Difference between revisions of "Goblin" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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*  They steal human women and children and hide them away underground.  
 
*  They steal human women and children and hide them away underground.  
 
*  Goblin women steal human babies, replacing them with ugly goblin babies ([[changeling]]s).
 
*  Goblin women steal human babies, replacing them with ugly goblin babies ([[changeling]]s).
*  Goblin [[changelings]] are sometimes known as "[[oaf]]s" or "[[crimbil]]s".
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*  Goblin [[changelings]] are sometimes known as "[[oaf]]s" or "[[crimbil]]s."
 
*  They are sometimes described as being an entirely male race.
 
*  They are sometimes described as being an entirely male race.
 
*  Female goblins are referred to as "[[hag]]s" or "[[crone]]s"
 
*  Female goblins are referred to as "[[hag]]s" or "[[crone]]s"
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Sir Walter Scott in his ''[[Letters on Demonology and witchcraft]]'' ascribed gnomes, kobolds and goblins, along with Scottish ''bogles'' to all correspond with a caricature of the [[Sami people]].
 
Sir Walter Scott in his ''[[Letters on Demonology and witchcraft]]'' ascribed gnomes, kobolds and goblins, along with Scottish ''bogles'' to all correspond with a caricature of the [[Sami people]].
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==Redcap==
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A '''Red Cap''' or '''Redcap,''' also known as a ''powrie'' or ''dunter'', is a type of malevolent murderous [[goblin]], [[elf]] or [[fairy]] found in [[British folklore]]. They inhabit ruined castles found along the border between [[England]] and [[Scotland]]. Redcaps are said to murder travelers who stray into their homes and dye their hats with their victims' blood (from which they get their name).<ref>K. M. Briggs, ''The Fairies in English Tradition and Literature'', p 57 University of Chicago Press, London, 1967</ref> Indeed, redcaps must kill regularly, for if the blood staining their hats dries out, they die.  Redcaps are very fast in spite of the heavy iron pikes they wield and the iron-shod boots they wear. Outrunning the buck-toothed little daemons is quite impossible; the only way to escape one is to quote a passage from the [[Bible]].  They lose a tooth on hearing it, which they leave behind.
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=== Robin Redcap & Wiliam de Soulis===
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[[Image:Hermitagecastle1.jpg|left|thumb|200px|<center>Hermitage Castle.<Center>]]
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[[Image:Hermitagecastle1814.jpg|200px|right|thumb|Hermitage Castle in 1814.]]
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The most infamous redcap of all was Robin Redcap. As the familiar of Lord [[William de Soulis]], Robin wreaked much harm and ruin in the lands of his master's dwelling, [[Hermitage Castle]]. Men were murdered, women cruelly abused, and [[Occultism|dark arts]] were practiced. So much infamy and blasphemy was said to have been committed at Hermitage Castle that the great stone keep was thought to be sinking under a great weight of sin, as though the very ground wanted to hide it from the sight of God.
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 +
Yet Soulis, for all the evil he wrought, met a very horrible end: he was taken to the Nine Stane Rigg, a circle of stones hard by the castle, and there he was wrapped in lead and boiled to death in a great cauldron.<ref name="Mack146">Mack, James Logan (1926). ''The Border Line'' Oliver & Boyd. Edinburgh.P. 146.</ref>
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=== Redcaps In Popular Culture ===
 +
Red Cap is [[Monster in My Pocket]] #25.  They appear in the [[video game]], sliding down diagonal girders in the stage 4 [[construction site]].
 +
 +
Mike Mignola, the author of the [[Hellboy]] comic book series, includes a short story entitled "Iron Shoes" which depicts Hellboy investigating an old abandoned castle in Scotland inhabited by a cannibalistic goblin who wears iron shoes and hurls iron spears.
 +
 +
Redcaps are mentioned in the [[Harry Potter]] series by British author [[J. K. Rowling]].
 +
 +
Redcaps are enemies which match their original description of goblins in the MMORPG [[City of Heroes]].
 +
 +
Redcaps are one of the basic [[Kith]]s of [[Kithain]] in [[Changeling]] the Dreaming, the RPG by [[Whitewolf]].
 +
Red caps (aka powries) are also some of the monsters in R.A. Salvatore's DemonWars series.
 +
 +
The [[Final Fantasy series]], most notably in [[Final Fantasy Tactics]] and [[Final Fantasy Tactics Advance]], Redcaps appear and they are considered members of the goblin family, often being the weakest members of this family.
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==Kallikantzaros==
 +
A '''Kallikantzaros''' (Καλλικάντζαρος) pl. ''Kallikantzaroi'' is a malevolent [[goblin]] in [[Greeks|Greek]] and [[Cypriot]] folk [[tradition]]. They dwell underground but come to the surface from 25 December to 6 January (from the winter solstice for a fortnight during which time the sun ceases its seasonal movement).  Its name is possibly derived from "''kalos-kentauros'', or "beautiful centaur.".<ref name="Ginzburg 1991">{{cite book |last= Ginzburg |first= Carlo |title= Ecstasies: Deciphering the Witches Sabbath|year= 1991|publisher= Univeristy of Chicago Press|location= Chicago|isbn= 0226296938}}</ref>
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It is believed that Kallikantzaroi stay underground sawing the [[World tree]], so that it will collapse, along with [[Earth]].<ref name="Ginzburg 1991"/>However, when they are about to saw the final part, [[Christmas]] dawns and they are able to come to surface. They forget the Tree and come to bring trouble to mortals.
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 +
Finally, on the [[Epiphany (Christian)|Epiphany]] (6 January), the sun starts moving again, and they must go underground again to continue their sawing. They see that during their absence the [[World tree]] has healed itself, so they must start working all over again. This happens every year.
 +
 +
There is no standard appearance of Kallikantzaroi, there are regional differences on their appearance. Some Greeks have imagined them with some animal parts, like hairy bodies, horse legs, or boar tusks, sometimes enormous, other times diminutive. Others see them as humans of small size smelling horribly.  They are predominatly male, often with protruding sex characteristics.<ref name="Ginzburg 1991"/>
 +
 +
The Kallikantzaroi are creatures of the night. There were ways people could protect themselves during the days when the Kallikantzaroi were loose. They could leave a [[colander]] on their doorstep: if a Kallikantzaros approached for his evildoings, he would instead decide to sit and count the holes until the sun rose and he was forced to hide. The Kallikantzaroi also could not count above 2, since [[3 (number)|3]] is a holy number, and by pronouncing it, they would kill themselves. Another method of protection is to leave the fire burning in the fireplace all night so that they cannot enter through there.
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Legend has it that any child born during the twelve days of the [[Saturnalia]] (17th through 26 December) was in danger of [[shapeshifting|transforming]] to a Kallikantzaros for each Christmas season, starting with adulthood. The antidote: Binding the baby in tresses of garlic or straw, or singeing the child's toenails.
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In [[Greek language|Greek]] ''Kallikantzaros'' is also used for every short, ugly and usually mischievous being. If not used for the abovementioned creatures, it seems to express the collective sense for the Irish word [[leprechaun]] and the English words [[gnome]] and [[goblin]].
  
 
== Goblins in art and literature ==
 
== Goblins in art and literature ==
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*Goblins also feature in the novel ''[[The Black Cauldron]]'', adapted into a film in 1985 by [[Walt Disney Pictures]], and in the 1986 film ''[[Legend (film)|Legend]]'', starring [[Tom Cruise]]. In 2005, a new perspective of goblins was depicted in the novel [[Dance of the Goblins]] by [[Jaq D. Hawkins]]. A film based on the novel and directed by David Heinemann and starring [[Kevin McNally]] is currently in pre-production at [[Goblin Films Ltd]].
 
*Goblins also feature in the novel ''[[The Black Cauldron]]'', adapted into a film in 1985 by [[Walt Disney Pictures]], and in the 1986 film ''[[Legend (film)|Legend]]'', starring [[Tom Cruise]]. In 2005, a new perspective of goblins was depicted in the novel [[Dance of the Goblins]] by [[Jaq D. Hawkins]]. A film based on the novel and directed by David Heinemann and starring [[Kevin McNally]] is currently in pre-production at [[Goblin Films Ltd]].
  
*See also [[Goblins (Harry Potter)]].
 
  
*The '''U.S. fighter plane''' [[XF-85]], is nicknamed "the Goblin". The Goblin is one of America's earliest jets, first flying in 1948.  Only 14 feet (4.3 meters) long, it was intended to have a top speed of 650 mph and flying time of 80 minutes.  The concept didn't get too far, though, with only two aircraft built and very few flights made.  After only a year and with just a few drops and recoveries from B-29 Superfortresses, the program was cancelled.
+
 
 +
*The '''U.S. fighter plane''' [[XF-85]], is nicknamed "the Goblin." The Goblin is one of America's earliest jets, first flying in 1948.  Only 14 feet (4.3 meters) long, it was intended to have a top speed of 650 mph and flying time of 80 minutes.  The concept didn't get too far, though, with only two aircraft built and very few flights made.  After only a year and with just a few drops and recoveries from B-29 Superfortresses, the program was cancelled.
  
 
*'''The [[Green Goblin]]''' is a villainous character in the [[Marvel Comics]] [[Spider-Man]] comic book series .
 
*'''The [[Green Goblin]]''' is a villainous character in the [[Marvel Comics]] [[Spider-Man]] comic book series .
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==Goblins in modern fiction==
 
==Goblins in modern fiction==
{{splitsection}}
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Two major branches of goblins exist in popular game properties. Alongside with [[J. R. R. Tolkien]]'s descriptions of [[Orc]]s, the older branch is inherently evil and malicious, with varying coloring and generally matted and filthy hair.  This type of goblin appears in ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]''.  The distinctive green-skinned, hairless, capricious, and generally amoral (rather than absolutely evil) goblins created for ''[[Warhammer Fantasy|Warhammer]]'' are direct progenitors of goblins in more modern games, such as those in the [[Warcraft Universe]] or ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]''.
 
Two major branches of goblins exist in popular game properties. Alongside with [[J. R. R. Tolkien]]'s descriptions of [[Orc]]s, the older branch is inherently evil and malicious, with varying coloring and generally matted and filthy hair.  This type of goblin appears in ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]''.  The distinctive green-skinned, hairless, capricious, and generally amoral (rather than absolutely evil) goblins created for ''[[Warhammer Fantasy|Warhammer]]'' are direct progenitors of goblins in more modern games, such as those in the [[Warcraft Universe]] or ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]''.
  
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===Goblins in ''[[Magic: the Gathering]]''===
 
===Goblins in ''[[Magic: the Gathering]]''===
In the collectible [[trading card game]], ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]'', goblins are a very popular and potent creature type.  They tend to be red aligned creatures that come in large numbers, love rocks and have little to no sense of self preservation.  They are often a source of humour within the game (for example, the flavour text of the spell Shock reads "I love lightning! It’s my best invention since the rock", attributed to the goblin weaponsmith Toggo). Their popularity and effectiveness is such that they have received more attention at the cost of other red flavoured creatures, such as dwarves and orcs.
+
In the collectible [[trading card game]], ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]'', goblins are a very popular and potent creature type.  They tend to be red aligned creatures that come in large numbers, love rocks and have little to no sense of self preservation.  They are often a source of humour within the game (for example, the flavour text of the spell Shock reads "I love lightning! It’s my best invention since the rock," attributed to the goblin weaponsmith Toggo). Their popularity and effectiveness is such that they have received more attention at the cost of other red flavoured creatures, such as dwarves and orcs.
  
 
===Goblins in ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh]]''===
 
===Goblins in ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh]]''===
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===Goblins in ''[[The Elder Scrolls]]''===
 
===Goblins in ''[[The Elder Scrolls]]''===
  
Throughout the franchise, including the 2006 "Oblivion", goblins have been used as an NPC class of monsters. The goblins featured in Oblivion are semisentient, diminutive greenskined barbarians. They range in power from the weak and cowardly "peon" goblins to the mighty goblin warlords.
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Throughout the franchise, including the 2006 "Oblivion," goblins have been used as an NPC class of monsters. The goblins featured in Oblivion are semisentient, diminutive greenskined barbarians. They range in power from the weak and cowardly "peon" goblins to the mighty goblin warlords.
  
 
===Goblins in ''[[The Grey Griffin Books]]''===
 
===Goblins in ''[[The Grey Griffin Books]]''===
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===Goblins in the ''[[Artemis Fowl (series)|Artemis Fowl Book Series]]''===
 
===Goblins in the ''[[Artemis Fowl (series)|Artemis Fowl Book Series]]''===
 
Goblins are fairies that are considered very stupid by other races. They are able to conjure fireballs. Goblins are lucky if they can make friends, as they cannot cooperate with others. A group of them create the [[B'wa Kell]], a [[mafia]] group that smuggles batteries for weaponery and started a rebellion that nearly destroyed [[Haven (Artemis Fowl)|Haven]], the capital of the fairy people.
 
Goblins are fairies that are considered very stupid by other races. They are able to conjure fireballs. Goblins are lucky if they can make friends, as they cannot cooperate with others. A group of them create the [[B'wa Kell]], a [[mafia]] group that smuggles batteries for weaponery and started a rebellion that nearly destroyed [[Haven (Artemis Fowl)|Haven]], the capital of the fairy people.
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==Notes==
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<references/>
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==References==
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*[[Katharine Mary Briggs|Katharine Briggs]], ''An Encyclopedia of Fairies, Hobgoblins, Brownies, Boogies, and Other Supernatural Creatures,'' "Redcap," p 339. ISBN 0-394-73467-X
  
 
=='''Sources''':==
 
=='''Sources''':==
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* ''Goblins!'' and ''The Goblin Companion'' by Brain Froud
 
* ''Goblins!'' and ''The Goblin Companion'' by Brain Froud
  
==See also==
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==External link==
*[[Hobgoblin]]
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*[http://webhome.idirect.com/~donlong/monsters/Html/Redcap.htm Redcap Picture]
*[[Nilbog]]
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*[[Redcap]]
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*[[Kallikantzaroi]]
 
*[[Jaygermeister]]
 
*[[Kyöpelinvuori]]
 
*[[Kobold]]
 
*[[Sprite (creature)]]
 
*[[Brownie (elf)]]
 
*[[Wirry-cow]]
 
*[[Wight]]
 
*[[Halloween traditions]]
 
  
  
{{Credit1|Goblin|93477416|}}
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{{Credits|Goblin|93477416|Kallikantzaros|127306875|Redcap|130990571|}}

Revision as of 20:03, 28 May 2007


Template:Cleanup A goblin is an evil or merely mischievous creature of folklore, often described as a grotesquely disfigured or elf-like phantom.

Description

Goblins are grotesque fairies that can be from dwarf to human height. Various (sometimes conflicting) abilities and attributes have been given to them.


  • Goblins can grow to anywhere from 30 cm to 2 m tall.
  • They have a somewhat bestial ausgezeichnet appearance: their brow is fully covered with thick hair and their mouth is filled with yellowed, crooked teeth.
  • They have some traits of old men, which can include shortsightedness, but they are described as wiser than humans.
  • In recent depictions Goblins have been portrayed as green in color. This is a modern tradition.
  • They are sometimes said to be mostly invisible to human eye.
  • They can weave nightmares out of gossamer and insert them into the ear of a sleeping human.
  • They steal human women and children and hide them away underground.
  • Goblin women steal human babies, replacing them with ugly goblin babies (changelings).
  • Goblin changelings are sometimes known as "oafs" or "crimbils."
  • They are sometimes described as being an entirely male race.
  • Female goblins are referred to as "hags" or "crones"
  • Goblins are of the Unseelie Court, and are at war with fairies.
  • A goblin smile curdles blood.
  • A goblin laugh sours milk and causes fruit to fall from trees.
  • It is said that they mimic human actions in their sardonic way, twisting human rituals and culture to show the worst aspects.
  • Goblin pranks include hiding small objects, tipping over pails of milk, and altering signposts.
  • Goblins are often associated with fire, or have the ability to create said element.
  • Goblins like to borrow horses and ride them all night. If a horse is tired in the morning, it is said a goblin rode it. If a horse is panicking, the goblin is trying to mount it.
  • They are said to count the dead among their companions ('ghosts & goblins'). Goblins like to roam and cause mayhem during Halloween, along with a crowd of ghosts, witches, etc. It is the last day they can walk the surface before their caves are snowed in for the winter.
  • 'Goblin’s Thimbles' is another name for the foxglove plant.
  • They sometimes eat humans.
  • A group of goblins is referred to as a horde.
  • In some cases, Goblins love mushrooms, and utilize them for housing, recreation, and as food.
  • Goblins are often depicted possessing a coarse raspy sounding and slightly high-pitched voice.
  • When speaking a human tongue, goblins will stereotypically refer to themselves in third person.
  • Goblins often have a particular interest in money or trading, like being banker in the Harry Potter book series or running trade houses in World of Warcraft

[citation needed]

Etymology

According to some traditions, goblin comes from Gob or Ghob, the king of the gnomes, whose inferiors were called Ghob-lings. However, according to "The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English" the name is probably derived from the Anglo-French gobelin (medieval Latin gobelinus), which is probably a diminutive of Gobel, a name related to the word kobold. Goblin is also related to the French lutin.

Places

One fabled origin for Goblins is in France, in a cleft of the Pyrenees, from which they spread rapidly throughout Europe. They hitched a ride with Viking ships to get to Britain. They have no homes, being nomadic, dwelling temporarily in mossy cracks in rocks and tree roots. Bryn y Ellyllon 'The Hill of the Goblins' is a place in Somerset. The Gap of Goeblin is a hole and underground tunnel in France.

Sir Walter Scott in his Letters on Demonology and witchcraft ascribed gnomes, kobolds and goblins, along with Scottish bogles to all correspond with a caricature of the Sami people.

Redcap

A Red Cap or Redcap, also known as a powrie or dunter, is a type of malevolent murderous goblin, elf or fairy found in British folklore. They inhabit ruined castles found along the border between England and Scotland. Redcaps are said to murder travelers who stray into their homes and dye their hats with their victims' blood (from which they get their name).[1] Indeed, redcaps must kill regularly, for if the blood staining their hats dries out, they die. Redcaps are very fast in spite of the heavy iron pikes they wield and the iron-shod boots they wear. Outrunning the buck-toothed little daemons is quite impossible; the only way to escape one is to quote a passage from the Bible. They lose a tooth on hearing it, which they leave behind.

Robin Redcap & Wiliam de Soulis

File:Hermitagecastle1.jpg
Hermitage Castle.
Hermitage Castle in 1814.

The most infamous redcap of all was Robin Redcap. As the familiar of Lord William de Soulis, Robin wreaked much harm and ruin in the lands of his master's dwelling, Hermitage Castle. Men were murdered, women cruelly abused, and dark arts were practiced. So much infamy and blasphemy was said to have been committed at Hermitage Castle that the great stone keep was thought to be sinking under a great weight of sin, as though the very ground wanted to hide it from the sight of God.

Yet Soulis, for all the evil he wrought, met a very horrible end: he was taken to the Nine Stane Rigg, a circle of stones hard by the castle, and there he was wrapped in lead and boiled to death in a great cauldron.[2]

Redcaps In Popular Culture

Red Cap is Monster in My Pocket #25. They appear in the video game, sliding down diagonal girders in the stage 4 construction site.

Mike Mignola, the author of the Hellboy comic book series, includes a short story entitled "Iron Shoes" which depicts Hellboy investigating an old abandoned castle in Scotland inhabited by a cannibalistic goblin who wears iron shoes and hurls iron spears.

Redcaps are mentioned in the Harry Potter series by British author J. K. Rowling.

Redcaps are enemies which match their original description of goblins in the MMORPG City of Heroes.

Redcaps are one of the basic Kiths of Kithain in Changeling the Dreaming, the RPG by Whitewolf. Red caps (aka powries) are also some of the monsters in R.A. Salvatore's DemonWars series.

The Final Fantasy series, most notably in Final Fantasy Tactics and Final Fantasy Tactics Advance, Redcaps appear and they are considered members of the goblin family, often being the weakest members of this family.


Kallikantzaros

A Kallikantzaros (Καλλικάντζαρος) pl. Kallikantzaroi is a malevolent goblin in Greek and Cypriot folk tradition. They dwell underground but come to the surface from 25 December to 6 January (from the winter solstice for a fortnight during which time the sun ceases its seasonal movement). Its name is possibly derived from "kalos-kentauros, or "beautiful centaur.".[3]

It is believed that Kallikantzaroi stay underground sawing the World tree, so that it will collapse, along with Earth.[3]However, when they are about to saw the final part, Christmas dawns and they are able to come to surface. They forget the Tree and come to bring trouble to mortals.

Finally, on the Epiphany (6 January), the sun starts moving again, and they must go underground again to continue their sawing. They see that during their absence the World tree has healed itself, so they must start working all over again. This happens every year.

There is no standard appearance of Kallikantzaroi, there are regional differences on their appearance. Some Greeks have imagined them with some animal parts, like hairy bodies, horse legs, or boar tusks, sometimes enormous, other times diminutive. Others see them as humans of small size smelling horribly. They are predominatly male, often with protruding sex characteristics.[3]

The Kallikantzaroi are creatures of the night. There were ways people could protect themselves during the days when the Kallikantzaroi were loose. They could leave a colander on their doorstep: if a Kallikantzaros approached for his evildoings, he would instead decide to sit and count the holes until the sun rose and he was forced to hide. The Kallikantzaroi also could not count above 2, since 3 is a holy number, and by pronouncing it, they would kill themselves. Another method of protection is to leave the fire burning in the fireplace all night so that they cannot enter through there.

Legend has it that any child born during the twelve days of the Saturnalia (17th through 26 December) was in danger of transforming to a Kallikantzaros for each Christmas season, starting with adulthood. The antidote: Binding the baby in tresses of garlic or straw, or singeing the child's toenails.

In Greek Kallikantzaros is also used for every short, ugly and usually mischievous being. If not used for the abovementioned creatures, it seems to express the collective sense for the Irish word leprechaun and the English words gnome and goblin.

Goblins in art and literature

  • The webcomic Goblins is famous for portraying goblins as oppressed by presumptuous "heroes" who assume the goblins are vile creatures and kill them for loot and experience.
  • The Goblin and the Huckster by Hans Christian Andersen (1853), The Benevolent Goblin by Gesta Romanorum, and The Goblin of Adachigahara (Japanese) are just a few fairy tales depicting goblins. See also the Brothers Grimm.
  • Christina Rossetti in her poem Goblin Market, used goblins as symbols of earthly desires who tantalize and nearly destroy a girl who falls under their spell.
  • Poet Craig MacKenzie, known for his works in portraying mythical creatures, described these creatures as being a paean to early explorers tales, documenting what they seen, It is now known that these creatures were probably small apes. In one of his greater works, MacKenzie uses the comparison of a goblin to the liking of one of his townspeople, Michael Nimbley, using 'goblin' as an insulting phrase.
  • Author George MacDonald, in The Princess and the Goblin, portrayed goblins as malevolent, subterranean creatures.
  • The book is said to have been a childhood favorite of J. R. R. Tolkien, who populated his Middle-earth with goblins, which he later called Orcs.
  • Other books that feature goblins are: The Book of Wonder (1912) (The Hoard of the Gibbelins) by Edward Plunkett (18th Baron Dunsany), The Brownies and the Goblins (1915), Outside Over There by Maurice Sendak, Rainbow Goblins, The White Goblin, The Revenge of the Shadow King by Derek Benz and J.S. Lewis
  • In the Jim Henson film Labyrinth, Goblins figure prominently. Jareth the Goblin King, a powerful sorcerer (portrayed by David Bowie), commands a legion of foul, diminutive, largely incompetent creatures. The goblins initially do the bidding of a young girl (played by Jennifer Connelly), who must ultimately overcome her fear of them and resist seduction by their king.
  • Goblins also feature in the novel The Black Cauldron, adapted into a film in 1985 by Walt Disney Pictures, and in the 1986 film Legend, starring Tom Cruise. In 2005, a new perspective of goblins was depicted in the novel Dance of the Goblins by Jaq D. Hawkins. A film based on the novel and directed by David Heinemann and starring Kevin McNally is currently in pre-production at Goblin Films Ltd.


  • The U.S. fighter plane XF-85, is nicknamed "the Goblin." The Goblin is one of America's earliest jets, first flying in 1948. Only 14 feet (4.3 meters) long, it was intended to have a top speed of 650 mph and flying time of 80 minutes. The concept didn't get too far, though, with only two aircraft built and very few flights made. After only a year and with just a few drops and recoveries from B-29 Superfortresses, the program was cancelled.
  • The Green Goblin is a villainous character in the Marvel Comics Spider-Man comic book series .
  • The March of the Goblins is a polka song composed by J.J. Tarrant.
  • In the Spiderwick Chronicles, goblins are toothless, toadlike beings who use random artifacts in the place of fangs.
  • Goblin is Monster in My Pocket #27. He appears briefly in the first issue of the comic book. In the video game, he throws sugar cubes in the kitchen, stage 2.

Goblins in modern fiction

Two major branches of goblins exist in popular game properties. Alongside with J. R. R. Tolkien's descriptions of Orcs, the older branch is inherently evil and malicious, with varying coloring and generally matted and filthy hair. This type of goblin appears in Dungeons & Dragons. The distinctive green-skinned, hairless, capricious, and generally amoral (rather than absolutely evil) goblins created for Warhammer are direct progenitors of goblins in more modern games, such as those in the Warcraft Universe or Magic: The Gathering.

Goblins in RuneScape

In the MMORPG RuneScape, most of the goblins that the humans of RuneScape are familiar with are those goblins that cover the surface of the world. There are few places goblins cannot be found, but there are also few goblins that could not be described as stupid. The Dorgeshuun tribe of goblins are the notable exception to this, as they have been separated from the main goblin race since the times of the godwars. The Dorgeshuun have since then been hiding themselves away in their underground city, Dorgesh-Kaan. Were it not for their remarkable stupidity, the common goblins of the surface could cause extreme problems for the human civilisations. The Dorgeshuun, who are nowhere close to as stupid or inclined to bickering as normal goblins, are opposed to violence of all forms. They do not trust humans, though, and it is a rare human that has seen their mines or had anything approaching a decent conversation with them. Some goblins are found in barbarian village and lumbridge

Goblins in Dungeons & Dragons

See main article Goblin (Dungeons & Dragons).

Goblins in Warhammer

See main article Goblin (Warhammer).

Goblins in Palladium

In the Palladium Fantasy Role-Playing Game, goblins are a race of faeries who have lost much of their native magic. Only a few, known as Cobblers, retain any magic. The vast majority of goblins are stupid, cruel, and lazy thieves.

Goblins in Warcraft

In the Warcraft Universe, goblins are a green-skinned, diminutive, crafty race; known for their occasionally explosive, but usually effective engineering. They also tend to be a neutral party between the Alliance and Horde factions of Azeroth. Motivated almost entirely by greed, it is very likely that the only reason goblins remain neutral in the ongoing conflict is that if they chose a side, they would be unable to profit from the other. Fans have noted similarity between the greed of Warcraft goblins and that of Star Trek's Ferengi.


Goblins in Final Fantasy

In the Final Fantasy series of RPGs, goblins are synonymous with imps. In the earlier episodes of the series they traditionally appeared as the weakest enemy in the game. They are depicted as being small and skinny with browinish skin and pointy ears and nearly always wearing a stocking cap, owing more in appearance to the Scottish redcap than the traditional Tolkien goblin. They also occasionally appear as a low level summoned creature. In Final Fantasy XI, they appear as one of the more intelligent species of Beastmen, occasionally living as merchants in cities and interacting with the people there. The more hostile Goblins are also known as some of the most annoying enemies in the game, frequently appearing at high levels in popular leveling zones, much to the chagrin of campers who must constantly avoid them.

Goblins in Everquest

In the MMORPG Everquest 2, goblins are portrayed as largely mischievous, primitive, fairly foolish creatures. Small and green, with large pointy ears and yellow eyes, they tend to look and sound as silly as they act. Gigglegibber Goblins run a series of gambling games throughout Norrath. Upon visiting their hideout during the 'Frostfell' season (Christmas 2005 special quest) it is revealed that in addition to this gambling game they are also attempting to - unsuccessfully - forge gold coins, and yet they have no intention spending any of this money, they simply wish to 'have' it. Most of their schemes are harmless, though often illegal. Not all goblins of Norrath are so benign, however, with some being evil, and even falling under the control of external dark magics.

Goblins in other computer games

Other computer games featuring goblins include Goblin Commandos, Dungeon Keeper 2, Ghost´n Goblins (Arcade), the MMORPG [Tibia] which has a complete entry for Goblins in its bestiary and the Gobliiins! series, in addition to games based on other works featuring goblins.

Goblins in Magic: the Gathering

In the collectible trading card game, Magic: The Gathering, goblins are a very popular and potent creature type. They tend to be red aligned creatures that come in large numbers, love rocks and have little to no sense of self preservation. They are often a source of humour within the game (for example, the flavour text of the spell Shock reads "I love lightning! It’s my best invention since the rock," attributed to the goblin weaponsmith Toggo). Their popularity and effectiveness is such that they have received more attention at the cost of other red flavoured creatures, such as dwarves and orcs.

Goblins in Yu-Gi-Oh

In the Yu-Gi-Oh trading card game there are a small number of Monsters identified as goblins which are depicted as green or light grey anthropoids and are classed either as warriors or fiends. Also there are several Spell and Trap cards with goblin in their names which normally have effects linked to card drawing or life point alteration. However it should be noted that as of 2005 there are few of these and they don't fit a particular deck type or theme. The most famous of these monsters, with the word goblin in its name, is Goblin Attack Force and its Toon counterpart.

Goblins in The Elder Scrolls

Throughout the franchise, including the 2006 "Oblivion," goblins have been used as an NPC class of monsters. The goblins featured in Oblivion are semisentient, diminutive greenskined barbarians. They range in power from the weak and cowardly "peon" goblins to the mighty goblin warlords.

Goblins in The Grey Griffin Books

In The Revenge of the Shadow King, the first book in The Grey Griffin books, goblins are dark faeries who make up the Shadow Kings Armies. They are divided into sub-species, the most dangerous being the Slayer Goblin.


Goblins in the Artemis Fowl Book Series

Goblins are fairies that are considered very stupid by other races. They are able to conjure fireballs. Goblins are lucky if they can make friends, as they cannot cooperate with others. A group of them create the B'wa Kell, a mafia group that smuggles batteries for weaponery and started a rebellion that nearly destroyed Haven, the capital of the fairy people.

Notes

  1. K. M. Briggs, The Fairies in English Tradition and Literature, p 57 University of Chicago Press, London, 1967
  2. Mack, James Logan (1926). The Border Line Oliver & Boyd. Edinburgh.P. 146.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Ginzburg, Carlo (1991). Ecstasies: Deciphering the Witches Sabbath. Chicago: Univeristy of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226296938. 

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Katharine Briggs, An Encyclopedia of Fairies, Hobgoblins, Brownies, Boogies, and Other Supernatural Creatures, "Redcap," p 339. ISBN 0-394-73467-X

Sources:

  • British Goblins: Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends and Traditions by Wirt Sikes
  • Encyclopedia of Things That Never Were by Michael Page & Robert Ingpen
  • The Complete Encyclopedia of Elves, Goblins, and Other Little Creatures by Pierre Dubois
  • Goblins! and The Goblin Companion by Brain Froud

External link


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