English Mythology

English mythology, like the conglomerate society which it represents, with a long and elaborate history of invasion and settlement by diverse cultures, is one which has nevertheless an entirely idiosyncratic nature of its own. Laying aside the considerations of contemporary myths such as that of Deep England, there are a number of distinctive mythical folk heroes and legends, many of which have their roots steeped in the vestiges of historical fact: King Arthur, Hereward the Wake, Robin Hood, the lost land of Lyonesse. There is a great deal of regional vegetation, and this reflects the historical sense of geographical separation which pre-existed today's transport systems. In Cornwall, for example, there are a number of faery species including the pixies, sometimes known as piskeys, and the spirits of the mine-shafts, the knockers, and these are known nowhere else in England. On Dartmoor, a traveller thought to have gone astray on the moor was said to have been 'pixie-led'.

See also

*English folklore

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the invisible man
soil
the illustrated man
political theorist
mead
m1 abrams
ah 1 cobra
ah 64 apache
maurice duverger
marquis de condorcet
british north america acts
turtle
ericfine
mountain
list of mountains
delhi
vindolanda
glowczyzna
plzen
tamar of georgia
hippopotamus
university of california, los angeles
patch collecting
seville
m. r. james
japanese knotweed
lyonesse
dragon book
tajiks
luge
anglo saxons
edward teller
media of venezuela
monte cassino
augsburg
mosquito
felix edmundovich dzerzhinsky
jack nicholson
west nile virus
hilbert's paradox of the grand hotel
thor heyerdahl
dendrochronology
ovid
cubism