Flying Head
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Grouping | Legendary creature |
---|---|
Sub grouping | Spirit Monster |
Other name(s) | Big Head Kanontsistóntie's Kunenhrayenhnenh Kwennenhrayenhnen Konearaunehneh Unenhrayenhnenh Ko-nea-rau-neh-neh Ro-nea-rau-yeh-ne Dagwanoeient Dagwanoenyent Dagwanoenyent gowa Daqqanoenyent Dagwûn'noyaênt |
Country | New York, United States |
Habitat | Mountainous forests |
The Flying Head (also known as Big Head or the Great Head) is a cannibalistic spirit from Iroquois and Wyandot mythology.[1][2][3][4][5]
Description and common attributes
According to both Iroquois and Wyandot, Flying Heads are described as being ravenous spirits that are cursed with an insatiable hunger. The physical appearance of the Flying Head somewhat varies depending on the storyteller; however, it is generally described as resembling a human head with long dark hair, "terrible eyes", and a large mouth filled with razor sharp fangs. In some versions, the Flying Head has a pair of bat wings jutting from each side of its cheek and bird-like talons.[6][7][5][8] Other versions replace its bat wings with those of a bird.[9] In all instances, they're described as being larger in size than that of the tallest man and possessing a hide that no weapon can penetrate.[9][5][4][10]
The country
According to folklore, the Flying Head drove the original native inhabitants who lived in the area of the state of New York near the source of the Hudson River, in the Adirondack Mountains away from their hunting grounds before the Europeans came. In the early nineteenth century, a Mohawk guide in the town of Lake Pleasant, New York, who called himself Capt. Gill, claimed it was Lake Sacandaga where the legend took place. The tribe had their village on a hill that is now located behind the Hamilton County buildings. The name of the previous inhabitants has been lost to history and the legend of The Flying Head ensured that every neighboring tribe steered clear for many years. The Flying Head legend survives, but the name of the tribe who invented it is gone.[1][2][3] The hill where the unknown tribe's village was located is considered cursed. Three different hotels were built on the sacred site and all three had a short life span and burned to the ground mysteriously.[11][12][13] Capt. Gill lived in a wigwam at the outlet of the lake, Lake Pleasant. He had a wife named Molly and Molly had a daughter named Molly Jr., whom Capt. Gill didn't claim as his own.[12]
Legend origins
- "The Great God hath sent us signs in the sky we have heard uncommon noise in the heavens and have seen HEADS fall down upon the earth" Speech of Tahayadoris a Mohawk sachem at Albany October 25, 1689[14]
One version of the story says that there was once a very severe winter that killed off plants and drove the moose and deer to other areas. Local native hunters decided against following them. The fishing too failed and, according to legend, the famine became so severe that whole families began to die.[15] Young members of the community began to talk of migrating from the area, surrounded as they were by hostile tribes, merely to shift their hunting ground for a season was not possible. They proposed a secret march to the great lake off to the west. They believed that once safely beyond the lake it would be easy enough to find a new home.
According to legend, the old men of the tribe were opposed to leaving their homelands and said that the journey was madness. They said too that the famine was a scourge which the Master of Life inflicted upon his people for their crimes; that if the punishment were endured, it would pass; if ran from, the results would follow them forever.[citation needed] The legend also states that the old men added that they would rather perish by inches on their native hills, that they would rather die that moment than leave their land forever to live with plenty upon strange lands. The legend goes on to say that the young men were enraged and promptly killed the old men.
After killing the elders, the question of the disposal of their remains was a problem. According to the legend, they wished in some way to sanctify the deed by offering up the bodies to the Master of Life. They agreed to decapitate the bodies, burn them, and to sink the heads together to the bottom of the lake. One of the young chiefs who planned the crime died when he became entangled in the ropes that bound the heads together and drowned.
The legend goes on to say that bubbles and slime appeared on the lake, heralding a terrible monster: a giant head with wings, which the tribe could apparently never escape.
Iroquois and the Flying Head
Legend continues
The legend states that the problems brought on by the Flying Head did not stop with this group alone. The Flying Head chose to terrorize neighboring peoples as well, apparently for no particular reason.
Many of the Iroquois were supposedly troubled by the Flying Head which, when it rested upon the ground, was taller than a man. This supposed monster was coated in thick black hair, it had wings like a bat, and talons.
One evening after they had been plagued a long time with fearful visitations, the Flying Head came to the door of a lodge occupied by a single female. She was sitting before the fire roasting acorns which, as they became cooked, she took from the fire and ate. Terrified by the power of the woman, who he thought was eating live coals, the Flying Head left and bothered them no more.[4][10] An alternate version of this part of the legend says that, rather than seeing a woman eating acorns and thinking she was eating live coals, the Flying Head stole live coals from her and tried to eat them, thinking they were acorns. The results of course disastrous, the Flying Head flees in agony, never to be seen again.[5][16]
See also
References
Bibliography
- The Magazine of History with Notes and Queries. W. Abbatt. 1906.
- George Copway (1851). Running Sketches of Men and Places: In England, France, Germany, Belgium, and Scotland. J. C. Riker.
- Cornplanter (Seneca chief) (1904). The Legends of the Iroquois : Told by the "Cornplanter". A. Wessels Company.
- Henry Coppée (1900). The Classic and the Beautiful from the Literature of Three Thousand Years. Carson & Simpson.
- Charles Fenno Hoffman (1839). Wild scenes in the forest and prairie. ISBN 9781404731325.
- Elias Johnson (1881). Legends, Traditions and Laws, of the Iroquois, Or Six Nations, and History of the Tuscarora Indians. Union Printing and Publishing Company.
- Kathleen Ragan (1998). Fearless Girls, Wise Women, and Beloved Sisters: Heroines in Folktales from Around the World. W.W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-04598-7.
- Henry Rowe Schoolcraft (1846). Notes on the Iroquois, Or, Contributions to the Statistics, Aboriginal History, Antiquities and General Ethnology of Western New York. Bartlett & Welford.
Notes
- ^ a b Hoffman 1839, pp. 31.
- ^ a b Abbatt 1906, pp. 282.
- ^ a b Coppée 1900, pp. 224.
- ^ a b c Johnson 1881, pp. 54.
- ^ a b c d Cornplanter 1904, pp. 125.
- ^ Abbatt 1906, pp. 286.
- ^ Coppée 1900, pp. 223.
- ^ Hoffman 1839, pp. 45.
- ^ a b Ragan 1998, pp. 105.
- ^ a b Schoolcraft 1846, pp. 158.
- ^ Aber, Ted, and Stella King. Tales from an Adirondack County. Prospect, NY: Prospect, 1981. Print.
- ^ a b Aber, Ted, and Stella Brooks King. The History of Hamilton County. Lake Pleasant, NY: Great Wilderness, 1965. Print
- ^ Erdoes, Richard, and Alfonso Ortiz. American Indian Myths and Legends. New York: Pantheon, 1984. Print.
- ^ Abbatt 1906, pp. 287.
- ^ Pettennude, Paul. "An Introduction to the American Indian". Retrieved 1 August 2012.
- ^ Copway 1851, pp. 136.