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  2. Devil Dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devil_Dog

    Devil Dog is a nickname for a United States Marine coined during World War I. [1] [2] History ... The veracity of the German origin of the term, however, ...

  3. Black Shuck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Shuck

    Artist's impression of the Black Shuck. Commonly described features include large red eyes, bared teeth and shaggy black fur. [1]In English folklore, Black Shuck, Old Shuck, Old Shock or simply Shuck is the name given to a ghostly black dog which is said to roam the coastline and countryside of East Anglia, one of many such black dogs recorded in folklore across the British Isles.

  4. Black dog (folklore) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_dog_(folklore)

    Sidney Paget's illustration of The Hound of the Baskervilles.The story was inspired by a legend of ghostly black dogs in Dartmoor. The black dog is a supernatural, spectral, or demonic hellhound originating from English folklore, and also present in folklore throughout Europe and the Americas.

  5. Chesty (mascot) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chesty_(mascot)

    Chesty is always an English bulldog. [5] [6] The current dog, Chesty XVI, is the 16th bulldog mascot of the Marine Corps. [7]He took over as mascot in May 2022. [2] Chesty's duties include attending drills and parades along with the Marine Corps Silent Drill Platoon, and joining community events.

  6. Hellhound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellhound

    Goddess Hel and the hellhound Garmr by Johannes Gehrts, 1889. A hellhound is a mythological hound that embodies a guardian or a servant of hell, the devil, or the underworld.. Hellhounds occur in mythologies around the world, with the best-known examples being Cerberus from Greek mythology, Garmr from Norse mythology, the black dogs of English folklore, and the fairy hounds of Celtic mythol

  7. Mephistopheles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mephistopheles

    The name appears in the late-sixteenth-century Faust chapbooks – stories concerning the life of Johann Georg Faust, written by an anonymous German author. In the 1725 version, which Goethe read, Mephostophiles is a devil in the form of a greyfriar summoned by Faust in a wood outside Wittenberg. From the chapbooks, the name entered Faustian ...

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  9. Church grim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_grim

    The Last of the Giant Killers published in 1891, includes a story where Jack the Giant Killer defeats an evil church grim that takes the shape of a goat. In this tale, Jack is helped by the ghost of a young woman who, like the church grim, was buried alive as a foundation sacrifice.