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(New page: Category:Demon Names Category:Definitions ''For other uses of the word Succubus, see Succubus (disambiguation).'' '''Mora''' are mostly malevolent folkloric beings ass...)
 
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[[Category:Demon Names]]
[[Category:Demon Names]]
[[Category:Definitions]]
[[Category:Deities, Spirits, and Mythic Beings]]
 
''For other uses of the word [[Succubus]], see [[Succubus (disambiguation)]].''
''For other uses of the word [[Succubus]], see [[Succubus (disambiguation)]].''




'''Mora''' are mostly malevolent folkloric beings associated with sleep that in some form or another can be found throughout Europe.




'''Mora''' are mostly malevolent folkloric beings associated with sleep that in some form or another can be found throughout Europe.
==Description==
 
In Polish folklore, ''mora'' are the souls of living people that leave the body during the night, and are seen as wisps of straw or hair or as moths. In certain Slavic languages, variations of the word mora actually ''mean'' moth (for example, see Czech word ''můra'' at Wikipedia).
In Polish folklore, ''mora'' are the souls of living people that leave the body during the night, and are seen as wisps of straw or hair or as moths. In certain Slavic languages, variations of the word mora actually ''mean'' moth (for example, see Czech word ''můra'' at Wikipedia).


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In Germany they were known as ''mara'', ''mahr'', ''mare'', in Romania they were known as ''Moroi''. In Slavic countries the terms included ''mora'', ''zmoras'', ''morava'' and ''moroi''<!-- What Slavic countries? Does the source break it down by countries? In that case those should be added. If not, I have doubts regarding the source - what serious folklorist would just swipe over half of Europe without giving specifics? -->; in France, such a witch was the ''cauchemar''. Hungarian folklorist Éva Pócs traces the core term back to the Indo-European root ''moros'', death.<ref>''Haunted Land'', Piatkus, 2001, p 78</ref>  
In Germany they were known as ''mara'', ''mahr'', ''mare'', in Romania they were known as ''Moroi''. In Slavic countries the terms included ''mora'', ''zmoras'', ''morava'' and ''moroi''<!-- What Slavic countries? Does the source break it down by countries? In that case those should be added. If not, I have doubts regarding the source - what serious folklorist would just swipe over half of Europe without giving specifics? -->; in France, such a witch was the ''cauchemar''. Hungarian folklorist Éva Pócs traces the core term back to the Indo-European root ''moros'', death.<ref>''Haunted Land'', Piatkus, 2001, p 78</ref>  


==Characteristics==
==Characteristics==
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{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


==Further reading==
*Paul Devereux, ''Haunted Land: Investigations into Ancient Mysteries and Modern Day Phenomena'', Piatkus Publishers, London, 2001
Paul Devereux, ''Haunted Land: Investigations into Ancient Mysteries and Modern Day Phenomena'', Piatkus Publishers, London, 2001
 
 
==See Also==
*[[Mara]]




== External Links ==
== External Links ==
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mora_(mythology) The original source of this page at Wikipedia]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mora_(mythology) The original source of this article at Wikipedia]

Latest revision as of 09:38, 20 October 2014

For other uses of the word Succubus, see Succubus (disambiguation).


Mora are mostly malevolent folkloric beings associated with sleep that in some form or another can be found throughout Europe.


Description

In Polish folklore, mora are the souls of living people that leave the body during the night, and are seen as wisps of straw or hair or as moths. In certain Slavic languages, variations of the word mora actually mean moth (for example, see Czech word můra at Wikipedia).

In Serbian, "mora" refers to a "nightmare". Mora or Mara is one of the spirits from ancient Slav mythology. Mara was a dark spirit that takes a form of a beautiful woman and then visits men in their dreams, torturing them with desire, and dragging life out of them. Other Slavic names were nocnica, night woman, or ejjeljaro, night-goer

In Germany they were known as mara, mahr, mare, in Romania they were known as Moroi. In Slavic countries the terms included mora, zmoras, morava and moroi; in France, such a witch was the cauchemar. Hungarian folklorist Éva Pócs traces the core term back to the Indo-European root moros, death.[1]


Characteristics

According to author and researcher Paul Devereux, mora included witches who took on the form of animals when their spirits went out while they were in trance. Animals such as frogs, cats, horses, hares, dogs, oxen, birds and often bees and wasps.[2]

Like other trance practitioners, mora witches traditionally owed their abilities to being born with a caul. In their metamorphosed form they could fly through the night, walk on or hover above water and travel in a sieve. Dead mora witches were said to return as ghosts.


References

  1. Haunted Land, Piatkus, 2001, p 78
  2. Haunted Land, Piatkus, 2001, p 78
  • Paul Devereux, Haunted Land: Investigations into Ancient Mysteries and Modern Day Phenomena, Piatkus Publishers, London, 2001


See Also


External Links