#Irish legend
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A wicked being, so set in her desire to cause death in some way that she has been banished to the bottom of a great body of water. Given impossible tasks as her form of atonement, for she may only be free again once they are complete.
#BriefBestiary#bestiary#digital art#fantasy#folklore#legend#myth#mythology#ghost#spirit#witch#petticoat loose#irish folklore#irish legend#irish witch#irish spirit#bay lough
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OMG you are in folk fairytales and legend Please can you tell me some of the cuteer ones you found even better if involving bears ? I loved interact with your OC too thanks fir joining and pls relax too from time to time and do not rush in answering me either 🙏🙏 I wish you a wonderful day 🤗🤗😘😘
Yesssss, I love them! Since a very young age I have been an avid reader/student of folklore, fairy tales, myths, and legends.
Below I talk more about my personal history/feelings on the topic, and end with my three favorite fairy tales. I hope they are ��cute” enough for you!
But first I wanted to answer your question about stories featuring bears.
I tried to think of one in my memory where a bear played a prominent part, but turned up empty. I mean, yes, there is the standard “Goldilocks and the Three Bears”, but I assumed you wanted to hear about something off the beaten path.
So I dug around and found this one for you:
"The Bear in the Forest Hut".
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It is a Slavic folk tale about a prince who was cursed to take the shape of a bear, and the brave and kind woman who helped him out of that curse. She had the typical misfortune to have a stupid father and an ‘evil stepmother’ who tries to stop anything good from happening to the heroine.
I liked this one because there is plenty of detail about the trials and tests the girl goes through in order to earn the bear’s trust and break his curse. Even more unique is how the story doesn’t just end right when the curse is broken (like so many folk tales). Instead, it goes on at length about how the two get married, travel over his kingdom, and what happens to the stepmother and stepsister.
@queengiuliettafirstlady What are some of your favorite fairy tales and myths?
How did I come to love fairy tales so much?
I think I can trace it back to my godmother, who was an amazing storyteller. She was Irish, so most of the tales she told me came from the British Isles and dated back to the 12th Century or earlier. The stories I most vividly remember her telling me were about the 3rd Century charismatic (but slightly foolish) folk hero Finn MacCool (or Fionn mac Cumhaill) and his very very clever wife Sadhbh.
As I entered my preteen years (1990s, pre-internet era) a library was built within a 15 minute drive from our rural town. I had never had such a frequent exposure to books before that, except our small school library. My mom would take me to the new public library often and I devoured every book they had on fairy tales and legends.
When I started college, the trend of turning ancient folktales into modern, dark retelling had begun to rise in popularity. Not only was my backpack full of those every week, but now I also had access to scholarly papers through our inter-collegiate online system! I could read published research on people all over the world, those who retraced Charles Perrault’s steps, or compared similar narratives, or discovered a new translation of an old work. It was also during my college years that I discovered The Aaarne-Thompson-Uther index, which categorizes the plots and themes of fairy tales.
When I learned about Perrault and the ATU Index, it changed my self-image.
Of course kids like fairy tales, but we are expected to grow out of those stories as we mature. I still had a deep love of folklore and myths well into my 20s and that made me feel a little silly and childish. But when I discovered that Charles Perreault (a historian in the 17th Century) believed the stories being shared in the oral tradition were important enough to be written down for posterity, that boosted my spirits. And when I stumbled across the ATU Index (begun in 1910, and continues to be updated annually still to this day), which took fairy tales seriously as anthropological artifacts, I was vindicated even more.
These historical efforts were proof that folk lore, legends, and fairy tales weren't just for children.
This short article is a MUST-READ for anyone who wants to have their love for storytelling rekindled and get pumped up to talk about fairy tales. It’s all about hope and courage. I especially appreciated the excerpt from Katherine Rundell when she talks about “the hope that is sharper than teeth”
As I studied more and more obscure stories from around the world, I soon had a list of my top 4 favorites that I came back to:
Katie Crackernuts
The Twelve Dancing Princesses
Beauty and the Beast
The Myth of the Selkie
The middle two I have owned a few printed copies of. They are quite common and have many retellings/variations. But Katie Crackernuts was a story I could only read online; I had never seen it in print.
There are actually similarities between parts of all three stories, which is probably why I love them so much.
I know you asked for ‘cute’ ones, but I don’t know if these really are that adorable. They all have happy endings for the heroines. Does that count? LOL
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Katie Crackernuts (collected by Andrew Lange, first printed 1889)
This is a Scottish story about two sisters, one plain but clever (Katie) and one beautiful but simple (Anne). Despite this difference, they loved and supported one another as much as two sisters could. Through no fault of her own, Anne was cursed (you guessed it, by an evil stepmother) with the head of a sheep (or sometimes a donkey or goat, depending on the version) because the stepmother was jealous of her beauty. Katie put a hood over Anne to disguise her and left the house together, never to return.
They eventually came to the kingdom where there was a sick prince. His parents offered rich rewards for anyone who could heal his mysterious disease. Katie knew there had to be a reason normal medicine wasn’t working. She thought perhaps he was under a curse, too. Yep, he was going out at night in a trance to go under a hill to dance with fairies. So she watched and listened and investigated until she discovered the cure and how to administer it. Turns out the way to lift her sister’s curse was under that hill, as well!
She out-smarted the fairies, collected the items from them, and followed the instructions precisely. He grew well and discovered he loved her during all their time together while she was patiently investigating. When she used the cure on her sister, Anne’s sheep head turned back into a human one and the prince’s brother fell in love with her on the spot (of course he did). It was a lovely double-wedding.
The Twelve Dancing Princesses (collected by the Brothers Grimm, first printed 1812)
This is about twelve sisters who are constantly tired and ruining their expensive shoes every night, and no one can find out why. The king has offered rich rewards and even marriage to the most beautiful of his daughters, but any man who steps up to the challenge either dies, fails the task, or is never seen again. Until one clever man (who has been watching this happen over and over) decides to try solving the mystery. The eldest sister (the most intelligent and haughty of the siblings) tries to stop him each time, but he outsmarts her as he follows the princesses into a fairy forest where they dance all night until their shoes fall apart and they drop from exhaustion.
Just like Katie in the story before, he is observant and waits until he has all the information and proof he needs to confront the princesses. He convinces the king, who is angry that his daughters were escaping every night. The man explains they were under a spell that compelled them to sneak out. The king offers him the most beautiful daughter (who is also the youngest and the most silly), but the man opts to marry the eldest because she was the only one who came close to matching wits.
Katie Crackernuts has much in common with The Twelve Dancing Princesses.
Both have very strict rules for entering into the world of fairies, and the “wasting sickness” that comes upon a human who spends too much time in that world (which is also a metaphor for other maladies that were rampant during those centuries, such as tuberculosis). I enjoy that theme of “Good luck if you’re beautiful because your looks won’t save you. You need to be wise, patient, and clever in this world.”
Beauty and the Beast
This was one of my favorites long before Disney made their movie. Almost everyone knows how the story goes, so I won’t make this long post even longer by summarizing it here. The bravery and selflessness of the heroine was very inspiring to me, and I loved the idea of being surrounded by talking furniture and not a single human! I was a very introverted kid. And I guess I loved the idea of a sad prince in an unloveable disguise who needed to feel loved.
Another thing I think is neat about that story is there is an actual author: Gabrielle-Suzanne de Villeneuve, published the story in 1740. Most folklore and fairy tales have a shared origin and no single creator. Not so for Beauty and the Beast. This one has a bonafide author, which makes it unique. Not only that, but the author was a woman!
What Beauty and the Beast has in common with Katie Crackernuts is charity, mercy, humility, and selflessness.
The heroine not only saves herself, but she saves those who are entrusted to her. Who needs a prince, right?? Katie didn’t have to leave home to take care of her cursed sister, but she did. She didn’t have to agree to help the sick prince, but she did. Belle didn’t have to sacrifice herself in her father’s place in that unreasonable pact, but she did. She could have been disagreeable, rude, and throwing herself a pity party the entire time she was captive in the Beast’s castle, but instead she did her best to keep her spirits up and not hate her captor. (Readers: don’t come at me with the whole “Stockholm Syndrome” comment trying to be witty; it’s an old joke that was never funny in the first place.) Katie also tried hard to make the best of an awful situation, and she was never resentful to Anne or put her on a guilt trip. I was inspired by the important values and virtues portrayed by these two heroines.
The Legend of the Selkie
You asked for ‘cute’ stories, but this last one is anything but cute. The Celtic legend of the Selkie is heartbreaking, and there is hardly ever a happy ending. I heard briefly about it as a kid, but never found a published story to read. The oral tradition of the tale goes back to the 13th Century, but it didn’t make it into many books. Then the movie The Secret of Roan Inish came out in 1995. I was 15 at the time and didn’t have my driver’s license yet, so I begged a family member to bring me to the only theater in the entire state that was showing this independent film, over an hour away. It was magical. I bought the DVD as soon as it was available. It was the only thing I could find at that time (remember, the internet wasn’t really used for entertainment in 1995 like it is now) that displayed the Selkie myth, which is:
There are some special seals in the sea who can shed their seal-skin and turn themselves into human women. They are beautiful, quiet, and hard-working. And therefore they are much sought-after as wives by the lonely fishermen of the islands. The legend says that if you find a Selkie in her human form and take her seal-skin away from her, she is yours for the rest of your life. You can imagine the life of servitude that awaits the poor woman! She is usually desperate to turn the house inside out looking for her seal skin and return to the sea, or if she doesn’t find it she will murder her husband.
Fascinating!
Oof, okay. That post went on really long. Sorry. When I start to talk about fairy tales and folklore, I have a difficult time keeping it short, lol. And I didn't even get into the Greek myths! Yikes.
#fairy tales#storytelling#folklore#legends#myths#folktales#Katie Crackernuts#Kate Crackernuts#Selkie#Beauty and the Beast#The Twelve Dancing Princesses#Twelve Dancing Princesses#The Bear in the Forest Hut#Irish legend#Slavic stories#Finn MacCool#Fionn mac Cumhaill#Charles Perrault#Aaarne-Thompson-Uther index#ATU Index#Andrew Lange#Brothers Grimm#Grimms Fairy Tales#Gabrielle-Suzanne de Villeneuve#my asks#Celtic folklore
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Guinevere and Iseult: Cartoon for Stained Glass, William Morris. 1862.
#art#aesthetic#art history#historical fashion#historical art#women in art#victorian#women#pseudo medieval art#medieval art#1860s art#medieval aesthetic#guinevere#iseult#Isolde#arthurian legend#medieval fashion#1860s#william morris#stained glass#tristan and iseult#Arthur and Guinevere#king arthur#medieval legend#french medieval#welsh medieval#Irish medieval#engraving#cartoon#fashion
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siblings
#liltaire's art#digital art#critical role#critrole#critical role fanart#tlovm#vox machina#the legend of vox machina#critical role tlovm#critrole c1#critrole fanart#legend of vox machina#vaxildan#vax'ildan#vex'ahlia#cr vax#cr vex#percy de rolo#cr cassandra#cassandra de rolo#and thats how i do siblings in art#yes my personal hc vex is a lipstick girlie#and she's more tanned than vax#percy and cass both pale as in that old meme irish girl sunbathing no not her other one#i'm too lazy to draw clothes lol
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Me: This is a really cool Neolithic monument, does anyone know who built it?
Irish folklore: Fionn mac Cumhaill.
Me: Ah. Interesting. This is a gorgeous and unique geographical feature, I wonder how it came to be…
Irish folklore: That was the work of Fionn mac Cumhaill as well.
Me: Ok. Wow. He was a very busy guy. Any idea who constructed this Neolithic tomb?
Irish folklore: Fionn mac Cumhaill. He did it.
Me: Is all of this…
Irish folklore: Yes. It was all Fionn mac Cumhaill.
#a bit of an over exaggeration but I do find it amusing#a lot of Irish folklore makes enough sense for you to think it may be verbal legend passed down for generations#but I have a hard time believing Fionn mac Cumhaill did all of that#could be wrong!
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A link design!!! For a story that’s solid enough in my head to possibly become a comic ehehe
some notes:
Link has been Heroing for some time now, with minimal success. He’s a bit grumpy.
he also has a bulky brown overcoat, but I haven’t figured out what it looks like yet so i didn’t draw it lol
the gloves are to hide his scar, but also help in the cold. Because this Hyrule is rather cold :)
The overtunics are both pretty new, which is the only reason they aren’t torn to bits. The same person who made them mended his pants and made his hat, which is why the patches match cloth in other parts of his outfit.
the scar on his face is from a lizalfos. I figured, if the Dilophosaurus in Jurassic Park gets to spit acid, then shouldn’t a lizalfos get to too? So it’s an acid burn. He’s lucky he dodged most of it!
I’m still figuring out how to accurately depict the scars, so they don’t look quite right yet! With research and practice I’ll get there!
the other scar I will not get into for plot reasons hehe
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This is the same story the above Zelda design is for!! I’ve posted her design in varying stages before, here, here and here, but the story in the previous posts has changed a bit since!! There are also some really old doodles of Link if you (hehe) follow the links.
the above is Zelda’s formal dress. I designed it with a girl a little younger than her in mind, because she loses most of her wardrobe when she’s about 12! So I really ought to draw this on her younger self XD
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Finally, scrapped Ganondorf and Link designs!!!
don’t look into these too much as I’m only putting them here because I’ll never post them otherwise; they do not fit the story at all lol
Ganondorf is gonna be… really hard to design… I made him a very complex character and his personality is so intertwined with the story there is a lot to be taken into account XD
ummm that’s all for now!!! I doubt many people will read all this but feel free to send asks if you have questions nevertheless :D
#dreamers au#character design#dreamers link#Dreamers zelda#Dreamers ganondorf#Loz au#tloz au#the legend of zelda#my art#art#the legend of zelda au#I love this story so much guys#For Link it’s like a post apocalyptic if-i-dont-do-this-or-the-world-will-end situation with both American Western and Irish folktale vibes#meanwhile Zelda’s living her best life in some sort of buddy-cop style adventure rom com#and ganondorf’s stuck in some kind of film noir horror story merged with high fantasy and a lot of really gloomy weather#it’s definitely a comfort story and I haven’t even written much of it
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sexy woman! 🌟💚🌼💫
#katie mcgrath#lena luthor#king arthur legend of the sword#warner bros#supergirl#morgana#dracula#gothic#the tudors#irish girl#dublin#movies#series
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this edit.
jayce saves viktor in each timeline the same reason orpheus looks back. love. "Why does anyone commit acts others deem unspeakable? For love." orpheus going down to the underworld to bring eurydice home. jayce going into the centre of the battle, alone, to bring viktor home
jayce is always going to save viktor. he's always going to find his way back to viktor. even if it means risking the fate of everyone else they know, of the entire word, jayce risks it all because of LOVE. no doubt if people knew jayce would doom entire universes for viktor they'd curse and scorn at him - what a ridiculous, violent, horrific thing to do. unspeakable. but jayce does it for love. he does it for viktor, & he'll do it again
#i also LOVEEE HADES TOWN#theres another version of jayce to irish orpheus WHICH I LOVEEEE BECAUSE THE YEARNING IS SO STRONG#jayvik#jayvik edit#arcane#viktor#jayce#jayce talis#viktor arcane#arcane league of legends#jayce x viktor#viktor x jayce#viktor league of legends#jayce league of legends#text
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Launching tomorrow! Celtic illuminated stories for children.
#celtic art#calligraphy#illumination#medieval#celtic#irish#knotwork#saints#animals#nature#secret of kells#book of kells#autumn#cottagecore#forest school#hermits#legends
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A man so infamous the Devil himself went to take him to Hell, but the result of that series of events, from trapping the Devil in his pocket with a crucifix to trapping the Devil in an apple tree surrounded by crucifixes, led to Jack's eternal unrest. Never shall the man known as Stingy Jack find finality. ...Happy Halloween!
#BriefBestiary#bestiary#digital art#fantasy#folklore#legend#stingy jack#drunk jack#flaky jack#jack the smith#jack o' lantern#irish folklore#irish legend#ghost#spirit#wandering soul#trickster
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According to Irish Legend, the Gates of Heaven open at midnight on Christmas Eve.
It was thought that on Christmas Eve the gates of Heaven were specially opened so that anyone dying at that moment could pass into Paradise without going through Purgatory. It was also believed that no prayer would go unanswered on this most holy of nights.
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Did we ever find any stories about an elf falling in love with a human, and it being all tragic that the human will die so soon while the elf carries on, and the elf considers giving up immortality because of The Love So Deep, only the elf is the guy, and the human is female?
No shade to Arwen and Aragorn of course, but like all things Tolkien, people seem to have copied their trope without much imagination.
Is there a book/movie/game/whatever out there where a male immortal voluntarily joins his mortal wife in dying early because he loves her so much? There must be.
#thwart those tropes#immortality#elves#twoo wuv#I far prefer it when they both get to live a long time#instead of both living a short time#but I'm curious#the story's got to be out there#feels like there's at least an Irish legend or something like that
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Apex Legends as Pokémon Trainers #6: Bloodhound
Went with their young blood skin to give ❄️Talos vibes❄️
#apex legends#pokemon#bloodhound#vanillish#corviknight#apex legends fanart#pokemon fanart#fanart#illustration#video game#battle royale#digital art#photoshop#wacom intuos#irish artist#illustrator
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So I was lucky enough to be a part of a zine filled with other talented artists from a variety of animation studios here in Ireland! Our theme was folklore and I decided to draw The Morrígan
It was so much fun to do and I'm so proud of how it came out
You can see the whole zine over on Instagram @ zinemachine01
#art#artists on tumblr#art on tumblr#digital art#morrigan#irish mythology#irish myths#myths#ireland#legends#the morrigan#crows#crow#birds#goddess#illustration#digital illustration
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The average ulster cycle war: Medb wants a cow. Stop her getting a cow.
Compared to
The average fenian cycle war: A descendant of Balor from Scandinavia has invaded Ireland and placed a Gaes on Fionn to sleep with his wife. Meanwhile, Clan morna is mad at Clan Bascne over some meat, and the high king hates the power the fianna holds but also needs them to shoo off the foreign invaders. The only solution for all of these problems is to go on an island hopping adventure where various Tuatha de will join the fianna, and Mananaan will go on a boat. The Battle of Magh Tuireadh will, for some reason, be recounted, and the fianna will have to stay in a hostel where they will be ambushed. Several magical monsters. To kill the random Scandinavian king, fionn will have to get a sword forged by the classical god vulcan and / or the King of Alba and / or on the day of the birth of the guy they are going to kill this will require about 20 more adventures. However, this won't matter anyway because Diarmuid, Goll, or Osgar will kill the guy in single combat without these weapons anyway. Fionn will never actually sleep with the king's wife, but they will marry.
#early modern irish literature#irish mythology#gaelic mythology#legend#history#meme post#ulster cycle#fenian cycle
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Hey are you interested in Irish Mythology? Are you interested in hearing the *actual* myths and legends from someone who has a PhD on the subject and has devoted his life to learning and pruning out all the bullshit that's swollen the myths over the years?
Then do I have a podcast for you.
Check out https://open.spotify.com/show/3sNnxgEjI2wVHtrdt4n2ND?si=5Ra18LJGQTeODQY7cbsHYw
My friend gives you the actual myths, what has been added over the years, proper pronunciations and more. Go check it out and suppose Emmet!
#irish history#irish mythology#actual researched myths and legends#signal boost#history#my follow nerds
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