The Green Children of Woolpit 1: All Hail John Clark! January 22, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalThe green children of Woolpit is one of the most fascinating stories to come out of our medieval records. Two children, coloured green, without any knowledge of English and with unusual dietary requirements turn up in a pit just outside a Suffolk village. They are adopted by the local lord, one dies and the other […]
Epiphany Gift 5: Latham’s Elizabethan Fairies January 6, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernA happy epiphany to all. Six year old little Miss B (her picture) has just announced that she thinks that ‘adults’ might be behind the Santa Claus lark and this seems, then, like an excellent time to give Beach’s fifth epiphany gift. This is Minor White Latham’s Elizabethan Fairies published back in 1930. In Beach’s […]
The Mystery of the Fairy Battery January 5, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernHere is a place and a name that is hard to account for. On the 1850 Ordinance Survey map for Lancashire (79) there is a peculiar rock formation with the words Fairy Battery by the side. This is on Lowe Hill to the north of Turton and Entwistle Resevoir (already built in 1850). There follows […]
Why Children-Stealing Gypsies? December 21, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThe idea that someone is out to get our children has been around from classical times. Several antique Christian writers, for example, credit ‘the Jews’ with stealing children and this became, by the Middle Ages, part of the notorious ‘blood libel’ for which hundreds and perhaps thousands of men, women and, yes, children of Jewish descent […]
Faking History on the Internet #2: Fairies Dug Up in Ireland! December 7, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalBeach is really getting into all these fake history news-stories on the internet: the champions of which are the generic sounding worldnewsdailyreport, the malodorous yet strangely attractive offspring of National Enquirer rutted with the History Channel. We have reported one of their previous fictions and have an especial joy now in spreading the word that […]
An Early Icelandic Fairy December 5, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalIceland has often featured on this blog for two reasons: first, because it is a part of the formula by which the thuggish Vikings made it to the New World five centuries before Columbus; and, second, because it retains in its traditions some particularly old pagan customs, customs that have been absorbed or overlaid by […]
New Folklore Survey: Have You a Fairy Story to Tell? November 14, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ActualiteGreat news from London tonight. Launched in this month’s Fortean Times and run in association with the Fairy Investigation Society, which has been reconstituting for the last months and that will send out its first communication this weekend, the Fairy Census 2015-2016 is ‘a go’ (the organizers don’t apparently follow the Gregorian calendar). Now what […]
Roma Fairies at Blackpool November 5, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryThere is not much to comment on here, just a very unusual passage in a classic Roma book, The Book of Boswell: Autobiography of a Gypsy (1970). The edition referred to here is the 1973 Penguin. Now to the fairies. Notice how they jump in rather matter of factly. Our author is remembering an idyllic […]
Did Joan of Arc see Fairies? October 13, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalAnyone who has ever read a book on Joan of Arc will know that the English-hater was supposed to have had some kind of relations with fairies. But what exactly were those relations? The trial at which Joan battled for her life in 1431 included a long list of charges against the Maid. Some of these charges […]
An Invisible Library Among the Fairies September 25, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernImagine that you have just been captured by the pixies. You are dragged down into one of the underground prisons and thrown into a dim room. However, while banging your fists on the now locked door you see that there is at least one distraction: a rich volume balanced on a circular stand ‘as one sometimes […]
In Search of Enys Tregarthen: ‘The Little Cripple’ August 19, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernImagine being born, in the winter of 1850, while your father is away at sea. You find yourself in a vulnerable but aspirational household, perhaps the worst nineteenth-century social gradient of them all in Britain. As you slowly emerge into consciousness you start to understand that your father, a seaman, is rarely present and by the time […]
Watch Out for the Fairies Among Us! August 13, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernIn the long struggle to get a handle on fairies there have been claims that ‘the good people’ were simply a human race, kept apart from the rest of us, in the bogs and the mountains of the west and north of Europe: Buchan, Jenner, MacRitchie and many, many others made this argument and it […]
Review: Hobberdy Dick July 29, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernKatharine Briggs is the world famous folklorist, who wrote many books on folklore and fairies, some above average, some outstanding. Among her lesser known works are two folklore novels that she wrote in the 1960s, Kate Crackernuts and Hobberdy Dick. I’m trying to read KC at the moment and not having much luck, but the […]
Seeing Fairies is Out: Lost Manuscript Found July 9, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernA bragging post today. This morning a copy of Marjorie Johnson’s Seeing Fairies: From the Lost Archives of the Fairy Investigation Society arrived by express delivery: major kudos in the village when the red van drives up and the courier demands a signature, the butcher and the baker came out to watch. Regular or perhaps […]
Do Fairies Hate Lawnmowers? June 18, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Contemporary, ModernBoggart Hole Clough is a nook, a small valley within the Manchester connurbation that has miraculously remained without housing development or industry. Its name should immediately excite those interested in fairylore as the boggart is a northern solitary fairy: note that there have been several boggart posts on strangehistory including boggart catching, a misplaced Calderdale […]