Tiddy Mun

Tiddy Mun

Tiddy Mun was a bog spirit worshipped in Lincolnshire, England, which supposedly had the ability to control floods. When the wetlands flooded and the rivers burst their banks, local people would gather by the waterside and call

"Tiddy Mun without a name, the water's rough!"

and the next morning the floods would have receded. Tiddy Mun (old Lincolnshire dialect for 'little man') was believed to look like a withered old man with a long, white beard. When he laughed it was said to sound like the whooping screech of a pyewipe (local dialect for peewit). He was said to dwell in the bogs and waterholes of the carrs of north Lincolnshire, and was generally helpful and kind towards humans.

When Dutch engineers led by Cornelius Vermuyden began draining the carrs in the seventeenth century, the local people used guerrilla tactics to attack and kill many of the engineers. They believed the killings would placate Tiddy Mun, who they thought was angered by the draining and had caused a pestilence as a result.

Tiddy Mun's existence was first cited in June 1891, in an article by M. C. Balfour in the Journal of Folklore. She recalls a story told to her by an older person in the village who remembered a curse cast upon the town when they were a child because of the ditching and draining of the bogs and fens of Lincolnshire by the Dutch. The water spirit is eventually placated by the town after they gather at midnight on a full moon, pour buckets of water back into the bog, and apologize for the damage to the spirit's bog where he lives. [ [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0015-587X%28189106%292%3A2%3C145%3ALOTC%3E2.0.CO%3B2-X "Legends of the Cars" by M. C. Balfour] in "Folklore" 2.2 (Jun., 1891): 145-170.]

The same spirit also appears in the story "Yarrow" by the fantasy author Charles de Lint.

Tiddy Mun also features in the song "Cursed Cornelius" by Norcsalordie, a song about the draining of the Lincolnshire wetlands.

References


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  • Cornelius Vermuyden — Sir Cornelius Wasterdyk Vermuyden (Sint Maartensdijk, 1595 – London, 11 October 1677)[1] was a Dutch engineer who introduced Dutch reclamation methods to Britain, and made the first important attempts to drain The Fens of East Anglia. Contents 1… …   Wikipedia

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