Sarmatian Sea Snail

Tradition / Region: Danish Mythology
Alternate Names: Sarmatian Snail, Cochlea Sarmatica, Philosmon, Aknib, Albakr, Lucrab
Category: Snail, Mollusc


The Myth

The Sarmatian Sea Snail is a gigantic marine creature described as inhabiting the Sarmatian Sea, identified with the Baltic Sea, and also reported in the Black Sea under various names.

It is said to be as large as a barrel and unlike ordinary snails in both form and behavior. It bears antlers like those of a stag, with bright, pearl-like tips. Its head has a rounded, cat-like snout with whiskers, and its eyes glow in the dark, lighting its way. Its mouth is long and deeply split, with a fleshy appendage hanging beneath it. The creature has a thick neck and a long, multicolored tail patterned like that of a tiger. Instead of a soft body, it possesses four legs armed with hooked claws.

Though capable of living both in water and on land, it is usually found in the open sea and rarely approaches the shore. In calm weather, it may crawl onto beaches to feed.

Its flesh is considered edible and even beneficial, believed to help with illnesses of the lungs and liver.

Reports place similar creatures across different regions, each culture naming it differently but describing the same or closely related being. These accounts present it as a rare and elusive inhabitant of northern and eastern seas.


Sources

A Book of Creatures contributors. (2015, August 31). Sarmatian Sea Snail. In A Book of Creatures, from https://abookofcreatures.com/2015/08/31/sarmatian-sea-snail/


Lou Carcolh

Tradition / Region: France (Gascony; Hastingues)
Alternate Names: Carcolh, Liu-Karkul
Category: Snail / dragon


The Myth

Lou Carcolh is a monstrous creature of Gascon folklore, whose name means “snail.” It is said to dwell in a deep cavern beneath the town of Hastingues in southwestern France. Half serpent and half mollusk, Lou Carcolh possesses a vast, elongated body crowned by an enormous shell as large as a house.

From its gaping mouth extend numerous long, hairy tentacles, slick with mucus. These appendages spread outward from the cave, lying flat against the ground and coated in thick slime. The tentacles can reach great distances, and anything that comes within their grasp is seized and dragged back toward the cave. Once pulled inside, the victim is swallowed whole.

People said that the creature’s slime could sometimes be seen long before Lou Carcolh itself appeared, glistening on the ground as a warning of its presence. Those who followed the trail too closely risked being taken without a sound, hauled away by the creature’s unseen reach.

Lou Carcolh became so closely associated with Hastingues that the creature’s name was used as a nickname for the town itself, which stands upon a rounded hill. In local tradition, the men of Hastingues were said to warn young women playfully, “The Carcolh will catch you,” invoking the lurking monster beneath the ground.

Through these stories, Lou Carcolh is remembered as a vast, slimy dragon-snail, hidden beneath the earth, whose silent tentacles stretched outward to claim the unwary and pull them into the darkness below.


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