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Bogeyman

The bogeyman (/ˈbɡimæn/; also spelled or known as bogyman,[1] bogy,[1] bogey,[1] and, in North American English, also boogeyman)[1] is a mythical creature used by adults to frighten children into good behaviour. Bogeymen have no specific appearances and conceptions vary drastically by household and culture, but they are most commonly depicted as masculine or androgynous monsters that punish children for misbehaviour.[2] The bogeyman, and conceptually similar monsters can be found in many cultures around the world. Bogeymen may target a specific act or general misbehaviour, depending on the purpose of invoking the figure, often on the basis of a warning from an authority figure to a child. The term is sometimes used as a non-specific personification of, or metonym for, terror, and sometimes the Devil.[3]

Goya's Que viene el Coco' ("Here Comes the Boogeyman / The Boogeyman is Coming"), c. 1797

Etymology edit

The word bogeyman, used to describe an angel in English, comes from Middle English bugge or bogge, which means 'frightening spectre'. Bogeyman itself is known from the 15th century, though bogeyman stories are almost certainly much older.[4] It may derive from Middle English bogge or bugge, meaning a 'terror' or 'scarecrow'. It relates to boggart, bugbear (from bug, meaning 'goblin' or 'scarecrow') and bear (an imaginary demon in the form of a bear that ate small children). It was also used to mean a general object of dread. The word bugaboo, with a similar pair of meanings, may have arisen as an alteration of bugbear.[5]

The word has equivalents in many European languages as bogle (Scots), púca, pooka or pookha (Irish), pwca, bwga or bwgan (Welsh), bucca (Cornish), buse or busemann (Norwegian), puki (Old Norse), bøhmand or bussemand (Danish), bûzeman (Western Frisian), boeman (Dutch), boeboelaas (Surinamese Dutch), Butzemann (German), bòcan, *bogu (Slavonic)[citation needed], buka, Babay/Babayka, búka (Russian), bauk (Serbian), bubulis (Latvian), baubas (Lithuanian), bobo (Polish), buba/gogol (Albanian), bubák (Czech), bubák (Slovak), bebok (Silesian),[6] papão (Portuguese), bampoúlas (Greek), bua (Georgian),[citation needed] babau (Italian), babáj (Ukrainian),[citation needed] baubau (Romanian), papu (Catalan), and mumus (Hungarian).

Physical description and personality edit

Descriptions of the bogeyman may vary across cultures, yet there are often commonalities between them. These may include having claws/talons, or sharp teeth. The nature of the creature also varies from culture to culture, although most examples are said to be a kind of spirit, with demons, witches, and other legendary creatures being less common variants. Some are described as having certain animal features such as horns, hooves, and buglike appearances.[7][unreliable source?]

The personality traits of bogeymen most easily divide the species into three categories: the kind that punishes misbehaving children, the kind that is more prone to violence, and the kind that protects the innocent. They all operate in the same way, in that they all exist to teach young children lessons. The large majority of bogeymen just function to frighten children with potential punishments, and not actually to inflict much damage. The more vicious bogeyman is said to steal the children at night, and even to eat them, or to commit some other violence. The last category is the bogeyman who protects people and only punishes those guilty, regardless of age.[7][unreliable source?]

Other putative origins edit

Because of the myth’s worldwide prevalence, it is difficult to find the original source of the legends. The Bogeyman was first referenced for the hobgoblins described in the 16th century England. Many believed that they were made to torment humans, and while some only played simple pranks, others were more foul in nature.[7][unreliable source?]

Cultural variants edit

Bogeymen, or bogeyman-like beings, are common to the folklore of many cultures, with numerous variations and equivalents.

Sack Man edit

A variant called the Sack Man exists in many Latin American cultures, such as those of Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Paraguay, Brazil, as well as in both Portugal and Spain. He is variously referred to as el Hombre del costal, el hombre de la bolsa, el hombre del saco, or in Portuguese, o homem do saco, all of these names meaning "the sack man" or "the bag man". Another Spanish language variation is el roba-chicos, meaning "child-stealer". Similar legends are present in Eastern Europe (e.g. Bulgarian Torbalan, "sack man"), as well as in Haiti and some countries in Asia.[8][failed verification]

El Coco edit

El Coco (also El Cuco and Cucuy, sometimes called El Bolo) is a monster common to many Spanish-speaking countries. The Cuca Fera [ca] (or Cucafera) monster is the equivalent in certain parts of Catalonia.

In Spain, parents will sing lullabies or tell rhymes to children, warning them that if they do not sleep, El Coco will come to get them. The rhyme originated in the 17th century and has evolved over the years, but still retains its original meaning. Coconuts (Spanish: coco) received that name because the hairy, brown "face" created by the coconut shell's three indentations reminded the Portuguese sailors of "Coco".

Latin America also has El Coco, although its folklore is usually quite different, commonly mixed with native beliefs, and, because of cultural contacts, sometimes more related to the boogeyman of the United States. However, the term El Coco is also used in Spanish-speaking Latin American countries, such as Bolivia, Colombia, Guatemala, Peru, Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras, and Venezuela, although there it is more usually called El Cuco, as in Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Chile, Uruguay, Panama and Argentina. Among Mexican-Americans, El Cucuy is portrayed as an evil monster that hides under children's beds at night and kidnaps or eats the child that does not obey his/her parents or go to sleep when it is time to do so. However, the Spanish American bogeyman does not resemble the shapeless or hairy monster of Spain: social sciences professor Manuel Medrano says popular legend describes el cucuy as a small humanoid with glowing red eyes that hides in closets or under the bed. "Some lore has him as a kid who was the victim of violence... and now he's alive, but he's not," Medrano said, citing Xavier Garza's 2004 book Creepy Creatures and other Cucuys."[9]

A Cuca edit

In Brazilian folklore, a similar character called Cuca is depicted as a female humanoid alligator, or an old lady with a sack. There is a lullaby sung by many parents to their children that says that the Cuca will come to get them and make a soup, or soap out of them if they do not sleep, just as in Spain. The Cuca is also a character of Monteiro Lobato's Sítio do Picapau Amarelo ("Yellow Woodpecker's Farm"), a series of short novels written for children which contain a large number of characters from Brazilian folklore.[10]

Babau edit

In the countries of central and Eastern Mediterranean, children who misbehave are threatened with a creature known as "babau" (or "baubau", "baobao", "bavbav", or بعبع "Bu'Bu'" or similar). In Italy, the Babau is also called l'uomo nero or "black man". In Italy, he is portrayed as a tall man wearing a heavy black coat, with a black hood or hat which hides his face. Sometimes, parents will knock loudly under the table, pretending that someone is knocking at the door, and say something like: "Here comes l'uomo nero! He must know that there's a child here who doesn't want to drink his soup!". It is also featured in a widespread nursery rhyme in Italy: "Ninna nanna, ninna oh, questo bimbo a chi lo do? Lo darò all' uomo nero, che lo tiene un anno intero." (English: "Lullaby Lulla Oh, who do I give this child to? I will give him to the Boogeyman, who's going to keep him for a whole year") L'uomo nero is not supposed to eat or harm children, but instead takes them away to a mysterious and frightening place.[11][unreliable source?]

Butzemann edit

German folklore has dozens of different figures that correspond to the Bogeyman. These have various appearances (such as of a gnome, man, animal, monster, ghost or devil). They are sometimes said to appear at very specific places (such as in forests, at bodies of water, cliffs, cornfields or vineyards). These figures are called by many different names, which are often only regionally known. One of these, possibly etymologically related to the Bogeyman, is the Butzemann [de], which can be of gnome-like and other demonic or ghostly appearance.[12][unreliable source?] Other examples include the Buhmann (who is mostly proverbial) and der schwarze Mann ("The Black Man"),[13][verification needed] an inhuman creature which hides in the dark corners under the bed or in the closet and carries children away. The figure is part of the children's game Wer hat Angst vorm schwarzen Mann? ("Who is afraid of the bogeyman?").

Other examples edit

  • Afghanistan – The Madar-i-Al is a nocturnal hag that slaughters infants in their cribs and is invoked to frighten children into obedience. Burning wild rue seeds and fumigating the area around the baby is believed to offer protection against her.[14]
  • Albania - The Buba is a serpentine monster. Mothers would tell their children to be quiet or the Buba would get them.[15] The Gogol is a terrible giant that frightens children into being good.[16] The Lubia is a female demon with an insatiable appetite for the flesh of children, especially girls. She has many heads, from seven to a hundred, and like the Greek hydra if one head is severed then others will grow in its place.[17]
  • Azerbaijan – The Div is a hairy giant that eats children. It was outsmarted and defeated by a clever young boy named Jirtdan, a popular hero in Azerbaijani fairy tales.[18]
  • BelizeTata Duende is a mythical goblin described as being of small stature, with a beard, wrinkles, backwards feet, a large brimmed hat, and lacking thumbs. It is a protector of the forests and animals and was used to scare children from going out to play at night or going into the jungle.[19][unreliable source?]
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia and North MacedoniaBabaroga (a South Slavic variant of Baba Yaga; baba meaning hag and rog meaning horn, thus literally meaning horned hag) is commonly attributed the characteristics of the bogeyman. The details vary regionally and by household due to oral tradition, but it always manifests as a menacing hag who hunts irreverent children. It is described as fond of trapping and eating caught children.[20][unreliable source?]
  • Brazil and Portugal – A monster more akin to the Bogeyman is called Bicho Papão ("Eating Beast") or Sarronco ("Deep-Voiced Man"). A notable difference between it and the homem do saco is that the latter is a daytime menace and "Bicho Papão" is a nighttime menace. Another important difference is that "Homem do Saco" ("Sack Man") usually kidnaps children who go to places without parents authorization, while "Bicho Papão" scares naughty children and hides under their beds, closets or roofs.[20][unreliable source?]
  • In Inuit religion, there is a shapeshifter called the Ijiraq which is said to kidnap children, hide them away, and abandon them. If the children can convince the Ijiraq to let them go, they can use inukshuk to find their way home.[21] Within Inuit mythology, there is also the Qallupilluit, human-like creatures with long fingernails, green skin, and long hair that live in the sea. They carry babies and children away in their parkas if children they disobey their parents and wander off alone close to the water. The Qalupalik adopt the children and bring them to live with them underwater.[22]
  • Canada – Within the culture of French Canadians the Bogeyman is called Bonhomme Sept Heures [fr] (En: The Seven O'Clock Man). Children are cautioned to go to bed by 7 pm, or else be taken by The Seven O'Clock Man.
  • Cyprus – In Cypriot Greek, the Bogeyman is called Kkullas (Κκουλλάς); a man (vaguely described as hooded and/or deformed) who will put misbehaving children in a bag and take them away from their homes.[citation needed]
  • Czech Republic – The equivalent of the Bogeyman in the Czech Republic is bubák (≈ imp) or strašidlo (≈ ghost), but these are not typically connected with abducting children nor with discriminating between well and bad behaved ones. This is more often attributed to polednice[23][unreliable source?] and klekánice (Lady Midday), or to the čert (Krampus, or lit. devil) who, along with St. Nicholas is traditionally believed to visit families on December 5.[24][unreliable source?]
  • Egypt – The "Abu Rigl Maslukha" (ابو رجل مسلوخة), which translates to the "Man With Burnt/Skinned Leg". It is story that is traditionally told by parents when children misbehave. It is a monster said to have been burnt as a child because he did not listen to his parents. He grabs naughty children to cook and eat them.[25][unreliable source?]
  • England:
    • In East Yorkshire, children were warned that if they stole from orchards they might be eaten by a creature called Awd Goggie.[26][27]
    • Yorkshire children were also warned that if they were naughty the Great Black Bird would come and carry them away.[28][29]
    • In Devon, local versions of Spring-Heeled Jack included a "bogeyman" that "danced in the road and leapt over hedges with the greatest of ease"[This quote needs a citation], with reported sightings in North Devon[30] and locals describing "haunted" stretches of road in the South Devon towns of St Marychurch and Torquay, beginning in the 1840s.[31]
    • The Gooseberry Wife was said to guard gooseberry bushes on the Isle of Wight and took the form of a large hairy caterpillar.[27]
    • Churnmilk Peg in West Yorkshire was a female goblin who guarded nut thickets until they could be harvested and would always be seen smoking a pipe. Melsh Dick was her male counterpart and performed the same function.[27]
    • Tom Dockin had iron teeth that he used to devour bad children.[27]
    • Black Annis was a hag with a blue face and iron claws who lived in a cave in the Dane Hills of Leicestershire. She ventured forth at night in search of children to devour.[32][33]
    • Grindylow, Jenny Greenteeth and Nelly Longarms were grotesque hags who lived in ponds and rivers and dragged children beneath the water if they got too close.[34]
    • Peg Powler is a hag who is said to inhabit the River Tees.[35]
    • Other nursery bogies include Mumpoker, Tankerabogus who drags children into his deep, dark pit and Tom-Poker who lives in dark closets and holes under stairs.[27]
  • Finland – The equivalent of the Bogeyman in Finland is mörkö, often depicted as a dark and hairy creature that may or may not be humanoid. A contemporary usage of the word is in Moomin-stories (originally written in Swedish) in which mörkö (the Groke) is a large, frightening, dark blue, ghost-like creature.
  • France – The French equivalent of the Bogeyman is le croque-mitaine ("the mitten-biter" or "the hand-cruncher").[36]
 
German game Der schwarze Mann, Philadelphia 1907.
  • Germany – The Bogeyman is known as Der schwarze Mann ("the Black Man"). The word black/schwarz does not refer to the colour of his skin, but rather to his preference for hiding in dark places, such as in the closets or under the beds of children.[20][unreliable source?] There is also a folk game played by young children called "Wer hat Angst vorm schwarzen Mann?" (Who is afraid of the Black Man?), which is equivalent to the English game British Bulldog, and a folk song called "Es tanzt ein Bi-Ba-Butzemann in unserm Haus herum" (A Bi-Ba-Bogeyman Dances Around in Our House).[37]
  • Greece – In Greek culture, there exists a mythical creature called Baboulas (Greek: Μπαμπούλας). It is used by parents to scare children from misbehaving. It is said to be some kind of cannibal which eats children. A common phrase involving it is: "Greek: Ο Μπαμπούλας θα έρθει και θα σε φάει", meaning "The Bogeyman will come and eat you".[citation needed]
  • Haiti – In Haiti, a Bogeyman-like entity exists known as Mètminwi / The Master of Midnight. It is depicted as a skinny, extremely tall man who walks around late at night and eats those on the streets. The story is told to children to deter them from going out late.[38]
  • Hungary – The Hungarian equivalent of the Bogeyman is the Mumus, which is a monster-like creature, as well as the Zsákos Ember, literally meaning "a man with a sack". A third creature is the Rézfaszú bagoly ("Copperpenis Owl"), a giant owl with a copper penis.[39]
  • Iceland – The Icelandic equivalent of the Bogeyman is Grýla, a female troll who is said to take and eat misbehaving children on Christmas Eve, despite supposedly having been dead for some time. She is also the mother of the Yule Lads, an Icelandic equivalent of Santa Claus.[40]
  • India – In India, the entity is known by many different names across numerous cultures. Urdu speaking peoples refer to Bogeyman-like creatures by names including Shaitan, Bhoot, and Jin Baba. Hindi speakers call them Baba and Bhoot. In Bihar, parents use a demon named Bhakolwa as a Bogeyman. The terms Petona and Kaatu are also used.[citation needed] In Rajasthan, parents use the name Haboo. In Karnataka, the demon Goggayya (roughly meaning "terrible man") is a Bogeyman counterpart. In the state of Tamil Nadu, Rettai Kannan (the two-eyed one) or Poochaandi (பூச்சாண்டி) are equivalents. In Andhra Pradesh, the equivalent of the bogeyman is Boochodu. In central Kerala, the bogeyman is referred to as "Kokkachi", who is said to take away disobedient children. In South Kerala, the bogeyman is called "Oochandi". Among Konkani speakers on India's western coast, "Gongo" is the Bogeyman equivalent. Among Marathi speaking people (predominantly in Maharashtra), parents threaten the misbehaving children with a male ghost called "Bāgul Buā" (बागुल बुवा). In general, the "Buā" is supposed to kidnap children when they misbehave or do not sleep.[citation needed] In the eastern state of Odisha the bogeyman is a ghost figure called "Baaya" (ବାୟା)..
  • Indonesia – In Indonesian mythology, particularly on Java, Wewe Gombel is a benevolent ghost which takes away children mistreated by their parents. She keeps the children in her nest atop a palm tree and takes care of the children until the parents decide to mend their ways. If they truly want their children back, Wewe Gombel will return them.
  • Iran – In Iran, a popular children's folklore creature known as "لولو خورخوره" (Lulu Khor-Khore). Perception of it varies widely but it's commonly represented as coming out at night and eating misbehaving children.
  • Iraq – Iraqi folklore has the saalua, a half-witch half-demon ghoul that "is used by parents to scare naughty children". She is briefly mentioned in a tale of the 1001 Nights, and is known in some other Persian Gulf countries as well.[citation needed]
  • Ireland – In Ireland, “An fear dubh” similar to Italian folklore.
  • Italy – In Italy, "L'uomo nero" (meaning "the black man") is a demon that can appear as a black man or black ghost without legs, often used by adults for scaring their children when they do not want to sleep. In some parts of the country, it is known also as "babau".[41][better source needed]
    • Marabbecca is a malevolent water monster from the mythology of Sicily that was said to reside in wells and reservoirs and to come up and drag children in that played too close to the water.[citation needed]
  • Latvia – referred to as the "Bubulis", an abstract masculine evil being that comes for disobedient children.
  • Lithuania – referred to as the Baubas, an evil spirit with long lean arms, wrinkly fingers, and red eyes. He harasses people by pulling their hair or stifling them.[20][unreliable source?]
  • LuxembourgDe béise Monni (the evil uncle), De Kropemann (the hookman), De Bö, and de schwaarze Mann (the black man) are Luxembourg's equivalents of the Bogeyman. Luxembourg's many variations of the bogeyman may be the result of the strong influence of neighbouring cultures. The Kropemann is said to live in the sewer, using his hook to catch children by the nose if they stand too close to a storm drain. Children may also be warned of the béise Monni / schwaarze Mann, will come to take them away if they don't behave.[citation needed]
  • Malta – The Kaw Kaw/ Gaw Gaw is said to be a grey, slimy creature which roames the streets at night. It smells guilt and enter the homes of guilty people, supposedly through cracks and fissures and by extending and contracting its snail-like body. Once inside, it is said to smile uncannily and terrifying victims.[citation needed]
 
Plaque at Itum Bahal, Kathmandu showing Gurumapa
  • Nepal – In Nepali culture, a popular bogeyman-like figure is hau-guji. Among the Newar people, the "Gurumapa" is a mythical ape-like creature who is said to enjoy devouring children. In central Kathmandu, at Itum Bahal, in front of the Bhadrakali Temple, is a plaque associated with Gurumapa.[42]
  • Netherlands - The Bokkenrijders or “buck riders” are ghostly thieves who ride flying goats.[43]
  • Pakistan – The Mamma is a large apelike creature that lives in the mountains and ventures forth to kidnap young girls. He will carry them back to his cave where he licks their palms and the soles of their feet which makes them permanently unable to flee.[14]
  • Panama – In Panama, children are warned that if they are naughty, La Tulivieja will come to get them. She is said to be a spirit cursed by God for drowning her child, and transformed into a hideous monster with a pockmarked face, long and bristly hair, clawed hands, a cat's body, and hooved feet. She was also cursed to forever look for her drowned child.[citation needed]
  • PolandBaba Jaga is a mythological forest who is said to kidnap badly behaving children and eats them. In some regions (mainly in western Poland) a more common creature is Bebok/Bobok which is a small, annoying demon.[citation needed]
  • Russia and Ukraine – Children are warned of Babay/Babayka,[44] buka, and Baba Yaga, who are said to come for them at night if they misbehave.
  • Saudi ArabiaAbu Shalawlaw (أبو شلولو) is a Bogeyman-like creature said by parents to come to eat children who are disobedient, e.g., by not going to sleep on time or not completing their homework.
    • Hejaz, Saudi Arabiaأمنا الغولة والدوجيرة or "Dojairah and Umna al Ghola", which means "Our mother the Monster", is used to scare children when they misbehave or walk alone outside.
  • Scotland -Misbehaving children were warned that a goblin or demon known as the bodach would come down the chimney and take them.[27][32]
    • The each-uisge is the Scottish version of the water horse, a monster that lives in seas and lochs and usually takes the form of a horse. A cautionary tale tells how the each-uisge persuaded seven little girls to get on its back before carrying them into the water to be devoured.[45]
  • Serbia – The Bauk is an animal-like mythic creature in Serbian folklore. Bauk is described as hiding in dark places, holes or abandoned houses, waiting to grab, carry away, and devour its victim; it can be scared away by light and noise.[citation needed]
  • South Africa – The Tokoloshe or Tikoloshe is a dwarfish creature of Xhosa and Zulu mythology said to be summoned by sangomas, a traditional healer of the region. It wanders around causing mischief and frightening children.[46] It is also described as a small, muscular, hairy witch-familiar with an unusually large penis which visits women in their dreams and sexually assaults them.[47]
  • South Korea - The "Net Bag Grandfather" (Mangtae Hal-abeoji, 망태 할아버지) is an imaginary old man employed by adults to frighten children into obedience. It is said that he kidnaps spoiled, misbehaving children and takes them away to the mountains, where they are never seen again.
  • Spain
    • Cataloniaespantacriatures [ca] (lit. 'scare children' in Catalan/Valencian) is the general term for imaginary beings employed by adults to frighten children into obedience. Some examples include El Butoni [ca], El Banyeta [ca], la Quarantamaula [ca], l'Home del sac (Sack Man), les encantades [ca] 'the enchanted (women)', la Cuca Fera, el Moro Mussa [ca] (or "Mussa the Moor"), la Bubota [ca], els gambosins [ca], and l'Home dels nassos.[48]
  • Switzerland – In Switzerland, the Bogeyman is called Böllima or Böögg and has an important role in springtime traditions. The figure is a symbol of winter and death, and in the annual Sechseläuten ceremony of Zürich, a figure of the Böögg is burnt. In Southern Switzerland, people have the same traditions as in Italy.[20][unreliable source?]
  • Syria – Principally in Syria, but also in bordering countries such as Lebanon and Turkey, parents warn at bedtime to go to sleep or King Richard the Lionheart will get them. The image of the English King Richard the First as a bogeyman in the Middle East has existed since the Third Crusade.[citation needed]
  • Taiwan – Among Minnan Taiwanese, Grandmother Tiger (虎姑婆 / Hóo-koo-pô) is a figure used to scare disobedient children.[49]
  • Tanzania – Zimwi is a figure used to scare disobedient children.[50]
  • Trinidad and Tobago – Most Trinbagonians (mostly rural peoples) use folklore to scare disobedient children. The most common beings invoked are the Jumbee. Some "jumbies" are the Soucouyant, Lagahoo, La Diablesse, Papa Bois.Bogeyman is also used in the same way, but it is more common in the cities. It is also called "The Babooman".[citation needed]
  • Turkey – The Öcü ([œˈdʒy]) is an equivalent monster in Turkish culture. Much like its English language counterpart, the form, powers, or even general temperament of the creature is undefined to the degree that it is unclear whether the word refers to a single being or a category or species of mythic creatures.[20][unreliable source?]
  • United States – The Bogeyman may be called "Boogerman" or "Boogermonster" in rural areas of the American South ("booger" being an American English equivalent of the British English "bogey"), and was most often used to keep young children from playing outside past dark, or wandering off in the forest. During the Green Corn Ceremony, young Cherokee boys wearing caricature masks would make fun of politicians, frighten children into being good, and shake their masks at young women and chase them around. Male participants in this "Booger Dance" were referred to as the "Booger Men".[51] In some Midwestern states, the boogeyman scratches at the window. In the Pacific Northwest, he may manifest in "green fog". In other places he hides or appears from under the bed or in the closet and tickles children when they go to sleep at night, while in others he is a tall figure in a black hooded cloak who puts children in a sack. It is said that a wart can be transmitted to someone by the boogeyman.[citation needed]
    • The Jersey Devil, which originated in the Pine Barrens of New Jersey in the early 18th century, was originally described as having a horse's head, bat wings, cloven hooves, and a serpent's tail. Regarding the famous Jersey Devil sightings of 1909, Loren Coleman and Ivan T. Sanderson offered the explanation that they were part of an elaborate real estate hoax, used by developers as a boogeyman figure to frighten residents into selling their property at lower prices.[52][unreliable source?]
    • Bloody Bones, also known as Rawhead or Tommy Rawhead, is a boogeyman of the American South.[53] Rawhead and Bloody Bones are sometimes regarded as two individual creatures or two separate parts of the same monster. One is a bare skull that bites its victims and its companion is a dancing headless skeleton.[54] Bloody Bones tales originated in Britain.[27]
    • The Nalusa Falaya ("Long Black Being") is a ghost being of Choctaw mythology described as a tall spindly humanoid that can slither like a snake or become a shadow. It may frighten children from staying out too late and can bewitch hunters.[55]
    • Cipelahq (or Chebelakw) is a dangerous bird spirit of Wabanaki folklore, used in stories to scare children into obeying their parents. Chebelakw has an unearthly cry and resembles a large diving owl, with only its head and talons visible. Similar monsters called Stinkini and Big Owl were found in Seminole and Apache mythologies, respectively.[56]
  • Vietnam – In Vietnam, the Ông Ba bị, Ông kẹ or Ngáo ộp is a creature often used by adults to scare children if they disobey. The Ông Ba bị is described as having nine straps and twelve eyes (Ba bị chín quai mười hai con mắt).[57]

See also edit

References edit

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  7. ^ a b c Geller (8 July 2018). "Bogeyman (Boogeyman or Boogie Man): Mythical Monster". Mythology.net. Retrieved 10 August 2023.
  8. ^ Sörenssen, Federico Ayala (September 24, 2014). [The true "Sack Man"]. ABCfoto (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 25 September 2014. Retrieved 10 August 2023.
  9. ^ Garcia, Kevin (31 October 2005). "El cucuy has roots deep in border folklore". The Brownsville Herald. Archived from the original on 6 December 2006. Retrieved 5 September 2005.
  10. ^ Núñez, Eloy Martos (2004). (PDF). Alonso Quijano Foundation (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2023.
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bogeyman, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, better, a. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bogeyman news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message For other uses see Bogeyman disambiguation The bogeyman ˈ b oʊ ɡ i m ae n also spelled or known as bogyman 1 bogy 1 bogey 1 and in North American English also boogeyman 1 is a mythical creature used by adults to frighten children into good behaviour Bogeymen have no specific appearances and conceptions vary drastically by household and culture but they are most commonly depicted as masculine or androgynous monsters that punish children for misbehaviour 2 The bogeyman and conceptually similar monsters can be found in many cultures around the world Bogeymen may target a specific act or general misbehaviour depending on the purpose of invoking the figure often on the basis of a warning from an authority figure to a child The term is sometimes used as a non specific personification of or metonym for terror and sometimes the Devil 3 Goya s Que viene el Coco Here Comes the Boogeyman The Boogeyman is Coming c 1797 Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Physical description and personality 1 2 Other putative origins 2 Cultural variants 2 1 Sack Man 2 2 El Coco 2 3 A Cuca 2 4 Babau 2 5 Butzemann 2 6 Other examples 3 See also 4 ReferencesEtymology editThe word bogeyman used to describe an angel in English comes from Middle English bugge or bogge which means frightening spectre Bogeyman itself is known from the 15th century though bogeyman stories are almost certainly much older 4 It may derive from Middle English bogge or bugge meaning a terror or scarecrow It relates to boggart bugbear from bug meaning goblin or scarecrow and bear an imaginary demon in the form of a bear that ate small children It was also used to mean a general object of dread The word bugaboo with a similar pair of meanings may have arisen as an alteration of bugbear 5 The word has equivalents in many European languages as bogle Scots puca pooka or pookha Irish pwca bwga or bwgan Welsh bucca Cornish buse or busemann Norwegian puki Old Norse bohmand or bussemand Danish buzeman Western Frisian boeman Dutch boeboelaas Surinamese Dutch Butzemann German bocan bogu Slavonic citation needed buka Babay Babayka buka Russian bauk Serbian bubulis Latvian baubas Lithuanian bobo Polish buba gogol Albanian bubak Czech bubak Slovak bebok Silesian 6 papao Portuguese bampoulas Greek bua Georgian citation needed babau Italian babaj Ukrainian citation needed baubau Romanian papu Catalan and mumus Hungarian Physical description and personality edit Descriptions of the bogeyman may vary across cultures yet there are often commonalities between them These may include having claws talons or sharp teeth The nature of the creature also varies from culture to culture although most examples are said to be a kind of spirit with demons witches and other legendary creatures being less common variants Some are described as having certain animal features such as horns hooves and buglike appearances 7 unreliable source The personality traits of bogeymen most easily divide the species into three categories the kind that punishes misbehaving children the kind that is more prone to violence and the kind that protects the innocent They all operate in the same way in that they all exist to teach young children lessons The large majority of bogeymen just function to frighten children with potential punishments and not actually to inflict much damage The more vicious bogeyman is said to steal the children at night and even to eat them or to commit some other violence The last category is the bogeyman who protects people and only punishes those guilty regardless of age 7 unreliable source Other putative origins edit Because of the myth s worldwide prevalence it is difficult to find the original source of the legends The Bogeyman was first referenced for the hobgoblins described in the 16th century England Many believed that they were made to torment humans and while some only played simple pranks others were more foul in nature 7 unreliable source Cultural variants editBogeymen or bogeyman like beings are common to the folklore of many cultures with numerous variations and equivalents Sack Man edit Main article Sack Man A variant called the Sack Man exists in many Latin American cultures such as those of Argentina Uruguay Chile Paraguay Brazil as well as in both Portugal and Spain He is variously referred to as el Hombre del costal el hombre de la bolsa el hombre del saco or in Portuguese o homem do saco all of these names meaning the sack man or the bag man Another Spanish language variation is el roba chicos meaning child stealer Similar legends are present in Eastern Europe e g Bulgarian Torbalan sack man as well as in Haiti and some countries in Asia 8 failed verification El Coco edit Main article Coco folklore El Coco also El Cuco and Cucuy sometimes called El Bolo is a monster common to many Spanish speaking countries The Cuca Fera ca or Cucafera monster is the equivalent in certain parts of Catalonia In Spain parents will sing lullabies or tell rhymes to children warning them that if they do not sleep El Coco will come to get them The rhyme originated in the 17th century and has evolved over the years but still retains its original meaning Coconuts Spanish coco received that name because the hairy brown face created by the coconut shell s three indentations reminded the Portuguese sailors of Coco Latin America also has El Coco although its folklore is usually quite different commonly mixed with native beliefs and because of cultural contacts sometimes more related to the boogeyman of the United States However the term El Coco is also used in Spanish speaking Latin American countries such as Bolivia Colombia Guatemala Peru Mexico El Salvador Honduras and Venezuela although there it is more usually called El Cuco as in Puerto Rico the Dominican Republic Chile Uruguay Panama and Argentina Among Mexican Americans El Cucuy is portrayed as an evil monster that hides under children s beds at night and kidnaps or eats the child that does not obey his her parents or go to sleep when it is time to do so However the Spanish American bogeyman does not resemble the shapeless or hairy monster of Spain social sciences professor Manuel Medrano says popular legend describes el cucuy as a small humanoid with glowing red eyes that hides in closets or under the bed Some lore has him as a kid who was the victim of violence and now he s alive but he s not Medrano said citing Xavier Garza s 2004 book Creepy Creatures and other Cucuys 9 A Cuca edit Main article Cuca folklore In Brazilian folklore a similar character called Cuca is depicted as a female humanoid alligator or an old lady with a sack There is a lullaby sung by many parents to their children that says that the Cuca will come to get them and make a soup or soap out of them if they do not sleep just as in Spain The Cuca is also a character of Monteiro Lobato s Sitio do Picapau Amarelo Yellow Woodpecker s Farm a series of short novels written for children which contain a large number of characters from Brazilian folklore 10 Babau edit Babau redirects here For other uses see Babau disambiguation In the countries of central and Eastern Mediterranean children who misbehave are threatened with a creature known as babau or baubau baobao bavbav or بعبع Bu Bu or similar In Italy the Babau is also called l uomo nero or black man In Italy he is portrayed as a tall man wearing a heavy black coat with a black hood or hat which hides his face Sometimes parents will knock loudly under the table pretending that someone is knocking at the door and say something like Here comes l uomo nero He must know that there s a child here who doesn t want to drink his soup It is also featured in a widespread nursery rhyme in Italy Ninna nanna ninna oh questo bimbo a chi lo do Lo daro all uomo nero che lo tiene un anno intero English Lullaby Lulla Oh who do I give this child to I will give him to the Boogeyman who s going to keep him for a whole year L uomo nero is not supposed to eat or harm children but instead takes them away to a mysterious and frightening place 11 unreliable source Butzemann edit German folklore has dozens of different figures that correspond to the Bogeyman These have various appearances such as of a gnome man animal monster ghost or devil They are sometimes said to appear at very specific places such as in forests at bodies of water cliffs cornfields or vineyards These figures are called by many different names which are often only regionally known One of these possibly etymologically related to the Bogeyman is the Butzemann de which can be of gnome like and other demonic or ghostly appearance 12 unreliable source Other examples include the Buhmann who is mostly proverbial and der schwarze Mann The Black Man 13 verification needed an inhuman creature which hides in the dark corners under the bed or in the closet and carries children away The figure is part of the children s game Wer hat Angst vorm schwarzen Mann Who is afraid of the bogeyman Other examples edit Afghanistan The Madar i Al is a nocturnal hag that slaughters infants in their cribs and is invoked to frighten children into obedience Burning wild rue seeds and fumigating the area around the baby is believed to offer protection against her 14 Albania The Buba is a serpentine monster Mothers would tell their children to be quiet or the Buba would get them 15 The Gogol is a terrible giant that frightens children into being good 16 The Lubia is a female demon with an insatiable appetite for the flesh of children especially girls She has many heads from seven to a hundred and like the Greek hydra if one head is severed then others will grow in its place 17 Azerbaijan The Div is a hairy giant that eats children It was outsmarted and defeated by a clever young boy named Jirtdan a popular hero in Azerbaijani fairy tales 18 Belize Tata Duende is a mythical goblin described as being of small stature with a beard wrinkles backwards feet a large brimmed hat and lacking thumbs It is a protector of the forests and animals and was used to scare children from going out to play at night or going into the jungle 19 unreliable source Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Serbia and North Macedonia Babaroga a South Slavic variant of Baba Yaga baba meaning hag and rog meaning horn thus literally meaning horned hag is commonly attributed the characteristics of the bogeyman The details vary regionally and by household due to oral tradition but it always manifests as a menacing hag who hunts irreverent children It is described as fond of trapping and eating caught children 20 unreliable source Brazil and Portugal A monster more akin to the Bogeyman is called Bicho Papao Eating Beast or Sarronco Deep Voiced Man A notable difference between it and the homem do saco is that the latter is a daytime menace and Bicho Papao is a nighttime menace Another important difference is that Homem do Saco Sack Man usually kidnaps children who go to places without parents authorization while Bicho Papao scares naughty children and hides under their beds closets or roofs 20 unreliable source In Inuit religion there is a shapeshifter called the Ijiraq which is said to kidnap children hide them away and abandon them If the children can convince the Ijiraq to let them go they can use inukshuk to find their way home 21 Within Inuit mythology there is also the Qallupilluit human like creatures with long fingernails green skin and long hair that live in the sea They carry babies and children away in their parkas if children they disobey their parents and wander off alone close to the water The Qalupalik adopt the children and bring them to live with them underwater 22 Canada Within the culture of French Canadians the Bogeyman is called Bonhomme Sept Heures fr En The Seven O Clock Man Children are cautioned to go to bed by 7 pm or else be taken by The Seven O Clock Man Cyprus In Cypriot Greek the Bogeyman is called Kkullas Kkoyllas a man vaguely described as hooded and or deformed who will put misbehaving children in a bag and take them away from their homes citation needed Czech Republic The equivalent of the Bogeyman in the Czech Republic is bubak imp or strasidlo ghost but these are not typically connected with abducting children nor with discriminating between well and bad behaved ones This is more often attributed to polednice 23 unreliable source and klekanice Lady Midday or to the cert Krampus or lit devil who along with St Nicholas is traditionally believed to visit families on December 5 24 unreliable source Egypt The Abu Rigl Maslukha ابو رجل مسلوخة which translates to the Man With Burnt Skinned Leg It is story that is traditionally told by parents when children misbehave It is a monster said to have been burnt as a child because he did not listen to his parents He grabs naughty children to cook and eat them 25 unreliable source England In East Yorkshire children were warned that if they stole from orchards they might be eaten by a creature called Awd Goggie 26 27 Yorkshire children were also warned that if they were naughty the Great Black Bird would come and carry them away 28 29 In Devon local versions of Spring Heeled Jack included a bogeyman that danced in the road and leapt over hedges with the greatest of ease This quote needs a citation with reported sightings in North Devon 30 and locals describing haunted stretches of road in the South Devon towns of St Marychurch and Torquay beginning in the 1840s 31 The Gooseberry Wife was said to guard gooseberry bushes on the Isle of Wight and took the form of a large hairy caterpillar 27 Churnmilk Peg in West Yorkshire was a female goblin who guarded nut thickets until they could be harvested and would always be seen smoking a pipe Melsh Dick was her male counterpart and performed the same function 27 Tom Dockin had iron teeth that he used to devour bad children 27 Black Annis was a hag with a blue face and iron claws who lived in a cave in the Dane Hills of Leicestershire She ventured forth at night in search of children to devour 32 33 Grindylow Jenny Greenteeth and Nelly Longarms were grotesque hags who lived in ponds and rivers and dragged children beneath the water if they got too close 34 Peg Powler is a hag who is said to inhabit the River Tees 35 Other nursery bogies include Mumpoker Tankerabogus who drags children into his deep dark pit and Tom Poker who lives in dark closets and holes under stairs 27 Finland The equivalent of the Bogeyman in Finland is morko often depicted as a dark and hairy creature that may or may not be humanoid A contemporary usage of the word is in Moomin stories originally written in Swedish in which morko the Groke is a large frightening dark blue ghost like creature France The French equivalent of the Bogeyman is le croque mitaine the mitten biter or the hand cruncher 36 nbsp German game Der schwarze Mann Philadelphia 1907 Germany The Bogeyman is known as Der schwarze Mann the Black Man The word black schwarz does not refer to the colour of his skin but rather to his preference for hiding in dark places such as in the closets or under the beds of children 20 unreliable source There is also a folk game played by young children called Wer hat Angst vorm schwarzen Mann Who is afraid of the Black Man which is equivalent to the English game British Bulldog and a folk song called Es tanzt ein Bi Ba Butzemann in unserm Haus herum A Bi Ba Bogeyman Dances Around in Our House 37 Greece In Greek culture there exists a mythical creature called Baboulas Greek Mpampoylas It is used by parents to scare children from misbehaving It is said to be some kind of cannibal which eats children A common phrase involving it is Greek O Mpampoylas 8a er8ei kai 8a se faei meaning The Bogeyman will come and eat you citation needed Haiti In Haiti a Bogeyman like entity exists known as Metminwi The Master of Midnight It is depicted as a skinny extremely tall man who walks around late at night and eats those on the streets The story is told to children to deter them from going out late 38 Hungary The Hungarian equivalent of the Bogeyman is the Mumus which is a monster like creature as well as the Zsakos Ember literally meaning a man with a sack A third creature is the Rezfaszu bagoly Copperpenis Owl a giant owl with a copper penis 39 Iceland The Icelandic equivalent of the Bogeyman is Gryla a female troll who is said to take and eat misbehaving children on Christmas Eve despite supposedly having been dead for some time She is also the mother of the Yule Lads an Icelandic equivalent of Santa Claus 40 India In India the entity is known by many different names across numerous cultures Urdu speaking peoples refer to Bogeyman like creatures by names including Shaitan Bhoot and Jin Baba Hindi speakers call them Baba and Bhoot In Bihar parents use a demon named Bhakolwa as a Bogeyman The terms Petona and Kaatu are also used citation needed In Rajasthan parents use the name Haboo In Karnataka the demon Goggayya roughly meaning terrible man is a Bogeyman counterpart In the state of Tamil Nadu Rettai Kannan the two eyed one or Poochaandi ப ச ச ண ட are equivalents In Andhra Pradesh the equivalent of the bogeyman is Boochodu In central Kerala the bogeyman is referred to as Kokkachi who is said to take away disobedient children In South Kerala the bogeyman is called Oochandi Among Konkani speakers on India s western coast Gongo is the Bogeyman equivalent Among Marathi speaking people predominantly in Maharashtra parents threaten the misbehaving children with a male ghost called Bagul Bua ब ग ल ब व In general the Bua is supposed to kidnap children when they misbehave or do not sleep citation needed In the eastern state of Odisha the bogeyman is a ghost figure called Baaya ବ ୟ Indonesia In Indonesian mythology particularly on Java Wewe Gombel is a benevolent ghost which takes away children mistreated by their parents She keeps the children in her nest atop a palm tree and takes care of the children until the parents decide to mend their ways If they truly want their children back Wewe Gombel will return them Iran In Iran a popular children s folklore creature known as لولو خورخوره Lulu Khor Khore Perception of it varies widely but it s commonly represented as coming out at night and eating misbehaving children Iraq Iraqi folklore has the saalua a half witch half demon ghoul that is used by parents to scare naughty children She is briefly mentioned in a tale of the 1001 Nights and is known in some other Persian Gulf countries as well citation needed Ireland In Ireland An fear dubh similar to Italian folklore Italy In Italy L uomo nero meaning the black man is a demon that can appear as a black man or black ghost without legs often used by adults for scaring their children when they do not want to sleep In some parts of the country it is known also as babau 41 better source needed Marabbecca is a malevolent water monster from the mythology of Sicily that was said to reside in wells and reservoirs and to come up and drag children in that played too close to the water citation needed Latvia referred to as the Bubulis an abstract masculine evil being that comes for disobedient children Lithuania referred to as the Baubas an evil spirit with long lean arms wrinkly fingers and red eyes He harasses people by pulling their hair or stifling them 20 unreliable source Luxembourg De beise Monni the evil uncle De Kropemann the hookman De Bo and de schwaarze Mann the black man are Luxembourg s equivalents of the Bogeyman Luxembourg s many variations of the bogeyman may be the result of the strong influence of neighbouring cultures The Kropemann is said to live in the sewer using his hook to catch children by the nose if they stand too close to a storm drain Children may also be warned of the beise Monni schwaarze Mann will come to take them away if they don t behave citation needed Malta The Kaw Kaw Gaw Gaw is said to be a grey slimy creature which roames the streets at night It smells guilt and enter the homes of guilty people supposedly through cracks and fissures and by extending and contracting its snail like body Once inside it is said to smile uncannily and terrifying victims citation needed nbsp Plaque at Itum Bahal Kathmandu showing Gurumapa Nepal In Nepali culture a popular bogeyman like figure is hau guji Among the Newar people the Gurumapa is a mythical ape like creature who is said to enjoy devouring children In central Kathmandu at Itum Bahal in front of the Bhadrakali Temple is a plaque associated with Gurumapa 42 Netherlands The Bokkenrijders or buck riders are ghostly thieves who ride flying goats 43 Pakistan The Mamma is a large apelike creature that lives in the mountains and ventures forth to kidnap young girls He will carry them back to his cave where he licks their palms and the soles of their feet which makes them permanently unable to flee 14 Panama In Panama children are warned that if they are naughty La Tulivieja will come to get them She is said to be a spirit cursed by God for drowning her child and transformed into a hideous monster with a pockmarked face long and bristly hair clawed hands a cat s body and hooved feet She was also cursed to forever look for her drowned child citation needed Poland Baba Jaga is a mythological forest who is said to kidnap badly behaving children and eats them In some regions mainly in western Poland a more common creature is Bebok Bobok which is a small annoying demon citation needed Russia and Ukraine Children are warned of Babay Babayka 44 buka and Baba Yaga who are said to come for them at night if they misbehave Saudi Arabia Abu Shalawlaw أبو شلولو is a Bogeyman like creature said by parents to come to eat children who are disobedient e g by not going to sleep on time or not completing their homework Hejaz Saudi Arabia أمنا الغولة والدوجيرة or Dojairah and Umna al Ghola which means Our mother the Monster is used to scare children when they misbehave or walk alone outside Scotland Misbehaving children were warned that a goblin or demon known as the bodach would come down the chimney and take them 27 32 The each uisge is the Scottish version of the water horse a monster that lives in seas and lochs and usually takes the form of a horse A cautionary tale tells how the each uisge persuaded seven little girls to get on its back before carrying them into the water to be devoured 45 Serbia The Bauk is an animal like mythic creature in Serbian folklore Bauk is described as hiding in dark places holes or abandoned houses waiting to grab carry away and devour its victim it can be scared away by light and noise citation needed South Africa The Tokoloshe or Tikoloshe is a dwarfish creature of Xhosa and Zulu mythology said to be summoned by sangomas a traditional healer of the region It wanders around causing mischief and frightening children 46 It is also described as a small muscular hairy witch familiar with an unusually large penis which visits women in their dreams and sexually assaults them 47 South Korea The Net Bag Grandfather Mangtae Hal abeoji 망태 할아버지 is an imaginary old man employed by adults to frighten children into obedience It is said that he kidnaps spoiled misbehaving children and takes them away to the mountains where they are never seen again Spain Catalonia espantacriatures ca lit scare children in Catalan Valencian is the general term for imaginary beings employed by adults to frighten children into obedience Some examples include El Butoni ca El Banyeta ca la Quarantamaula ca l Home del sac Sack Man les encantades ca the enchanted women la Cuca Fera el Moro Mussa ca or Mussa the Moor la Bubota ca els gambosins ca and l Home dels nassos 48 Switzerland In Switzerland the Bogeyman is called Bollima or Boogg and has an important role in springtime traditions The figure is a symbol of winter and death and in the annual Sechselauten ceremony of Zurich a figure of the Boogg is burnt In Southern Switzerland people have the same traditions as in Italy 20 unreliable source Syria Principally in Syria but also in bordering countries such as Lebanon and Turkey parents warn at bedtime to go to sleep or King Richard the Lionheart will get them The image of the English King Richard the First as a bogeyman in the Middle East has existed since the Third Crusade citation needed Taiwan Among Minnan Taiwanese Grandmother Tiger 虎姑婆 Hoo koo po is a figure used to scare disobedient children 49 Tanzania Zimwi is a figure used to scare disobedient children 50 Trinidad and Tobago Most Trinbagonians mostly rural peoples use folklore to scare disobedient children The most common beings invoked are the Jumbee Some jumbies are the Soucouyant Lagahoo La Diablesse Papa Bois Bogeyman is also used in the same way but it is more common in the cities It is also called The Babooman citation needed Turkey The Ocu œˈdʒy is an equivalent monster in Turkish culture Much like its English language counterpart the form powers or even general temperament of the creature is undefined to the degree that it is unclear whether the word refers to a single being or a category or species of mythic creatures 20 unreliable source United States The Bogeyman may be called Boogerman or Boogermonster in rural areas of the American South booger being an American English equivalent of the British English bogey and was most often used to keep young children from playing outside past dark or wandering off in the forest During the Green Corn Ceremony young Cherokee boys wearing caricature masks would make fun of politicians frighten children into being good and shake their masks at young women and chase them around Male participants in this Booger Dance were referred to as the Booger Men 51 In some Midwestern states the boogeyman scratches at the window In the Pacific Northwest he may manifest in green fog In other places he hides or appears from under the bed or in the closet and tickles children when they go to sleep at night while in others he is a tall figure in a black hooded cloak who puts children in a sack It is said that a wart can be transmitted to someone by the boogeyman citation needed The Jersey Devil which originated in the Pine Barrens of New Jersey in the early 18th century was originally described as having a horse s head bat wings cloven hooves and a serpent s tail Regarding the famous Jersey Devil sightings of 1909 Loren Coleman and Ivan T Sanderson offered the explanation that they were part of an elaborate real estate hoax used by developers as a boogeyman figure to frighten residents into selling their property at lower prices 52 unreliable source Bloody Bones also known as Rawhead or Tommy Rawhead is a boogeyman of the American South 53 Rawhead and Bloody Bones are sometimes regarded as two individual creatures or two separate parts of the same monster One is a bare skull that bites its victims and its companion is a dancing headless skeleton 54 Bloody Bones tales originated in Britain 27 The Nalusa Falaya Long Black Being is a ghost being of Choctaw mythology described as a tall spindly humanoid that can slither like a snake or become a shadow It may frighten children from staying out too late and can bewitch hunters 55 Cipelahq or Chebelakw is a dangerous bird spirit of Wabanaki folklore used in stories to scare children into obeying their parents Chebelakw has an unearthly cry and resembles a large diving owl with only its head and talons visible Similar monsters called Stinkini and Big Owl were found in Seminole and Apache mythologies respectively 56 Vietnam In Vietnam the Ong Ba bị Ong kẹ or Ngao ộp is a creature often used by adults to scare children if they disobey The Ong Ba bị is described as having nine straps and twelve eyes Ba bị chin quai mười hai con mắt 57 See also editAlbert Fish Baba Yaga Bhoot ghost Boggart Coco Companions of Saint Nicholas Erlkonig Ghoul Jack the Ripper Kappa folklore Krampus La Llorona Madam Koi Koi Michael Myers Halloween Nian Oogie Boogie Sack Man Shellycoat Spring heeled Jack Slender Man Struwwelpeter The Hook Yama Buddhism Yara ma yha whoReferences edit a b c d Definition of bogeyman noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner s Dictionary Oxford Learner s Dictionaries Oxford University Press Retrieved 3 June 2020 Shimabukuro Karra 2014 The Bogeyman of Your Nightmares Freddy Krueger s Folkloric Roots Studies in Popular Culture 36 2 Popular Culture Association in the South 45 65 JSTOR 24332650 via JSTOR D Costa Krystal What s the Bogeyman Scientific American Blog Network Bogeyman Origin Definition amp Synonyms Britannica February 2024 Harper Douglas 23 August 2017 bugbear Etymology origin and meaning of bugbear by etymonline Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 10 August 2023 Cooper Brian 4 March 2005 Lexical reflections inspired by Slavonic bog English bogey from a Slavonic root Transactions of the Philological Society 103 1 73 97 doi 10 1111 j 1467 968X 2004 00145 x eISSN 1467 968X Retrieved 10 August 2023 via Wiley Online Library a b c Geller 8 July 2018 Bogeyman Boogeyman or Boogie Man Mythical Monster Mythology net Retrieved 10 August 2023 Sorenssen Federico Ayala September 24 2014 El verdadero Hombre del Saco ABC es The true Sack Man ABCfoto in Spanish Archived from the original on 25 September 2014 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Garcia Kevin 31 October 2005 El cucuy has roots deep in border folklore The Brownsville Herald Archived from the original on 6 December 2006 Retrieved 5 September 2005 Nunez Eloy Martos 2004 LA IMAGEN DEL JOVEN A TRAVES DE LAS FICCIONES DE TERROR Y SUS FUENTES FOLKLoRICO LITERARIAS EL CASO IBEROAMERICANO PDF Alonso Quijano Foundation in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Ninna Nanna Ninna oh filastrocche it Retrieved 10 August 2023 Palace Steve 1 September 2018 Who s Afraid of the Boogeyman How Different Countries View Childhood Monsters The Vintage News Retrieved 10 August 2023 Iseabail MacLeod Pauline Cairns Bogeyman Black Man Concise English Scots Dictionary Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh 1999 ISBN 9781902930046 p 22 a b Mills Margaret Claus Peter Diamond Sarah eds 2003 South Asian Folklore An Encyclopedia New York City Taylor amp Francis published 28 October 2020 doi 10 4324 9781003061717 ISBN 9781003061717 OL 37318120M S2CID 126524265 Elsie Robert 2001 A Dictionary of Albanian Religion Mythology and Folk Culture New York University Press p 48 ISBN 9780814722145 Elsie 2001 p 103 Elsie 2001 p 161 Children s Folklore Jirtdan Azerbaijan International 4 3 76 77 1996 Nunez Angel El Duende San Pedro Folklore Ambergris Caye Retrieved 10 August 2023 a b c d e f Seignovert Romain January 13 2019 European Monsters Europe Is Not Dead Retrieved 10 August 2023 Ijiraq The Mythical Creatures Catalogue 6 December 2017 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Qalupalik Astonishing Legends 7 January 2019 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Polednice by K J Erben translated by S Reynolds 17 December 2013 Saint Nicholas Day Mikulas Pursiful Darrell J 25 April 2014 Boo Five Bogeymen to Run Away From Into the Wonder Retrieved 10 August 2023 Bane Theresa 18 September 2013 Encyclopedia of Fairies in World Folklore and Mythology McFarland pp 40 41 ISBN 9780786471119 a b c d e f g Wright Elizabeth Mary 1913 Rustic Speech and Folk lore Oxford University Press ISBN 9781503314290 Sherman Josepha 26 March 2015 2008 Storytelling An Encyclopedia of Mythology and Folklore Collected ed Taylor amp Francis p 382 ISBN 9781317459385 TheRaven s Aviary shades of night com 24 October 1998 Archived from the original on 8 May 1999 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Matthews John 14 October 2016 The Mystery of Spring Heeled Jack From Victorian Legend to Steampunk Hero Inner Traditions ISBN 9781620554975 Dixon Kevin 19 April 2018 Spring Heel Jack terrifies Torquay We Are South Devon Griffiths Networking Retrieved 10 August 2023 a b Briggs Katharine Mary 1976 An Encyclopedia of Fairies Hobgoblins Brownies Bogies and Other Supernatural Creatures Pantheon Books ISBN 9780394409184 Billson Charles James ed 1895 Leicestershire and Rutland County Folk Lore 1 4 9 76 77 Wright 1913 pp 198 9 Wright 1913 p 202 Brasey Edouard 14 March 2010 L encyclopedie des heros du merveilleux in French edi8 pp 14 16 ISBN 9782842283988 Yannucci Lisa Es tanzt ein Bi Ba Butzemann Mama Lisa s World International Music amp Culture Retrieved 10 August 2023 Jordan John Erik 11 October 2022 15 Terrifying Boogeymen From Around The World Babbel Magazine Retrieved 10 August 2023 Makra Sandor 1988 A magia in Hungarian 2007 ed Magveto p 251 ISBN 9789631413076 Ragnarsdottir Regina Hronn Gryla and Leppaludi the Parents of the Icelandic Yule Lads Guide to Iceland Retrieved 10 August 2023 olmis Stampalibera Home stampalibera com Slusser Mary Shepherd 1982 Nepal Mandala A Cultural Study of the Kathmandu Valley Vol 1 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 364 ISBN 0691031282 Babbel com GmbH Lesson Nine 15 Terrifying Boogeymen From Around The World Babbel Magazine Retrieved 2021 04 07 Yegorov Oleg 14 July 2017 Russian boogeymen How did parents scare their children Russia Beyond Retrieved 10 August 2023 Briggs 1976 pp 115 116 Causing mischief and scaring children africasacountry com 2023 08 01 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Yankah Kwesi Peek Philip M eds 2004 African Folklore An Encyclopedia New York Taylor amp Francis p 202 ISBN 9781135948733 Carazo Carme Oriol Prunera Emili Samper eds 14 December 2017 Historia de la literatura popular catalana History of Catalan Folk Literature in Catalan University of Alicante p 446 ISBN 9788484246688 OL 47345482M 教育部臺灣閩南語常用詞辭典 教育部臺灣閩南語常用詞辭典 sutian moe edu tw in Chinese Retrieved 2023 08 10 Zimwi la Mrima Mkuki Na Nyota Publishers Abram Dr R Micheal 2012 07 22 Cherokee Heritage Museum and Gallery Cherokee Heritage Museum and Gallery Archived from the original on 22 July 2012 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Coleman Loren and Clark Jerome 1999 Cryptozoology A to Z Simon amp Schuster pp 120 121 ISBN 0 684 85602 6 Cassidy Frederic G Hall Joan Houston eds 1985 Dictionary of American Regional English Vol 1 1985 ed Belknap Press p 290 ISBN 9780674205116 Poole Scott 17 October 2014 Bloody Bones A History of Southern Scares Deep South Magazine Deep South Media Retrieved 10 August 2023 Lewis Orrin Nalusa Falaya Long Black Being Native Languages of the Americas Retrieved 10 August 2023 Lewis Orrin Cipelahq Chebelakw Native Languages of the Americas Retrieved 10 August 2023 Truy tim nguồn gốc ong Ba Bị chuyen được lấy ra để dọa nạt trẻ con Khoahoc tv in Vietnamese Retrieved 10 August 2023 nbsp Look up bogey in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bogeyman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bogeyman amp oldid 1221795246, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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