Misplaced Pages

Simonside Dwarfs

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Duergar (folklore)) Race of dwarfs in English folklore For the Dungeons & Dragons creatures, see Duergar (Dungeons & Dragons).

The Simonside Dwarfs, also known as Brownmen, Bogles and Duergar, are in English folklore a race of dwarfs, particularly associated with the Simonside Hills of Northumberland, in northern England. Their leader was said to be known as Heslop.

In F. Grice's telling of the traditional story The Duergar in Folk Tales of the North Country (1944), one of them is described as being short, wearing a lambskin coat, moleskin trousers and shoes, and a hat made of moss stuck with a feather.

The legendary dwarfs of Simonside were mentioned in the local newspaper, the Morpeth Gazette, in 1889, and in Tyndale's Legends and Folklore of Northumbria, 1930. They delighted in leading travellers astray, especially after dark, often carrying lighted torches to lead them into bogs, rather like a Will-o'-the-wisp. The menacing creatures would often disappear at dawn.

The word duergar is likely to be derived from the dialectal words for "dwarf" on the Anglo-Scottish border which include dorch, dwerch, duerch, Duergh and Duerwe amongst others with a later, mistakenly added Norse -ar plural, perhaps as a result of linguistic misattestation. It may also come from the Old Norse word for dwarf or dwarfs (dvergar). These Border words for "dwarf", like the Standard English form, all derive from the Old English dweorh or dweorg via the Middle English dwerg.

In the 2004 film Van Helsing, the Duergar are the minions of Count Dracula.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ghosts of The North Country, Henry Tegner, 1991 Butler Publishing ISBN 0-946928-40-1, page 62
  2. ^ Familiar letters of Sir Walter Scott, Volume 1, Sir Walter Scott, Houghton Mifflin, 1894, page 151
  3. ^ Concise Scots dictionary Mairi Robinson, Edinburgh University Press, 1999, ISBN 1-902930-01-0, ISBN 978-1-902930-01-5 pages 162-166
  4. ^ "Dwarf Definition & Meaning".
  5. Online Etymology Dictionary

External links

Fairies in folklore
Classifications of fairies
Related articles
Abodes and structures
Attested fairies
A–E
F–L
M–Z
Fairy-like beings worldwide
Worldwide
Africa
Americas
Asia
Oceania
Europe
Eastern
Northern
Southern
Western
Cross-regional
See also
Category


Stub icon

This article relating to a European folklore is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: