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Name Origin Medium Queen Lurline: Oz books by L. Frank Baum: Book Queen Mab: English folklore "She is the fairies' midwife" (Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet) Queen Julian, and Flower Fairy: Doraemon: Nobita to Yōsei no Kuni: Anime Queen Seelie: The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare: Book series Quentin Quake: PopPixie: Animated TV series Ribbon
Fairy queens appear in some of the Child Ballads. A kind and helpful fairy queen features in Alison Gross (Child 35), and a terrible and deadly fairy queen is the antagonist of Tam Lin (Child 39). Tam Lin's Fairy Queen pays a tithe to Hell every seven years, and Tam Lin fears that he will be forced to serve as a human sacrifice:
Fairy Queen; The Story of The Farmer's Three Daughters (Icelandic fairy tale) The Tale of the Queen Who Sought a Drink From a Certain Well; Flame Princess; The Story of the Queen of the Flowery Isles; Frigga (character)
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Articles relating to Fairy Queens, figures from Irish and British folklore, believed to rule the fairies. Pages in category "Fairy Queens" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
Nicneven, Nicnevin or Nicnevan is a witch or fairy queen from Scottish folklore. She is often said to be the same figure as the Gyre-Carling or Hecate, but some scholars disagree with this. It is debated whether the name originally referred to a real woman or a mythical goddess. [1] [2]
With instructions from the Fairy Queen, Kendra makes a potion that enlarges the fairies to human size. In their empowered state the fairies defeat Muriel the witch, and the demon Bahumat. In Book 2, a fairy named Shiara turns Mendigo to Kendra's will. Other names of fairies include Yolie, Larina, Ilyana.
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