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The legend of Death, Ankou. Ankou is a major figure of Breton mythology, very present in the oral tradition and the tales of lower Brittany. He does not represent death in itself, but his servant: his role is to collect the souls of the deceased.
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Oct 9, 2020 · The Ankou is a defiant remnant of Pagan influence surviving as a stowaway in the stone-work of Christian buildings. It is said that every ...
Ankou is a servant of death in Breton, Cornish (an Ankow in Cornish), Welsh (yr Angau in Welsh) and Norman French folklore. Ankou in La Roche-Maurice, ...
The Ankou is a guardian protector to the dead, but an omen of death and a symbol of the fear of dying to the living. He is said to knock on the door of the ...
Nov 24, 2018 · It involves the story of three young drunken friends who when returning home one night met an elderly man dressed in black on an old cart. The ...
Aug 13, 2014 · In one legend, the Ankou was thought to be a barbarous landowner who challenged Death to a gambling game.
Aug 8, 2023 · Apparently Ankou is a grim reaper-like figure from British/French mythology. In Black Snow, it's described as a Celtic word that means ...
Jul 18, 2021 · "In the Breton folklore tradition, Ankou ("reaper of the dead") is the personification of Death; it is described as looking like a tall, thin, ...
Dec 17, 2023 · Ankou from the Breton, or 'Ankow' in Cornish, is one of Death's henchmen, cursed to wander the mortal plane for eternity collecting souls.
The tormented spirit works to frighten off others, dead or alive, who fail to show respect. It is the Ankou's curse to ensure the peace of the departed shall ...