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The Original Headless Horseman | Monstrum 5 лет назад


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The Original Headless Horseman | Monstrum

PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateStoried ↓ More info below ↓ Don’t miss future episodes of Monstrum, subscribe! http://bit.ly/pbsstoried_sub The Irish Dullahan not only helped inspire The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, but as Dr. Zarka will show, they are much scarier than Washington Irving’s monster. These headless monsters of Celtic lore are connected to horses, carriages, and graveyards—and they cannot be defeated. Oscar Wilde even called them “the most terrible thing in the world.” The dullahan can be male or female, but they are always headless, a characteristic that makes sense given Ireland’s social and religious history. Ultimately this monster is a personification of death, a monster that reminds us all not to “lose our heads” in more ways than one. #dullahan #headlesshorseman #MonstrumPBS Written and Hosted by: Emily Zarka Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Illustrator: Samuel Allen Editor: Dano Johnson Sound Design: Kirby Meador Produced by Spotzen for PBS Digital Studios. Follow us on Instagram:   / monstrumpbs   ----------- BIBLIOGRAPHY: Art and Picture Collection, The New York Public Library. "Brom Bones and Ichabod." The New York Public Library Digital Collections, 1864. http://digitalcollections.nypl.org/it... Bitel, Lisa. “Secrets of the Síd: The Supernatural in Medieval Irish Texts.” Fairies, Demons, and Nature Spirits: ‘Small Gods’ at the Margins of Christendom, ed. Michael Ostling, Palgrave Macmillan, 2018, pp. 79-101. Borsje, Jacqueline. “Human Sacrifice in Medieval Irish Literature.” The Strange World of Human Sacrifice, ed. Jan N. Bremmer, Lueven, Belgium ; Dudley, MA : Peeters, 2007. Bürger, Gottfried August. The Wild Huntsman, a poem from the German of bürger, 1797 Burns, Robert. Alloway kirk; or Tam o’Shanter: A Tale ,1790. Burnstein, Andrew. The Original Knickerbocker: The Life of Washington Irving, Basic Books, 2007. Carty, Niamh. “‘The Halved Heads’: Osteological Evidence for Decapitation in Medieval Ireland.” Papers from the Institute of Archaeology, 25 (1), 2015. Croker, Thomas Crofton. Fairy legends and traditions of the south of Ireland, 1825. Edwards, David. “Some days two heads and some days four.” History Ireland, Issue 1, vol. 17, Jan/Feb 2009, pp. 18-21. Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry, ed. W.B. Yeats, 1888. Frankfurter, David. “The Threat of Headless Beings: Constructing the Demonic in Christian Egypt.” Fairies, Demons, and Nature Spirits: ‘Small Gods’ at the Margins of Christendom, ed. Michael Ostling, Palgrave Macmillan, 2018, pp. 57-78. Heath, William. Memoirs of Major General William Heath, 1901. Irving, P. Monroe. The life and letters of Washington Irving, Volume I, 1862. Irving, Washington. The Complete Tales of Washington Irving, ed. Charles Neider, 1975. Irving, Washington. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1906. O’Hanlon, John. “A Legend of Murrisk.” Legend Lays of Ireland, 1870. Palmer, Patricia. “‘An headlesse Ladie’ and ‘a horses loade of heades’: writing the beheading.” Renaissance Quarterly, vol. 60, no. 1, 2007, pp. 25-57. Wilde, Oscar. Essays, Criticisms and Reviews, 1901.

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