Barghest

{{short description|Mythical creature in Northern English folklore}}

{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2024}}

In Northern English folklore, the Barghest or Barguest is a mythical monstrous black dog with large teeth and claws;{{EB1911|inline=1|wstitle=Barghest|volume=3|page=399}} This in turn cites:

Origin of the name

"Ghost" in Northern England was pronounced "guest", and the origin is thought to be of the combination burh-ghest, "town-ghost". Others explain it as cognate to German Berg-geist, "mountain ghost" or Bär-geist, "bear-ghost". Another mooted derivation is Bahr-Geist, German for the "spirit of the funeral bier".

Domain and description

In Yorkshire, England, one notable case is said to frequent a remote gorge named Troller's Gill in the Yorkshire Dales. A ballad entitled "The Legend of the Troller's Gill" can be found in William Hone's Everyday Book (1830). It recounts the tale of a man who ventures forth "to the horrid gill of the limestone hill" in order to summon and confront the Barghest in an act of ritual magic. The man's lifeless body is discovered soon afterward with inhuman marks upon his breast.{{cite book |last=Hone |first=William |date=1830 |title=The Every-day Book and Table Book |volume=3 |pages=653–655}} There is also a story of a Barghest entering the city of York occasionally where, according to legend, it preys on lone travellers in the city's narrow Snickelways. Furthermore, the building at number 1 The Shambles is named Barghest.{{cite web |url=https://york-me-community.org/a-little-shambles-shopping-review/ |title=A Little Shambles Shopping Review |website=The York ME Community }}{{dead link|date=February 2025|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The town of Whitby is also associated with the spectre,{{cite book |first=Jeffrey |last=Shaw |title=Whitby Lore and Legend |date=1923}} and yet another haunted an area of wasteland between Wreghorn and Headingley Hill near Leeds.{{cite book |author-link=Katharine Mary Briggs |last=Briggs |first=Katharine |date=1976 |title=An Encyclopedia of Fairies |publisher=Pantheon Books |pages=16–17 |isbn=0394409183}}

In Durham, during the 1870s a shapeshifting Barghest was said to live near Darlington and was said to take the form of a headless man (who would vanish in flames), a headless lady, a white cat, a rabbit, a dog, or a black dog. Another was said to live in an "uncanny-looking" dale between Darlington and Houghton near Throstlenest,.{{cite book |last=Henderson |first=William |title=Notes on the folk-lore of the northern counties of England and the borders |url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Notes_on_the_folk-lore_of_the_northern_counties_of_England_and_the_borders/Chapter_7#275 |edition=2nd |year=1879 |publisher=Folk-Lore Society |page=275 |chapter=Ch. 7}}

The Barghest often allegedly serves as an omen of death. At the passing of a notable person the Barghest may appear, followed by all the other dogs of the local area in a kind of funeral procession, heralding the person's death with howling and barking. If anyone were to get in the Barghest's way it would strike out with its paw and leave a wound that never heals.

Besides taking the form of a large black dog with fiery eyes, it may also become invisible and walk about with the sound of rattling chains. It may also foretell the death of an individual by laying across the threshold of his or her house, and like the vampire the Barghest is unable to cross rivers.

See also

{{Wiktionary}}

References