Showing posts with label #witches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #witches. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2026

The Iron Nose Witch in Hungarian Mythology

 The scariest witch of my childhood

As a young child, my mom's only weapon to scare me into going to bed when I still wanted to play was the "Vasorrú Bába." When nothing else worked, as a last resort, she said, "Go to sleep, or the Iron Nose Witch (vasorrú bába) will take you away and eat you."

What is a Vasorrú Bába?

A vasorrú bába is one of the most fearsome supernatural figures in Hungarian folklore, but she’s not simply “the Hungarian Baba Yaga.” She’s older, stranger, and symbolically much darker.
A vasorrú bába is a terrifying, witch‑like being with an iron nose, appearing in Hungarian folktales as a child‑stealing, soul‑devouring, or fate‑twisting crone. Her origins reach into Ugric shamanic ancestor‑spirit traditions, and some scholars argue she may descend from an ancient death‑ or birth‑related demon rather than a typical witch. 

What she is in the tales

A monstrous old woman with an iron nose so long it scrapes the ground.
A figure who frightens children and adults, often guarding the threshold between worlds.
Sometimes the mother of demons or the ruler of a liminal, otherworldly household.
A being who tests, torments, or devours heroes — similar to Baba Yaga, but with uniquely Hungarian traits.

Deep origins: not just a witch

Folklorists emphasize that the vasorrú bába is not identical to a boszorkány (witch).
Her roots appear to lie in:
Obi‑Ugor and Ugric shamanic traditions, where ancestor spirits were carved with protruding noses covered in metal plates to prevent decay.
Siberian and Inner Asian mythic figures with metal noses (often copper), suggesting a very old steppe connection.
This makes her less a human witch and more a mythic, ancestral, or underworld entity.

The disturbing scholarly interpretation

A modern ethnographic theory proposes that “vasorrú” or “vasfogú” bába originally referred to a taboo figure connected to childbirth and infanticide — specifically a feared, transgressive midwife.
In this reading:
The iron nose symbolizes a hooked instrument used to reach into the womb.
The iron teeth (in some regions) symbolize the same tool from a frontal view.
Her child‑stealing, devouring behavior in tales echoes this dark association.
This interpretation is controversial but widely discussed in Hungarian folkloristics.

Relationship to Baba Yaga

She is often compared to Baba Yaga, but:
The iron nose is not a Slavic motif.
It is found in Ugric and Siberian traditions.
Hungarian scholars argue she may be an independent, older mythic figure that later blended with Slavic witch motifs.

Symbolic role

Across tales, the vasorrú bába embodies:
Thresholds (forest → otherworld, childhood → danger, life → death)
Fear of the unknown feminine (birth, blood, taboo knowledge)
Ancestral dread (spirits, the dead, the uncanny)
Tests of courage for heroes
She is a guardian of liminal spaces, a devourer, a tester, and sometimes a distorted echo of ancient maternal power.

Like stories about witches?

Supernatural YA fantasy

A love potion made with haste out of jealousy puts Dorian into a coma-like state. A rare orchid that blooms only once a year could save his life, but Liam and his werewolf pack fiercely guard the precious flowers. The acolytes of the coven are forbidden to enter the forest, and the young apprentices volunteer to make the journey that will test their loyalty and courage. Can they succeed?


Cozy supernatural thriller

When her Raven spirit guide warns Lauren of impending danger, but didn’t know what to do. After a brutal attack and the Raven’s repeated warnings, she knows her life is in danger. Who wants her dead and why?


Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Broomstick and Chocolate

 When Halloween traditions defended by real witches


Agatha couldn’t help herself, so she swept the porch with her broom before she used the oversized door knocker. It was a bad reproduction of the head of Bela Lugosi’s Dracula holding a single link of a heavy chain in his fanged mouth.

A short octogenarian woman who could have been Margaret Hamilton’s double answered the door. “About time, Cousin Agatha. It’s almost sunset, and the trick-or-treaters will be starting.”

“Don’t bristle at me. This is a new broom, and I just whisked in from Cincinnati. This isn’t your first Halloween; I suspect you’ve got a handle on things.”

“I do. Come inside, and let’s get ready for the children.”

Agatha leaned her broom against the wall inside the door. “This is a Boeing Stratoduster, right off the assembly line. Free to me because I’m a beta tester. Thought I’d try it for a spell.”

Endora inspected the broomstick. “Boeing? It’s a miracle you didn’t crash on takeoff.”

“Jealous much? You’re still flying that old Curtis Twin Stick, aren’t you?”

“It’s a classic and the most stable broomstick ever manufactured. It belonged to my grandmother. She flew 36 missions during World War Two.”

“She’s my grandmother, too. That’s such a bewitching tale, but my mom said that Grandma spent the war working in a defense plant in upstate New York putting protection spells on aircraft.”

“She was a witch just like us. She told me that the defense plant was just a cover story. The Curtis was the fastest broom on the planet. She’d finish her shift at the Curtis-Wright plant, sweep across the Atlantic, make a bomber escort run, bewitch a V-2, and then shuffle back to Buffalo in time to clock in.”

Agatha petted a large black cat, Ashtoreth, Endora’s familiar. “Ashtoreth looks healthy and happy, cousin, but I came for Halloween, not a history lesson. Are we ready for the children?”

“I was born ready. Ashtoreth loves Halloween. We’ll take turns with the kids. I’ll go first and you take the second group. The children love my house because I don’t do Halloween like everyone else.”

“How does that work? Don’t the children get upset?”

“Not at all. When I answer the door, they don’t say trick-or-treat. I do. They always say trick, and then I do a trick for them. Different tricks for different kids. I sometimes make their flashlights talk or their costumed wings real. I make the jack-o’-lanterns or my Bela Lugosi door knocker talk.”

“That’s real magic, Endora. No one can know that magic is real.”

“Relax, Cousin. The only magic I do for the children are parlor tricks, and they wear off like fairy gold when they leave my yard.  Most of the parents who live around here visited my house when they were young, and the rest wouldn’t believe it anyway. I’m just a harmless old lady. It’s fun, and it makes Halloween a little more special for the children.”

“Clang, clang, clang went Bela Lugosi. Endora opened the door and said, “Trick or treat.”

Three princesses shouted, “Trick.”

Ashtoreth slipped out the door, brushed against the girls’ legs, and then slunk back into the house. Endora thought for a moment and then touched the girl’s tiaras one at a time. The plastic headpieces glowed brighter than sparklers on the Fourth of July.

The princesses laughed and danced. Ashtoreth danced with them. Like real sparklers, the tiaras soon went out, and the three girls walked quickly to their mothers waiting on the sidewalk. One woman cupped her hands and yelled, “Thanks, Endora. You’ve still got it, girl.”

Two boys ran onto the front porch. Endora smiled at them. “Wow, I love your costumes. Who are you supposed to be?”

“I’m Speed Racer, and Greg is Astro Boy. Manga comic characters. Japanese.”

“Can’t say as I’ve ever been to Japan. Trick or treat, boys.? Trick or treat?”

“Trick.”

“Agatha, help me with this one. These boys want a trick.”

Agatha waved her little finger, and Speed Racer’s helmet lit up like a futuristic computer screen. Data flashed inside the faceplate, visible only to the wearer, and scrolled rapidly in several colors, using several languages, known and unknown. The young man was mesmerized.

Continue reading the story in the anthology:

https://books2read.com/u/mq5qNO


Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Magic and Mankind: Part Two - Witches and Witchcraft

Part two - Witches and Witchcraft
Nicola McDonagh
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Image public domain
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From prehistoric times some form of ‘witchcraft’ has existed, but then, unlike now, the casting of spells was more to do with the art of healing than any association with devilry. Most ‘witches’ were herbalists, wise women, or, ‘cunning folk’, who were adept at making potions to cure a range of illnesses. Often providing charms and offerings alongside incantations to protect livestock from predators by using these ‘blessings’ to keep them safe.
Image public domain (Wikipedia)
The belief in the power of magic has existed since mankind created social settlements where large numbers of people lived and worked. Fearing the forces of nature, inevitably, someone would try to make the unknown less scary by using rituals and spells to ward off evil spirits, whether natural or supernatural. Cave drawings often show people dancing wearing animal costumes alongside images of a ‘witch’ as seen in the photograph below.
Image public domain (Wikipedia)
Once, such ‘magical’ folk were revered, but as time went on people became wary of these magicians that could seemingly perform supernatural feats. From the 7th century, attitudes changed and terms such as ‘black magic’ spread fear into the hearts of god-fearing folk. With Christianity taking over from paganism as the main religion, it wasn’t long before the church found such powerful shaman a threat. Witch hunts in the name of God became a way to frighten people into turning against their own to preserve the status quo and get rid of annoying, possibly subversive women and men in the community. These poor people didn’t stand a chance against the prejudices and hatred from fanatics who turned communities against someone who was not quite like everyone else. So began the long centuries of demonising the innocent.
Image public domain (Wikipedia)
During medieval times being accused of witchcraft was a death sentence. Anyone who had a black cat, a mole, some kind of physical tick or blemish, and could conjure up an effective poultice for a wound or boil, would be suspected of being in league with the devil. The caricature of the old hag with a broomstick became the norm.  Wise women in a village were the subject of scorn and accused of evil deeds.

 In the UK, The Witch Finder General, Matthew Hopkins, made it his life’s work to seek out and destroy those accused of witchcraft. Through gruesome torture, he and his allies gained forced confessions from terrified men and women who would often be accused of the crime by friends or family. From the 15th to the 16h century over 100,000 people were hanged or burned at the stake for being witches.
Image public domain (Wikipedia)
This fear of sorcery lasted well into the eighteenth century when the cruel and unjust system of identifying a witch was abolished, courtesy of - The Enlightenment. A period in history which advocated the use of reason over superstition, and in 1736 the laws against witchcraft were repealed.

Witches and warlocks exist to this day but are no longer seen as dangerous. Often known as Wiccans, these people regard themselves as spiritual folk following pagan beliefs, incorporating mystical sorcery such as divination, herbalism and, Tarot reading. Casting spells not to summon demons or ghouls but to help find a true love, get promoted at work, or simply to engage more with nature and the universe.
You can read more about Wiccan magic in this article:

Image public domain (Wikipedia)
The idea of possessing supernatural powers is deep-rooted within our psyche. Whether it comes from a religious source or from the belief in our own need to connect with natural forces, magic and the casting of spells will never go away. Now, we accept it as part of our everyday world, whether it is reading our astrological predictions or buying Himalayan Salt Lamps, we need to believe that we are more than the sum of our parts, and can control the elements to do our bidding. Does it work? It might. The power is in the belief that it will.

You can go to this blog to find out how to cast spells for good luck here: 
Image public domain (Wikipedia)
If you want to know more about my work, visit my website: 
or my Amazon page: 
https://www.amazon.com/Nicola-McDonagh/e/B00D4NAH0S/

If you enjoyed reading this post you might like to look at more. Just click on the link:
https://asmallgangofauthors.blogspot.com/p/2018-gallery.html



COMMENTS


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P. J. Mann

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Interesting article. Certainly witches were not devil's worshippers but they had something very dangerous to the church: knowledge and critical thinking, something too dangerous for those seeking to have absolute control over the masses.
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Exactly P.J. Mann, anyone who dared speak out against the church was vilified.

Joe Bonadonna

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
This is an excellent and well-researched bit of history, Nikki.  Very interesting, and should be of great help to those of us who use magic and witchcraft in our stories.
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Thanks Joe, hope it does help in some way.
 
+Nikki McDonagh -- it sure does and it sure will.

Joe Bonadonna via Google+

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today on #OurAuthorGang, author Nikki McDonagh​ brings us something just in time for Halloween: Part 2 of her article about Magic and Mankind. This time, it's Witches and Witchcraft.
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Tricia Drammeh

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Great article. It's horrifying to think about the many, many people who were persecuted and even killed. Thank you for writing this, Nicola.
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Glad you liked it Tricia.

Ruth de Jauregui via Google+

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
#OurAuthorGang author Nicola McDonagh shares the origins and history of witches. Wise women went from revered to persecuted in the middle ages to (somewhat) accepted today. Great post!!
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Thank you Ruth. It is sad that these woman were chastised when before they were revered.

Ruth de Jauregui

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Great post Nikki! Thank you!
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My pleasure, Ruth.

Erika M Szabo shared this via Google+

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
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Erika M Szabo

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Great series Nikki! In medieval times everything was turned upside down and innocent, healing practices were labeled evil and witchcraft. Humanity had lost a lot of valuable knowledge because of it.
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You are so right Erika!

Chris Weigand

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Intriguing piece.
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Thanks Chris.

Chris Weigand via Google+

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Explore the history of witchcraft with Nicola Mcdonagh
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Cindy Smith

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Interesting piece.  Amazing how things that are taken for granted for centuries can suddenly be seen as evil.
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It is Cindy. But I suppose it has always been that way.

Cindy Smith shared this via Google+

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Toi Thomas via Google+

3 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today, Nikki McDonagh offers a history lesson on magical practices. #OurAuthorGang
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