Gigelorum
Gigelorum (or Giol-Daoram) is an insect of Scottish folklore. It was believed to be the smallest creature. No description or information is available about it except that it inhabits the ear of a mite.[1]
Speculation exists that it may be based upon the tiniest insect that can be discerned by people possessing excellent eyesight, the giolcam-daobhram, which is described as "an animalcule, the smallest supposable living thing".[2] Ronald Black, a one time Celtic studies lecturer, author and journalist,[3] suggests that the creature could be a figment of the imagination of folklorist and Tiree minister John Gregorson Campbell as he could trace no authoritative sources for it.[2]
References[]
Citations
- ^ Gregorson Campbell (1900), p. 220
- ^ a b Gregorson Campbell (2005), p. 375
- ^ Martin Devine & Logue (2002), p. 23
Bibliography
- Martin Devine, Thomas; Logue, Paddy (2002), Being Scottish: Personal Reflections on Scottish Identity Today, Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-1-902930-36-7
- Gregorson Campbell, John (1900), Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, James MacLehose
- Gregorson Campbell, John (2005) [1990 & 1902], Black, Ronald (ed.), The Gaelic Otherworld: Superstitions of the Highlands and the Islands and Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, Birlinn, ISBN 978 1 84158 207 8[dead link]
Categories:
- Scottish legendary creatures
- Scotland stubs
- Legendary creature stubs
- Mythological insects