Tradition / Region: English Mythology
Alternate Names: Fray-bug, Fraybug
Category: Dog
The Myth
In the folklore of Norfolk in England, people spoke of a terrifying creature known as the Freybug.
It was said to be a monstrous black dog, as large as a calf, wandering lonely country roads and appearing suddenly before travelers. Those who encountered it were struck with fear, for it belonged to the same shadowy kind as the other great black hounds of England that haunted paths, fields, and crossroads.
The creature did not need to attack to bring terror. Its size, darkness, and silent approach were enough to unnerve anyone who saw it on the road at night. Many believed that to meet such a beast was a sign of danger, misfortune, or a presence from the unseen world.
The name of the Freybug was remembered in old writings as a word for something meant to frighten — a specter or bogey used to terrify the living. In time, this fearful name came to be linked with the image of the black roadside hound itself.
So the Freybug lived on in memory as one of the dread black dogs of England, a creature of the night that prowled the roads of Norfolk and left travelers hurrying home in fear.
Sources
Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Freybug. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freybug