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Revision as of 18:28, 10 May 2009


File:Banshee1.jpg
photo by D'Arcy Benincosa

A banshee is one of many spirits of Irish and Scottish folklore. Banshees are common in Irish and Scottish folk stories, and enjoy the same mythical status in Ireland as fairies and leprechauns. The modern understanding of a banshee as a grotesque, angry female spirit that flies in the air at night, terrifying people with her shrieking is something of a misnomer. The banshee is understood by the people of Ireland and Scotland as an omen of death and a messenger from the afterlife who would appear and wail under the windows of a house where a person was about to die. Such tales indicate the belief in the spirit world and the existence of spiritual beings, whether spirits of people who have died young, or of beings entirely of spiritual origin, who can communicate with human beings.

Etymology

The term Banshee is an Anglicization of the Irish bean sídhe or bean sí, which translates as "fairy woman": bean: woman, and sidhe: the genitive case of "fairy."[1] The Scots Gaelic version of the name is Bean Nighe—"fairy washer woman."

Description

The shriveled hag with long, unkempt white hair, wearing a funeral robe is only one of several different forms in which a banshee may appear, although this is the most common form the creature takes. She can also appear as a young woman with a beautiful, if slightly un-earthly, appearance—an honorable matriarch. No matter what her appearance, she is almost always portrayed as having long hair and wearing long flowing robes of similar color.[2]

The most distinctive feature of the banshee is her cry. It has been described differently, from a low moan to a loud shriek. Most often it is said to be a loud, sad lamenting that has not startled, but saddened those who heard it. The banshee's cry has always been understood to herald death.

Scottish Bean Nighe

Since the Scottish name Bean Nighe is derived from the Old Irish language, the fairy washer woman of Scotland may well be related to the Irish banshee, yet the two creatures are different in several details. The Scottish Bean Nighe is described in some tales as having one nostril, one big protruding tooth, webbed feet, long hanging breasts, and as being dressed in green.

As the "Washer at the Ford," she wanders near deserted streams where she washes the blood from the grave-clothes of those who are about to die. It is said that Mnathan Nighe (the plural of bean nighe) are the spirits of women who died giving birth and are doomed to do this work until the day their lives would have normally ended. A mortal who is bold enough to sneak up to her while she is washing and suck her breast can claim to be her foster child, and as a result gain a wish from her.[3]

In the ancient Celtic epic The Ulster Cycle, the Morrígan (a Celtic war goddess) is seen in the role of a Bean Nighe. When the hero Cúchulainn rides out to war, he encounters the Morrígan as a hag washing his bloody armor in a ford. From this omen he realizes this battle will be his last.

Origin

The banshee first appeared in very old Gaelic legends. According to such stories, the six noteworthy families of Ireland—the O'Neills, O'Donnells, O'Connors, O'Learys, O'Tools, and O'Connaghs—each had a woman spirit who would act as the harbinger of death; having foresight, she would appear before the death, weeping. When several banshees appeared at once, it indicated the death of someone great or holy.[4]

Why these specific families were connected originally to the banshee is not entirely known. Some have suggested that the banshee is actually the conglomeration of death rituals and supernatural beliefs. Traditionally, when a citizen of an Irish village died, a woman would sing, otherwise known as "keen," a lament at their funeral. Music in those times was often connected to the spirits and fairies that were believed to inhabit the woods. It is possible that at some point the ritual merged with the belief, creating the banshee.[5]

Banshees in literature and popular culture

When the oral narratives were first translated into English, a distinction between the "banshee" and other fairy folk was introduced which does not seem to exist in the stories in their original (Irish or Scottish) Gaelic forms. The funeral lament became a mournful cry or wail by which the death is heralded. In these tales, hearing the banshee's wail came to predict a death in the family and seeing the banshee portended one's own death.

Yet, the banshee is still one of a handful of mythical creatures that, although widely known over a diverse geographical area, is not commonly seen outside of folklore. Gaelic oral traditions passed down for centuries, written down only in the last five hundred years, are the most common place to find the banshee, such as the fourteenth century Chogaidh Gaeil are Gall. Such traditions changed over time to include poems, limericks, nursery rhymes, and superstitions that have carried on to the twentieth century, although actual belief in such creatures is scarce at best.

Today, the best places to find stories of banshees are in anthologies of Irish and Scottish lore. Some contemporary authors, such as Terry Pratchett in the novel Reaper Man employ banshees, but on the whole the banshee is not used frequently in literature or art. Certain pop-cultural activities, however, such as role-playing and video games, include the banshee among their mythical creatures.

Notes

  1. The Oxford English Dictionary. (Oxford Press, 1971)
  2. Irelandseye.com, The Banshee. Retrieved June 18, 2007.
  3. Duffy, Susanna, The Wail of the Banshee. Retrieved June 18, 2007.
  4. Yeats, W. B. Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry (Allan Rodgers Books, 2005), p. 108. ISBN 1598186566
  5. Bowes, Leo, The Legend of the Banshee. Retrieved June 18, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Briggs, Katharine. An Encyclopedia of Fairies. Pantheon Books. 1976. ISBN 0-394-73467-X
  • Lysaght, Patricia. The Banshee: The Irish Death Messenger. Roberts Rinehart Publishers. 1986. ISBN 1-57098-138-8
  • Vinopal, John. Ten Years of Torment. UC Santa Cruz. 1986.
  • Wentz, W.Y. Evans. The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries. Citadel. 1966, 1990.

External links

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