Snow Queens and Winter Witches from Around the World

Elena Ringo's Illustration of the Snow Queen by H.C. Andersen, CC BY 3.0, http://www.elena-ringo.com, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37744268

Through myth, fairy tale and legend, powerful women are depicted as dark, cruel and calculating, and they are often naturally associated with winter – a season where all warmth withdraws, and the land is covered with snow and ice, and life is no more than a battle of survival against the elements.

May Folklore: May Day, Maypoles and May Queens in Britain

May Day is a traditional spring celebration in many cultures, linked with Gaelic Beltane, and is now also the date of Labour Day.

Was it Really East of the Sun and West of the Moon?

Northern Lights. Photo by Johny Goerend on Unsplash

The Norwegian folktale, “East of the Sun and West of the Moon,” in which a white bear comes to take a poor girl away, is loved by people the world over. It is also part of a huge cycle of folklore and myth that has spanned Eurasia in the last 2500 years.

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