MermaidsCorner Welcoming Speech ->
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Welcome to MermaidsCorner! This is a serious site for mermaids. I'm Mira, the owner of the site, and this is Aimee, the co-owner to the site. Please enjoy our widespread information, spells, and folklore about mermaids.
This website is for serious Shifters and Mermaid Spirits ONLY. You have to be 100% sure that you want this, to be one with the water forever, before you go further. If you are here to make fun of all of the others, do yourself a favor and leave now. Now that only the serious ones are left, let's get started. This website compiles spells, information, experiences, and spam/con alerts to make this the right place for people like us- merfolk. We look all over the web, finding as much helpful information as possible to help you. We can easily detect when something is fake or just insulting, and that means that it won't make it onto the website, to ensure that no one reports us as fakes. Because we're not. Thank you for reading this introduction the MermaidsCorner. Aimee and I hope you found this website useful. Check out www.thesirenscove.com as they have a larger community and a lot of extra information. All of the topics we have are: Sub-species of Mermaids Tail Examples Mermaid Anatomy |
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Fact and Myth- Mermaids
1. Fact: Mermaids can transform in water. While many people believe this was just an H2O made up "myth", water is actually a HUGE trigger that can start the transformation process. While it may not turn you in 10 seconds, being submerged in water can trigger your P-Shift.
2. Myth: Mermaids get tops with tails. Just think, if you are shifting your BODY, why would you end up with a type of CLOTHING. Most mermaids go full fledged boobies out, or some cover it with seaweed. But this is one thing H2O got wrong, you do not get a magical bikini top.
3. Fact: The call of the sea is very hard to resist. Everyone here (hopefully) knows of KissingMidnight, the mermaid who successfully shifted. She tried her best to stay on land, but it is VERY hard to do that, and eventually she returned to the sea.
4. Myth: Mermaids get powers automatically after shifting. No, you have to work for your abilities. Mermaids are commonly known to have control over the water, weather, and siren singing.
5. Fact: Mermaids travel in pods. Much like dolphins, many mermaids travel in pods of 30-50. While some mermaids (Deep Sea especially) travel alone, it is a very lonely life. So if you are shifting, you may want to look into finding a pod.
6. Myth: You can't shave. This is so 100% false that it's not even funny! No, mermaids don't have razors, BUT if one was to shave, they would not lose their tail.
7. Fact: Mermaids are attracted to shiny objects. Mermaids especially like red, orange, and yellow things that remind them of the sun.
8. Myth: Mermaids can talk underwater. Many mermaid representations, like Ariel, have mermaids chatting underwater. The reason this is impossible for humans is not that we just don't have the power or body functions, it's science. The sound waves don't travel the same underwater. Nobody, human or mermaid, can talk underwater.
9. Fact: Mermaids speak a language called Mermish, which is simplistic, and used only above water. It is a combination of coastal slang, and mersong. Under the water, they speak a variety of whistles, clicks, fluting sounds, and telepathy.
10. Myth: Mermaids are Elven. No, this is not true. Mermaids are MERMAIDS. Elven include Elves, and Druids, and Trolls, and Gnomes, and Giants. NOT Mermaids. Thank You.
11. Fact: Mermaids have been reported to have turquoise blood. Which would mean that it has more oxygen stored inside it.
12. Myth: Sirens are evil. Sirens are not evil, in fact, all, if not most mermaids possess the ability to enchant, and it's usually for defensive purposes.
13. Fact: Mermaids have both gills and one large lung. This is important. Breathing underwater is not some power you get from a spell or from birth, you have to have gills to actually breathe underwater, and one large lung to help store air.
2. Myth: Mermaids get tops with tails. Just think, if you are shifting your BODY, why would you end up with a type of CLOTHING. Most mermaids go full fledged boobies out, or some cover it with seaweed. But this is one thing H2O got wrong, you do not get a magical bikini top.
3. Fact: The call of the sea is very hard to resist. Everyone here (hopefully) knows of KissingMidnight, the mermaid who successfully shifted. She tried her best to stay on land, but it is VERY hard to do that, and eventually she returned to the sea.
4. Myth: Mermaids get powers automatically after shifting. No, you have to work for your abilities. Mermaids are commonly known to have control over the water, weather, and siren singing.
5. Fact: Mermaids travel in pods. Much like dolphins, many mermaids travel in pods of 30-50. While some mermaids (Deep Sea especially) travel alone, it is a very lonely life. So if you are shifting, you may want to look into finding a pod.
6. Myth: You can't shave. This is so 100% false that it's not even funny! No, mermaids don't have razors, BUT if one was to shave, they would not lose their tail.
7. Fact: Mermaids are attracted to shiny objects. Mermaids especially like red, orange, and yellow things that remind them of the sun.
8. Myth: Mermaids can talk underwater. Many mermaid representations, like Ariel, have mermaids chatting underwater. The reason this is impossible for humans is not that we just don't have the power or body functions, it's science. The sound waves don't travel the same underwater. Nobody, human or mermaid, can talk underwater.
9. Fact: Mermaids speak a language called Mermish, which is simplistic, and used only above water. It is a combination of coastal slang, and mersong. Under the water, they speak a variety of whistles, clicks, fluting sounds, and telepathy.
10. Myth: Mermaids are Elven. No, this is not true. Mermaids are MERMAIDS. Elven include Elves, and Druids, and Trolls, and Gnomes, and Giants. NOT Mermaids. Thank You.
11. Fact: Mermaids have been reported to have turquoise blood. Which would mean that it has more oxygen stored inside it.
12. Myth: Sirens are evil. Sirens are not evil, in fact, all, if not most mermaids possess the ability to enchant, and it's usually for defensive purposes.
13. Fact: Mermaids have both gills and one large lung. This is important. Breathing underwater is not some power you get from a spell or from birth, you have to have gills to actually breathe underwater, and one large lung to help store air.
Folklore on Mermaids
There is a lot of myths that were told about mermaids a long time ago up to present day. This section is just the myths- what was said back then. We aren't saying this is true or fake. We just are giving you the thoughts of early humanity.
A mermaid is a legendary aquatic creature with the upper body of a female human and the tail of a fish.[1] Mermaids appear in the folklore of many cultures worldwide, including the Near East, Europe, Africa and Asia. The first stories appeared in ancient Assyria, in which the goddess Atargatis transformed herself into a mermaid out of shame for accidentally killing her human lover. Mermaids are sometimes associated with perilous events such as floods, storms, shipwrecks and drownings. In other folk traditions (or sometimes within the same tradition), they can be benevolent or beneficent, bestowing boons or falling in love with humans.
Mermaids are associated with the mythological Greek sirens as well as with sirenia, a
biological order comprising dugongs and manatees. Some of the historical sightings by sailors may have been misunderstood encounters with these aquatic mammals. Christopher Columbus reported seeing mermaids while exploring the Caribbean, and supposed sightings have been reported in the 20th and 21st centuries in Canada, Israel, and Zimbabwe.
Mermaids have been a popular subject of art and literature in recent centuries, such as in Hans Christian Andersen's well-known fairy tale "The Little Mermaid" (1836). They have subsequently been depicted in operas, paintings, books, films and comics.
The word mermaid is a compound of the Old English mere (sea), and maid (a girl or young woman).[1] The equivalent term in Old English was merewif.[2] They are conventionally depicted as beautiful with long flowing hair.[1] As cited above, they are sometimes equated with the sirens of Greek mythology (especially the Odyssey), half-bird femme fatales whose enchanting voices would lure soon-to-be-shipwrecked sailors to nearby rocks, sandbars or shoals.[3]
Sirenia
Sirenia is an order of fully aquatic, herbivorous mammals that inhabit rivers, estuaries, coastal marine waters, swamps and marine wetlands. Sirenians, including manatees and dugongs, possess major aquatic adaptations: arms used for steering, a paddle used for propulsion, and remnants of hind limbs (legs) in the form of two small bones floating deep in the muscle. They look ponderous and clumsy but are actually fusiform, hydrodynamic and highly muscular, and mariners before the mid-nineteenth century referred to them as mermaids.[4]
Sirenomelia
Sirenomelia, also called "mermaid syndrome", is a rare congenital disorder in which a child is born with his or her legs fused together and small genitalia. This condition is about as rare as conjoined twins, affecting one out of every 100,000 live births[5] and is usually fatal within a day or two of birth because of kidney and bladder complications. Four survivors were known as of July 2003.[6]
Near East, Ancient Greece
The goddess Atargatis shown as a fish with human head, on an ancient Greek coin of Demetrius III Eucaerus
The first known mermaid stories appeared in Assyria c. 1000 BC. The goddess Atargatis, mother of Assyrian queen Semiramis, loved a mortal (a shepherd) and unintentionally killed him. Ashamed, she jumped into a lake and took the form of a fish, but the waters would not conceal her divine beauty. Thereafter, she took the form of a mermaid — human above the waist, fish below — although the earliest representations of Atargatis showed her as a fish with a human head and arm, similar to the Babylonian god Ea. The Greeks recognized Atargatis under the name Derketo. Sometime before 546 BC, Milesian philosopher Anaximander postulated that mankind had sprung from an aquatic animal species. He thought that humans, who begin life with prolonged infancy, could not have survived otherwise.
A popular Greek legend turned Alexander the Great's sister, Thessalonike, into a mermaid after her death,[7] living in the Aegean. She would ask the sailors on any ship she would encounter only one question: "Is King Alexander alive?" (Greek: "Ζει ο Βασιλεύς Αλέξανδρος;"), to which the correct answer was: "He lives and reigns and conquers the world" (Greek: "Ζει και βασιλεύει και τον κόσμον κυριεύει"). This answer would please her, and she would accordingly calm the waters and bid the ship farewell. Any other answer would enrage her, and she would stir up a terrible storm, dooming the ship and every sailor on board.[8][9]
Lucian of Samosata in Syria (2nd century A.D.), in De Dea Syria (About the Syrian Goddess) wrote of the Syrian temples he had visited:
"Among them – Now that is the traditional story among them concerning the temple. But other men swear that Semiramis of Babylonia, whose deeds are many in Asia, also founded this site, and not for Hera but for her own mother, whose name was Derketo."
"I saw Derketo's likeness in Phoenicia, a strange marvel. It is woman for half its length; but the other half, from thighs to feet, stretched out in a fish's tail. But the image in the Holy City is entirely a woman, and the grounds for their account are not very clear. They consider fish to be sacred, and they never eat them; and though they eat all other fowls they do not eat the dove, for they believe it is holy. And these things are done, they believe, because of Derketo and Semiramis, the first because Derketo has the shape of a fish, and the other because ultimately Semiramis turned into a dove. Well, I may grant that the temple was a work of Semiramis perhaps; but that it belongs to Derketo I do not believe in any way. For among the Egyptians some people do not eat fish, and that is not done to honor Derketo."[10]
One Thousand and One Nights
A dried skate, or Jenny Haniver. Mashhad Museum, Iran
The One Thousand and One Nights collection includes several tales featuring "sea people", such as "Djullanar the Sea-girl".[11] Unlike depictions of mermaids in other mythologies, these are anatomically identical to land-bound humans, differing only in their ability to breathe and live underwater. They can (and do) interbreed with land humans, and the children of such unions have the ability to live underwater. In the tale "Abdullah the Fisherman and Abdullah the Merman", the protagonist Abdullah the Fisherman gains the ability to breathe underwater and discovers an underwater society that is portrayed as an inverted reflection of society on land. The underwater society follows a form of primitive communism where concepts like money and clothing do not exist. In "The Adventures of Bulukiya", the protagonist Bulukiya's quest for the herb of immortality leads him to explore the seas, where he encounters societies of mermaids.[11]
Due to their vaguely anthropomorphic shape, dried skates have long been described as mermaids. Often their appearance is deliberately modified to make them look even more human. In Europe, dried skates, sometimes called devil fish, (not to be confused with devil fish or devil rays, two species of ray native to the north Atlantic) were displayed as mermaids, angels, demons, or basilisks. In Britain they are known as Jenny Hanivers, perhaps in reference to Antwerp, where they were made by sailors. Dried skates are also known in Mexico, where they are believed to have magical powers, and are used in healing rituals.[12]
British Isles
16th century Zennor mermaid chair
The Norman chapel in Durham Castle, built around 1078 by Saxon stonemasons, has what is probably the earliest artistic depiction of a mermaid in England.[13] It can be seen on a south-facing capital above one of the original Norman stone pillars.[14]
Mermaids appear in British folklore as unlucky omens, both foretelling disaster and provoking it.[15] Several variants of the ballad Sir Patrick Spens depict a mermaid speaking to the doomed ships. In some versions, she tells them they will never see land again; in others, she claims they are near shore, which they are wise enough to know means the same thing. Mermaids can also be a sign of approaching rough weather,[16] and some have been described as monstrous in size, up to 2,000 feet (610 m).[15]
Mermaids have also been described as able to swim up rivers to freshwater lakes. In one story, the Laird of Lorntie went to aid a woman he thought was drowning in a lake near his house; a servant of his pulled him back, warning that it was a mermaid, and the mermaid screamed at them that she would have killed him if it were not for his servant.[17] But mermaids could occasionally be more beneficent; e.g., teaching humans cures for certain diseases.[18] Mermen have been described as wilder and uglier than mermaids, with little interest in humans.[19]
According to legend, a mermaid came to the Cornish village of Zennor where she used to listen to the singing of a chorister, Matthew Trewhella. The two fell in love, and Matthew went with the mermaid to her home at Pendour Cove. On summer nights, the lovers can be heard singing together. At the Church of Saint Senara in Zennor, there is a famous chair decorated by a mermaid carving which is probably six hundred years old.[20]
Some tales raised the question of whether mermaids had immortal souls, answering in the negative.[21] The figure of Lí Ban appears as a sanctified mermaid, but she was a human being transformed into a mermaid. After three centuries, when Christianity had come to Ireland, she was baptized.[22] In Scottish mythology, there is a mermaid called the ceasg or "maid of the wave",[23] as well as the Merrow of Ireland and Scotland.
Mermaids from the Isle of Man, known as ben-varrey, are considered more favorable toward humans than those of other regions,[24] with various accounts of assistance, gifts and rewards. One story tells of a fisherman who carried a stranded mermaid back into the sea and was rewarded with the location of treasure. Another recounts the tale of a baby mermaid who stole a doll from a human little girl, but was rebuked by her mother and sent back to the girl with a gift of a pearl necklace to atone for the theft. A third story tells of a fishing family that made regular gifts of apples to a mermaid and was rewarded with prosperity.[24]
Western Europe
Raymond walks in on his wife, Melusine, in her bath, finding she has the lower body of a serpent. Jean d'Arras, Le livre de Mélusine, 1478.
A freshwater mermaid-like creature from European folklore is Melusine. She is sometimes depicted with two fish tails, or with the lower body of a serpent.[25]
The best-known example of mermaids in literature is probably Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale, The Little Mermaid, first published in 1837. In the original story, a young mermaid falls in love with a human prince whom she saves from drowning when his ship is wrecked in a storm. Although her grandmother tells her not to envy humans, who live much shorter lives than mermaids, and whose only consolation is an immortal soul, the mermaid chooses to risk her life in order to be with the prince. She trades her tongue and her beautiful voice to the sea-witch in exchange for a draught that will make her human and allow her to live on land. She will have to rely on her beauty and charm to win the prince's love, as she will be entirely mute.
The sea-witch warns the mermaid that, although she will be graceful, each step will feel as though she is stepping on knives; and that if she does not earn the prince's love, she will die of a broken heart after he weds another. The spell is worked, and the mermaid is found by the prince, who sees the resemblance between her and the one who rescued him from drowning, although he does not realize that they are the same person. Although the prince cares deeply for the mermaid, he is betrothed to the daughter of a neighboring king, and the mermaid cannot prevent their marriage.
The mermaid's sisters trade their beautiful hair to the sea-witch for a knife that the mermaid can use to break the spell and return to the sea. She must kill the prince before dawn on the day after his wedding. But the mermaid still loves the prince and cannot harm him. She flings the knife into the sea and jumps in after it, then begins to dissolve into foam. Then she is transformed into one of the daughters of the air, ethereal beings who strive to earn an immortal soul by doing good deeds in the world of men.[26]
A world-famous statue of the Little Mermaid, based on Andersen's fairy tale, has been in Copenhagen, Denmark since August 1913, with copies in 13 other locations around the world – almost half of them in North America.[27][28][29]
In 1989, Walt Disney Studios released a full-length animated film based on the Andersen fairy tale. Featuring an Academy Award-winning soundtrack with songs by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman,[30] the film garnered glowing reviews, and was credited with revitalizing both the studio and the concept of animated feature films.[31][32] Notable changes to the plot of Andersen's story include the elimination of the grandmother character and the religious aspects of the fairy tale, including the mermaid's quest to obtain an immortal soul. The sea-witch herself replaces the princess to whom the prince becomes engaged, using the mermaid's voice to prevent her from obtaining the prince's love. However, on their wedding day the plot is revealed, and the sea-witch is vanquished. The knife motif is not used in the film, which ends with the mermaid and the prince marrying.[33] Among other things, the film was praised for portraying the mermaid as an independent and even rebellious young woman, rather than a passive actor content to let others determine her destiny.[34]
Eastern Europe
Sadko in the Underwater Kingdom by Ilya Repin
Rusalkas are the Slavic counterpart of the Greek sirens and naiads.[35] The nature of rusalkas varies among folk traditions, but according to ethnologist D.K. Zelenin they all share a common element: they are the restless spirits of the unclean dead.[35] They are usually the ghosts of young women who died a violent or untimely death, perhaps by murder or suicide, before their wedding and especially by drowning. Rusalkas are said to inhabit lakes and rivers. They appear as beautiful young women with long pale green hair and pale skin, suggesting a connection with floating weeds and days spent underwater in faint sunlight. They can be seen after dark, dancing together under the moon and calling out to young men by name, luring them to the water and drowning them. The characterization of rusalkas as both desirable and treacherous is prevalent in southern Russia, the Ukraine and Belarus, and was emphasized by 19th-century Russian authors.[36][37][38] The best-known of the great Czech nationalist composer Antonín Dvořák's operas is Rusalka.
In Sadko (Russian: Садко), a Russian medieval epic, the title character—an adventurer, merchant and gusli musician from Novgorod—lives for some time in the underwater court of the "Sea Tsar" and marries his daughter before finally returning home. The tale inspired such works as the poem "Sadko"[39] by Alexei Tolstoy (1817–75), the opera Sadko composed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and the painting by Ilya Repin.
China
A 15th-century compilation of quotations from Chinese literature tells of a mermaid who "wept tears which became pearls".[40] An early 19th-century book entitled Jottings on the South of China contains two stories about mermaids. In the first, a man captures a mermaid on the shore of Namtao island. She looks human in every respect except that her body is covered with fine hair of many colors. She can't talk, but he takes her home and marries her. After his death, the mermaid returns to the sea where she was found. In the second story, a man sees a woman lying on the beach while his ship was anchored offshore. On closer inspection, her feet and hands appear to be webbed. She is carried to the water, and expresses her gratitude toward the sailors before swimming away.[41]
Hinduism
Suvannamaccha (lit. golden mermaid) is a daughter of Ravana that appears in the Cambodian and Thai versions of the Ramayana. She is a mermaid princess who tries to spoil Hanuman's plans to build a bridge to Lanka but falls in love with him instead. She is a popular figure of Thai folklore.[42]
Apsaras (Ap = waters/rivers, saras = flowing on) are river nymphs co-resident with mostly male gods for their pleasure in the rivers of their heavenly abode.[citation needed]
Africa
Mami Wata are water spirits venerated in west, central and southern Africa, and in the African diaspora in the Caribbean and parts of North and South America. They are usually female, but are sometimes male.[43] The Persian word "برایم بمان" or "maneli" means both "mermaid"[44] and "stay with me".[citation needed]
Other
The Neo-Taíno nations of the Caribbean identify a mermaid called Aycayia[45][46] with attributes of the goddess Jagua and the hibiscus flower of the majagua tree Hibiscus tiliaceus.[47] In modern Caribbean culture, there is a mermaid recognized as a Haitian vodou loa called La Sirene (lit. "the mermaid"), representing wealth, beauty and the orisha Yemaya.
Examples from other cultures are the jengu of Cameroon, the iara of Brazil and the Greek oceanids, nereids and naiads. The ningyo is a fishlike creature from Japanese folklore, and consuming its flesh bestows amazing longevity. Mermaids and mermen are also characters of Philippine folklore, where they are locally known as sirena and siyokoy respectively.[48] The Javanese people believe that the southern beach in Java is a home of Javanese mermaid queen Nyi Roro Kidul.[49]
A mermaid is a legendary aquatic creature with the upper body of a female human and the tail of a fish.[1] Mermaids appear in the folklore of many cultures worldwide, including the Near East, Europe, Africa and Asia. The first stories appeared in ancient Assyria, in which the goddess Atargatis transformed herself into a mermaid out of shame for accidentally killing her human lover. Mermaids are sometimes associated with perilous events such as floods, storms, shipwrecks and drownings. In other folk traditions (or sometimes within the same tradition), they can be benevolent or beneficent, bestowing boons or falling in love with humans.
Mermaids are associated with the mythological Greek sirens as well as with sirenia, a
biological order comprising dugongs and manatees. Some of the historical sightings by sailors may have been misunderstood encounters with these aquatic mammals. Christopher Columbus reported seeing mermaids while exploring the Caribbean, and supposed sightings have been reported in the 20th and 21st centuries in Canada, Israel, and Zimbabwe.
Mermaids have been a popular subject of art and literature in recent centuries, such as in Hans Christian Andersen's well-known fairy tale "The Little Mermaid" (1836). They have subsequently been depicted in operas, paintings, books, films and comics.
The word mermaid is a compound of the Old English mere (sea), and maid (a girl or young woman).[1] The equivalent term in Old English was merewif.[2] They are conventionally depicted as beautiful with long flowing hair.[1] As cited above, they are sometimes equated with the sirens of Greek mythology (especially the Odyssey), half-bird femme fatales whose enchanting voices would lure soon-to-be-shipwrecked sailors to nearby rocks, sandbars or shoals.[3]
Sirenia
Sirenia is an order of fully aquatic, herbivorous mammals that inhabit rivers, estuaries, coastal marine waters, swamps and marine wetlands. Sirenians, including manatees and dugongs, possess major aquatic adaptations: arms used for steering, a paddle used for propulsion, and remnants of hind limbs (legs) in the form of two small bones floating deep in the muscle. They look ponderous and clumsy but are actually fusiform, hydrodynamic and highly muscular, and mariners before the mid-nineteenth century referred to them as mermaids.[4]
Sirenomelia
Sirenomelia, also called "mermaid syndrome", is a rare congenital disorder in which a child is born with his or her legs fused together and small genitalia. This condition is about as rare as conjoined twins, affecting one out of every 100,000 live births[5] and is usually fatal within a day or two of birth because of kidney and bladder complications. Four survivors were known as of July 2003.[6]
Near East, Ancient Greece
The goddess Atargatis shown as a fish with human head, on an ancient Greek coin of Demetrius III Eucaerus
The first known mermaid stories appeared in Assyria c. 1000 BC. The goddess Atargatis, mother of Assyrian queen Semiramis, loved a mortal (a shepherd) and unintentionally killed him. Ashamed, she jumped into a lake and took the form of a fish, but the waters would not conceal her divine beauty. Thereafter, she took the form of a mermaid — human above the waist, fish below — although the earliest representations of Atargatis showed her as a fish with a human head and arm, similar to the Babylonian god Ea. The Greeks recognized Atargatis under the name Derketo. Sometime before 546 BC, Milesian philosopher Anaximander postulated that mankind had sprung from an aquatic animal species. He thought that humans, who begin life with prolonged infancy, could not have survived otherwise.
A popular Greek legend turned Alexander the Great's sister, Thessalonike, into a mermaid after her death,[7] living in the Aegean. She would ask the sailors on any ship she would encounter only one question: "Is King Alexander alive?" (Greek: "Ζει ο Βασιλεύς Αλέξανδρος;"), to which the correct answer was: "He lives and reigns and conquers the world" (Greek: "Ζει και βασιλεύει και τον κόσμον κυριεύει"). This answer would please her, and she would accordingly calm the waters and bid the ship farewell. Any other answer would enrage her, and she would stir up a terrible storm, dooming the ship and every sailor on board.[8][9]
Lucian of Samosata in Syria (2nd century A.D.), in De Dea Syria (About the Syrian Goddess) wrote of the Syrian temples he had visited:
"Among them – Now that is the traditional story among them concerning the temple. But other men swear that Semiramis of Babylonia, whose deeds are many in Asia, also founded this site, and not for Hera but for her own mother, whose name was Derketo."
"I saw Derketo's likeness in Phoenicia, a strange marvel. It is woman for half its length; but the other half, from thighs to feet, stretched out in a fish's tail. But the image in the Holy City is entirely a woman, and the grounds for their account are not very clear. They consider fish to be sacred, and they never eat them; and though they eat all other fowls they do not eat the dove, for they believe it is holy. And these things are done, they believe, because of Derketo and Semiramis, the first because Derketo has the shape of a fish, and the other because ultimately Semiramis turned into a dove. Well, I may grant that the temple was a work of Semiramis perhaps; but that it belongs to Derketo I do not believe in any way. For among the Egyptians some people do not eat fish, and that is not done to honor Derketo."[10]
One Thousand and One Nights
A dried skate, or Jenny Haniver. Mashhad Museum, Iran
The One Thousand and One Nights collection includes several tales featuring "sea people", such as "Djullanar the Sea-girl".[11] Unlike depictions of mermaids in other mythologies, these are anatomically identical to land-bound humans, differing only in their ability to breathe and live underwater. They can (and do) interbreed with land humans, and the children of such unions have the ability to live underwater. In the tale "Abdullah the Fisherman and Abdullah the Merman", the protagonist Abdullah the Fisherman gains the ability to breathe underwater and discovers an underwater society that is portrayed as an inverted reflection of society on land. The underwater society follows a form of primitive communism where concepts like money and clothing do not exist. In "The Adventures of Bulukiya", the protagonist Bulukiya's quest for the herb of immortality leads him to explore the seas, where he encounters societies of mermaids.[11]
Due to their vaguely anthropomorphic shape, dried skates have long been described as mermaids. Often their appearance is deliberately modified to make them look even more human. In Europe, dried skates, sometimes called devil fish, (not to be confused with devil fish or devil rays, two species of ray native to the north Atlantic) were displayed as mermaids, angels, demons, or basilisks. In Britain they are known as Jenny Hanivers, perhaps in reference to Antwerp, where they were made by sailors. Dried skates are also known in Mexico, where they are believed to have magical powers, and are used in healing rituals.[12]
British Isles
16th century Zennor mermaid chair
The Norman chapel in Durham Castle, built around 1078 by Saxon stonemasons, has what is probably the earliest artistic depiction of a mermaid in England.[13] It can be seen on a south-facing capital above one of the original Norman stone pillars.[14]
Mermaids appear in British folklore as unlucky omens, both foretelling disaster and provoking it.[15] Several variants of the ballad Sir Patrick Spens depict a mermaid speaking to the doomed ships. In some versions, she tells them they will never see land again; in others, she claims they are near shore, which they are wise enough to know means the same thing. Mermaids can also be a sign of approaching rough weather,[16] and some have been described as monstrous in size, up to 2,000 feet (610 m).[15]
Mermaids have also been described as able to swim up rivers to freshwater lakes. In one story, the Laird of Lorntie went to aid a woman he thought was drowning in a lake near his house; a servant of his pulled him back, warning that it was a mermaid, and the mermaid screamed at them that she would have killed him if it were not for his servant.[17] But mermaids could occasionally be more beneficent; e.g., teaching humans cures for certain diseases.[18] Mermen have been described as wilder and uglier than mermaids, with little interest in humans.[19]
According to legend, a mermaid came to the Cornish village of Zennor where she used to listen to the singing of a chorister, Matthew Trewhella. The two fell in love, and Matthew went with the mermaid to her home at Pendour Cove. On summer nights, the lovers can be heard singing together. At the Church of Saint Senara in Zennor, there is a famous chair decorated by a mermaid carving which is probably six hundred years old.[20]
Some tales raised the question of whether mermaids had immortal souls, answering in the negative.[21] The figure of Lí Ban appears as a sanctified mermaid, but she was a human being transformed into a mermaid. After three centuries, when Christianity had come to Ireland, she was baptized.[22] In Scottish mythology, there is a mermaid called the ceasg or "maid of the wave",[23] as well as the Merrow of Ireland and Scotland.
Mermaids from the Isle of Man, known as ben-varrey, are considered more favorable toward humans than those of other regions,[24] with various accounts of assistance, gifts and rewards. One story tells of a fisherman who carried a stranded mermaid back into the sea and was rewarded with the location of treasure. Another recounts the tale of a baby mermaid who stole a doll from a human little girl, but was rebuked by her mother and sent back to the girl with a gift of a pearl necklace to atone for the theft. A third story tells of a fishing family that made regular gifts of apples to a mermaid and was rewarded with prosperity.[24]
Western Europe
Raymond walks in on his wife, Melusine, in her bath, finding she has the lower body of a serpent. Jean d'Arras, Le livre de Mélusine, 1478.
A freshwater mermaid-like creature from European folklore is Melusine. She is sometimes depicted with two fish tails, or with the lower body of a serpent.[25]
The best-known example of mermaids in literature is probably Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale, The Little Mermaid, first published in 1837. In the original story, a young mermaid falls in love with a human prince whom she saves from drowning when his ship is wrecked in a storm. Although her grandmother tells her not to envy humans, who live much shorter lives than mermaids, and whose only consolation is an immortal soul, the mermaid chooses to risk her life in order to be with the prince. She trades her tongue and her beautiful voice to the sea-witch in exchange for a draught that will make her human and allow her to live on land. She will have to rely on her beauty and charm to win the prince's love, as she will be entirely mute.
The sea-witch warns the mermaid that, although she will be graceful, each step will feel as though she is stepping on knives; and that if she does not earn the prince's love, she will die of a broken heart after he weds another. The spell is worked, and the mermaid is found by the prince, who sees the resemblance between her and the one who rescued him from drowning, although he does not realize that they are the same person. Although the prince cares deeply for the mermaid, he is betrothed to the daughter of a neighboring king, and the mermaid cannot prevent their marriage.
The mermaid's sisters trade their beautiful hair to the sea-witch for a knife that the mermaid can use to break the spell and return to the sea. She must kill the prince before dawn on the day after his wedding. But the mermaid still loves the prince and cannot harm him. She flings the knife into the sea and jumps in after it, then begins to dissolve into foam. Then she is transformed into one of the daughters of the air, ethereal beings who strive to earn an immortal soul by doing good deeds in the world of men.[26]
A world-famous statue of the Little Mermaid, based on Andersen's fairy tale, has been in Copenhagen, Denmark since August 1913, with copies in 13 other locations around the world – almost half of them in North America.[27][28][29]
In 1989, Walt Disney Studios released a full-length animated film based on the Andersen fairy tale. Featuring an Academy Award-winning soundtrack with songs by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman,[30] the film garnered glowing reviews, and was credited with revitalizing both the studio and the concept of animated feature films.[31][32] Notable changes to the plot of Andersen's story include the elimination of the grandmother character and the religious aspects of the fairy tale, including the mermaid's quest to obtain an immortal soul. The sea-witch herself replaces the princess to whom the prince becomes engaged, using the mermaid's voice to prevent her from obtaining the prince's love. However, on their wedding day the plot is revealed, and the sea-witch is vanquished. The knife motif is not used in the film, which ends with the mermaid and the prince marrying.[33] Among other things, the film was praised for portraying the mermaid as an independent and even rebellious young woman, rather than a passive actor content to let others determine her destiny.[34]
Eastern Europe
Sadko in the Underwater Kingdom by Ilya Repin
Rusalkas are the Slavic counterpart of the Greek sirens and naiads.[35] The nature of rusalkas varies among folk traditions, but according to ethnologist D.K. Zelenin they all share a common element: they are the restless spirits of the unclean dead.[35] They are usually the ghosts of young women who died a violent or untimely death, perhaps by murder or suicide, before their wedding and especially by drowning. Rusalkas are said to inhabit lakes and rivers. They appear as beautiful young women with long pale green hair and pale skin, suggesting a connection with floating weeds and days spent underwater in faint sunlight. They can be seen after dark, dancing together under the moon and calling out to young men by name, luring them to the water and drowning them. The characterization of rusalkas as both desirable and treacherous is prevalent in southern Russia, the Ukraine and Belarus, and was emphasized by 19th-century Russian authors.[36][37][38] The best-known of the great Czech nationalist composer Antonín Dvořák's operas is Rusalka.
In Sadko (Russian: Садко), a Russian medieval epic, the title character—an adventurer, merchant and gusli musician from Novgorod—lives for some time in the underwater court of the "Sea Tsar" and marries his daughter before finally returning home. The tale inspired such works as the poem "Sadko"[39] by Alexei Tolstoy (1817–75), the opera Sadko composed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and the painting by Ilya Repin.
China
A 15th-century compilation of quotations from Chinese literature tells of a mermaid who "wept tears which became pearls".[40] An early 19th-century book entitled Jottings on the South of China contains two stories about mermaids. In the first, a man captures a mermaid on the shore of Namtao island. She looks human in every respect except that her body is covered with fine hair of many colors. She can't talk, but he takes her home and marries her. After his death, the mermaid returns to the sea where she was found. In the second story, a man sees a woman lying on the beach while his ship was anchored offshore. On closer inspection, her feet and hands appear to be webbed. She is carried to the water, and expresses her gratitude toward the sailors before swimming away.[41]
Hinduism
Suvannamaccha (lit. golden mermaid) is a daughter of Ravana that appears in the Cambodian and Thai versions of the Ramayana. She is a mermaid princess who tries to spoil Hanuman's plans to build a bridge to Lanka but falls in love with him instead. She is a popular figure of Thai folklore.[42]
Apsaras (Ap = waters/rivers, saras = flowing on) are river nymphs co-resident with mostly male gods for their pleasure in the rivers of their heavenly abode.[citation needed]
Africa
Mami Wata are water spirits venerated in west, central and southern Africa, and in the African diaspora in the Caribbean and parts of North and South America. They are usually female, but are sometimes male.[43] The Persian word "برایم بمان" or "maneli" means both "mermaid"[44] and "stay with me".[citation needed]
Other
The Neo-Taíno nations of the Caribbean identify a mermaid called Aycayia[45][46] with attributes of the goddess Jagua and the hibiscus flower of the majagua tree Hibiscus tiliaceus.[47] In modern Caribbean culture, there is a mermaid recognized as a Haitian vodou loa called La Sirene (lit. "the mermaid"), representing wealth, beauty and the orisha Yemaya.
Examples from other cultures are the jengu of Cameroon, the iara of Brazil and the Greek oceanids, nereids and naiads. The ningyo is a fishlike creature from Japanese folklore, and consuming its flesh bestows amazing longevity. Mermaids and mermen are also characters of Philippine folklore, where they are locally known as sirena and siyokoy respectively.[48] The Javanese people believe that the southern beach in Java is a home of Javanese mermaid queen Nyi Roro Kidul.[49]
Hoaxes
In the middle of the 17th century, John Tradescant the elder created a wunderkammer (called Tradescant's Ark) in which he displayed, among other things, a "mermaid's hand".[66] In the 19th century, P. T. Barnum displayed a taxidermal hoax called the Fiji mermaid in his museum. Others have perpetrated similar hoaxes, which are usually papier-mâché fabrications or parts of deceased creatures, usually monkeys and fish, stitched together for the appearance of a grotesque mermaid. In the wake of the 2004 tsunami, pictures of Fiji "mermaids" circulated on the Internet as supposed examples of items that had washed up amid the devastation, though they were no more real than Barnum's exhibit.[67]
Fiji Mermaid- This artifact in P.T. Barnum's museum was advertised as a gorgeous topless siren, but was actually the mummified corpse of an ape sewn to a fish.
'Mermaids- the New Evidence' By Animal Planet- A record number of viewers tuned in to watch Animal Planet's "documentary" on mermaids, but now audiences who believed that the humanoids actually exist are disappointed after the show turned out to be a hoax.
The fake documentary, "Mermaids: The New Evidence," drew in 3.6 million viewers, many of whom believed hook, line, and sinker that the facts presented were true. But Charlie Foley, the "Mermaids" creator, writer, executive producer and senior vice president of development for Animal Planet, spilled the truth earlier this week.
Fiji Mermaid- This artifact in P.T. Barnum's museum was advertised as a gorgeous topless siren, but was actually the mummified corpse of an ape sewn to a fish.
'Mermaids- the New Evidence' By Animal Planet- A record number of viewers tuned in to watch Animal Planet's "documentary" on mermaids, but now audiences who believed that the humanoids actually exist are disappointed after the show turned out to be a hoax.
The fake documentary, "Mermaids: The New Evidence," drew in 3.6 million viewers, many of whom believed hook, line, and sinker that the facts presented were true. But Charlie Foley, the "Mermaids" creator, writer, executive producer and senior vice president of development for Animal Planet, spilled the truth earlier this week.