- Brazilian mythology
The term Brazilian mythology is used to describe a series of cultural elements of diverse origin that are found in
Brazil , comprising folk tales, traditions, characters and beliefs regarding places, peoples and entities. It is a subset of the Brazilian folklore. The term was originally restricted to indigenous elements, but has been extended to include:* Medieval iberic traditions brought by the Portuguese settlers, some of which are forgotten or very disminished in Portugal itself; as well as other European nations folklore, such as Italy, Germany and Poland.
*Africa n traditions brought by the blacks brought to Brazil as slaves during the colonial times -- including their religious beliefs;
* Lives of Saints and other devotional elements propagated by theCatholic Church which were appropriated by the folklore;
* Elements originated in Brazil by the contact of the three different traditions;
* Contemporary elements that are reelaborations of old traditions.Because Brazil is a
melting pot ofculture s, many elements of Brazilian mythology are shared by the traditions of other countries, especially itsSouth America n neighbours andPortugal .Also, the huge size of the territory prevents any folklore element from being prevalent all over the country.
Prominent figures
*
Alemoa - the ghost of a blond woman that is somehow connected to the island ofFernando de Noronha .
*Anhangá — the indian devil.
*Bestial beast — acentaur -like creature, thought to be theDevil .
*Bernunça — strange beast of the folk tales of the state ofSanta Catarina (state) .
*Boi-Bumbá (seeBumba-meu-boi ).
* Boitatá — a fiery snake-dragon-bull that crawls over the open fields at night.
*Boiúna ("Black snake") — a gigantic, nocturnal serpent that is the personification of the Amazonian rivers.
* Boto — an enchanteddolphin ("Inia geoffrensis") that shapeshifts into a handsome man to seduce young women (Amazon).
*Bumba-meu-Boi — an ox that is part of strange folk tale celebrated with dance and music by the peoples of the Brazilian north (states of Maranhão and Amazonas, where it is known as "Boi-Bumbá").
*Caipora — jungle spirits that lived in trees but came out at night to haunt those who were astray.
* Ci —Tupian primevalgoddess (the name means simply "mother").
*Corpo-Seco ("Dry Corpse") — a man so evil that the earth would not rot its flesh and the devil would return his soul. Condemned to wander fruitlessly the earth until thejudgment day .
* Cuca — menacing, supernatural, female entity that does evil things to small children who do not go to bed early.
*Curupira — a (male) jungle genie that protects the animals and the trees.
*Cobra-Encantada (Enchanted snake) — a beautiful woman shapeshifted into a hideous snake to guard an immense treasure. One who breaks the spell will have the gold and marry the maiden.
*Cobra-Grande (seeBoiúna ).
*Encantado — someone who is magically trapped into another dimension, living an eternal, but unfruitful life (usually a punishment for pursuing riches at any cost or doing some wrong).
* Exu — a demonic, trickster or simply mischievous (depending on the tradition) supernatural being of African origin that is worshipped by theQuimbanda , banished byUmbanda , exorcised by Catholics or ignored by Kardecists.
*Headless Mule — the shape taken by the woman accursed for having sex with a priest (South-East, North-East, Centre, South).
* Iara — a type of freshwater mermaid (Centre, South-East, North).
* Iemanjá — the Afro-Brazilian sea goddess.
*Jurupari — another Amazonian jungle devil.
* Lady in White — the most widespread type of ghost seen in Brazil.
* Lobisomem — the Brazilian version of the Werewolf.
* Mother of the Gold — a powerful and lethal being that protects gold ores. Nobody has survived seeing it, so no description exists. It is usually seen from afar as a globe of fire that flies from mountain to mountain (South-East).
*Mapinguari — a large, bipedal, furry animal that wanders the Amazon jungle. Considered the Brazilian version of theYeti or the last memory of the now extinct giantsloth s passed through generations by the indians.
*Negrinho do Pastoreio — a slave boy that died an awful death (similar to Candyman's) for not keeping his owner's horses. He helps people who are looking for lost things.
* Saci Pererê — a mischievous single-legged black elf-like creature who is blamed as the culprit of anything that goes wrong at a farm (Centre, South-East) and is themascot ofSport Club Internacional (South).
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