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Kelpie

A kelpie, or water kelpie (Scottish Gaelic: Each-Uisge), is a shape-shifting spirit inhabiting lochs in Irish and Scottish folklore. It is usually described as a grey or white[1] horse-like creature, able to adopt human form. Some accounts state that the kelpie retains its hooves when appearing as a human, leading to its association with the Christian idea of Satan as alluded to by Robert Burns in his 1786 poem "Address to the Devil".

The Kelpie by Herbert James Draper, 1913

Almost every sizeable body of water in Scotland has an associated kelpie story, but the most extensively reported is that of Loch Ness. The kelpie has counterparts across the world, such as the Germanic nixie, the wihwin of Central America and the Australian bunyip. The origins of narratives about the creature are unclear, but the practical purposes of keeping children away from dangerous stretches of water and warning young women to be wary of handsome strangers has been noted in secondary literature.

Kelpies have been portrayed in their various forms in art and literature, including two 30-metre-high (100 ft) steel sculptures in Falkirk, The Kelpies, completed in October 2013.

Etymology edit

The etymology of the Scots word kelpie is uncertain, but it may be derived from the Gaelic calpa or cailpeach, meaning "heifer" or "colt". The first recorded use of the term to describe a mythological creature, then spelled kaelpie, appears in the manuscript of an ode by William Collins, composed some time before 1759[2] and reproduced in the Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh of 1788.[3] The place names Kelpie hoall and Kelpie hooll are reported in A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue as appearing in the 1674 burgh records for Kirkcudbright.[4]

Folk beliefs edit

Description and common attributes edit

The kelpie is the most common water spirit in Scottish folklore, and the name is attributed to several different forms in narratives recorded throughout the country.[5] The late 19th century saw the onset of an interest in transcribing folklore, and recorders were inconsistent in spelling and frequently anglicised words, which could result in differing names for the same spirit.[6]

Commentators have disagreed over the kelpie's aquatic habitat. Folklorists who define kelpies as spirits living beside rivers, as distinguished from the Celtic lochside-dwelling water horse (each-uisge), include 19th-century minister of Tiree John Gregorson Campbell and 20th-century writers Lewis Spence and Katharine Briggs.[7][8][9] This distinction is not universally applied however; Sir Walter Scott for instance claims that the kelpie's range may extend to lochs.[10][11] Mackillop's dictionary reconciles the discrepancy, stating that the kelpie was "initially thought to inhabit ... streams, and later any body of water."[12] But the distinction should stand, argues one annotator, who suggests that people are led astray when an each uisge in a "common practice of translating" are referred to as kelpies in English accounts,[13] and thus mistakenly attribute loch-dwelling habits to the latter.

Others associate the term kelpie with a wide variety of legendary creatures.[5] Counterparts in some regions of Scotland include the shoopiltee and nuggle[14] of Shetland and the tangie of Orkney; in other parts of the British Islands they include the Welsh ceffyl dŵr and the Manx cabbyl-ushtey. Parallels to the general Germanic neck and the Scandinavian bäckahäst have been observed; Nick Middleton observes that "the kelpie of Scottish folklore is a direct parallel of the [sic] bäckahästen [of Scandinavian folklore]".[15] The wihwin of Central America[16] and the Australian bunyip[17] are seen as similar creatures in other parts of the world.

The kelpie is usually described as a powerful and beautiful black horse inhabiting the deep pools of rivers and streams of Scotland, preying on any humans it encounters.[16][18] One of the water-kelpie's common identifying characteristics is that its hooves are reversed as compared to those of a normal horse, a trait also shared by the nykur of Iceland.[16][19] An Aberdeenshire variation portrays the kelpie as a horse with a mane of serpents,[20] whereas the resident equine spirit of the River Spey was white and could entice victims onto its back by singing.[17]

The creature's nature was described by Walter Gregor, a folklorist and one of the first members of the Folklore Society,[21] as "useful", "hurtful", or seeking "human companionship";[22] in some cases, kelpies take their victims into the water, devour them, and throw the entrails to the water's edge.[23] In its equine form the kelpie is able to extend the length of its back to carry many riders together into the depths;[24] a common theme in the tales is of several children clambering onto the creature's back while one remains on the shore. Usually a little boy, he then pets the horse but his hand sticks to its neck. In some variations the lad cuts off his fingers or hand to free himself; he survives but the other children are carried off and drowned, with only some of their entrails being found later. Such a creature said to inhabit Glen Keltney in Perthshire is considered to be a kelpie by 20th-century folklorist Katharine Mary Briggs,[5] but a similar tale also set in Perthshire has an each uisge as the culprit and omits the embellishment of the young boy.[25] The lad does cut his finger off when the event takes place in Thurso, where a water kelpie is identified as the culprit.[26] The same tale set at Sunart in the Highlands gives a specific figure of nine children lost, of whom only the innards of one are recovered. The surviving boy is again saved by cutting off his finger, and the additional information is given that he had a Bible in his pocket. Gregorson Campbell considers the creature responsible to have been a water horse rather than a kelpie, and the tale "obviously a pious fraud to keep children from wandering on Sundays".[27]

Kelpie myths usually describe a solitary creature, but a fairy story recorded by John F. Campbell in Popular Tales of the West Highlands (1860) has a different perspective. Entitled Of the Drocht na Vougha or Fuoah, which is given the translation of the bridge of the fairies or kelpies, it features a group of voughas. The spirits had set about constructing a bridge over the Dornoch Firth after becoming tired of travelling across the water in cockleshells. It was a magnificent piece of work resplendent with gold piers and posts, but sank into the water to become a treacherous area of quicksand after a grateful onlooker tried to bless the kelpies for their work.[28] The same story is recorded by Folklore Society member and folklore collector Charlotte Dempster simply as The Kelpie's Bridge (1888) with no mention of Voughas or Fuoah.[29] Quoting the same narrative Jennifer Westwood, author and folklorist,[30] uses the descriptor water kelpies, adding that in her opinion "Kelpies, here and in a few other instances, is used in a loose sense to mean something like 'imps'".[31]

Progeny resulting from a mating between a kelpie and a normal horse were impossible to drown, and could be recognised by their shorter than normal ears, a characteristic shared by the mythical water bull or tarbh uisge in Scottish Gaelic, similar to the Manx tarroo ushtey.[32][33]

Shapeshifting edit

 
The Kelpie by Thomas Millie Dow, 1895

Kelpies have the ability to transform themselves into non-equine forms, and can take on the outward appearance of human figures,[34] in which guise they may betray themselves by the presence of water weeds in their hair.[16] Gregor described a kelpie adopting the guise of a wizened old man continually muttering to himself while sitting on a bridge stitching a pair of trousers. Believing it to be a kelpie, a passing local struck it on the head, causing it to revert to its equine form and scamper back to its lair in a nearby pond.[35] Other accounts describe the kelpie when appearing in human form as a "rough, shaggy man who leaps behind a solitary rider, gripping and crushing him", or as tearing apart and devouring humans.[12]

A folk tale from Barra tells of a lonely kelpie that transforms itself into a handsome young man to woo a pretty young girl it was determined to take for its wife. But the girl recognises the young man as a kelpie and removes his silver necklace (his bridle) while he sleeps. The kelpie immediately reverts to its equine form, and the girl takes it home to her father's farm, where it is put to work for a year. At the end of that time the girl rides the kelpie to consult a wise man, who tells her to return the silver necklace. The wise man then asks the kelpie, once again transformed into the handsome young man the girl had first met, whether if given the choice it would choose to be a kelpie or a mortal. The kelpie in turn asks the girl whether, if he were a man, she would agree to be his wife. She confirms that she would, after which the kelpie chooses to become a mortal man, and the pair are married.[36]

Traditionally, kelpies in their human form are male. One of the few stories describing the creature in female form is set at Conon House in Ross and Cromarty. It tells of a "tall woman dressed in green", with a "withered, meagre countenance, ever distorted by a malignant scowl", who overpowered and drowned a man and a boy after she jumped out of a stream.[37]

The arrival of Christianity in Scotland in the 6th century resulted in some folk stories and beliefs being recorded by scribes, usually Christian monks, instead of being perpetuated by word of mouth.[6] Some accounts state that the kelpie retains its hooves even in human form, leading to its association with the Christian notion of Satan, just as with the Greek god Pan.[16] Robert Burns refers to such a Satanic association in his "Address to the Devil" (1786):

When thowes dissolve the snawy hoord
An' float the jinglin icy boord
Then, water-kelpies haunt the foord
By your direction
An' nighted trav'llers are allur'd
To their destruction.

Capture and killing edit

When a kelpie appeared in its equine persona without any tack, it could be captured using a halter stamped with the sign of a cross, and its strength could then be harnessed in tasks such as the transportation of heavy mill stones.[38] One folk tale describes how the Laird of Morphie captured a kelpie and used it to carry stones to build his castle. Once the work was complete, the laird released the kelpie, which was evidently unhappy about its treatment. The curse it issued before leaving – "Sair back and sair banes/ Drivin' the Laird o' Morphies's stanes,/ The Laird o' Morphie'll never thrive/ As lang's the kelpy is alive" – (Sore back and sore bones/ Driving the Lord of Morphie's stones,/ The Lord of Morphie will never thrive/ As long as the kelpie is alive) was popularly believed to have resulted in the extinction of the laird's family.[39] Some kelpies were said to be equipped with a bridle and sometimes a saddle, and appeared invitingly ready to ride, but if mounted they would run off and drown their riders. If the kelpie was already wearing a bridle, exorcism might be achieved by removing it.[40] A bridle taken from a kelpie was endowed with magical properties, and if brandished towards someone, was able to transform that person into a horse or pony.[41]

Just as with cinematic werewolves,[42] a kelpie can be killed by being shot with a silver bullet, after which it is seen to consist of nothing more than "turf and a soft mass like jelly-fish" according to an account published by Spence.[43] When a blacksmith's family were being frightened by the repeated appearances of a water kelpie at their summer cottage, the blacksmith managed to render it into a "heap of starch, or something like it" by penetrating the spirit's flanks with two sharp iron spears that had been heated in a fire.[44]

Loch Ness edit

Almost every sizeable Scottish body of water has a kelpie story associated with it,[11][38] but the most widely reported is the kelpie of Loch Ness. Several stories of mythical spirits and monsters are attached to the loch's vicinity, dating back to 6th-century reports of Saint Columba defeating a monster on the banks of the River Ness.[45] The early 19th-century kelpie that haunted the woods and shores of Loch Ness was tacked up with its own saddle and bridle. A fable attached to the notoriously nasty creature has the Highlander James MacGrigor taking it by surprise and cutting off its bridle, the source of its power and life, without which it would die within twenty-four hours. As the kelpie had the power of speech, it attempted unsuccessfully to bargain with MacGrigor for the return of its bridle. After following MacGrigor to his home, the kelpie asserted that MacGrigor would be unable to enter his house while in possession of the bridle, because of the presence of a cross above the entrance door. But MacGrigor outwitted the creature by tossing the bridle through a window, so the kelpie accepted its fate and left, cursing and swearing.[40][46] The myth is perpetuated with further tales of the bridle as it is passed down through the family. Referred to as "Willox's Ball and Bridle", it had magical powers of healing; a spell was made by placing the items in water while chanting "In the name of the Father, the Son and of the Holy Ghost"; the water could then be used as a cure.[47][48]

A popular and more recent explanation for the Loch Ness monster among believers is that it belongs to a line of long-surviving plesiosaurs,[49] but the kelpie myth still survives in children's books such as Mollie Hunter's The Kelpie's Pearls (1966) and Dick King-Smith's The Water Horse (1990).

Origins edit

According to Derek Gath Whitley (1911), the association with horses may have its roots in horse sacrifices performed in ancient Scandinavia.[50] Stories of malevolent water spirits served the practical purpose of keeping children away from perilous areas of water, and of warning adolescent women to be wary of attractive young strangers.[5] The stories were also used to enforce moral standards, as they implied that the creatures took retribution for bad behaviour carried out on Sundays.[23] The intervention of demons and spirits was possibly a way to rationalise the drowning of children and adults who had accidentally fallen into deep, fast flowing or turbulent water.[51]

Historian and symbologist Charles Milton Smith has hypothesised that the kelpie myth might originate with the water spouts that can form over the surface of Scottish lochs, giving the impression of a living form as they move across the water.[52] Sir Walter Scott alludes to a similar explanation in his epic poem The Lady of the Lake (1810), which contains the lines

He watched the wheeling eddies boil,
Till from their foam his dazzled eyes
Beheld the River Demon rise:

in which Scott uses "River Demon" to denote a "kelpy".[10] Scott may also have hinted at an alternative rational explanation by naming a treacherous area of quicksand "Kelpie's Flow" in his novel The Bride of Lammermoor (1818).[53]

 
Pictish beast featured in a line drawing of the Maiden Stone

Artistic representations edit

Pictish stones dating from the 6th to 9th centuries featuring what has been dubbed the Pictish Beast may be the earliest representations of a kelpie or kelpie-like creature.[54]

Victorian artist Thomas Millie Dow sketched the kelpie in 1895 as a melancholy dark-haired maiden balanced on a rock,[55] a common depiction for artists of the period.[56] Other depictions show kelpies as poolside maidens, as in Draper's 1913 oil on canvas.[56] Folklorist Nicola Bown has suggested that painters such as Millie Dow and Draper deliberately ignored earlier accounts of the kelpie and reinvented it by altering its sex and nature.[57]

Two 30-metre-high (100 ft) steel sculptures in Falkirk on the Forth and Clyde Canal, named The Kelpies, borrow the name of the mythical creature to associate with the strength and endurance of the horse; designed by sculptor Andy Scott, they were built as monuments to Scotland's horse-powered industrial heritage. Construction was completed in October 2013 and the sculptures were opened for public access from April 2014.[58]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "'The Kelpies': Ancient myth in modern art | Art UK".
  2. ^ "kelpie, n.1.", Oxford English Dictionary (online ed.), Oxford University Press, 2014, retrieved 4 May 2014
  3. ^ Carlyle (1788), p. 72
  4. ^ "kelpie, n", A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue (up to 1700) (online ed.), retrieved 6 July 2014
  5. ^ a b c d Westwood & Kingshill (2012), p. 364
  6. ^ a b Monaghan (2009), pp. ix, xi, xv
  7. ^ Gregorson Campbell (1900), p. 215
  8. ^ Spence, L. (4 March 1933), "Mythical Beasts: in Scottish Folklore", The Scotsman, ProQuest 489688325
  9. ^ Briggs, Katharine, An Encyclopedia of Fairies, quoted in Bown 2001, pp. 177–178
  10. ^ a b Scott, Walter (1884) [1810], The lady of the lake: a poem, Lippincott, p. 277 (Note V to st. vii, p. 89), River Demon, or River Horse ... is the Kelpy of the Lowlands ... He frequents most Highland lakes and rivers; and one of his most memorable exploits performed on the banks of Loch Vennachar.
  11. ^ a b Graham (1812), p. 245
  12. ^ a b MacKillop, James (2004), "kelpie, kelpy, waterkelpie", A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology (online ed.), Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780198609674, retrieved 6 May 2014
  13. ^ Gregorson Campbell (2008), p. 320
  14. ^ Blind (1881), p. 189
  15. ^ Middleton (2012), p. 44
  16. ^ a b c d e Varner (2007), p. 24
  17. ^ a b McPherson (1929), p. 61
  18. ^ Gregor (1881), p. 38
  19. ^ Blind (1881), p. 200
  20. ^ McPherson (1929), p. 63
  21. ^ Buchan & Olson (1997)
  22. ^ Gregor (1883), p. 292
  23. ^ a b Anonymous (1887), p. 513
  24. ^ Campbell (1860), p. lxxxvi
  25. ^ MacKillop, James (2004), "each uisce, each uisge, aughisky", A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology (online ed.), Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780198609674, retrieved 22 May 2014
  26. ^ Anonymous (1887), p. 512
  27. ^ Gregorson Campbell (1900), pp. 208–209
  28. ^ Campbell (1860a), p. 64
  29. ^ Dempster (1888), p. 172
  30. ^ Bowman (2008), pp. 346–348
  31. ^ Westwood & Kingshill (2012), p. 356
  32. ^ MacKillop, James (2004), "tarroo ushtey, theroo ushta", A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology (online ed.), Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780198609674, retrieved 17 May 2014
  33. ^ Lamont-Brown (1996), p. 19
  34. ^ McPherson (1929), p. 62
  35. ^ Gregor (1883), pp. 293–294
  36. ^ McNeil (2001), pp. 68–72
  37. ^ Westwood & Kingshill (2012), pp. 423–424
  38. ^ a b Spence (1999), p. 91
  39. ^ Chambers (1870), pp. 334–335.
  40. ^ a b Mackinlay (1893), p. 174
  41. ^ Spence (1999), p. 19
  42. ^ Varner (2007), p. 23
  43. ^ Spence (1999), p. 95
  44. ^ Gregor (1881), p. 66
  45. ^ Westwood & Kingshill (2012), p. 458
  46. ^ Stewart (1823), pp. 102–107
  47. ^ Black (1893), p. 501
  48. ^ Stewart (1823), p. 102
  49. ^ Harmsworth (2010), p. 310
  50. ^ Gath Whitley (1911), p. 147
  51. ^ Campbell (2002), p. 1
  52. ^ Milton Smith (2009), p. 44.
  53. ^ Scott, Maggie (November 2010), , The Bottle Imp (8), University of Glasgow, archived from the original on 8 May 2014, retrieved 17 May 2014
  54. ^ Cessford, Craig (June 2005), Ragan, Elizabeth (ed.), "Pictish Art and the Sea", The Heroic Age, 8 (4): 3, ISSN 1526-1867, from the original on 20 March 2017, retrieved 12 May 2017
  55. ^ Martin (1902), p. 12
  56. ^ a b The Kelpie, National Museums Liverpool, Lady Lever Art Gallery, from the original on 8 May 2014, retrieved 5 May 2014
  57. ^ Bown (2001), p. 218
  58. ^ Brocklehurst, Steven (6 May 2014), "The man who created The Kelpies", BBC News, from the original on 9 May 2014, retrieved 8 May 2014

Bibliography edit

  • Anonymous (1887), "Tales of the Water-Kelpie", Celtic Magazine, XII, Mackenzie Alt URL
  • Black, George F. (1893), "Scottish Charms and Amulets", Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 27
  • Blind, Karl (1881), "Scottish, Shetlandic and Germanic Water Tales", The Contemporary Review, XL, Strahan
  • Bowman, Marion (2008), "Jennifer Westwood (1940–2008)", Folklore, 119 (3): 346–348, doi:10.1080/00155870802352293, S2CID 161378473
  • Bown, Nicola (2001), Fairies in Nineteenth-Century Art and Literature, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-79315-5
  • Buchan, David; Olson, Ian A. (1997), "Walter Gregor (1825–97): A Life and Preliminary Bibliography", Folklore, 108 (1–2): 115–117, doi:10.1080/0015587X.1997.9715949
  • Campbell, Steuart (2002), The Loch Ness Monster: The Evidence, Birlinn
  • Campbell, John Francis (1860), Popular Tales of the West Highlands, vol. I, Edmonston and Douglas
  • Campbell, John Francis (1860a), Popular Tales of the West Highlands, vol. II, Edmonston and Douglas
  • Carlyle, Alexander (1788), "An Ode on the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands. Written by the late William Collins", Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, vol. I
  • Chambers, Robert (1870), Popular Rhymes of Scotland, Chambers
  • Dempster, Charlotte (1888), The Folk-Lore Journal, vol. VI
  • Gath Whitley, Derek (1911), "Cornish Serpent Divinity of the Sea", Records of the Past, vol. 10
  • Graham, Patrick (1812) [1810], Sketches of Perthshire (2nd ed.), James Ballantyne and Co.
  • Gregor, Walter (1881), Notes on the Folk Lore of North East Scotland, Elliot Stock
  • Gregor, Walter (1883), The Folk-Lore Journal, vol. 1
  • Gregorson Campbell, John (1900), Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, James MacLehose
  • Gregorson Campbell, John (2008) [1990 & 1902], Black, Ronald (ed.), The Gaelic Otherworld: Superstitions of the Highlands and the Islands and Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-84158-733-2
  • Harmsworth, Tony (2010), Loch Ness, Nessie & Me, Createspace, ISBN 978-1-4563-8023-6
  • Lamont-Brown, Raymond (1996), Scottish Folklore, Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-874744-58-0
  • Martin, David (1902), The Glasgow School of Painting, George Bell & Sons
  • Mackinlay, James M. (1893), Folklore Of Scottish Lochs And Springs, W. Hodge, ISBN 978-0-7661-8333-9
  • McNeil, Heather (2001), The Celtic Breeze: Stories of the Otherworld from Scotland, Ireland, and Wales, Libraries Unlimited, ISBN 978-1-56308-778-3
  • McPherson, Joseph McKenzie (1929), "Primitive beliefs in the north-east of Scotland", Nature, 124 (3118), Longmans, Green: 175, Bibcode:1929Natur.124Q.175., doi:10.1038/124175a0, S2CID 4089570
  • Middleton, Nick (2012), Rivers: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-958867-1
  • Milton Smith, Charles (2009), Our Spiritual Journey: The Language of Life, Dreamstairway Books, ISBN 978-1-907091-02-5
  • Monaghan, Patricia (2009), The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore, Infobase Publishing, ISBN 978-1-4381-1037-0
  • Spence, Lewis (1999) [1945], The Magic Arts in Celtic Britain, Courier Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-40447-9
  • Stewart, William Grant (1823), The Popular Superstitions and Festive Amusements of the Highlanders of Scotland, A. Constable, ISBN 9780841479210
  • Varner, Gary R. (2007), Creatures in the Mist: Little People, Wild Men and Spirit Beings around the World: A Study in Comparative Mythology, Algora, ISBN 978-0-87586-545-4
  • Westwood, Jennifer; Kingshill, Sophia (2012), The Lore of Scotland: A Guide to Scottish Legends, Random House, ISBN 978-1-4090-6171-7

kelpie, redirects, here, steel, sculptures, falkirk, this, article, about, folkloric, creature, breed, australian, dungeons, dragons, monster, dungeons, dragons, kelpie, water, kelpie, scottish, gaelic, each, uisge, shape, shifting, spirit, inhabiting, lochs, . Kelpies redirects here For the steel sculptures in Falkirk see The Kelpies This article is about the folkloric creature For the dog breed see Australian Kelpie For the Dungeons amp Dragons monster see Kelpie Dungeons amp Dragons A kelpie or water kelpie Scottish Gaelic Each Uisge is a shape shifting spirit inhabiting lochs in Irish and Scottish folklore It is usually described as a grey or white 1 horse like creature able to adopt human form Some accounts state that the kelpie retains its hooves when appearing as a human leading to its association with the Christian idea of Satan as alluded to by Robert Burns in his 1786 poem Address to the Devil The Kelpie by Herbert James Draper 1913Almost every sizeable body of water in Scotland has an associated kelpie story but the most extensively reported is that of Loch Ness The kelpie has counterparts across the world such as the Germanic nixie the wihwin of Central America and the Australian bunyip The origins of narratives about the creature are unclear but the practical purposes of keeping children away from dangerous stretches of water and warning young women to be wary of handsome strangers has been noted in secondary literature Kelpies have been portrayed in their various forms in art and literature including two 30 metre high 100 ft steel sculptures in Falkirk The Kelpies completed in October 2013 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Folk beliefs 2 1 Description and common attributes 2 2 Shapeshifting 2 3 Capture and killing 3 Loch Ness 4 Origins 5 Artistic representations 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 BibliographyEtymology editThe etymology of the Scots word kelpie is uncertain but it may be derived from the Gaelic calpa or cailpeach meaning heifer or colt The first recorded use of the term to describe a mythological creature then spelled kaelpie appears in the manuscript of an ode by William Collins composed some time before 1759 2 and reproduced in the Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh of 1788 3 The place names Kelpie hoall and Kelpie hooll are reported in A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue as appearing in the 1674 burgh records for Kirkcudbright 4 Folk beliefs editDescription and common attributes edit The kelpie is the most common water spirit in Scottish folklore and the name is attributed to several different forms in narratives recorded throughout the country 5 The late 19th century saw the onset of an interest in transcribing folklore and recorders were inconsistent in spelling and frequently anglicised words which could result in differing names for the same spirit 6 Commentators have disagreed over the kelpie s aquatic habitat Folklorists who define kelpies as spirits living beside rivers as distinguished from the Celtic lochside dwelling water horse each uisge include 19th century minister of Tiree John Gregorson Campbell and 20th century writers Lewis Spence and Katharine Briggs 7 8 9 This distinction is not universally applied however Sir Walter Scott for instance claims that the kelpie s range may extend to lochs 10 11 Mackillop s dictionary reconciles the discrepancy stating that the kelpie was initially thought to inhabit streams and later any body of water 12 But the distinction should stand argues one annotator who suggests that people are led astray when an each uisge in a common practice of translating are referred to as kelpies in English accounts 13 and thus mistakenly attribute loch dwelling habits to the latter Others associate the term kelpie with a wide variety of legendary creatures 5 Counterparts in some regions of Scotland include the shoopiltee and nuggle 14 of Shetland and the tangie of Orkney in other parts of the British Islands they include the Welsh ceffyl dŵr and the Manx cabbyl ushtey Parallels to the general Germanic neck and the Scandinavian backahast have been observed Nick Middleton observes that the kelpie of Scottish folklore is a direct parallel of the sic backahasten of Scandinavian folklore 15 The wihwin of Central America 16 and the Australian bunyip 17 are seen as similar creatures in other parts of the world The kelpie is usually described as a powerful and beautiful black horse inhabiting the deep pools of rivers and streams of Scotland preying on any humans it encounters 16 18 One of the water kelpie s common identifying characteristics is that its hooves are reversed as compared to those of a normal horse a trait also shared by the nykur of Iceland 16 19 An Aberdeenshire variation portrays the kelpie as a horse with a mane of serpents 20 whereas the resident equine spirit of the River Spey was white and could entice victims onto its back by singing 17 The creature s nature was described by Walter Gregor a folklorist and one of the first members of the Folklore Society 21 as useful hurtful or seeking human companionship 22 in some cases kelpies take their victims into the water devour them and throw the entrails to the water s edge 23 In its equine form the kelpie is able to extend the length of its back to carry many riders together into the depths 24 a common theme in the tales is of several children clambering onto the creature s back while one remains on the shore Usually a little boy he then pets the horse but his hand sticks to its neck In some variations the lad cuts off his fingers or hand to free himself he survives but the other children are carried off and drowned with only some of their entrails being found later Such a creature said to inhabit Glen Keltney in Perthshire is considered to be a kelpie by 20th century folklorist Katharine Mary Briggs 5 but a similar tale also set in Perthshire has an each uisge as the culprit and omits the embellishment of the young boy 25 The lad does cut his finger off when the event takes place in Thurso where a water kelpie is identified as the culprit 26 The same tale set at Sunart in the Highlands gives a specific figure of nine children lost of whom only the innards of one are recovered The surviving boy is again saved by cutting off his finger and the additional information is given that he had a Bible in his pocket Gregorson Campbell considers the creature responsible to have been a water horse rather than a kelpie and the tale obviously a pious fraud to keep children from wandering on Sundays 27 Kelpie myths usually describe a solitary creature but a fairy story recorded by John F Campbell in Popular Tales of the West Highlands 1860 has a different perspective Entitled Of the Drocht na Vougha or Fuoah which is given the translation of the bridge of the fairies or kelpies it features a group of voughas The spirits had set about constructing a bridge over the Dornoch Firth after becoming tired of travelling across the water in cockleshells It was a magnificent piece of work resplendent with gold piers and posts but sank into the water to become a treacherous area of quicksand after a grateful onlooker tried to bless the kelpies for their work 28 The same story is recorded by Folklore Society member and folklore collector Charlotte Dempster simply as The Kelpie s Bridge 1888 with no mention of Voughas or Fuoah 29 Quoting the same narrative Jennifer Westwood author and folklorist 30 uses the descriptor water kelpies adding that in her opinion Kelpies here and in a few other instances is used in a loose sense to mean something like imps 31 Progeny resulting from a mating between a kelpie and a normal horse were impossible to drown and could be recognised by their shorter than normal ears a characteristic shared by the mythical water bull or tarbh uisge in Scottish Gaelic similar to the Manx tarroo ushtey 32 33 Shapeshifting edit nbsp The Kelpie by Thomas Millie Dow 1895Kelpies have the ability to transform themselves into non equine forms and can take on the outward appearance of human figures 34 in which guise they may betray themselves by the presence of water weeds in their hair 16 Gregor described a kelpie adopting the guise of a wizened old man continually muttering to himself while sitting on a bridge stitching a pair of trousers Believing it to be a kelpie a passing local struck it on the head causing it to revert to its equine form and scamper back to its lair in a nearby pond 35 Other accounts describe the kelpie when appearing in human form as a rough shaggy man who leaps behind a solitary rider gripping and crushing him or as tearing apart and devouring humans 12 A folk tale from Barra tells of a lonely kelpie that transforms itself into a handsome young man to woo a pretty young girl it was determined to take for its wife But the girl recognises the young man as a kelpie and removes his silver necklace his bridle while he sleeps The kelpie immediately reverts to its equine form and the girl takes it home to her father s farm where it is put to work for a year At the end of that time the girl rides the kelpie to consult a wise man who tells her to return the silver necklace The wise man then asks the kelpie once again transformed into the handsome young man the girl had first met whether if given the choice it would choose to be a kelpie or a mortal The kelpie in turn asks the girl whether if he were a man she would agree to be his wife She confirms that she would after which the kelpie chooses to become a mortal man and the pair are married 36 Traditionally kelpies in their human form are male One of the few stories describing the creature in female form is set at Conon House in Ross and Cromarty It tells of a tall woman dressed in green with a withered meagre countenance ever distorted by a malignant scowl who overpowered and drowned a man and a boy after she jumped out of a stream 37 The arrival of Christianity in Scotland in the 6th century resulted in some folk stories and beliefs being recorded by scribes usually Christian monks instead of being perpetuated by word of mouth 6 Some accounts state that the kelpie retains its hooves even in human form leading to its association with the Christian notion of Satan just as with the Greek god Pan 16 Robert Burns refers to such a Satanic association in his Address to the Devil 1786 When thowes dissolve the snawy hoord An float the jinglin icy boord Then water kelpies haunt the foord By your direction An nighted trav llers are allur d To their destruction Capture and killing edit When a kelpie appeared in its equine persona without any tack it could be captured using a halter stamped with the sign of a cross and its strength could then be harnessed in tasks such as the transportation of heavy mill stones 38 One folk tale describes how the Laird of Morphie captured a kelpie and used it to carry stones to build his castle Once the work was complete the laird released the kelpie which was evidently unhappy about its treatment The curse it issued before leaving Sair back and sair banes Drivin the Laird o Morphies s stanes The Laird o Morphie ll never thrive As lang s the kelpy is alive Sore back and sore bones Driving the Lord of Morphie s stones The Lord of Morphie will never thrive As long as the kelpie is alive was popularly believed to have resulted in the extinction of the laird s family 39 Some kelpies were said to be equipped with a bridle and sometimes a saddle and appeared invitingly ready to ride but if mounted they would run off and drown their riders If the kelpie was already wearing a bridle exorcism might be achieved by removing it 40 A bridle taken from a kelpie was endowed with magical properties and if brandished towards someone was able to transform that person into a horse or pony 41 Just as with cinematic werewolves 42 a kelpie can be killed by being shot with a silver bullet after which it is seen to consist of nothing more than turf and a soft mass like jelly fish according to an account published by Spence 43 When a blacksmith s family were being frightened by the repeated appearances of a water kelpie at their summer cottage the blacksmith managed to render it into a heap of starch or something like it by penetrating the spirit s flanks with two sharp iron spears that had been heated in a fire 44 Loch Ness editMain article Loch Ness Monster Almost every sizeable Scottish body of water has a kelpie story associated with it 11 38 but the most widely reported is the kelpie of Loch Ness Several stories of mythical spirits and monsters are attached to the loch s vicinity dating back to 6th century reports of Saint Columba defeating a monster on the banks of the River Ness 45 The early 19th century kelpie that haunted the woods and shores of Loch Ness was tacked up with its own saddle and bridle A fable attached to the notoriously nasty creature has the Highlander James MacGrigor taking it by surprise and cutting off its bridle the source of its power and life without which it would die within twenty four hours As the kelpie had the power of speech it attempted unsuccessfully to bargain with MacGrigor for the return of its bridle After following MacGrigor to his home the kelpie asserted that MacGrigor would be unable to enter his house while in possession of the bridle because of the presence of a cross above the entrance door But MacGrigor outwitted the creature by tossing the bridle through a window so the kelpie accepted its fate and left cursing and swearing 40 46 The myth is perpetuated with further tales of the bridle as it is passed down through the family Referred to as Willox s Ball and Bridle it had magical powers of healing a spell was made by placing the items in water while chanting In the name of the Father the Son and of the Holy Ghost the water could then be used as a cure 47 48 A popular and more recent explanation for the Loch Ness monster among believers is that it belongs to a line of long surviving plesiosaurs 49 but the kelpie myth still survives in children s books such as Mollie Hunter s The Kelpie s Pearls 1966 and Dick King Smith s The Water Horse 1990 Origins editAccording to Derek Gath Whitley 1911 the association with horses may have its roots in horse sacrifices performed in ancient Scandinavia 50 Stories of malevolent water spirits served the practical purpose of keeping children away from perilous areas of water and of warning adolescent women to be wary of attractive young strangers 5 The stories were also used to enforce moral standards as they implied that the creatures took retribution for bad behaviour carried out on Sundays 23 The intervention of demons and spirits was possibly a way to rationalise the drowning of children and adults who had accidentally fallen into deep fast flowing or turbulent water 51 Historian and symbologist Charles Milton Smith has hypothesised that the kelpie myth might originate with the water spouts that can form over the surface of Scottish lochs giving the impression of a living form as they move across the water 52 Sir Walter Scott alludes to a similar explanation in his epic poem The Lady of the Lake 1810 which contains the lines He watched the wheeling eddies boil Till from their foam his dazzled eyes Beheld the River Demon rise in which Scott uses River Demon to denote a kelpy 10 Scott may also have hinted at an alternative rational explanation by naming a treacherous area of quicksand Kelpie s Flow in his novel The Bride of Lammermoor 1818 53 nbsp Pictish beast featured in a line drawing of the Maiden StoneArtistic representations editPictish stones dating from the 6th to 9th centuries featuring what has been dubbed the Pictish Beast may be the earliest representations of a kelpie or kelpie like creature 54 Victorian artist Thomas Millie Dow sketched the kelpie in 1895 as a melancholy dark haired maiden balanced on a rock 55 a common depiction for artists of the period 56 Other depictions show kelpies as poolside maidens as in Draper s 1913 oil on canvas 56 Folklorist Nicola Bown has suggested that painters such as Millie Dow and Draper deliberately ignored earlier accounts of the kelpie and reinvented it by altering its sex and nature 57 Two 30 metre high 100 ft steel sculptures in Falkirk on the Forth and Clyde Canal named The Kelpies borrow the name of the mythical creature to associate with the strength and endurance of the horse designed by sculptor Andy Scott they were built as monuments to Scotland s horse powered industrial heritage Construction was completed in October 2013 and the sculptures were opened for public access from April 2014 58 See also editList of fictional horses Water horse Nuckelavee Hippocampus mythology Kappa folklore Neck water spirit Peg Powler Selkie VodyanoiReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kelpie Citations edit The Kelpies Ancient myth in modern art Art UK kelpie n 1 Oxford English Dictionary online ed Oxford University Press 2014 retrieved 4 May 2014 Carlyle 1788 p 72 kelpie n A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue up to 1700 online ed retrieved 6 July 2014 a b c d Westwood amp Kingshill 2012 p 364 a b Monaghan 2009 pp ix xi xv Gregorson Campbell 1900 p 215 Spence L 4 March 1933 Mythical Beasts in Scottish Folklore The Scotsman ProQuest 489688325 Briggs Katharine An Encyclopedia of Fairies quoted in Bown 2001 pp 177 178 a b Scott Walter 1884 1810 The lady of the lake a poem Lippincott p 277 Note V to st vii p 89 River Demon or River Horse is the Kelpy of the Lowlands He frequents most Highland lakes and rivers and one of his most memorable exploits performed on the banks of Loch Vennachar a b Graham 1812 p 245 a b MacKillop James 2004 kelpie kelpy waterkelpie A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology online ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198609674 retrieved 6 May 2014 Gregorson Campbell 2008 p 320 Blind 1881 p 189 Middleton 2012 p 44 a b c d e Varner 2007 p 24 a b McPherson 1929 p 61 Gregor 1881 p 38 Blind 1881 p 200 McPherson 1929 p 63 Buchan amp Olson 1997 Gregor 1883 p 292 a b Anonymous 1887 p 513 Campbell 1860 p lxxxvi MacKillop James 2004 each uisce each uisge aughisky A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology online ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198609674 retrieved 22 May 2014 Anonymous 1887 p 512 Gregorson Campbell 1900 pp 208 209 Campbell 1860a p 64 Dempster 1888 p 172 Bowman 2008 pp 346 348 Westwood amp Kingshill 2012 p 356 MacKillop James 2004 tarroo ushtey theroo ushta A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology online ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198609674 retrieved 17 May 2014 Lamont Brown 1996 p 19 McPherson 1929 p 62 Gregor 1883 pp 293 294 McNeil 2001 pp 68 72 Westwood amp Kingshill 2012 pp 423 424 a b Spence 1999 p 91 Chambers 1870 pp 334 335 a b Mackinlay 1893 p 174 Spence 1999 p 19 Varner 2007 p 23 Spence 1999 p 95 Gregor 1881 p 66 Westwood amp Kingshill 2012 p 458 Stewart 1823 pp 102 107 Black 1893 p 501 Stewart 1823 p 102 Harmsworth 2010 p 310 Gath Whitley 1911 p 147 Campbell 2002 p 1 Milton Smith 2009 p 44 Scott Maggie November 2010 Scots Word of the Season Kelpie The Bottle Imp 8 University of Glasgow archived from the original on 8 May 2014 retrieved 17 May 2014 Cessford Craig June 2005 Ragan Elizabeth ed Pictish Art and the Sea The Heroic Age 8 4 3 ISSN 1526 1867 archived from the original on 20 March 2017 retrieved 12 May 2017 Martin 1902 p 12 a b The Kelpie National Museums Liverpool Lady Lever Art Gallery archived from the original on 8 May 2014 retrieved 5 May 2014 Bown 2001 p 218 Brocklehurst Steven 6 May 2014 The man who created The Kelpies BBC News archived from the original on 9 May 2014 retrieved 8 May 2014 Bibliography edit Anonymous 1887 Tales of the Water Kelpie Celtic Magazine XII Mackenzie Alt URL Black George F 1893 Scottish Charms and Amulets Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 27 Blind Karl 1881 Scottish Shetlandic and Germanic Water Tales The Contemporary Review XL Strahan Bowman Marion 2008 Jennifer Westwood 1940 2008 Folklore 119 3 346 348 doi 10 1080 00155870802352293 S2CID 161378473 Bown Nicola 2001 Fairies in Nineteenth Century Art and Literature Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79315 5 Buchan David Olson Ian A 1997 Walter Gregor 1825 97 A Life and Preliminary Bibliography Folklore 108 1 2 115 117 doi 10 1080 0015587X 1997 9715949 Campbell Steuart 2002 The Loch Ness Monster The Evidence Birlinn Campbell John Francis 1860 Popular Tales of the West Highlands vol I Edmonston and Douglas Campbell John Francis 1860a Popular Tales of the West Highlands vol II Edmonston and Douglas Carlyle Alexander 1788 An Ode on the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands Written by the late William Collins Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh vol I Chambers Robert 1870 Popular Rhymes of Scotland Chambers Dempster Charlotte 1888 The Folk Lore Journal vol VI Gath Whitley Derek 1911 Cornish Serpent Divinity of the Sea Records of the Past vol 10 Graham Patrick 1812 1810 Sketches of Perthshire 2nd ed James Ballantyne and Co Gregor Walter 1881 Notes on the Folk Lore of North East Scotland Elliot Stock Gregor Walter 1883 The Folk Lore Journal vol 1 Gregorson Campbell John 1900 Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland James MacLehose Gregorson Campbell John 2008 1990 amp 1902 Black Ronald ed The Gaelic Otherworld Superstitions of the Highlands and the Islands and Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 733 2 Harmsworth Tony 2010 Loch Ness Nessie amp Me Createspace ISBN 978 1 4563 8023 6 Lamont Brown Raymond 1996 Scottish Folklore Birlinn ISBN 978 1 874744 58 0 Martin David 1902 The Glasgow School of Painting George Bell amp Sons Mackinlay James M 1893 Folklore Of Scottish Lochs And Springs W Hodge ISBN 978 0 7661 8333 9 McNeil Heather 2001 The Celtic Breeze Stories of the Otherworld from Scotland Ireland and Wales Libraries Unlimited ISBN 978 1 56308 778 3 McPherson Joseph McKenzie 1929 Primitive beliefs in the north east of Scotland Nature 124 3118 Longmans Green 175 Bibcode 1929Natur 124Q 175 doi 10 1038 124175a0 S2CID 4089570 Middleton Nick 2012 Rivers A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958867 1 Milton Smith Charles 2009 Our Spiritual Journey The Language of Life Dreamstairway Books ISBN 978 1 907091 02 5 Monaghan Patricia 2009 The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 1037 0 Spence Lewis 1999 1945 The Magic Arts in Celtic Britain Courier Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 40447 9 Stewart William Grant 1823 The Popular Superstitions and Festive Amusements of the Highlanders of Scotland A Constable ISBN 9780841479210 Varner Gary R 2007 Creatures in the Mist Little People Wild Men and Spirit Beings around the World A Study in Comparative Mythology Algora ISBN 978 0 87586 545 4 Westwood Jennifer Kingshill Sophia 2012 The Lore of Scotland A Guide to Scottish Legends Random House ISBN 978 1 4090 6171 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kelpie amp oldid 1210057477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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