Tradition / Region: Serbian, Macedonian, Bulgarian, Turkish, Albania, Kosovo
Alternative names: Karakondzhal, Karakoncolos
Category: Demon
The Myth
The Karakondzhul is a terrifying winter demon from Balkan and Anatolian folklore that appears during the darkest and coldest days of midwinter. These creatures emerge during the dangerous period between Christmas and Epiphany, especially during severe frosts and the “unbaptized days” of winter when the boundary between the human world and the spirit world was believed to weaken.
The demons rise from rivers, caves, frozen lakes, abandoned places, and other unclean locations after midnight. They wander through villages, fields, and riverbanks until the first rooster crows at dawn. During these nights people avoided traveling alone because the Karakondzhuls were believed to attack travelers, leap onto their backs, and force them to run wildly through the darkness until exhaustion or death.
In Serbian tradition, Karakondzhuls were associated with the spirits of children conceived or dead during the impure winter period. They were believed to especially target women and children, scratching faces, drinking blood, and devouring victims.
The appearance of the Karakondzhul changes constantly. Folklore describes them as shaggy black or red humanoids with horns and tails, naked thorn-covered creatures, horse-bodied beings with human heads and wings, monstrous little people that lure victims onto dangerous ice, or animals such as dogs, sheep, and calves. Some traditions considered them werewolf-like beings capable of changing shape freely.
In Turkish and Anatolian folklore, the related Karakoncolos appears as a small black hairy creature roughly the size of a monkey, child, or cat. It roams winter roads at night questioning travelers with strange riddles such as “Where are you from?” and “Where are you going?” The answer had to include the word kara, meaning “black.” If the traveler failed, the creature attacked them using a massive comb.
People believed iron, fire, bread, salt, ashes from the Christmas badnjak fire, and sharp metal objects could repel the demon. In some regions combs were hidden during winter so the Karakoncolos could not use them as weapons.
The Karakondzhul was feared not simply as a monster, but as a spirit of the dangerous winter season itself — a creature of darkness, frost, wilderness, and the chaotic nights when the world temporarily fell outside divine protection.
Sources
Bestiary.us. (n.d.). Karakonj. Retrieved May 16, 2026, from https://www.bestiary.us/karakonj