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Fairies; folklore and legends
Topic Started: Jan 28 2009, 03:01 PM (165 Views)
StrmySummer
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Storm Goddess

A fairy (also fay, fey, fae, faerie; collectively, wee folk, good folk, people of peace, fair folk, and other euphemisms)[1] is a type of mythological being or legendary creature, a form of spirit, often described as metaphysical, supernatural or preternatural.

The word fairy derives from the term fae of medieval Western European (Old French) folklore and romance, one famous example being Morgan le Fay. "Fae-ery" was therefore everything that appertains to the "fae", and so the land of "faes", all the "faes". Finally the word replaced its original and one could speak of "a faery or fairy", though the word fey is still used as an adjective.

Fairies resemble various beings of other mythologies, though even folklore that uses the term fairy offers many definitions. Sometimes the term describes any magical creature, including goblins or gnomes: at other times, the term only describes a specific type of more ethereal creature.[2]

Folk beliefs

Dead
One popular belief was that they were the dead, or some subclass of the dead.[3] The Irish banshee (Irish Gaelic bean sí or Scottish Gaelic bean shìth, which both mean "fairy woman") is sometimes described as a ghost.[4] The northern English Cauld Lad of Hylton, though described as a murdered boy, is also described as a household sprite like a brownie,[5] much of the time a Barghest or Elf.[6] One tale recounted a man caught by the fairies, who found that whenever he looked steadily at one, the fairy was a dead neighbor of his.[7] This was among the most common views expressed by those who believed in fairies, although many of the informants would express the view with some doubts.[8]

Elementals
Another view held that the fairies were an intelligent species, distinct from humans and angels.[9] In alchemy in particular they were regarded as elementals, such as gnomes and sylphs, as described by Paracelsus.[10] This is uncommon in folklore, but accounts describing the fairies as "spirits of the air" have been found popularly.[11]

Demoted angels
A third belief held that they were a class of "demoted" angels.[12] One popular story held that when the angels revolted, God ordered the gates shut; those still in heaven remained angels, those in hell became devils, and those caught in between became fairies.[13] Others held that they had been thrown out of heaven, not being good enough, but they were not evil enough for hell.[14] This may explain the tradition that they had to pay a "teind" or tithe to Hell. As fallen angels, though not quite devils, they could be seen as subject of the Devil.[15]

Demons
A fourth belief was the fairies were devils entirely.[16] This belief became much more popular with the growth of Puritanism.[17] The hobgoblin, once a friendly household spirit, became a wicked goblin.[18] Dealing with fairies was in some cases considered a form of witchcraft and punished as such in this era.[19] Disassociating himself from such evils may be why Oberon, in A Midsummer Night's Dream, carefully observed that neither he nor his court feared the church bells.[20]

The belief in their angelic nature was less common than that they were the dead, but still found popularity, especially in Theosophist circles.[21][22] Informants who described their nature sometimes held aspects of both the third and the fourth view, or observed that the matter was disputed.[21]

Humans
A less-common belief was that the fairies were actually humans; one folktale recounts how a woman had hidden some of her children from God, and then looked for them in vain, because they had become the hidden people, the fairies. This is parallel to a more developed tale, of the origin of the Scandinavian huldra.[21]

Babies' laughs
A story of the origin of fairies appears in the 1906 Sir J. M. Barrie novella Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, composed of chapters sliced out of the novel The Little White Bird after the success of his re-imagining of the character into the play Peter Pan and then incorporated into the novel Peter and Wendy. Barrie wrote, "…when the first baby laughed for the first time, its laugh broke into a thousand pieces, and they all went skipping about, and that was the beginning of fairies."[23]

Pagan deities
Many of the Irish tales of the Tuatha Dé Danann refer to these beings as fairies, though in more ancient times they were regarded as Goddesses and Gods. The Tuatha Dé were spoken of as having come from Islands in the north of the world, or, in other sources, from the sky. After being defeated in a series of battles with other Otherworldly beings, and then by the ancestors of the current Irish people, they were said to have withdrawn to the sídhe (fairy mounds), where they lived on in popular imagination as "fairies."


found this on Wikipedia.....i'm beginnin to love that site....lol
Edited by StrmySummer, Jan 28 2009, 03:02 PM.
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"Beginning now, let's play more, kiss more, love more, let's be so close that when one of us cries, the other tastes salt."
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Isis
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The Goddess of Darkness & Desire

This is one myth that i have alway's thought to be fake... :reading:
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Isis, The Goddess of Desire & Darkness. In The Darkness, We Find The Light.

This is a Drama Free Zone..!
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StrmySummer
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Storm Goddess

i just dunno.....i mean.....i think that almost all fictions is based on some reality *shrug*
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"Beginning now, let's play more, kiss more, love more, let's be so close that when one of us cries, the other tastes salt."
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Isis
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The Goddess of Darkness & Desire

There is a certain amount of truth to that statement, But Fairiea are more legend from the Irish from what i have read....
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Isis, The Goddess of Desire & Darkness. In The Darkness, We Find The Light.

This is a Drama Free Zone..!
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hunter207
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Boss
[ *  *  *  *  * ]
Aye, but the Irish are still firm believers... they still never build upon "faerie trails" and "faerie mounds"... it is considered extreme bad luck, and that the house will be cursed to fall within a year... so who knows...
You can take your heaven, when I die I sooner go to Middle Earth..

- George R.R. Martin

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgcoBKWTW14
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StrmySummer
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Storm Goddess

i've heard and understood that too hunter
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