Black Shuck

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates In English folklore, Black Shuck, Old Shuck, Old Shock or simply Shuck is the name given to a ghostly black dog which is said to roam the coastline and countryside of East Anglia, one of many such black dogs recorded in folklore across the British Isles.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>Template:Better source needed Accounts of Black Shuck form part of the folklore of Norfolk, Suffolk, the Cambridgeshire Fens and Essex, and descriptions of the creature's appearance and nature vary considerably; it is sometimes recorded as an omen of death, but, in other instances, is described as companionable.<ref name=Sherwood/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the name Shuck derives from the Old English word Template:Lang 'devil, fiend', perhaps from the root Template:Lang 'to terrify'.<ref name=OED>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> The first mention in print of "Black Shuck" is by Reverend E. S. Taylor in an 1850 edition of the journal Notes and Queries which describes "Shuck the Dog-fiend"; "This phantom I have heard many persons in East Norfolk, and even Cambridgeshire, describe as having seen as a black shaggy dog, with fiery eyes and of immense size, and who visits churchyards at midnight."<ref name="notes and queries">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Abraham Fleming's account of the appearance of A strange, and terrible wunder in 1577 at Bungay, Suffolk is a famous account of the beast. Images of sinister black dogs have become part of the iconography of the area and have appeared in popular culture.<ref name=lore>Template:Cite book</ref> Writing in 1877, Walter Rye stated that Shuck was "the most curious of our local apparitions, as they are no doubt varieties of the same animal."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Descriptions

Descriptions of Black Shuck vary in both shape and size, from that of a large dog to being the size of a calf or horse.<ref name=lore/><ref name=Sherwood>Template:Cite web</ref> W. A. Dutt, in his 1901 Highways & Byways in East Anglia describes the creature thus:

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Dr Simon Sherwood suggests that the earliest surviving description of devilish black hounds is an account of an incident in the Peterborough Abbey recorded in the Peterborough Chronicle (one version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle) around 1127: Template:Quote This account also appears to describe the Europe-wide phenomenon of a Wild Hunt.

Bungay and Blythburgh

Title page of Rev. Abraham Fleming's account of the appearance of the ghostly black dog "Black Shuck" at the church of Bungay, Suffolk: "A straunge, and terrible Wunder wrought very late in the parish church of Bungay: a town of no great distance from the citie of Norwich, namely the fourth of this August, in the yeere of our Lord 1577. in a great tempest of violent raine, lightning, and thunder, the like wherof hath been seldome seene. With the appeerance of an horrible shaped thing, sensibly perceiued of the people then and there assembled. Drawen into a plain method according to the written copye. by Abraham Fleming."

One of the most notable reports of Black Shuck is of his appearance at the churches of Bungay and Blythburgh in Suffolk. On 4 August 1577, at Blythburgh, Black Shuck is said to have burst in through the doors of Holy Trinity Church to a clap of thunder. He ran up the nave, past a large congregation, killing a man and boy and causing the church steeple to collapse through the roof. As the dog left, he left scorch marks on the north door which can be seen at the church to this day.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The encounter on the same day at St Mary's Church, Bungay was described in A Straunge and Terrible Wunder by Abraham Fleming in 1577: Template:Quote

Fleming was a translator and editor for several printing houses in London, and therefore probably only published his account based on exaggerated oral accounts. Other local accounts attribute the event to the Devil (Fleming calls the animal "the Divel in such a likeness"). The scorch marks on the door are referred to by the locals as "the devil's fingerprints", and the event is remembered in this verse:

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Littleport

Template:Main Littleport, Cambridgeshire is home to two different legends of spectral black dogs, which have been linked to the Black Shuck folklore, but differ in significant aspects: local folklorist W.H. Barrett relates the story of a huge black dog haunting the area after being killed rescuing a local girl from a lustful friar in pre-reformation times,<ref name="TFF01">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="CFT01">Template:Cite book</ref> while fellow folklorist Enid Porter relates stories of a black dog haunting the A10 road after its owner drowned in the nearby River Great Ouse in the 1800s.<ref name="CCF01">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="MC01">Template:Cite book</ref>

British rock band The Darkness have a song called "Black Shuck" on their 2003 debut album Permission to Land.

In Teen Wolf, an ancient Hellhound spirit that had possessed someone, tells one of the main characters that it is known by many names, one of which is "Black Shuck".

British rock band Down I Go have a song called "Black Shuck" on their 2019 EP All Down the Church in Midst of Fire the Hellish Monster Flew, and Passing Onward to the Quire, He Many People Slew.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>Template:Better source needed

The Black Shuck appears in the 2020 video game Assassin's Creed: Valhalla as a mini boss encountered while exploring the countryside of East Anglia. The player can find it eating a carcass amidst a ruined building, and when killed it gives the player a skill point and its severed head.Template:Cn

The Black Shuck appears in Rahel Kapsaski's 2020 stop-motion animated folk horror film Curse of the Black Shuck released by Troma.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Black Shuck is a track with 'knot-in-the-stomach insistent strings' on These Feral Lands Volume 1, a 2020 release by musician Laura Cannell, comedian Stewart Lee, and others.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In the 2005 fantasy young adult novel series, May Bird, a team of Black Shuck dogs accompany one of the series villains, the boogeyman.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

See also

References

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