1. LEPRECHAUNS
The leprechaun is likely the most widely known type of fairy living in Ireland. Leprechauns have been in existence in Irish legend since the medieval times. Traditionally, leprechauns are tall fairies and often appear to humans as an old man – much different from the modern view of a small, childlike fairy in a green suit. As legend holds, Leprechauns love to collect gold, which they store in a pot and hide at the end of a rainbow. If a human catches a leprechaun, the fairy must grant the human three-wishes before he can be released.
2. FAERIES
3. CHANGELINGS
As legend has it, female fairies often give birth to deformed children.
Since the fairies prefer visually pleasing babies, they would go into
the mortal world and swap with a healthy human baby, leaving behind a
changeling. While the changeling looked like a human baby, it carried
none of the same emotional characteristics. The changeling was only
happy when misfortune or grief happened in the house. The changeling
legend has lasted for centuries. William Shakespeare talks of a
changeling in his play, “A Midsummer’s Night Dream.” Three hundred years
later, Scarlett O’Hara believed Rhett Butler’s illegitimate child was a
changeling in “Gone with the Wind.”
4. THE SHAMROCK
The three green leaves of the Shamrock is more than the unofficial
symbol of Ireland and one of the marshmallows in Lucky Charms. The
Shamrock has held meaning to most of Ireland’s historic cultures. The
Druids believed the Shamrock was a sacred plant that could ward off
evil. The Celtics believed the Shamrock had mystical properties due to
the plant’s three heart-shaped leaves. The Celtics believed three was a
sacred number. Some Christians also believed the Shamrock had special
meaning- the three leaves representing the Holy Trinity.
5.THE BANSHEE
The Banshee was a woman who carried with her an omen of death.
Sometimes you saw the Banshee as an old woman dressed in rags,
sometimes you saw her as a young and beautiful girl and sometimes you
saw her as a wash woman, ringing out bloody clothing. Whenever she was
seen, she let out a horrible cry and legend has it this cry brought
death to any family that heard it. King James I of Scotland thought he
was approached by a Banshee. Shortly after, he died at the Earl of
Atholl.
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