Hob (folklore)

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Runswick Bay, North Yorkshire. Local people would ask "Hobhole Hob" for help to get rid of a cough.

A hob is a type of small mythological household spirit found in the English Midlands, Northern England,[a][b] and on the Anglo-Scottish border, according to traditional folklore of those regions.[3] They could live inside the house or outdoors. They are said to work in farmyards and thus could be helpful; however if offended they could become nuisances. The usual way to dispose of hobs was to give them a set of new clothing, the receiving of which would make the creatures leave forever. It could, however, be impossible to get rid of the worst hobs.[4]

‘Hob’ is a diminutive form of the name Robin, which is itself a diminutive form of the name Robert. [5]

Hob is sometimes a generic term given to a goblin, bogle or brownie. The name Hob became associated with the mythical creature as ‘a piece of rude familiarity to cover up uncertainty or fear’;[6] essentially, calling a mystical creature by a common nickname was a way to make the concept less frightening and the nickname eventually became the common term.

As well as the brownie, another cognate exists in the Scandinavian nisse or tomte; all are thought to be derived from the household gods of olden times, known in England as the cofgodas (Old English for ‘house-gods’), of which the brownie and hob are indeed a survival.[7][full citation needed]

The term 'hob' is also linked in the north of England to the Old English þyrs and Old Norse þurs, meaning 'giant' or 'monster’. These roots give rise to dialectal variants such as hob-thrush, hob-thrust and hob-dross, recorded across Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and Derbyshire.[8]

Folklore

Yorkshire

Hobs have been described as small, hairy, wizened men. Hobs were viewed as kind but mischievous spirits, helpful to local people in need. One famous hob lived near Runswick Bay in a hobhole; this hob was believed to be able to cure young children of kink-cough (whooping cough).[9] Parents would bring their ailing young to the hob's cave dwelling and recite the following:[10]

Hobhole Hob!
Ma' bairn's gotten 't kink cough,
Tak't off ! tak't off!

Hobs are generally considered household spirits who preferred to be about at night. Hobs were not tied to a particular place but seemed to come and go as they chose.[11] A hob would help the farmer in the field or the shopkeeper in his store.[12] The householder had to be careful in dealing with a hob so as not to offend it. If a farmer were to speak poorly of a hob on his farm, the hob might retaliate by breaking dishes and turning loose livestock.[13] Most importantly, a hob must not be given a gift of clothing, as this would be greatly resented and might cause a helpful hob to leave immediately.

A recurring motif in northern folklore is that when a hob is offered clothes—often a coarse shirt or hood—he vanishes, offended.[14] This is often marked by a rhyme, such as: “Ha! a cap and a hood, / Hob’ll never do mair good.” (Sturfit Hall)[15]

“Gin Hob mun hae nowght but a hardin’ hamp, / He’ll come nae mair nowther to berry nor stamp.” (Hart Hall, Glaisdale)[10]

These couplets often signal the end of a hob’s aid, linking him to the wider European motif of the departing brownie or tomte.

North York Moors

Farndale flit

Farndale in the North York Moors is separated from its neighbour Rosedale to the east by a high but relatively level moorland promontory known as Blakey Ridge. On the east side of that ridge is a topographical feature known as Hobb Crag, overlooking the village of Rosedale Abbey. A local story relates how a farmer in Farndale was so troubled by a Hob that he decided to move to another farm – just to get rid of that Hob.[2]

He loaded his cart with furniture and farm equipment and set off. On the way he met a neighbour who exclaimed, "What's thoo doin' George, flittin'?" And a voice from the churn called out, "Aye, lad, we're flittin'!" So the farmer turned his horse and cart round and went back to his farm, knowing that the hobgoblin would always be with him.[2]

Note the local dialect word flittin[c] which may be derived from the Old Norse language.[citation needed]

Names and habitations

Names

Local name

"Hob-trush Hob ! Where is thou ?[d]
. . ."Ah's tying on mah left-fuit shoe;
An' Ah'll be wiv thee—Noo!"

J.C.Atkinson – Cleveland Dialect.[17]

It was customary for a local hob to have a local name and a local habitation.[e]

Some "Hob" names may suggest their mischievous personality:

Hobbe Hyrste

The name Hob-thrush may be derived from Hobbe Hyrste[g] or Hob o' t' hyrst – "Hob of the hurst".[h]

  1. Hob o' t' hyrst
  2. Hob-t-hyrst
  3. Hob-thyrst
  4. Hob-thrust
  5. Hob-thrush

See also WiKtionary : Old English < hyrst > ..."hurst, hillock, eminence, height, wood, wooded eminence".

The following names may be derived from Hobbe Hyrste:

Name Habitation Location
"Hob-trush" Hob-trush Cave[d] Mulgrave woods, North Yorkshire.
"Hobthrush" Obtrush Rook[i] Farndale, North Yorkshire.
"Hobthrush" Hobthrush's Isle St Cuthbert's Isle (Hobthrush), Northumberland.
"Hob Hurst" Hob Hurst's House Hob Hurst's House, Beeley Moor, Derbyshire.

Similar names are found in disparate parts of the country – it is possible that these were introduced by migrant workers while moving between employments, especially those involved with mining and railway construction.

Habitations

Hob's House Cave, Monsal Dale, Derbyshire.

The habitation was usually a topographical feature, such as a hill, crag, hole, cave or island.

Often the feature would be within view of the farm or local settlement:

Habitation Settlement
Hobb Hill Bloxham near Banbury.
Hobb Crag Rosedale Abbey
Hobthrush Isle Holy Island

Hob Hole

WiKtionary: The name element hole might relate to:

  1. English < hole > ..."A hollow place or cavity; an excavation; a pit; a dent; a depression; a fissure".
  2. Old Norse < hóll > ..."hill, hillock, knoll".
Habitation Location
Hob Hole[j] Calais Beck south of Runswick Bay, North Yorkshire.
Hob Hole Hob Hole Beck near Kempswithen, Kildale Moor,
Eskdale, North Yorkshire.
Hobbs Hole Hobbs Hole Farm near Great Tew, Oxfordshire.

Tumuli

It was common for Hob place names to be associated with tumuli:

Habitation Location Listed
Hobthrush Rook[k] Farndale, North Yorkshire. Two round cairns[HE 1]
Hob on the Hill Commondale Moor, North Yorkshire. Wayside cross[HE 2]
Round barrows[HE 3][HE 4]
Hob Hurst's House Beeley Moor, Derbyshire. Square tumulus[HE 5]

Legacy

Place names

Yorkshire place names

Many topographical features, especially in North Yorkshire, are named "Hobs".[l] Dickins provides dozens of attested hob place-names across Northern England, many associated with barrows, springs, or moorlands.[20]

Place name Link Location Area Feature Map
[m]
Latitude
N – S
Hob Hill The Fairy Glen,
Saltburn-by-the-Sea.[n]
North Yorkshire Hill [Map 1] 520200
Hob Hole[j] Hob Hole Calais Beck south of Runswick Bay. North York Moors Hole [Map 2] 515500
Hob on the Hill Tumuli Between Guisborough and Commondale.[o] North York Moors Cross[HE 2] [Map 3] 512420
Hob-trush Cave[d] Name Mulgrave woods[p] North Yorkshire Cave [Map 4] 511700
Hobshaddow Wood Name Between Hutton Rudby and Stokesley. North Yorkshire Wood [Map 5] 508300
Hob Hole Beck[j] Hob Hole South of Kempswithen (Kildale moor)
near Castleton, Eskdale.[q]
North York Moors Hole [Map 6] 507800
Hobb Crag Habitat West of Rosedale Abbey, Rosedale. North York Moors Crag [Map 7] 495400
Hobthrush Rook[k] Name Farndale, North Yorkshire. North York Moors Tumulus[HE 1] [Map 8] 494400

Scotland – England

Place name Link Location Area Feature Map
[m]
Latitude
N – S
Hobthrush Name Lindisfarne Northumberland Islet [Map 9] 641600
Hobkirk South-east of Hawick Scottish Borders Church [Map 10] 610900
Hobb's Flow Anglo-Scottish border near Kielder Forest Northumberland Wetland [Map 11] 590100
Hobroyd Whitfield, Glossop. Derbyshire Wood [Map 12] 393200
Hob Hill Whitfield, Glossop. Derbyshire Hill [Map 13] 392800
Hob's House Cave Monsal Dale Derbyshire Cave [Map 14] 371300
Hob Hurst's House Tumuli Beeley Moor near Chatsworth House Derbyshire Tumulus[HE 7] [Map 15] 369200
Hob Hall
Hob Wood
South of Wirksworth Derbyshire Croft
Wood
[Map 16] 352700
Jester's Hill Name Shutford near Banbury.[r] Oxfordshire Hill [Map 17] 239500
Hobb Hill Habitat Bloxham near Banbury. Oxfordshire Hill [Map 18] 236600
Hobb's Hole Hob Hole Hobbs Hole Farm[web 1] near Great Tew. Oxfordshire Hole [Map 19] 229100
Hobbard's Hill North-west of Wootton-by-Woodstock. Oxfordshire Hill [Map 20] 220400
Hobb's Hill Hobb's Hill tin mine, Bodmin Moor.[HE 8] Cornwall Hill [Map 21] 069400

Notable people

  • Hobhouse is a rare English family name, belonging originally to a Somerset family.
  • The Scottish national hero Robert the Bruce was known as King Hobbe by his English enemy.[s]
  • The 1958 TV serial Quatermass and the Pit, and the later film version, centre around the fictional Hobbs Lane (formerly called Hob's Lane), the significance of the name becoming apparent as the plot unfolds.
  • In Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files, hobs are eyeless creatures who burn in light. They serve the Queen Mab of the Winter Court of the Sidhe.
  • In Lionhead Studios' video games Fable, Fable II, and Fable III some of the minor adversaries are creatures known as "hobbes". They are created from children who misbehave and are captured by hobbes.
  • In J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, house-elves (such as Harry's friend Dobby) appear to be a type of hob, doing household tasks for human masters and driven from their households if given gifts of clothing (in what most house-elves see as a type of shameful expulsion, but the eccentric Dobby – and several human observers – consider an emancipation from slavery).
  • The Hob appearing in The Years of Longdirk by Ken Hood is considerably different from the traditional depiction, being a powerful spirit which is amoral, neither good nor bad, but which has considerable destructive powers it can use if provoked. In Hood's fantasy world, "Hob" and "Imp" are two names for much the same kind of being.
  • In The Hob's Bargain by Patricia Briggs, the Hob is a powerful creature, possibly the last of his kind, who bargains to help protect a local village from a necromancer in exchange for a mate. The heroine who brought the Hob to the village agrees to his bargain in exchange for his help.
  • In Moonshine, the second novel of the Cal Leandros novels by Rob Thurman, the villain is "Hobgoblin" or "the Hob", the oldest of the race of immortal creatures known as pucks. In this series, the pucks all look alike, with curly brown hair, green eyes, and "foxlike" faces. Unlike his fellow puck, Robin Goodfellow, the Hob sees humans merely as toys and tools, beings which are utterly beneath him.
  • In An Elder Scrolls Novel: The Infernal City, hobs are used as kitchen slaves.
  • In Richard Dawson's 2017 album Peasant, a song titled "Hob" tells the story of a family's encounter with a hobthrust.
  • In Travis Baldree's book Legends & Lattes, the main character hires a hob as a carpenter in her coffee shop, noting that they are disparagingly referred to as 'pucks' by humans and are not often seen in cities.

See also

References

General and cited sources

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