. Look at the good luck rituals people follow […]
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March 15, 2025
The Folklore of British Pub Names Linked to Local History
There is no shortage of bizarre pub names in the UK. Some of them appear to be a combination of random objects, like the Frog and Nightgown. Others have a local story behind their odd name. I’ve covered unusual pub names before, so consider this Part 2. Yet when I started researching these examples, it […]
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March 8, 2025
Strange Street Names: From The Philog to Dog Leap Stairs
Unlike place names, which often give us information who once lived somewhere, street names can be a different case entirely. Sometimes they bear the names of notable (and often now infamous) people. Other times they refer to long-gone industries performed in the area – you can guess what happened on Cock Lane in London, site […]
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March 1, 2025
From Coven to Hot Coffee: The Folklore of Place Names Part 2
Place names are important and pass on a lot of valuable information, even if we no longer understand how to interpret it. Within them, they tell us who used to live in an area, or what natural features were important. Some of them even end up with a range of legends to explain names that […]
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February 22, 2025
Goats in Folklore: From the Farmyard Doctor to the Devil
When I decided to write about goats in folklore, I thought I would find plenty of content. After all, they appear in mythology. Look at Amalthea, the goat reputed to have raised Zeus in Greek myth. Or the goats associated with the goatherd in the Auriga constellation. That’s before we get anywhere near the sign […]
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February 15, 2025
Pigs in Folklore: From Piggy Banks to Spectral Sows
Pigs appear in folklore in somewhat unusual ways. Sometimes, they choose the location where a church should be built. Or they appear as phantoms, haunting misty moorland. Sailors or fishermen considered pigs unlucky, and wouldn’t even say ‘pig’ at sea. If they met a pig on their way to the boat, they would postpone sailing. […]
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