Difference between revisions of "Snallygaster"

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[[File:Snallygaster.png|200px|thumb|right|Snallygaster, as portrayed in an early 20th century Maryland Newspaper]]
 
[[File:Snallygaster.png|200px|thumb|right|Snallygaster, as portrayed in an early 20th century Maryland Newspaper]]
'''Snallygaster'''
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'''Snallygaster''', AKA '''Snoligoster''', '''Schneller Geister''', '''Scnelle Geist''', etc.
  
 
Origin:  American Folklore
 
Origin:  American Folklore
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In American folklore, the snallygaster is a dragon-like beast described by hill communities of German immigrants in the forests of northern Maryland and southern Pennsylvania, who knew it as a monster called a ''Schnelle Geist'', meaning "quick ghost" in German. The Snallygaster would be described in an infamous newspaper campaign spanning the first half of the 20th century as one-eyed, reptilian, ghoul-like creature, with leathery bat-like wings, a metallic beak lined with razor-sharp teeth, and octopus-like tentacles. It swoops silently from the sky to pick up and carry off its victims, from whom the Snallygaster would then suck the blood, discarding their corpses on the lonely cliffs of the Maryland hills. [[Elder Sign (symbol)|Star-shaped "hex signs"]], which reputedly kept the snallygaster at bay, can still be seen painted on local Maryland barns.
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In American folklore, the Snallygaster is a dragon-like beast described by hill communities of German immigrants in the forests of northern Maryland and southern Pennsylvania, who knew it since the 1700s as a monster called a ''Schnelle Geist'', meaning "quick ghost" in German. The Snallygaster has been described as as one-eyed, serpentine creature, with slug-like skin, leathery bat-like wings, and octopus-like tentacles. It swoops silently from the sky to pick up and carry off its victims into the distant and lonely cliffs of the Maryland hills.  There, the Snallygaster will suck the blood from its victim through its tentacles, draining its victim dry and then digging a shallow burrow to toss the corpse into to decay, and after a few days the Snallygaster returns and grinds the last of its rotting victim into a pulp which the Snallygaster then slurps up like a soup. To this day, [[Elder Sign (symbol)|Star-shaped "hex signs"]], which reputedly kept the snallygaster at bay, can still be seen painted on local Maryland barns.
  
  

Revision as of 02:53, 6 October 2018

Snallygaster, as portrayed in an early 20th century Maryland Newspaper

Snallygaster, AKA Snoligoster, Schneller Geister, Scnelle Geist, etc.

Origin: American Folklore

Description

In American folklore, the Snallygaster is a dragon-like beast described by hill communities of German immigrants in the forests of northern Maryland and southern Pennsylvania, who knew it since the 1700s as a monster called a Schnelle Geist, meaning "quick ghost" in German. The Snallygaster has been described as as one-eyed, serpentine creature, with slug-like skin, leathery bat-like wings, and octopus-like tentacles. It swoops silently from the sky to pick up and carry off its victims into the distant and lonely cliffs of the Maryland hills. There, the Snallygaster will suck the blood from its victim through its tentacles, draining its victim dry and then digging a shallow burrow to toss the corpse into to decay, and after a few days the Snallygaster returns and grinds the last of its rotting victim into a pulp which the Snallygaster then slurps up like a soup. To this day, Star-shaped "hex signs", which reputedly kept the snallygaster at bay, can still be seen painted on local Maryland barns.


Keeper Notes

  • The sinister, hybrid, winged Snallygaster (and the similar Jersey Devil) might be thought of as regional variations on the Byakhee. (fan theory)


Associated Mythos Elements


References