Glastig – A Scottish fairy-woman with goat-like features
The Glastig is a figure in Scottish folklore, often described as a beautiful yet enigmatic woman with goat-like features—most commonly, […]
The Glastig is a figure in Scottish folklore, often described as a beautiful yet enigmatic woman with goat-like features—most commonly, […]
Coblynau are the Welsh equivalents of mine spirits or knockers, believed to inhabit the depths of hills and underground tunnels
Urisk is a solitary fae spirit found in Scottish Highland folklore, particularly associated with remote pools, waterfalls, and secluded glens.
Nuckelavee is widely regarded as one of the most horrifying entities in Scottish folklore, specifically tied to the Orkney Islands.
The Green Man is a symbolic figure prevalent in British and European art, especially in medieval church carvings. Portrayed as
The Clurichaun is an often overlooked yet mischievous fairy from Irish folklore, akin to the more famous leprechaun but distinguished
Vough is a lesser-known Welsh water spirit, sometimes spelled “Vaugh,” associated with lakes and secluded mountain tarns. Like other Celtic
Nursery Bogey is a broad term encompassing the various child-scaring spirits, monsters, or bogeymen invoked in British households to keep
A Fetch is a peculiar phenomenon in British and Irish folklore: the appearance of a spectral double or apparition of
Cutty Dyer is a local bogeyman figure from the county of Devon in England, especially around the town of Totnes.