logo
The mythical creature from Harry Potter that has northern roots

The mythical creature from Harry Potter that has northern roots

BBC News29-03-2025

Those familiar with Harry Potter will have heard of the mythical grindylow, described in the JK Rowling novels as a small, horned water demon with pointed fangs.And while they might not be as well known as Scotland's Loch Ness Monster, the north of England can claim the strange creatures as their own.First thought to have appeared in folklore tales across Lancashire and Yorkshire, the grindylow's purpose was to make children across the North brush their teeth or stay away from deep water.As the stories go, the creatures, also known as Jenny Greenteeth or Peg Prowler, would stretch out their long spindly arms to grab children from the edge of pools.
"You can see how parents would pass these tales on to children as an educational warning for them not to go near stagnant water," says Dr David Clarke, who is project lead for the National Folklore Survey."What better way to ingrain into children that they're dangerous."The grindylows appeared in the third and fourth novel of the Harry Potter series, first in Remus Lupin's Defence Against the Dark Arts class, and then again where they tried to disrupt the eponymous hero as he faced an underwater challenge in the Triwizard Tournament.And now, they are set to appear on a new Royal Mail stamp collection featuring mythical creatures and fabled figures from UK folklore.Other stamps will include the Loch Ness Monster, Cornish piskies, and Beowulf and Grendel.
Willow Winsham, co-author of the Treasury of Folklore book series, says: "While recent books and films have reimagined the grindylow, the stamp illustration remains faithful to traditional folklore."Grindylows are closely linked to river hags in Yorkshire and Lancashire folklore, namely Peg Powler, Nelly Longarms and Jenny Greenteeth."She says they are traditionally human-like creatures "who lurk at the bottom of rivers or ponds"."They're known for dragging children who venture too close to the water into the depths with their long, sinewy arms."
Dr Clarke believes "in England, we're almost embarrassed by our folklore," pointing out how Scotland, for example, is proud to embrace folklore legends such as the Loch Ness Monster.Further afield he says about 20 universities in the US offer a masters qualification in folklore studies, compared to what he claims is just one in England.However he reckons the new stamps highlight a recent "folklore revival" and is now leading a study on British folklore traditions on behalf of a group of universities."Folklore is the end result of oral tradition – some of it does get written down," says Dr Clarke.In 2024, the UK government adopted Unesco's convention on safeguarding "intangible cultural heritage", which covers stories passed down orally through generations.Winsham says: "England particularly has a complex colonial history and the UK's folklore and national narratives need to be handled carefully and responsibly because of this."She believes folklore forms "an integral part of who we are and display our rich culture"."While we must also be wary of using folklore to exclude people or to push agendas, it's something wonderful if engaged with in a positive way."
Winsham says that more and more there are "books, movies and TV shows featuring folklore abound and there is now a huge trend towards using folklore, even in gaming".Social media has also improved access to the traditions and urban legends and she is one of the founders of the #FolkloreThursday project, which has more than 60,000 followers."People are now able to communicate with others from across the globe in real time, sharing their local lore, tales and traditions with a huge audience instantly," she says.She believes renewed interest is because folklore provides a "respite in a difficult world and help soothe us by letting us step outside of ourselves and our worries for just a short time".Dr Clarke says: "While technology and communication has its benefits, people feel they are missing something."He believes that young people are embracing folklore "strongly" and the trend was explored in last year's BBC series Charlie Cooper's Myth Country. "The natural world is not just plants and animals, but also the stories and traditions."He says this inspires a "sense of connection and identity", where people no longer feel like a "tiny cog in the machine"."They don't have power or influence but if they're part of a local community group, part of a tradition, they can get so much out of that connection."
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Noel and Liam Gallagher's children share key advice from rockstar dads
Noel and Liam Gallagher's children share key advice from rockstar dads

Daily Mirror

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Noel and Liam Gallagher's children share key advice from rockstar dads

Oasis stars Noel and Liam Gallagher have been giving advice to their kids whilst they have not been on stage rehearsing with the band ahead of their reunion tour It's not the most rock'n'roll thing to do - but Liam and Noel Gallagher are great at giving their kids sensible advice. The pair are back on the road together later this month as the Oasis reunion kicks off in Cardiff on July 4, their first shows in 16 years. In that time, they have been trying to install confidence and the value of money into their children. ‌ Anaïs, daughter of Noel, says of the Oasis Live 25 tour: 'I'm pre-prepping my liver now by drinking, I don't know, electrolytes. It should be a very fun summer. My plan is to be at every U.K. date, and my camera will be with me every step of the way.' ‌ The model and photographer, 25, went on to joke that she might not make a photo book as 'then my dad would probably want every penny.' Growing up, she assumed that every kid could be taken to the Harry Potter film set to hang out like she was, until her parents, Noel and his ex-wife Meg Matthews, set her straight. 'They said, 'You're different, but that doesn't mean you're better than anybody else.' I think I've kept that in mind throughout my whole life.' Noel also seems to be aware that the children of famous people often buckle under the pressure of living up to their parents' success. 'My generation has been told that the sky is the limit and that if you dream big, you can invent an app and become a billionaire,' Anaïs told W magazine in the US. 'But that is such a small fraction of the population. My parents were always like, do whatever makes you happy—you don't need to be this big superstar.' ‌ Noel also didn't try to push her into music, quite the opposite. She had 'a brief stint playing the cello when I was about 11, and it's safe to say there is not an inherent Gallagher musical gene.' She added: 'My dad came to see a few of my recitals, and he swiftly was like, 'Maybe it's not for you.'' Noel's brother has been trying to help two of his kids follow in his musical footsteps. Gene, 23, has his band Villanelle who supported Liam on tour and have a new single out later this Summer (PLS REF). Lennon Gallagher, the eldest of Liam's sons, says his dad give hims tips, even thought his music so far has been more experimental than Oasis, featuring spoken vocals on stage. ‌ 'He doesn't hate it,' says Lennon, laughing. 'He's always been very supportive. Dad has given me some great pointers. One of the best ones is: Don't think about what you're doing when you're getting onstage. Just get up there and belt it out. It's a pretty perfect piece of advice, because if you ever think too much, you'll just get locked in your shell.' Gene said it was 'water off a duck's back' to be compared to his dad and he worries more about the reaction of his mum Nicole Appleton, of the girl group All Saints, to his music than his father. 'I'd be more nervous to play it to my mum. My dad hears my music all the time.' Oasis split following a backstage bust-up between the Gallaghers at Rock en Seine festival in Paris in 2009. But thankfully the brothers have now made up and it is believed Liam made the first move to patch things up. On X Liam said last year: "I called him but don't tell anyone as I don't want folk thinking I'm a soft lad and stuffs keep it between me n you cheers x." The reply laced with humour was typical of Liam's responses on social media. The pair will walk out on stage together, with their kids on the sidelines no doubt, on July 4 at Cardiff's Principality Stadium. There will also be dates in Manchester, London and Dublin as part of the tour.

Stephen Fry could do with a lesson in ‘radicalisation'
Stephen Fry could do with a lesson in ‘radicalisation'

Spectator

time11 hours ago

  • Spectator

Stephen Fry could do with a lesson in ‘radicalisation'

Stephen Fry has accused J.K. Rowling of being 'inflammatory and contemptuous', 'mocking' and adding to 'a terribly distressing time for trans people'. Fry, who narrated the Harry Potter audiobooks, has damned their author for saying 'cruel' and 'wrong' things and for failing to 'disavow some of the more revolting and truly horrible, destructive – violently destructive – things that people say'. He suspects that she's been 'radicalised by Terfs', charged her with kicking up 'a hornet's nest of transphobia which has been entirely destructive', and dismissed her as 'a lost cause'. Might I interrupt this lengthy damnatio memoriae to point out that Fry is supposed to be Rowling's friend and to venture that, if she deserves to be rebuked for anything, it's her godawful taste in friends. Fry, Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson. The woman is like flypaper for airheads, dilettantes, and abject ingrates. If J.K. Rowling has been radicalised, it is not by Terfs Fry's comments, which came in a recording of the podcast The Show People, are in stark contrast to his answer when asked about these matters in 2021 ('She's a friend and will remain a friend') and again the following year, when he refused to 'abandon' her and said: 'I know that J.K. Rowling doesn't want to see trans people bullied, alienated, shut out of society, made to feel ashamed, guilty, laughed at, all those things.' Fry suggests Rowling has been 'radicalised', a word familiar to followers of the gender controversy for its customary application to women who insist on their rights. Although the terminology echoes that used to describe recruitment of Islamist terrorists, you need not be a feminist semantician to suspect that 'radical' is being used as a synonym for 'hysterical', as though women who believe in chromosomal sex are like the mad heroine of a Charlotte Perkins Gilman story and would benefit from a lie down. Radicalisation is a deceptive and manipulative framing because recognising the existence of physiological differences between men and women isn't radicalism, it's biology. Fry has repeatedly professed his distaste for the gender wars and refused to engage on the substance. For all his donnish affectations, he's a 'be kind' merchant whose contribution to the debate is every bit as vacuous as those Insta mums who pose with a Pride Progress flag in front of their 'Live, Laugh, Love' wall canvas every 1 June. Yet were Fry to take heed of what the gender ideology vanguard say, he might grasp that their use of 'radicalisation' is projection. For if you've convinced yourself that men become women by declaring themselves to be so, that women corseting themselves in chest binders or having healthy breasts amputated is sound therapeutic care, that children should be offered medical and even surgical interventions to mutilate their bodies – and, yes, this is what the vanguard believes – then you should stop and ask who exactly has been radicalised here. When I first wrote critically about gender identity ideology on Coffee House in 2019, it set in motion a parting of ways with several friends who could not tolerate my disagreement with the fundamental convictions they had recently picked up from Twitter. The end of a friendship is often mired in sadness and regret but when a mate breaks away because you reckon Judith Butler is a bit of a nutter, there is – eventually – relief at a bullet dodged. There is also a deeper appreciation of those friendships which span political and philosophical divides. Some of my dearest friends are people who maintain that trans women are women, Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, Scotland should be an independent state, and Jeremy Corbyn would have made a good prime minister. Mateship across ideological lines is normal and healthy, I don't care what the bug-eyed scolds on BlueSky say. You stick by your mate, defend him even as you disagree with him, and you most certainly don't turn on him when a gang of under-medicated hall monitors corner you in the cafeteria. I'd like to think that Rowling doesn't pay much mind to turncoats who huff the fumes of her success then ditch her for status points. That she's too busy spending her days in a mountaintop hotel typing 'All work and no play makes Jo a dull girl' and her nights dive-bombing into a vault of gold coins like Scrooge McDuck. But no doubt it stings her just as it would the rest of us. That's unfortunate but it is better than the alternative. A friendship you can only hold on to by believing, or pretending to believe, that womanhood is nothing more than a feeling, that sex-based rights are bigoted, that transing the gay away is progressive, is a friendship from which you should flee without delay. If J.K. Rowling has been radicalised, it is not by Terfs but by the spinelessness and intellectual vacuity of characters like Stephen Fry. Men who profess left-liberal affinities in every other regard but are content to align themselves with harmful, reactionary doctrines because to do otherwise would be low-brow. Why, he'd be no better than the ghastly Americans who voted for Trump and those hideous English provincials who read the Daily Express. People like this have nothing to add to the conversation beyond repeating vapid platitudes half-remembered from their last dinner party. If this is the quality of contribution Fry has to offer the gender debate, it might be wise all round if he resumed his vow of silence.

Ian H Watkins slams JK Rowling as he says LGBTQIA+ community is 'under attack'
Ian H Watkins slams JK Rowling as he says LGBTQIA+ community is 'under attack'

Daily Mirror

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Ian H Watkins slams JK Rowling as he says LGBTQIA+ community is 'under attack'

Steps star Ian H Watkins has written a new children's book which is called Pride and the Rainbow Warriors, which teaches readers of all ages the about the LGBTQ+ community Steps' Ian H Watkins has slammed JK Rowling as he says LGBTQI+ community is "under attack". In a move away from music, Ian has brought out a children's book which teaches people about the LGBTQI+ community. Ian has reflected on his own experiences growing up in the Rhondda Valley in Wales in the '80s and '90s and has said that despite the world now being more progressive, the community is still "under attack". ‌ Harry Potter author JK Rowling has very vocal on the subject of trans people over the years. Following the Supreme Court's judgement in April, she has referred to transgender women as "men". ‌ Speaking to MailOnline, Ian said: "There are a few, they are the minority, a few very powerful people making decisions that the majority do not agree with.... So this book is also a big middle finger up to the b***ts." Stephen Fry has also also criticised LGBT charity Stonewall as he called it "nonsensical" and "stuck in a terrible, terrible, quagmire" when it comes to trans issues. In December he said: "I am not sure I support them." Talking about the situation, Ian said: "There's actual human beings involved. I think they are playing a political game. But at the end of the day, the bottom line is just be kind. "We're all facing struggles on a daily basis, you never know what somebody is going through, so just be kind, life is hard enough, let it go. Who I choose to love, why does that form your opinion? Why should that make you lose sleep at night? No. Worry about yourself." ‌ Ian's new book, which is called Pride and the Rainbow Warriors, follows the Rainbow Warriors as they teach readers about the LGBTQ+ community. Talking about the book, Ian said it is a "love letter" to himself. He said he wishes he had the book when he was growing up as he was made to fell "very different". He explained that he spent a lot of time out of school due to the bullying and hopes his children don't have to go through the same. Ian is dad to twin sons Macsen and Cybi with his former partner Craig Ryder. The pair welcomed the boys via surrogate in 2016 before they went their separate ways a year later. As well as turning his hand to writing and releasing his new book, Ian also uses his time to talk about diversity in schools and encourages children to embrace their individuality. Ian came out publicly in 2007 when he did an interview with The Sun.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store