5e:Hag
Ancient beings with origins in the Feywild, hags are cankers on the mortal world…
All hags possess magical powers, and some… spellcasting. They can alter their forms or curse their foes…
Other Lore
Many stories about hags seem to have been used to frighten children into being good. The...Peg Powler , for example, was a river hag who...had skin the colour of green pond scum.[8][9][10] Parents who wanted to keep their children away from the river's edge told them that if they got too close to the water she would pull them in with her long arms, drown them, and sometimes eat them. This type of nixie or neck has other regional names, such as Grindylow[11] (a name connected to Grendel),[11][12] Jenny Greenteeth ... and Nelly Longarms ...[13]
Many tales about hags do not describe them well enough to distinguish between an old woman who knows magic or a supernatural being.[14]
List of Hags
11 Hags
Sources and Notes
- SRD5:
- Wizards RPG Team. SRD-OGL v5.1 (5e 2014) (2015.05.06). Wizards of the Coast. Licensed: OGL.
- Wizards RPG Team. SRD-CC v5.1 (5e 2014) (2024-05-09). Wizards of the Coast. Licensed: CC-BY.
- Christopher Perkins, et. al.. Monster Manual (5e) (5e 2014) (2014-09-30). Wizards of the Coast. p. 176-177. Licnesed: © Wizards of the Coast (used under 'fair use' clause). ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2
- Habitat (unofficial) - User ↑
- user: Rlyehable ↑
- Wikipedia: Hag (excerpt, accessed 2020-03-24). Licensed: CC-BY-SA ↑
- Ernsting, Michele (2004) "Hags and nightmares: sleep paralysis and the midnight terrors" Radio Netherlands ↑
- The "Old Hag" Syndrome from About: Paranormal Phenomena ↑
- Ghosts, Helpful and Harmful by Elliott O'Donnell ↑
- Introduction to Folklore by Marian Roalfe Cox ↑
- The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Darlington, in the Bishoprick by William Hylton Dyer Longstaffe, 1854 ↑
- The Nineteenth century and after, Volume 68, Leonard Scott Pub. Co., 1910. Page. 556 ↑ 11.0 11.1
- A Grammar of the Dialect of Oldham by Karl Georg Schilling, 1906. Page. 17. ↑
- Froud, Brian and Lee, Alan (1978) Faeries. New York, Peacock Press 0-553-01159-6 ↑
- K. M. Briggs, The Fairies in English Tradition and Literature, p 66-7 University of Chicago Press, London, 1967 ↑