Fey Races in Jeweled Amber: Difference between revisions
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==African Folklore== | ==African Folklore== |
Revision as of 03:01, 29 January 2025
African Folklore
- Impundulu – Lightning bird that brings storms and misfortune*
- Jengu – Benevolent water spirits that bring good luck and healing*
- Eloko – Dwarf-like spirits that use enchanted bells to hypnotize victims*
Asian Folklore
Chinese
- Jiangshi – Hopping vampire-like creature that feeds on life force*
- Lamassu (adopted in broader Chinese lore) – Winged, protective beings*
- Qilin – Gentle, dragon-like protector of purity and virtue*
- Xiangliu – Multi-headed serpent demon of floods and destruction*
Indian
- Rakshasa – Demonic shape-shifters with tiger-like features*
- Garuda – A massive bird-like protector, enemy of serpents*
- Naga – Serpentine beings associated with wisdom and water*
Japanese
- Baku – Dream-eating tapir-like spirit that devours nightmares*
- Kitsune – Shape-shifting fox spirits with magical abilities*
- Onryō – Vengeful ghosts that seek revenge for past wrongs*
- Kappa – Water-dwelling trickster spirits resembling turtles*
- Jorōgumo – Spider spirits that lure victims into their webs*
- Yuki-onna – Snow woman who freezes travelers to death*
- Tengu – Bird-like warriors and trickster spirits*
- Obake – Shape-shifting ghosts and spirits*
- Zashiki-warashi – Playful household spirits that bring good fortune*
Celtic & British Isles Folklore (Irish, Scottish, Welsh, and English)
Irish
- Banshee – Wailing spirits that foretell death*
- Selkie – Seal creatures that transform into humans by shedding their skin*
- Merrow – Sea-dwelling merfolk with green hair and webbed fingers*
- Púca (Pooka) – Shape-shifting tricksters, often appearing as horses, goats, or rabbits*
- Dullahan – Headless rider who carries their own head, an omen of death*
- Leanan Sídhe – Beautiful muses who inspire artists but drain their life force*
Scottish
- Brownie – Small, industrious household spirits*
- Kelpie – Shape-shifting water horses that lure people to their doom*
- Nuckelavee – A terrifying, skinless sea demon*
- Redcap – Bloodthirsty goblins with red hats dyed in human blood*
Welsh
- Gwragedd Annwn – Beautiful water maidens of Welsh lakes*
English
- Will-o’-the-Wisp – Floating orbs of light that lead travelers astray*
- Boggarts – Malevolent spirits that cause fear and poltergeist-like disturbances*
- Nain Rouge – A small, red-skinned goblin associated with disaster*
- Bogeyman – Shadowy monster used to frighten children*
Orkney & Shetland (Scottish Isles)
- Trow – Small, troll-like beings fond of music*
- Draugr – Undead warriors who haunt burial sites*
- Fossegrim – Water spirits that teach music in exchange for sacrifices*
- Valkyrie – Warrior maidens who choose the slain in battle*
- Fenrir – A giant wolf prophesied to bring destruction*
- Huldra – Beautiful women with hollow, bark-covered backs*
Greek Folklore
- Dryad – Tree spirits that embody and protect specific trees*
- Naiads – Freshwater nymphs associated with rivers, springs, and lakes*
- Hippocampus – Half-horse, half-fish creatures of the sea*
- Manticore – A lion-bodied, scorpion-tailed beast*
- Chimera – A fire-breathing monster with a lion, goat, and serpent head*
Slavic Folklore
- Domovoi – Household spirits that protect homes and families*
- Rusalka – Spirits of drowned women who haunt lakes and rivers*
- Leshy – A forest guardian spirit who misleads travelers*
- Zmeu – A dragon-like trickster figure*
Native American Folklore
North America
- Thunderbird – Giant bird that controls storms and lightning*
- Wendigo – A skeletal, emaciated monster symbolizing insatiable hunger and cannibalism*
- Sasquatch – Large, ape-like humanoid of the forests*
South America
- Encantado – Dolphin-like shape-shifters who take human form*
Mesoamerican Folklore (Aztec, Mayan, and other Central American cultures)
- Camazotz – Bat-like death spirit*
Oceanic Folklore
- Taniwha (Māori) – Guardian water spirits, sometimes protective, sometimes dangerous*
- Bunyip (Australian Aboriginal) – Amphibious monster of swamps and rivers*
Middle Eastern Folklore
- Efreet – Powerful and often malevolent fire spirits*
- Barghest – Omen of death, often appearing as a large spectral black dog*
- Lamassu – Winged, protective beings from Mesopotamian mythology*
European Folklore (General or Unspecified Regions)
- Abaia – Giant, magical eel that protects the creatures of lakes*
- Alkonost – Half-woman, half-bird being with an enchanting voice*
- Sirin – Similar to the Alkonost but associated with sorrowful songs*
- Ouroboros – A serpent that eats its own tail, symbolizing eternity*
- Leviathan – A massive sea creature representing chaos*
French Folklore
- Korrigan – Female water fairies tied to wells and springs*
- Tarasque – A dragon-like beast subdued by a saint*
Caribbean Folklore
- Ciguapa – Beautiful women with backward-facing feet who lure men into the forest
African-American Folklore
- Ewah – Spirit associated with darkness and fear
Universal or Multiple Traditions
- Bogeyman – Shadowy figure used to scare children
- Will-o’-the-Wisp – Mysterious floating lights that appear in swamps and marshes