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The name stoor worm may be derived from the Old Norse Storðar-gandr, an alternative name for Jörmungandr, the world or Midgard Serpent of Norse mythology, [1] [2] Stoor or stour was a term used by Scots in the latter part of the 14th century to describe fighting or battles; it could also be applied to "violent conflicts" of the weather elements. [3]
Assipattle and the Stoor Worm is an Orcadian folktale relating the battle between the eponymous hero and a gigantic sea serpent known as the stoor worm. The tale was preserved by 19th-century antiquarian Walter Traill Dennison , and retold by another Orcadian folklorist, Ernest Marwick , in a 20th-century version that integrates Dennison's ...
The book is set in 1919. The hatchlings of the book echo the horrors of war. [1]McCaughrean uses various creatures from English, Irish, Manx, Orcadian, Scottish, and Slavic folklore and mythology, including the bean-nighe, bugganes, the Domovoy, merrows, the neck, the nuckelavee, the Stoor Worm, and ushteys.
Stoor worm, an Orcadian sea serpent slain by the hero Assipattle. Lambton Worm, according to Northumbrian legend, curled around Worm Hill near Fatfield in northeast England, eating livestock and children, and was killed during the time of the Crusades by a Sir John Lambton. Laidly Worm of Spindleston Heugh, of Northumbrian legend. Worm of ...
Stoor may refer to: Stoor worm, or Mester Stoor Worm, was a gigantic evil sea serpent of Orcadian folklore; Stoor (Hobbit), a Middle-earth Hobbit. See Hobbit#Divisions;
The Linton Worm is a mythical beast referred to in a Scottish Borders legend dating back to the 12th century. " Wyrm " is the Old English for serpent . A 12th-century writer believed it to be "In length three Scots yards and bigger than an ordinary man’s leg – in form and callour to our common muir edders."
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Gollum was a Stoor Hobbit [T 1] [T 2] of the River-folk who lived near the Gladden Fields. In The Lord of the Rings, it is stated that he was originally known as Sméagol, corrupted by the One Ring, and later named Gollum after his habit of making "a horrible swallowing noise in his throat". [T 3]