Victorian Urban Legends: Canine Protector June 20, 2022
Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern***I’m putting a series of Victorian Urban Legends posts up to draw the reader’s attention to my forthcoming book: The Nail in the Skull and Other Victorian Urban Legends. This legend (with full references) will appear in a second volume. If anyone can fill in missing pieces or offer other sources… I’ll be grateful and you’ll […]
Monsters with Eyes Like Saucers April 22, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernIntroduction: Eyes like Saucers Eyes like saucers comes up again and again in accounts of the supernatural: ghosts sometimes have them, ditto demons and ‘black dogs’ almost always have them. But why? What do these descriptions mean? Where do they come from? Monsters Let’s start with some typical creepy saucer descriptions. A bogey at […]
Dog Glove Magic Disease Near Dublin (or Leicester) June 16, 2017
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalElder daughter’s birthday party in a swimming pool coming up in minutes so this is just a curiosity pulled out of the rusty filing cabinet without too much thought. The following is dated to 1341 and appeared in the Annals of Ireland. The Irish annalistic tradition is incredibly complex in its early phase and rather […]
Three Sheep Killers: 1904-1905 February 27, 2017
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernWhen we experience unusual phenomenon then, of course, our filters are almost as important as the phenomenon itself. Take a series of sheep killing cases that recently made quite an impression on Beach. The narrative breaks down into three sections: Mystery, Mystery Solved, Perception. Each of these in three parts: a, b and c. The […]
Victorian Urban Legend: Eating Fido December 6, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernYou all know the story. Young couple go out on their first date and decide to drive out to the twilight lake with a Kentucky Fried Chicken. They arrive and in the dark start chewing on the delicious white meat only for the girl to say that hers tastes strange. She takes a number of […]
Execution by Dogs? May 26, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernNorth Korea is a frequent source of joy for bizarrists: if not for the poor wretched put upon people who live there. For example, last month Beach wrote up the Indian custom of death by cannon, only to be trumped by Kim Jong-un who had just executed his minister of defence with an anti-aircraft gun. This got Beach […]
The Non-Discovery of Shuck May 26, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernShuck (aka shock) was a demonic hound that haunted much of East Anglia in the early modern period: and in the absence of satisfactory ancient and medieval records may have been running around with blazing red saucer sized eyes, since the time when the druids were the new kids on the Neolithic block. However, in […]
Slaughter Hounds in Celtic Ireland May 21, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, MedievalA recent story on the supposed archaeological discovery of shuck – [sorry can’t give links, wordpress playing up] – has set me thinking about large violent dogs in history, the way that ancient and medieval peoples used these animals and one particularly evil-sounding example: the Irish archu or slaughter hound. First, though, some background. Dogs, of […]
1937 Cornish Black Dog Scare May 4, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryThe phantom dog of Linkinhorne was one of the south-western dandy dogs that have terrified locals since time immemorial. What is particularly interesting though about this dog from the past is that it returned in 1937 and caused a local panic. Here are a number of the best stories from the outbreak. The first reference […]
In Praise of Bouncer and Co December 11, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern***note because of stupid mistake yesterday’s post was posted in the wrong place late, look below for a possible medieval reference to hippopotami*** Another in our strange sport series: today it is trail hunting. This was completely new to Beach but it seems that trail hunting was actually a fairly common nineteenth century sport and […]