Supernatural Safeguarding: Hidden Objects in the Post-Medieval Home

Mummified cat found in the roof space of a church in Clifton, Cumbria. Photograph by J. Neild, copyright Keswick Museum (please contact Keswick Museum curator to reproduce image)

What do a child’s shoe, a cod-liver oil bottle, and a desiccated cat have in common? They’re all objects that have been discovered in unusual locations within buildings. In fact, a vast variety of objects have been found (from pantaloons to chickens), often dating to the 18th and 19th centuries, under floorboards, hearthstones, and thresholds; […]

Oaxacan Ruin Lore: When the Stones Come For You

The wall mosaic of the palace in Mitla, Oaxaca. Mexico. Uploaded into English Wikipedia by en:User:Bobak Ha'Eri - English Wikipedia, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7947660

Mitla is a Zapotec town in Oaxaca, a state in southern Mexico. Its name is derived from the Aztec place-name, Mictlan, which means, “land of the dead,” and is also incidentally the name for the Aztec underworld.

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.

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