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sue4e3

(742 posts)
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 01:48 PM Yesterday

The medieval folklore of Britain's endangered wildlife 'omens

https://phys.org/news/2025-10-medieval-folklore-britain-endangered-wildlife.html
As the seasons turn and the nights draw in, the countryside of the British Isles seems alive with omens: an owl's screech, or a bat above the hedgerows.

For centuries, such creatures were cast as messengers of fate, straddling the boundary between the natural and the supernatural. Yet today, the omens these animals bring are no longer warnings of ghosts or witchcraft, but of something far more tangible: their own survival.

The very species that once haunted our imagination and foretold ill-fated futures are now haunted by habitat loss, climate change and pressure from urbanization. In the stories of these creatures, we glimpse both our fear of the wild past and our responsibility for the future. Now is the time to revisit some of Britain's iconic "omen animals," tracing their folklore and asking what their fate tells us about our shared environment.
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