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  2. Nixie (folklore) - Wikipedia

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

    Fossegrim and derivatives were almost always portrayed as gorgeous young men whose clothing (or lack thereof) varied widely from story to story. The enthralling music of the nøkk was most dangerous to women and children, especially pregnant women and unbaptised children.

  3. Lycian peasants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycian_peasants

    The story of the Lycian peasants is a short one; legend says that after a very troubling labour on Delos, the goddess Leto took her newborn infants, Artemis and Apollo, and crossed over to Lycia (a region in southwestern Asia Minor) where she attempted to bathe her children in and drink from a spring she found there. But the local people tried ...

  4. Soulmate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soulmate

    A soulmate is a person with whom one feels a deep or natural affinity. [1] This affinity may involve similarity , love romance , comfort, intimacy, sexuality , sexual activity , spirituality , compatibility , and trust . [ 2 ]

  5. Ask and Embla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ask_and_Embla

    In Norse mythology, Ask and Embla (Old Norse: Askr ok Embla)—man and woman respectively—were the first two humans, created by the gods. The pair are attested in both the Poetic Edda , compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources, and the Prose Edda , composed in the 13th century.

  6. A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Wonder-Book_for_Girls...

    The stories in A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys are all stories within a story. The frame story is that Eustace Bright, a Williams College student, is telling these tales to a group of children at Tanglewood, an area in Lenox, Massachusetts, where Hawthorne lived for a time. All the tales are modified versions of ancient Greek myths:

  7. Psychopomp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychopomp

    Classical examples of a psychopomp are the ancient Egyptian god Anubis, [3] the deity Pushan in Hinduism, the Greek ferryman Charon, [1] the goddess Hecate, and god Hermes, the Roman god Mercury, the Norse Valkyries, the Aztec Xolotl, the Slavic goddess Morana and the Etruscan Vanth.

  8. Fylgja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fylgja

    The word fylgja means "to accompany". [2] The term fylgja is typically translated into English as "fetch", a similar being from Irish folklore. [3]The term fylgja also has the meaning of "afterbirth, caul", and it has been argued by Gabriel Turville-Petre [4] (cf. § Placenta origins) that the concept of the supernatural fylgja cannot be completely dissociated from this secondary meaning; in ...

  9. Ancient Egyptian conception of the soul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Egyptian...

    According to ancient Egyptian creation myths, the god Atum created the world out of chaos, utilizing his own magic . [1] Because the earth was created with magic, Egyptians believed that the world was imbued with magic and so was every living thing upon it.