Legends of the Hidden Horde

Stikini

8 min · 10. juni 2026
episode Stikini cover

Description

In the misty cypress groves and hammocks of the southeastern lands long stewarded by the Seminole people, a story endures, passed in hushed tones by those entrusted with its weight. It speaks not of mere monsters from the wild, but of a profound warning woven into the fabric of community, power, and the fragile line between human and something lost.  This is Episode 27: Stikini, a story drawn from Seminole oral traditions with a deep respect for the sacred knowledge of Indigenous storytellers, medicine people, and cultural stewards who have preserved these teachings through generations of resilience, including the forced journeys of the Trail of Tears. Sources https://urbanlegendsmysteryandmyth.com/2025/08/stikini-seminole-owl-witch-that-feeds.html [https://urbanlegendsmysteryandmyth.com/2025/08/stikini-seminole-owl-witch-that-feeds.html] https://a4play.com/pages/stikini [https://a4play.com/pages/stikini] (or fernflowerpress variant) https://grokipedia.com/page/Stikini [https://grokipedia.com/page/Stikini] https://www.bestiary.us/stikini/en [https://www.bestiary.us/stikini/en] Supporting ethnographic context: -  Books like Oklahoma Seminoles: Medicines, Magic and Religion by James H. Howard and Willie Lena; Dictionary of Native American Mythology by Sam D. Gill and Irene F. Sullivan. Music created with Suno - https://suno.com/s/HWTWgvodJIrawqZL [https://suno.com/s/HWTWgvodJIrawqZL]

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37 episodes

episode The Kludde artwork

The Kludde

In the oral traditions of the Flemish people, passed down through generations in farmhouses and along lonely paths, lives the Kludde, a shapeshifting spirit of torment and trickery.  This is not a creature of distant myth but a figure rooted in the lived fears and warnings of local communities: a guardian of boundaries between safety and peril, light and shadow, the known path and the treacherous unknown.  This is Episode 36: The Kludde. Sources https://abookofcreatures.com/2019/06/07/kludde/ (detailed English summary with historical references) https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kludde (Dutch Wikipedia entry on Flemish folklore) https://mythlok.com/kludde/ (overview of traits and regional context) Historical collections referenced in sources above, including 19th-century accounts by Baron of Saint-Genois, Teirlinck’s Le Folklore Flamand, and related volumes like Northern Mythology.

Yesterday8 min
episode The Processional Giants of Mons artwork

The Processional Giants of Mons

In Belgian culture, the processional giants stand as towering emblems of identity, resilience, and communal memory. Belgium is home to more than 2,000 of these colossal figures, some of the highest concentrations in the world for such a small nation, with Flanders particularly rich in them. Many date back to the late Middle Ages, originally appearing in religious processions to educate and inspire before evolving into proud symbols of civic independence and local heritage. Inscribed on UNESCO’s Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity alongside their French counterparts, they dance through festivals like the Ducasse de Mons and the Ommegang, carried by dedicated bearers and celebrated by entire communities. They are not mere decorations but living vessels of history, blending myth, faith, and folk tradition into spectacles that bind past and present.  This is Episode 35: The Processional Giants of Mons Sources https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducasse_de_Mons [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducasse_de_Mons] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ommegang_of_Brussels [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ommegang_of_Brussels] https://historiek.net/silvius-brabo-druon-antigoon/80323/ [https://historiek.net/silvius-brabo-druon-antigoon/80323/] (Druon Antigoon legend) Additional heritage documentation from Wallonia-Brussels living heritage resources and historical accounts of the Lumeçon combat.

6. juli 202611 min
episode Qalupalik artwork

Qalupalik

This is Episode 34: Qalupalik In the long night of the Arctic, where the sea breathes under thick ice and the wind carries secrets older than memory, the people of the camps knew to listen.   They gathered in the warmth of the Qulliq, its flame flickering against walls of snow and stone. Elders spoke in low voices of the beings that shared the land and water, not as fairy tales for comfort, but as truths woven into survival. Among them was the Qalupalik, the one who waits beneath the ice edge. Sources Wikipedia overview (with references to Boas and variations): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qallupilluit [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qallupilluit] Folktales America retelling and context: https://folktalesamerica.com/Qalupalik-the-sea-creature-that-takes-children/ [https://folktalesamerica.com/qalupalik-the-sea-creature-that-takes-children/] Inhabit Media / Elisha Kilabuk The Qalupalik (kah-loo-pah-leek) (kah-loo-pah-leek) (kah-loo-pah-leek) book details and descriptions: https://quillandquire.com/review/the-Qalupalik [https://quillandquire.com/review/the-qalupalik/] NFB/Nunavut Animation Lab short film adaptation: Search “Nunavut Animation Lab Qalupalik” on YouTube or nfb.ca Tell Story site with traditional variations (including Boas-inspired grandmother tale): https://tellstory.net/stories/inuit/folk-tale/the-child-taken-by-the-qallupilluit/ [https://tellstory.net/stories/inuit/folk-tale/the-child-taken-by-the-qallupilluit/]   Additional context on cultural role and modern graphic adaptations: References in NightTide Magazine or CM: Canadian Review of Materials for Putuguq & Kublu and the Qalupalik

2. juli 202612 min
episode The Daughters of Airitech artwork

The Daughters of Airitech

In the ancient heart of Connacht where rolling plains meet the brooding hills and mists rise like forgotten memories, there stands a place of power and peril. Rathcroghan, also known as Cruachan, rises as a complex of earthworks, ringforts, and caves.  For the Gaelic peoples of old Ireland, this was no ordinary hill. It was a threshold, a place where the veil between the human world and the Otherworld grew thin, especially when the year turned toward darkness. Every Samhain, when the harvest was gathered and the boundary between living and dead, known and unknown, softened like damp wool, something stirred in the depths of the cave. From that shadowed mouth emerged three figures bound by blood and duty: the daughters of Airitech. Airitech himself remains a mystery wrapped in shadow, a creature of the Otherworld, a being who had twice met violent ends at human hands yet endured through the fierce loyalty of his progeny. He did not raid the surface himself in these later cycles. Instead, his three daughters upheld the ancient rhythm... Sources https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cas_Corach [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cas_Corach] (core legend summary and reference to Windisch’s Irische Texte, 1900) https://enchantedconversationmag.blogspot.com/2018/10/daughters-of-Airitech-by-i-e-kneverday.html [https://enchantedconversationmag.blogspot.com/2018/10/daughters-of-airitech-by-i-e-kneverday.html] (detailed modern atmospheric retelling) https://irishmyths.com/2021/04/10/wolfwalkers/ [https://irishmyths.com/2021/04/10/wolfwalkers/] (Irish werewolf/Faoladh: FAY-luh or FWEE-luh lore, cultural context, and connections to broader traditions) https://encyclopedia-of-monsters.fandom.com/wiki/Airitech [https://encyclopedia-of-monsters.fandom.com/wiki/Airitech]  (secondary summary of the entity) https://www.wyrmfoe.com/1936/Airitechs-daughters/ [https://www.wyrmfoe.com/1936/airitechs-daughters/] (RPG contextual reference noting the Celtic origin)

30. juni 202613 min
episode Anansi artwork

Anansi

In the deep forests of the Akan lands, where ancient trees whisper secrets to the wind and the earth pulses with the heartbeat of generations, there dwells a being both small and boundless. We do not really mean what we are about to say is true. A story, just a story; let it come, let it go.  Episode 32 is the tale of Anansi, the spider whose threads bind the world of stories. Born from the rich oral traditions of the Akan people, particularly the Ashanti of what is now Ghana. Anansi is no mere creature of legend but a paradoxical spirit of cunning, wisdom, and mischief. His stories honor the ingenuity of a people who have long navigated the complexities of life through wit and resilience, respecting the cultural heritage from which they spring. Sources Wikipedia Anansi/Ananse https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anansi/Ananse (/əˈnɑːnsi/): ah-NAHN-see [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anansi] TED-Ed Anansi/Ananses Myth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nWba9Ii5Lo [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nWba9Ii5Lo] Study.com Anansi: https://study.com/academy/lesson/Anansi/Ananse (/əˈnɑːnsi/): ah-NAHN-see-spider-stories-mythology.html [https://study.com/academy/lesson/anansi-spider-stories-mythology.html] Britannica Ananse: https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ananse [https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ananse] Gutenberg Jamaica Anansi Stories: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/72735/72735-h/72735-h.htm [https://www.gutenberg.org/files/72735/72735-h/72735-h.htm] Vecsey on Akan Trickster (cultural context): https://pages.mtu.edu/~rlstrick/rsvtxt/faulkner/vecsey.pdf [https://pages.mtu.edu/~rlstrick/rsvtxt/faulkner/vecsey.pdf]

25. juni 20269 min