Bachhund of the Stöckelter Moor

Tradition / Region: Luxembourg Mythology
Alternate Names: Moor Hound, Black Dog of Stöckelts
Category: Dog


The Myth

Near the Stöckelter Moor, which lies between the districts of Sandweiler and Itzig, people long believed that an evil spirit dwelt in the marsh. This being was called the Bachhund.

It was said to roam the heights of Stöckelts at night in the form of a large black dog. At times, a terrible roaring could be heard across the moor and in the surrounding woods, a noise that rose like a distant thunderstorm and filled the place with dread.

One story tells of a woman from Kontern who, near the moor, heard someone calling out “Hoo! Hoo!” Thinking it was a lost traveler, she answered with the same call. The exchange happened three times. But when she called out the third time, a large black dog suddenly leapt from the air beside her and stared fixedly at her. Terrified, she hurried away as fast as she could.

Thus the Stöckelter Moor was remembered as a place haunted by the Bachhund, whose presence was feared and whose roaming was said to continue even in later times.


Gallery


Sources

sagen.at contributors. (n.d.). Der Bachhund. In sagen.at, from https://www.sagen.at/texte/sagen/luxemburg/Bachhund.html


Interpretive Lenses

Religious Readings
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Philosophical Readings
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Muselhond of Grevenmacher

Tradition / Region: Luxembourg Mythology
Alternate Names: Moselle Hound
Category: Dog


The Myth

Near Grevenmacher there was said to live a strange being known as the Muselhond. He usually stayed in the waters of the Moselle and only rarely appeared in the countryside around the town. Because he harmed no one, he was not greatly feared.

Early in the morning he was often seen as a large dog. After making his rounds around the town, he would plunge into the Moselle and there reappear in the form of a man. Washerwomen sometimes saw him rolling noisily down the river like a tumbling cask. Children who behaved too boldly while bathing were warned that the Muselhond would drag them under the water.

He was said to be friendly toward fishermen, and two fishermen from Grevenmacher were believed to have once caught an enormous quantity of fish with his help.

Opposite Temmels, people sometimes heard voices shouting “Carry me across! Carry me across!” Two figures, one tall and one short, were said to roll about in the meadow there. Yet when the ferryman crossed over, he found no one waiting. This too was attributed to the Muselhond, who was thought to delight in such tricks.

Thus the Muselhond was remembered as a strange river being who moved between water and land, sometimes appearing as a dog, sometimes as a man, and whose presence lingered in the tales told to children.


Gallery


Sources

sagen.at contributors. (n.d.). Der Muselhond zu Grevenmacher. In sagen.at, from https://www.sagen.at/texte/sagen/luxemburg/Muselhond.html


Interpretive Lenses

Religious Readings
  • Christian Ascetic Deep Dive
Philosophical Readings
  • Nietzschean Deep Dive
Psychological Readings
  • Jungian Deep Dive
Esoteric Deep Dive
  • Hermetic Deep Dive
Political / Social Readings
  • Marxist Deep Dive