Gelert

Tradition / Region: Welsh Mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Dog


The Myth

Gelert was the loyal hunting dog of the Welsh ruler Llywelyn the Great.

One day Llywelyn went out hunting, leaving his infant child at home. Gelert remained behind to guard the house. When the prince returned, he found the scene in chaos. The cradle was overturned, the child nowhere in sight, and Gelert rushed forward to greet him with blood smeared around his mouth.

Seeing this, Llywelyn believed the worst. Thinking the dog had killed the child, he drew his sword in anger and struck Gelert down.

As the dog gave a final cry, Llywelyn suddenly heard another sound — the crying of his baby. Searching the room, he found the child alive beneath the overturned cradle. Nearby lay the body of a wolf, slain by Gelert while defending the infant.

Realizing what he had done, Llywelyn was filled with grief. He had killed the faithful dog who had saved his son’s life. He buried Gelert with honor, raising a grave in memory of his loyalty and sacrifice.

It was said that from that day forward Llywelyn never smiled again, and the echo of Gelert’s dying cry remained with him for the rest of his life.

Thus Gelert was remembered as the faithful hound who died protecting his master’s child, his story living on as a tale of loyalty, loss, and tragic mistake.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Gelert. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gelert


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Itbaraks

Tradition / Region: Turkic Mythology
Alternate Names: Baraks, Itbarak (“Shaggy Dog”)
Category: Dog, Hyrbid


The Myth

In the ancient Turkic epics, especially the stories of Oghuz Khagan, there is mention of a strange people known as the Itbaraks.

Their name came from the Turkic words for dog and for a dark, shaggy breed of hound. They were said to be powerful beings with the bodies of men but the heads of dogs. Their skin was dark, and they were described as fierce, strong, and difficult to defeat. Their homeland lay far to the northwest, in lands unknown to the Turkic peoples, somewhere beyond the familiar steppe.

When Oghuz Khagan set out to conquer distant regions, he marched against the Itbaraks. But their land proved difficult, and the dog-headed warriors were strong. In this first campaign, Oghuz could not defeat them and was forced to retreat with his army to a small island.

While they were encamped there, one of his warriors’ widows gave birth. With no tent or shelter, the child was born in a hollow. Oghuz named him Kıpçak, a word meaning “hollow” in the old tongue.

Years passed, and Oghuz gathered strength again. After seventeen years he returned to the land of the Itbaraks and this time overcame them. According to the tales, even the women of that land played a role in ending the struggle.

When the victory was won, Oghuz gave the conquered territory to the grown Kıpçak to rule. From him, it was said, came the lineage of the Kipchak people, whose name preserved the memory of his birth and of the long war in the land of the dog-headed folk.

Thus the Itbaraks remained in Turkic legend as a distant and powerful race — part man, part dog — whose land lay on the edge of the known world and whose defeat marked the rise of a new people.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Itbarak. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itbarak


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Cù-Sìth

Tradition / Region: Scottish Mythology
Alternate Names: Cú Sídhe, Coin-Shìth (plural)
Category: Dog


The Myth

The Cù-Sìth is a great supernatural hound spoken of in the traditions of the Highlands.

It is said to dwell among rocky clefts and lonely hills, wandering the moors and wild places far from settled land. The creature is immense, as large as a small cow, and covered in a shaggy coat that is often described as dark green, blending with the moss and heather of the hills.

Though huge, the Cù-Sìth is a silent hunter. It moves without sound across the land, appearing suddenly and vanishing just as quickly. Most of the time it gives no warning of its presence.

But at times it does cry out.

When it does, the sound is terrible to hear. The hound gives three barks — and only three. These cries carry for great distances, even out across the sea, and those who hear them know that something otherworldly is near.

Legend says that anyone who hears the barking must reach a place of safety before the third cry sounds. If they fail, terror will overwhelm them, and the fear itself may bring their death.

Because of this, the Cù-Sìth was feared as a creature tied to the fairy world and to fate. It roamed the lonely places between hills and shore, its voice a warning that the boundary between the human world and the unseen one had grown thin.

So the great green hound of the Highlands was remembered as a silent wanderer of the moors, whose three terrible barks could decide whether a traveler lived or died.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Cù-sìth. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%C3%B9-s%C3%ACth


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Cavall

Tradition / Region: Welsh Mythology
Alternate Names: Cafall, Cabal, Caball
Category: Dog


The Myth

Cavall was the favorite hunting dog of King Arthur.

He was famed among Arthur’s hounds for his strength and loyalty, and during hunts he held a special place. When Arthur pursued game, the other dogs were often released first, while Cavall was kept back. Only when the moment was right would he be unleashed, and then he would race after the quarry with unmatched speed.

Cavall is most closely remembered for the hunt of the monstrous boar Twrch Trwyth. During this pursuit, the hound chased the beast across the land, and in the course of the hunt he leapt upon a stone and left the mark of his paw impressed in it.

Arthur ordered that a mound of stones be raised around that rock to honor the moment. The place became known as Carn Cavall, the Cairn of Cavall.

It was said that the stone bearing the pawprint possessed a strange power. Travelers who visited the cairn sometimes took the stone away, carrying it off for a day or a night. Yet when they returned, the stone would always be found back upon the mound where it belonged, as though the land itself refused to let the mark of Arthur’s dog be removed.

Thus Cavall was remembered not only as a hunter beside a king, but as a hound whose deed left a permanent sign in the earth, a mark that endured long after the hunt itself had passed into legend.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Cavall. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavall


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Bran and Sceólang

Tradition / Region: Irish Mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Dog


The Myth

Bran and Sceólang were the two great hounds of the hero Fionn mac Cumhaill, leader of the Fianna.

They were no ordinary dogs. Both were said to be mostly white, with striking colors marking their bodies — purple upon their flanks, a crimson tail, and blue feet. They were enormous, standing as high as Fionn’s shoulder, and were famed for their speed, loyalty, and intelligence.

Their birth was itself strange. Their mother, Uirne, sister to Fionn’s own mother, had been transformed into a dog while pregnant. In that form she gave birth to the twins. Afterward she was restored to her human shape, but the two children remained hounds. Because of this, Bran and Sceólang were not only companions to Fionn, but also his kin.

The two dogs accompanied Fionn throughout many of his adventures and hunts. Bran in particular was said to remain always at his master’s side. In later stories it was told that the two hounds grew up together and were inseparable.

They were the first to find Fionn’s son Oisín when the boy wandered alone in the wilderness, discovering him naked in the forest and bringing him back to the world of men.

Yet the end of the two hounds came in sorrow.

Sceólang died during a hunt in the place later called Thrush Glen. There she chased a strange doe that was half black and half white, pursuing it until she met her death.

Bran’s end came later. In a moment of anger or impulse, Fionn struck his beloved hound. Whether from grief, injury, or the breaking of their bond, Bran afterward chose to cast himself into the water and drown.

So the two great hounds of the Fianna passed from the world, remembered not only as hunting dogs, but as companions of heroes and creatures whose lives were bound by blood and fate to the family of Fionn himself.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Bran and Sceólang. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bran_and_Sce%C3%B3lang


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Axehandle Hound

Tradition / Region: American Mythology
Alternate Names: Axhandle Hound, Ax-handle Hound
Category: Dog


The Myth

Among the tall tales of the lumber camps of Minnesota and Wisconsin, woodsmen told of a strange and troublesome creature known as the Axehandle Hound.

The animal was said to resemble a dog, but its body was shaped like an axe. Its head formed a broad blade, while its long, straight body resembled the handle of a tool set atop short, stubby legs. Because of this strange shape, it moved in an awkward but determined way as it prowled through the forests at night.

The Axehandle Hound did not hunt animals for food. Instead, it lived on axe handles. Whenever a careless woodsman left his tool unattended outside a cabin or camp, the creature might come creeping in the dark. By morning, the handle would be chewed away, leaving only the useless metal head behind.

The hound was said to travel from camp to camp under cover of night, sniffing out wooden handles wherever they could be found. Loggers warned each other to keep their tools close, for once the creature found a camp rich in axes, it would return again and again.

Some believed there was one way to protect against it. Axe handles made from red oak were said to repel the beast, and camps that used them claimed to be left undisturbed.

So the Axehandle Hound became part of lumberjack lore — a strange dog-shaped spirit of the forest, wandering the logging roads in search of forgotten tools and leaving frustrated woodsmen in its wake.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Axehandle hound. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axehandle_hound


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Augenbrand

Tradition / Region: Swiss Mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Dog


The Myth

In the legends of the Jura region of Switzerland, people once spoke of a black dog known as Augenbrand.

He was said to haunt the area near the old bridge at Soyhières over the river Birs. The bridge has long since vanished, but the stories of the creature that wandered there remained. Augenbrand was described as a large black dog with burning, fiery eyes whose glow could be seen in the dark from far away. It was from these blazing eyes that he took his name.

The spirit was believed to be bound to the fate of his master, Count Rodolphe de Sogren, lord of the nearby castle. The count had been murdered in the year 1233, and after his death the dog was said to roam the countryside, searching endlessly for him.

Travelers passing the bridge or nearby roads at night sometimes claimed to see the glowing-eyed hound moving through the darkness. Others felt they were being followed, hearing movement behind them on the path. Those who strayed too far or wandered uncertainly were said to be pursued by the creature as it searched the land for the master it had lost.

Stories from the region tell that strange sounds were often heard near the castle grounds in summer nights — and among these tales was the recurring sight of the fiery-eyed dog wandering restlessly below the ruins.

Thus Augenbrand was remembered as a ghostly hound of Jura, forever roaming the place of his lord’s death, his burning eyes searching the night for the master he would never find again.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Augenbrand. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augenbrand


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Freybug

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.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Freybug. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freybug


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Smakhak

Tradition / Region: Dutch Mythology
Alternate Names: Smakpoot, Smakvoet
Category: Dog


The Myth

Along the Delleweg near Stedum in Groningen, people once spoke of a haunting presence known as the Smakhak.

He was said to move along the road at night, close to travelers but often not clearly seen. What first gave him away were the sounds — heavy, wet thuds and smacking noises made by his feet as he went. The noises would come suddenly, as though something unseen was pacing alongside a person in the darkness.

When he did appear, he was described as a white dog, gliding along the road and passing close by those who walked there. He did not always attack or speak, but his presence was enough to unsettle anyone who met him.

Some said the Smakhak was not alone in the world of spirits. He was believed to be kin to another supernatural being known as the Widde Wiend, and the two were thought to belong to the same shadowy order of night wanderers.

So the Smakhak was remembered as a ghostly white hound of the road, known more by the strange sounds of his passing than by his form, a spirit that brushed past travelers and vanished again into the dark.


Gallery


Sources

Abe de Verteller. (n.d.). Van aardmannetje tot zwarte juffer: Een lijst van Nederlandse en Vlaamse elfen en geesten. In abedeverteller.nl, from https://abedeverteller.nl/van-aardmannetje-tot-zwarte-juffer-een-lijst-van-nederlandse-en-vlaamse-elfen-en-geesten/


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Polderhond

Tradition / Region: Dutch Mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Dog


The Myth

In the province of Groningen, stories were told of a spectral animal known as the Polderhond.

He was described as a rough, black dog, wild in appearance, with a tail like a broom. People rarely saw him clearly, but they often heard him. His howling carried across the open land, echoing over fields and ditches. At times the sound seemed to come not only from the land but from the water itself, as though the creature moved between both.

The Polderhond was counted among the ghostly hounds that haunted lonely places. He wandered the polders, appearing in the dark and vanishing just as quickly, leaving behind only the sound of his cry.

Those who heard him knew that something uncanny was near, and the night would feel heavier until the howling faded and the fields fell silent again.

So the Polderhond remained in memory as a dark spirit of the northern lowlands — a black hound whose voice could rise from land or water, warning that the unseen world was close at hand.


Gallery


Sources

Abe de Verteller. (n.d.). Van aardmannetje tot zwarte juffer: Een lijst van Nederlandse en Vlaamse elfen en geesten. In abedeverteller.nl, from https://abedeverteller.nl/van-aardmannetje-tot-zwarte-juffer-een-lijst-van-nederlandse-en-vlaamse-elfen-en-geesten/


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