Bucca (mythological creature)

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Other nameBocka (Cornish)
First attestedIn folklore
Bucca
Creature information
Other nameBocka (Cornish)
GroupingMythological creature
Fairy
Sprite
Origin
First attestedIn folklore
CountryUnited Kingdom
RegionCornwall

Bucca (Cornish, SWF: bocka, pl. bockas, bockyas [1][2]) is a male sea-spirit in Cornish folklore, a merman, that inhabited mines and coastal communities as a hobgoblin during storms. The mythological creature is a type of water spirit likely related to the Púca from Irish, the Pwca from Welsh folklore, and the female mari-morgans, a type of mermaid from Welsh and Breton mythology. Rev W. S. Lach-Szyrma, one 19th-century writer on Cornish antiquities, suggested the Bucca had originally been an ancient pagan deity of the sea such as Irish Nechtan or British Nodens, though his claims are mainly conjecture.[3] Folklore however records votive food offerings made on the beach similar to those made to the subterranean Knockers and may represent some form of continuity with early or pre-Christian Brittonic belief practices.

In 1611, in the Cornish language book Gwreans an bys known in English as The Creation of the World the Bucca is mentioned [4] and some believe that the word is a borrowing into Cornish from Old English 'puca'.

Use of the term Púka in Ireland, however, may predate the arrival of Norse settlers and could be an alternative origin of the word with considerable cultural exchange with Ireland occurring in the Early Christian era.

Folklore

Modern influence

References

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