European folklore
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European folklore is the folklore of Europe. See European folklore and medieval folklore. European folklore was at the root of Romanticism and is still the basis of many horror stories. Wikipedia has a categor for European folklore but no page. The concept of Euro folklore raises questions of comparative folklore studies; for example, does the werewolf occur in Asian folklore? See Folklore by region at Wikipedia.
See Hand of Glory, fairy tales
Todo
Categories at Wikipedia
- Albanian folklore
B
- Belgian folklore
- British folklore
C
- Catalan folklore
E
- English folklore
F
- French folklore
G
- Greek folklore
I
- Icelandic folklore
- Irish folklore
- Italian folklore
N
- Nordic folklore
P
- Polish folklore
R
- Romanian folklore
R cont.
- Russian folklore
S
- Scottish folklore
- Spanish folklore
- Swiss folklore
W
- Welsh folklore
Pages at Wikipedia
- Alp (folklore)
- Ankou
B
- Bear's Son Tales
- Beatrijs
C
- Castell
- Corn dolly
D
- Daboecia
- Devil's Bridge
- Dull Gret
- Dutch folklore
E
- Eglė the Queen of Serpents
- Elegast
- English folklore
F
- Faust
G
- German folklore
- Gigantes y cabezudos
- Gnome
H
- Hand of Glory
- Historia von D. Johann Fausten
- Hunor and Magor
J
- Jack o' Legs
- Jūratė and Kastytis
L
- Lady of Stavoren
- Les Lavandières
- London Falling
- Lovers of Teruel
M
- Maa-alused
- Maypole
- Mojiganga
M cont.
- Mouse Tower
- Muixeranga
P
- Pre-Christian Alpine traditions
- Pérák, the Spring Man of Prague
R
- Rübezahl
S
- Saeftinghe legend
- Santa Tecla Festival
- Sava Savanović
- Slavic studies
T
- The Three Bears
V
- Valentine and Orson
W
- Weisse Frauen
- Wishing well
- Witte Wieven
Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "European folklore" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.