Cornish mythology
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Part of a series on |
Celtic mythologies |
---|
Cornish mythology is the folk tradition and
The traditional folklore of Cornwall often consists of tales of giants, mermaids, Bucca, piskies or the 'pobel vean' (little folk.) These tales are still popular today, with some events hosting a 'droll teller' or storyteller,[1][page needed] to share Cornish myths and legends. The myths and stories of Cornwall have found much publishing success, particularly in children's books. The fairy tale Jack the Giant Killer takes place in Cornwall. Many early British legends associate King Arthur with Cornwall, putting his birthplace at Tintagel, the court of King Mark of Cornwall, uncle of Tristan and husband of Iseult, the most famous Cornish lovers.
Overview
Cornwall shares its ancient cultural heritage with its '
Part of Cornish mythology is derived from tales of seafaring
Legendary creatures that appear in Cornish folklore include buccas, knockers, Giants, and Pixies.[3] Tales of these creatures are thought to have developed as supernatural explanations for the frequent and deadly cave-ins that occurred during 18th century Cornish tin mining, or else a creation of the oxygen-starved minds of exhausted miners who returned from the underground.
The
Many landscape features, from the barren granite rock features on Bodmin Moor, to the dramatic cliff seascape, to the mystical form of St Michael's Mount are explained as the work of Giants and English tales such as the early eighteenth century Jack the Giant Killer may recall much older British folk traditions recorded elsewhere in medieval Welsh language manuscripts and closely related to the folk traditions of Dartmoor in neighbouring Devon.
There is a Cornish legend of the lost land of Lyonesse, supposedly lost to the sea in one night. It is claimed to represent the folk memory of the flooding of the Isles of Scilly and Mount's Bay near Penzance.[4] For example, the Cornish name of St Michael's Mount is Karrek Loos y'n Koos, literally, "the grey rock in the wood". The Breton legend of Ys is a similar concept.
Old
- The midnight washerwomen
- Weather lore
"Mist from the hill / Brings water for the mill; / Mist from the sea / Brings fine weather for me."[6] "Lundy plain, Sign of rain" (current in north Cornwall where Lundy Island is normally visible).
Enys Tregarthen
Nellie Sloggett of Padstow devoted much of her attention to Cornish folklore and legend. She collected and recorded many stories about the Piskey folk, fairies of Cornish myth and legend. She published most of her works in this category under her better-known pen-name of Enys Tregarthen.[7]
North Cornwall
.The
The Doom Bar at the mouth of the River Camel was, according to legend, created by the Mermaid of Padstow as a dying curse, after being shot by a sailor.
Penwith
Within the bounds of
At Zennor, there is a legend of the Mermaid of Zennor and at Mousehole, Tom Bawcock is a legendary fisherman from the village who, according to legend, risked his life to go out and fish and managed to come back with enough fish to feed the village until the storm was over. All the fish was put into a big pie, and the pie called "Stargazy pie".
The Merry Maidens stone circle at
See also
- Breton mythology
- Cornish festivals
- Peter and the Piskies: Cornish Folk and Fairy Tales
- Culture of Cornwall
- List of Cornish saints
- Arthur & Celliwig - PenDragon; 'Bear Chief Dragon' of the Britons
- Tristan and Iseult - a Cornish love story
- Lyonesse & Ys - the Cornish & Breton Atlantis
- Jan Tregeagle
- William Henry Paynter
- Matter of Britain
- Corineus - mythical founder of Cornwall
- Cormoran - the Giant and his wife of St Michael's Mount
- Hunting of Twrch Trwyth- the Cornish Boar of Welsh legend
- Jack the Giant Killer
- Blunderbore
- Morgawr - the Cornish sea monster
- Bucca - the Spirit of the Sea
- Mark of Cornwall alias Conomor - the mythical and historical king; 'Hound of the Sea'
- Macsen Wledig- historical late Roman emperor and mythical founder of Brittany
- History of Brittany - the brother nation over the sea
- Welsh folklore
- Welsh Mythology
References
- OCLC 865081421.
- ISBN 978-1-84353-686-4
- ISBN 978-1-59880-097-5
- JSTOR 1793956.
- ^ Taylor, Rob (7 October 2010). "Michaelmas Traditions". Black Country Bugle. Local World. Archived from the original on 30 September 2015. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
- OCLC 463975437.
- ^ "Introduction to Cornish Fairy Folk Tales". Celtic, Tolkien, and Arthurian Graphics, and Cornish Folklore. William Rowe. Archived from the original on 30 November 2009. Retrieved 15 September 2009.
- ^ Tilley, Christopher (1995). "Rock as resources: landscapes and power" (PDF). Cornish Archaeology. 34: 5–57. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 April 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
- OCLC 917210115.
Further reading
- Addicoat, Ian; Buswell, Geoff (2003). Mysteries of the Cornish Coast: legends, ghosts and extraordinary events from Cornwall's south-west peninsula. Tiverton: Halsgrove. ISBN 1-84114-255-7.
- Baring-Gould, Sabine (1899). A Book of the West: Being an Introduction to Devon and Cornwall. Vol. II: Cornwall. London: Methuen – via Internet Archive.
- Bottrell, William. Traditions and Hearthside Stories of West Cornwall. 3 vols:
- Bottrell, William (1870). Traditions and Hearthside Stories of West Cornwall. Penzance: W. Cornish (for the author) – via Google Books.
- Bottrell, William (1873). Traditions and Hearthside Stories of West Cornwall. Vol. Second Series. Penzance: Beare and Son (for the author) – via Internet Archive.
- Bottrell, William (1880). Stories and folk-lore of West Cornwall. Vol. Third Series. Penzance: F. Rodda (for the author) – via Internet Archive.
- OCLC 867913690)
- Quiller-Couch, Mabel (1914). Cornwall's Wonderland. London: J.M. Dent & Sons – via Internet Archive. (Contents: How Corineus fought the chief of the giants.--The giant of St Michael's Mount.--The legend of the Tamar, the Tavy, and the Taw.--The strange story of Cherry Honey.--The fairies on the Gump.--The fairy ointment.--The exciting adventure of John Sturtridge.--The true story of Anne and the fairies.--Barker and the Buccas.--Lutey and the mermaid.--The wicked spectre.--The story of the lovers' cove.--The silver table.--Cruel Coppinger, the Dane.--Madge Figgy, the wrecker.--How Madge Figgy got her pig.--The story of Sir Tristram and La Belle Isoult.)
- Courtney, Margaret Ann (1890). Folklore and Legends of Cornwall.
- Ditmas, Edith (1970). Tristan and Iseult in Cornwall. Gloucester: Forrester Roberts.
- Evans-Wentz, W. Y. (1911). The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries. London: Oxford University Press – via Internet Archive.
- Gary, Gemma (2011). Traditional Witchcraft: A Cornish Book of Ways (Rev. 2nd ed.). Troy Books. OCLC 819718908.
- ISBN 0-85025-351-9. Selected from:
- Hunt, Robert (1865). Popular Romances of the West of England, or, The drolls, traditions, and superstitions of old Cornwall. Vol. First Series. London: John Camden Hotten – via Internet Archive.
- Hunt, Robert (1865). Popular Romances of the West of England, or, The drolls, traditions, and superstitions of old Cornwall. Vol. Second Series. London: John Camden Hotten – via Internet Archive.
- James, Beryl (1988). Tales of the Tinners' Way. Redruth: Dyllansow Truran. ISBN 1-85022-042-5.
- Jenkin, A. K. Hamilton(1933). Cornwall and the Cornish: the story, religion and folk-lore of 'The Western Land'.
- Lach-Szyrma, W.S. (1882). "M. Sebillot's System as applied to Cornish Folk-lore". Transactions of the Penzance Natural History and Antiquarian Society. New Series: 132–150.
- Matthews, John Hobson (1892). "Legendary Lore". A History of the Parishes of Saint Ives, Lelant, Towednack, and Zennor, in the County of Cornwall. London: Elliot Stock. pp. 379-392 – via Internet Archive. (Reprinted: St Ives: St. Ives Trust and St. Ives Library, 2003)
- Paynter, William H.; Semmens, Jason (2008). The Cornish Witch-finder: The Witchery, Ghosts, Charms and Folklore of Cornwall. St. Agnes: Federation of Old Cornwall Societies. OCLC 407137778.
- Phillips, Carl. "Mystical Geographies of Cornwall" (PDF). Thesis submitted to the University of Nottingham for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (2006). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 26 October 2011.
- Semmens, Jason (2004). The Witch of the West: Or, The Strange and Wonderful History of Thomasine Blight. Plymouth: Jason Semmens. OCLC 62263902.
- Semmens, Jason (1998). "A Case of Witchcraft in Camborne during the Late Seventeenth Century?". Old Cornwall. 12 (3): 3–4. ISSN 1741-0932.
- Semmens, Jason (2000). "The Usage of Witch-Bottles and Apotropaic Charms in Cornwall". Old Cornwall. 12 (6): 25–30. ISSN 1741-0932.
- Semmens, Jason (2003). "The Magus in Cornwall: an Unknown Chapter in the Life of Francis Barrett, F.R.C.". Old Cornwall. 13 (1): 18–21. ISSN 1741-0932.
- Semmens, Jason (2004). "An Account of One Ann Jeffries: Notes on the Background to the Curious Case of the Maid of St. Teath". Old Cornwall. 13 (3): 10–15. ISSN 1741-0932.
- Semmens, Jason (April 2005). "'Whyler Pystry': a Breviate of the Life and Folklore-Collecting Practices of William Henry Paynter (1901–1976) of S2CID 161902483.
- Semmens, Jason (2005). "A Cure from the Cunning". Cornish World. 42: 62–67.
- Semmens, Jason (Autumn 2005). "Old and a Trouble: Notes on the Life of Granny Boswell". Meyn Mamvro. 58: 20–22.
- Semmens, Jason (2006). "Tales of Cornish Witches". Old Cornwall. 13 (7): 22–27. ISSN 1741-0932.
- Semmens, Jason (2008). "Folk-magic in East Cornwall: a Nineteenth-century Conjuror's Archive from ISSN 1741-0932.
- Semmens, Jason (2009). "On the Origin of 'Peller'". Old Cornwall. 14 (1): 43–50. ISSN 1741-0932.
External links
- Legends of Cornwall's Stones Gareth Evans, 2005
- Witchcraft
- History of Witchcraft in Cornwall
- Sal Tregenna Guy Vox; Launceston Then!