The Creepiest Characters From Irish Mythology


The Creepiest Characters From Irish Mythology


Disturbing Immortals Haunt The Emerald Isle

A country deeply rooted in mythology and storytelling, Ireland has a long list of dark tales. Irish folklore portrays some of the most disturbing immortals that lurk in the grassy hills, depicting why the island is the way it is. Here we share the evil from Ireland's most crooked characters, from envious witches to blood-thirsty ghosts.    

Top Photo (8)Michael1010 on Wikimedia


1. The Dearg Due

This is a tale of a tragic love story filled with greed and blood. After falling in love with a peasant, the woman’s father forces her to marry a wealthy chieftain who locks her up so she can’t escape. She takes her own life but her spirit rises from the grave to seek revenge, sucking the blood from the cruel men like a vampire. It’s said that Miss Dearg Due (“blood-sucker”) uses her beauty to seduce male victims and drink their blood once a year when her restless spirit is thirsty.   

Eduardo  GonzálezEduardo González on Pexels

    

2. The Demon Bride

If you thought you knew a Bridezilla, think again. In Errigal-Truagh graveyard, the ghost of a bride in white haunts funerals, hoping for a young man to linger behind after other mourners leave. She persuades men to kiss her, trading his soul for her lips. She vanishes, leaving them crazed and bewildered until they eventually die of insanity.

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a couple of women standing next to each otherPhotos_frompasttofuture on Unsplash

3. The Banshee

The Banshee is Ireland’s most famous ghostly monster who is described as a female entity who lets out a spine-tingling shriek as she wails into the night. You don’t want to hear her scream–– she is known as an omen of death and to hear her painful cry means a family member will die soon. Some believe every family has their own Banshee.

File:Banshee.jpgW.H. Brooke on Wikimedia

      

4. The Dullahan

The Dullahan means “dark man” and he is dark indeed. He’s Ireland's version of the headless horseman who roams the country with his decapitated head under one arm. He either rides horseback on a black stallion with flaming eyes or he takes his black carriage pulled by six horses. When he stops, someone must die. People say that when the shriek of the Banshee is heard, the Dullahan is near, ready to collect new souls. 

File:Croker(1834)Fairy Legends p0239-dullahan.jpgDaniel Maclise (25 January 1806 – 25 April 1870), original drawing William Henry Brooke (1772–1860), illustrator, engraver on Wikimedia

5. Aoife, The Wife Of King Lir

In the ancient tale of The Children of Lir, Aoife is a king’s jealous second wife who possesses magical powers. She envies his four children since he spends all of his time with them. Fueled by jealousy, Aoife takes the children to a lake where she casts a spell on them, turning them into swans. She knew if she killed them they would haunt her so instead she forced them to live as swans for 900 years.

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After nine long centuries, they returned to human form but shortly died of old age.    

File:The Children of Lîr, A Book of Myths.jpgHelen Stratton on Wikimedia

6. The Puca

The Puca is a ghost capable of assuming the form of furry creatures that haunt remote parts of rural Ireland. It’s said that witnessing this mischievous critter can be a sign of good or bad luck. One tale suggests that the Puca transformed itself into a horse to trick a drunken patron outside a pub. The evil horse wildly carried him into the hills and dumped him there alone and confused.   

ASchuehleinASchuehlein on Pixabay

7. Wolf Men Of Tipperary

There are many violent tales to tell of the Wolf Men of Tipperary. These harsh men were shapeshifters, transforming into wolf-like creatures in preparation for battle. They would fight for kings and chieftains willing to pay a steep price, soaking the land in their victims’ blood after vicious attacks. 

File:Loup garou.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author on Wikimedia

8. Balor

In Celtic folklore, Balor is a giant and the demonic god of death. A glance from his one gigantic eye will kill you. He ruled the evil creatures known as Fomorians that lurk in the depths of Irish lakes, feeding them innocent people for dinner. Now that he is dead after his son killed him with a slingshot, the Fomorians must fend for themselves and search for prey on their own.

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File:Eye Central Heterochromia crop and lighter.jpgAdam Cuerden, modified by Greg A L on Wikimedia

9. The Hag Of Beara

The Hag of Beara is the witch of the winter who brings the frosty season to Ireland every year. Locals fear her as she controls the harsh climate, devastating farms and livestock with icy temperatures and wicked storms. The most southerly point of the famous Cliffs of Moher is called Hag’s Head, named after this cold-blooded witch.  

File:The Cailleach Beara or the Hag of Beara - geograph.org.uk - 268026.jpgNigel Cox on Wikimedia

10. The Sluagh

The Sluagh are a gruesome group of dead sinners who have taken the form of malevolent spirits. They soar through the sky from the west in packs, searching for homes with dying habitants whose spirits they intend to steal. Irish believers keep their west-facing windows locked to prevent the evil ghosts from entering their houses.     

File:Irish cottage - geograph.org.uk - 3447198.jpgdanny kearney  on Wikimedia

11. Evil Leprechauns 

To many, the leprechauns are jolly little lads who live at the end of rainbows with their pots of gold. Don’t be fooled by their charming red beards and silly Irish banter, some of them are evil. Their practical jokes are no laughing matter as they torment and irritate their victims to insanity.    

File:Leprechaun ill artlibre jnl.pngJean-no on Wikimedia

12. Carman

With the essence of a witch, the Celtic goddess named Carman is a force of destruction and evil magic. With her three sons by her side, she destroys everything in her path as she travels across the land.

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The trio of brothers Dub (darkness), Dother (evil), and Dain (violence) were banished from Ireland after their mother was defeated by the magical people known as the Tuatha De Danann. 

File:A Celtic Goddess Holding a Lute - George William Russell.pngPainted by George William Russell on Wikimedia

13. Lady Of The Lake

In an abandoned haunted manor in Limerick roams a ghostly lady. Instead of Christmas lights, the legend claims that every Christmas Eve, this disturbing woman lights up the lake by the house with her burning figure. She hovers over the lake with her body in flames, terrifying those who catch her fire in their eyes.  

a group of birds flying over a fireTristen Whitman on Unsplash

14. The Kelpie

In Irish folklore, the Kelpie is no ordinary pony–– she is the ghost of a sea monster in disguise. The dark creature uses its pony form to trick vulnerable children into going for a fatal horseback ride into the sea. A telling sign of the Kelpie is its drenched mane dripping with salty water.    

Tanja HeßTanja Heß on Pexels

15. Aos Si

Aos Si means “people of the mound”, referring to a species of fairies that appear in many Irish myths. These spiteful fairies are protective of their territories and are quick to seek revenge on humans who offend them or trespass on their land. They destroy lives with their spells, kidnap their victim’s children, and ruin family land with their curses.     

File:Lordly ones (1913) - George William Russell.jpgPainted by George William Russell on Wikimedia

   

16. The Abhartach

With an appearance like a vampire, the Abhartach was an evil dwarf who tormented villages with his powerful dark magic.

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Legend has it that the Abhartach was slain and buried by a village chieftain multiple times as he continuously rose from his grave, never accepting death. Turns out he needed to be buried face down for him to stay put underground.     

Paul_HenriPaul_Henri on Pixabay

17. The Clurichaun

The Clurichaun is a close cousin to a leprechaun, or so he wants you to believe. With an identical appearance to a traditional leprechaun, the Clurichaun creeps in the cellars of pubs and homes, getting drunk off their booze. If he was treated badly by the owner, he would wreak havoc by destroying the stock and begrudgingly lurking in their homes forever.    

File:Leprechaun or Clurichaun.pngCawhee on Wikimedia

18. Caorthannach

As the legend goes, Caorthannach was a demon who managed to escape St. Patrick, an Irish saint who banished all snakes and demons from the island. She was St. Patrick’s one remaining conquest and is said to be the mother of the devil who spit fire and poisoned water wells. Eventually, the saint was able to drown her in the sea which created a swell known today as Hawk’s Well.    

File:Saint Patrick Catholic Church (Junction City, Ohio) - stained glass, Saint Patrick - detail.jpgNheyob on Wikimedia

19. Changelings

Changelings could be described as elderly bug-eyed fairies with a twisted dream to be young again. They were shapeshifting immortals who kidnapped children and then took their appearances.

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This creepy act was their way of experiencing life as a baby human.  

File:Füssli - Der Wechselbalg - 1780.jpegHenry Fuseli on Wikimedia

20. Leanan Sidhe

Leanan appeared to be a pretty fairy on the outside but her true self was a demonic muse. With her bewitching beauty, she seduced Ireland’s greatest poets and musicians and left them devastated with broken hearts until they eventually died. The disturbed fairy would take the bodies of her deceased lovers back to her lair where she drained their blood into a giant red cauldron.   

A black and white photo of a woman in a dressMarina Nazina on Unsplash