9. The Devil’s Dandy Dogs: The Barguest, Black Shuck and other hellish hounds of Britain (part 2)
Last time we talked about the ghostly apparition that is known generally as The Black Dog. It appears throughout the United Kingdom and is often seen as an omen, a foreteller of death, a spectral remnant of some tragic event, a haunter of boundaries and churchyards and sometimes a friendly guardian. Today, however, as we inch closer to Samhain and the barriers between worlds get ever more fragile, we are going to come face to face with some more malevolent mutts. Specific black dogs and the places they have wrought fear upon, black dogs as symbols of devils and witchery, and a look back at some potential origins for this canine creep in the roots of British mythology. Twitter: https://twitter.com/godsandgoblinsInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/godsandgoblins/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/godsandgoblinsYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTgEBT-yIqvaoEZozk9y35wSoundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/godsandgoblinsWebsite: https://godsandgoblins.buzzsprout.com/Email: godgobpod@gmail.comSources:‘The Black Dog’ in Folklore Sep. 1942, Vol. 53 by W. P. Witcutt ‘Notes on the Folk-lore of the Northern Counties of England and the Borders' by William Henderson ‘English Fairy and Other Folk Tales’ by Edwin Sidney Hartland ‘The Devil in Dog Form’ in Folklore Oct. 1954, Vol. 13, No. 4 by Barbara Allen Woods ‘A Note on the Witch-Familiar in Seventeenth Century England’ by F. H. Amphlett Micklewright Encyclopaedia Britannica ‘The Powers of Evil in Western Religion, Magic and Folk Belief’ by Richard Cavendish ‘Northern Mythology, Comprising the Principal Popular Traditions and Superstitions of Scandinavia, North Germany and the Netherlands' by Benjamin Thorpe http://www.sussexarch.org.uk/saaf/blackdog.html ‘The Norfolk antiquarian miscellany’ by Walter Rye ‘The Welsh Fairy Book’ by W. Jenkyn Thomas ‘English Fairy and Other Folk Tales’ by Edwin Sidney Hartland 'The Black Dog' published in Folklore, Sep., 1958, Vol. 69 by Theo Brown ‘The Black Dog’ published in Folklore, Jun., 1938, Vol. 49, No. 2 by Ethel Rudkin ‘Notes on the Folk Lore of the Northern Counties of England and the Borders’ by William Henderson