The Fabled Coast: Legends & traditions from around the shores of Britain & IrelandPirates and smugglers, ghost ships and sea-serpents, fishermen’s prayers and sailors’ rituals – the coastline of the British Isles plays host to an astonishingly rich variety of local legends, customs, and superstitions. |
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called into play to explain sightings of 'skyships' (seeBODMIN, SouthWest
England & Channel Islands), vessels sailing in the air, a strand of folklore that
has in fact grown more common in modern times, although today witnesses are
more ...
On the east coast of England the losses are not only realbut relatively recent:
more than thirty places mentioned in the ... drowned in CARDIGAN BAY and
CONWY BAY (Wales) and off LAND'S END (SouthWest England & Channel
Islands).
Trying to secondguess fate, fisherfolk were alert to a variety of omens, making
their forecasts from clouds, seabirds, fish, and sounds heard at sea and on shore
(see for example PATERNOSTERS, SouthWest England & Channel Islands, and
...
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Contents
Hampshire Kent London Sussex Isle ofWight | |
Essex Norfolk Suffolk | |
NORTHEAST ENGLAND | |
NORTHWEST ENGLAND ISLE OF | |
WALES | |
SCOTTISH LOWLANDS | |
Highland Orkney Shetland Western Isles | |
CountiesAntrim Donegal Down Galway Louth Mayo Meath Sligo | |
Counties Clare Cork Dublin Kerry Waterford Wexford | |
Bibliography | |
References | |
Index | |
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The Fabled Coast: Legends & Traditions from Around the Shores of Britain ... Sophia Kingshill,Jennifer Westwood No preview available - 2014 |