Pixie

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For other uses, see Pixie (disambiguation).

Pixies are mythical creatures of English folklore, considered to be particularly concentrated in the areas around Devon and Cornwall, suggesting some Celtic origin for the belief and name. In regional dialect, these mischievous little folk are sometimes referred to as piskies/piskeys or the little people. They are usually depicted as wingless, with pointed ears, and often wearing a green outfit and pointed hat. Sometimes their eyes are described as being pointed upwards at the temple ends.

Mythic origins

One myth states that pixies were a race of people who were not good enough for Heaven or bad enough for Hell and were therefore forced to remain on Earth forever. Another legend claims that they were Druids who resisted Christianity and were subsequently sentenced by God to grow smaller and smaller until they accepted Christianity.

More recently a theory has developed that they are named after the nation of Picts that inhabited Scotland during the post-Roman period, whom some believe are descended from an indigenous group of people predating the arrival of the Celts in Britain during the Iron Age, the word 'pixie' apparently being formed from a mixture of the words 'Pict' and Sídhe (see also Banshee). However, this is not proven, as many scholars believe the Picts to have been largely a Celtic people, as evidenced by the fact that they were called Priteni (Irish Cruithni) by the Welsh, an archaic Celtic name for "Briton". Additionally, the name Pict is derived from Latin picti, "painted people", making the Pictish origin of pixies unlikely as the word would not have been used by the Celts to describe their neighbours.

Characteristics

Pixies are said to enjoy playing tricks on people, for example by stealing their belongings or throwing things at them. At night, they steal horses and bring them back before dawn, leaving only tangled manes as evidence of the prank. Some pixies are said to exude pixie dust, which is left in their footprints or floating behind them as they fly.

Just a small note: Fairy folk are also known to steal horses and return them with tangled manes, as in the book, "An Earthly Knight" written by Janet McNaughton. Though fairies and pixies have a lot in common they are not, as commonly mistaken, the same thing.

On Dartmoor, in Devon, travellers who became lost on the moor were sometimes said to have been "pixie led", in other words, deliberately led astray by the little people. It is said that, if travellers felt the onset of the pixie spell, they can turn their coats inside out to confuse them and escape, a technique normally used for all fairies.

Pixies can also be repelled by objects made from iron or iron ore as contact with the metal is said to harm them, another trait they share in common with other fairies of the British Isles.

Those who deliberately follow pixies often vanish without a trace. For example, a farmhand at Rowbrook, situated on the steep, wooded flanks of the River Dart valley, is said to have been lured down towards the river by mysterious voices, calling his name: ‘Jan Coo.’ He was never seen again.

Even within living memory, some rural families left small gifts, such as bowls of food or saucers of milk, for the pixies in order to placate them. When shown this respect and attention, pixies would sometimes even help the family by tidying up the household during the night.

Modern medicine

It has been speculated by some medical professionals that the legends of pixies and elves, was inspired by a genetic disorder known as Williams syndrome. Some of these afflicted have pointed ears and sloe eyes and elongated faces that make them look like "real" pixies and the syndrome is often called "Pixieism".

In modern popular culture

Template:Cleanup-section (And some of them should moved to disambiguation page for Pixie)

Pixies commonly appear in popular culture. Fantasy books and movies such as The Black Cauldron feature the creatures. In film, their first appearance was in the 1912 film As Others See Us.

Holly Black's Spiderwick Chronicles
Pixies are small and mischievous creatures that can usually be found in one's backyard.
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Defence Against the Dark Arts professor Gilderoy Lockhart brings a cage of Cornish Pixies to class as part of a lesson. The pixies are small, blue, anthropoid creatures which fly without the aid of wings and create havoc when released.
Peter Pan
The loveable Peter Pan character Tinker Bell is a pixie. She is fiesty and very beautiful, and she makes a tinkling, bell-like sound when she flies (hence, her name). When people don't believe in her, her glow dims and she becomes weary and ill. But when people say they believe, she brightens and gains energy.
Eoin Colfer's Artemis Fowl series
Pixies are one of a number of magical species that have been driven underground by humans and the pollution they have caused on earth. Pixies fly using mechanical wings. Opal Koboi is the megalomaniac, genius pixie of Artemis Fowl: The Opal Deception.
Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels
The Wee Free Men and A Hat Full of Sky feature a race of fairies named "Pictsies", which are truly Pictish pixies.
The Fairly OddParents
The Pixies are dull, wear grey suits, speak in monotone voices, wear pointy caps as opposed to the fairy crown-things and, unlike the fairies, treat magic like a business. Instead of wands, they carry cellphones which make the traditional Fairly Odd Parents 'Ping!' when a fairy uses magic, except the ping is pixelated. The female pixies are not seen. The Head Pixie (H.P. for short), Mr. Sanderson, and the other male pixies are voiced by Ben Stein.
The Monster Rancher video games and anime series
Features anthropoid pixies that resemble angels and fairies.
Engineer folklore
During the construction of Hinkley Point nuclear power station, anything that went wrong was blamed on "the Pixy", the station being built near Wick's Barrow, an Iron Age burial mound called "Pixies Mound" by the locals.
After construction was completed, the contractors presented the station manager with a garden gnome, representing the Pixy. On the one occasion the ornament was removed from the station's trophy cabinet, the station was closed down by a freak flood.
Pixie Restaurant
The Pixie Restaurant opened in 1948 and was the first drive-in restaurant in Mt. Pleasant. At that time, the operation consisted of curb service with a complete menu. "Car Hops" would wait on customers in their cars and bring their food to them on trays which attached to the window. Today, the Pixie Restaurant has the 50's/60's neon look and a dining room with a 50's juke box, memorabilia and the same great food and service the Pixie has made famous for over 50 years.

There was reports in 2001 that there was pixie sightings in the UK in the Woodham area of County Durham. All of these sightings were from residents of houses in a small street near a meadow calld "carwadine close"

The candy Pixy Stix
Named after the species.
The influential alternative rock band Pixies
Directly named for the creatures.
American Dragon: Jake Long
The Pixie Kitchen
A restaurant and coastal attraction in Lincoln City, Oregon, from the 1930's through the 1980's, that was well-known to frequent visitors to the Oregon coast. Pixieland, a theme park, was built nearby in 1969, but went out of business after four years.

See also

  • Goblin
  • Korrigans
  • Sprite (creature)
  • Fairy
  • Peter and the Piskies: Cornish Folk and Fairy Tales

External links


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