The Human Heart in the Middle Ages and the Practice of Ablation – or Treatment of the Dead for Valentine’s Day

Sacred Heart, All Saints Catholic Church (St. Peters, Missouri). By Nheyob - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=34226009

As Valentine’s Day comes around, spare a passing thought for that ubiquitous red heart that has come to symbolize the event. Historically speaking, there is a lot more than is at the surface for that emblem of love.

A Real Robin Hood: Tales of Wild Kynaston and his Satanic Steed, Beelzebub

The entrance to Kynaston’s Cave in the Nesscliffe Hills © Gwyn Norrell http://www.gwynnorrell.co.uk/about

Remy Dean explores the stories of Wild Kynaston; a medieval noble turned highwayman who may have inspired some of the tales of the legendary Robin Hood.

Stories My Parents Tell Me: Bars of Flaming Swords

Mt. Asog, Camarines Sur, Bicol region, Philippines By Geopoet - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=30454555

I asked my parents to tell me about folk beliefs in the Philippines. In the process, I learned some interesting family stories. “Mom, what do you know about the aswang?” My parents never told me much about Filipino folklore when I was growing up.

The Indigenous Burial Ground: Urban Legends and Popular Culture

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In North America, legends of haunted places often claim they have been built on an “Indian burial ground.” Indigenous burial ground urban legends are so widely shared they’ve become a part of popular culture. Writers used them repeatedly as a literary device in horror until they became a comedic cliché and eventually a meme.

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