Sunday, November 24, 2024

Fairy Encyclopedia – Redcaps & Kabouters

What Are British Redcaps?

The Redcaps are thought to be murderous fairies who inhabit these long-forgotten castles. And,  they will kill those who wander too close or stray inside, to dye their hats with the blood of their victims.

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Redcaps are two very different creatures, depending on where you reference them. There are many ruined castles in the British Isles, specifically along the border of England and Scotland.

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For you see, the British Redcaps must keep their hats dyed with blood; if it should ever dry out, the Redcap fae will die a most heinous death. They are incredibly speedy and light on their feet, and remarkably quiet, despite the iron spikes that adorn the iron boots they wear. Also, it is thought that attempting to outrun a redcap is a foolishly hopeless act that will only result in you dying tired.

Redcaps

They are decidedly from the Unseelie court of Fae, with their murderous ways and dark intent. Even though, some people classify them as a type of vampire. This doesn’t hold up to close inspection, however, as they are not known to ingest the blood of their victims.

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The best and only way to avoid a British Redcap is to take care when adventuring in abandoned castles along that border, and perhaps to bring a friend you’re slightly faster than when doing so.

Dutch Kabouter (Red Cap)

The Redcap, or Kabouter, known to the Dutch is an entirely different and much kinder fellow. The Kabouter is a very friendly face. They live in deep burrows underground or in large mushrooms in the forest. Also, they are incredibly fond of beards, almost as much as Dwarves are renowned to be.

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Also, as their name suggests, they wear tall red pointy hats. Like many faery folk, they are associated with cobblers and shoemakers, and the story “Legend of the Wooden Shoes” has a Kabouter teaching a man to make a set of wooden shoes.

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While often thought of as a Gnome, Garden gnomes are Kabouters as illustrated by Rien Pootvliet. There is some consideration that, as their hats resemble certain psilocybin mushrooms, the Kabouter’s overall appearance, and their red hat in particular, may be seen as the result of the consumption of those self-same mushrooms.

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They are fond of treats left out for them. Especially, gingerbread cookies and acorns full of milk, best left atop an oak stump in the woods.

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