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* [[Shiva]] has a cohort of goblins and ghouls (India).
* [[Shiva]] has a cohort of goblins and ghouls (India).
* ''Twenty-Two Goblins'' (Indian fairy tale)<ref>[http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/ttg/index.htm Sacred texts]</ref>
* ''Twenty-Two Goblins'' (Indian fairy tale)<ref>[http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/ttg/index.htm Sacred texts]</ref>

==Relation to the Gidgey Gadgets==
The goblin and human worlds had been separated peacefully for hundreds of years, until just recently. In early July, reports began coming in of goblins appearing everywhere. After days of research, researchers [[Jack Doyle]] and [[Max Sickler]] discovered that two seemingly harmless gidgey gadgets, when placed together, had opened up the portal between the two worlds. The two went to the origin of the gidgey gadgets, a sweat shop in Kansas City called Taiwan, to try and return them, but they could not. Wanting to keep them out of the goblins hands, they enlisted [[Marisa Daeschner]], [[Lauren Jasion]], [[Kara Leonard]] and [[Sandy Stewart]] to create a box to keep the gadgets in. Currently, they are safe in [[Jack Doyle]]'s care.

==Goblin Facts.==

*Goblins can fly and climb extremely well.
*Goblins enjoy eating moon chips.
*Goblins take offense when they are confused with cowmen.
*Goblins enjoy acting in musicals.


==Goblin Places==
==Goblin Places==

Revision as of 07:58, 6 August 2008

Goblin
GroupingMythological creature
Fairy
RegionEurope

A goblin is an evil, crabby, or mischievous creature of folklore, often described as a grotesquely disfigured or gnome-like phantom, that may range in height from that of a dwarf to that of a human. They are attributed with various (sometimes conflicting) abilities, temperaments and appearances depending on the story and country of origin. In some cases, goblins have been classified as constant annoying little creatures somewhat related with the Celtic brownie.

Etymology

According to "The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English," the name is probably derived from the Anglo-French gobelin (Medieval Latin gobelinus), which is probably a diminutive of Gobel, a name related to the word kobold (a German sprite). Goblin is also related to the French lutin[1]. In addition, there also exist various other alternative spellings of the word goblin, including: Gobblin, gobeline, gobling, goblyn, gobelinus (Medieval Latin).

Dwarfs, hiisi, duende, tengu, Menninkäinen and kallikantzaroi are often translated into English as 'goblins'. The Erlking and Billy Blind are sometimes called goblins. 'Goblin' is often used as a general term to mean any small mischievous being.

According to some traditions, goblin comes from Gob or Ghob, the king of the gnomes , whose inferiors were called Ghob-lings.[2]

Skratta is old Scandinavian word for a goblin or monster (modern Icelandic skratti, a devil).[citation needed]

A creature resembling a goblin, but larger than a human, is often considered an Ogre or a Troll.[citation needed]

Origins in folklore

One fabled origin for goblins is in France, in a cleft of the Pyrenees, from which they spread rapidly throughout Europe. They hitched a ride with Viking ships to get to Britain. [3][4] They have no homes, being nomadic, dwelling temporarily in mossy cracks in rocks and tree roots.

Sir Walter Scott in his Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft ascribed gnomes, kobolds and goblins, along with Scottish bogles, to all correspond with a caricature of the Sami people.[citation needed]

Goblin Places

Early Fiction

Video Games

See also

References

  1. ^ Sacred texts
  2. ^ Encyclopaedia Britannica - Gnome
  3. ^ The Complete Encyclopedia of Elves, Goblins, and Other Little Creatures by Pierre Dubois, in English 2005
  4. ^ Encyclopedia of Things That Never Were by Michael Page & Robert Ingpen, 1987
  5. ^ Apples4theTeacher - short stories
  6. ^ Rick Walton - folktale
  7. ^ Dutch Fairy Tales for Young Folks, 1918, compiled by William Elliot Griffis
  8. ^ Sacred texts
  9. ^ Sacred texts
  10. ^ Ghosts, Goblins, and Haunted Castles, Aventinum Publishers, 1990 in English, page 51
  11. ^ SF Site

Further reading

  • British Goblins: Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends and Traditions by Wirt Sikes
  • Encyclopedia of Things That Never Were by Michael Page & Robert Ingpen
  • The Complete Encyclopedia of Elves, Goblins, and Other Little Creatures by Pierre Dubois
  • Goblins! and The Goblin Companion by Brian Froud
  • Spirits, Fairies, Gnomes and Goblins: an Encyclopedia of the Little People by Carol Rose

Online texts