Kichkanya

Tradition / Region: Nepali Mythology
Alternative names: Kichkandi
Category: Ghost


The Myth

The Kichkanya is the restless spirit of a woman whose body was not completely cremated, leaving part of her remains—usually a bone—behind in the world of the living. Bound to this fragment, she wanders alone and haunts the place where she suffered an untimely death.

These spirits are often said to be the souls of women who were mistreated during life or who died during pregnancy or childbirth. They are remembered as tragic and tortured beings unable to find peace.

A Kichkanya appears as a beautiful young woman with unusually long black hair, a pale and bony complexion, and a red bridal dress. Her most disturbing feature is revealed by her feet, which point backward.

She uses her beauty to lure lonely male travelers. Those who fall under her influence are said to have their life force drained away, becoming thin, weak, and exhausted. Some victims are believed to waste away entirely.

Another common tale describes the Kichkanya as a ghostly hitchhiker who appears on deserted roads late at night. Drivers who stop for her and obey her directions eventually find themselves led to cremation grounds, temple cemeteries, or lonely places of death.

Solitary and mournful, the Kichkanya is one of Nepal’s most feared female spirits—a beautiful phantom in red, forever wandering the places where her suffering began.


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Kichkandi. In Wikipedia. Retrieved June 20, 2026, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kichkandi


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