google-site-verification: google1c6a56b8b78b1d8d.html Ancient Giants: Cherokee
Showing posts with label Cherokee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cherokee. Show all posts

Friday, March 4, 2016

Cherokee Indian Legend of Fairies or Little People

Cherokee Indian Legend of Fairies or Little People





Now and Long Ago-A History of the Marion County Area, 1969

  


   Another God invoked in the hunting songs is Tsu´l’kalĂ»´, or “Slanting Eyes,” a giant hunter who lives in one of the great mountains of the Blue Ridge and owns all the game. Others are the Little Men, probably the two Thunder boys; the Little People, the fairies who live in the rock cliffs; and even the De´tsata, a diminutive sprite who holds the place of our Puck. One unwritten formula, which could not be obtained correctly by dictation, was addressed to the “Red-Headed Woman, whose hair hangs down to the ground.”

Friday, July 25, 2014

Cherokee Indian Legends of an Ancient Giant Race

Cherokee Indian Legends of an Ancient Giant Race




Now and Long Ago-A History of the Marion County Area, 1969
   James Wafford, of the western Cherokee, who was born in Georgia in 1806, says that his grandmother, who must have been born about the middle of the last century, told him that she had heard from the old people that long before her time a party of giants had once come to visit the Cherokee. They were nearly twice as tall as common men, and had their eyes set slanting in their heads, so that the Cherokee called them Tsunil´ kalu´, "the Slant-eyed people," because they looked like the giant hunter Tsul´ kalu´. They said that these giants lived far away in the direction in which the sun goes down. The Cherokee received them as friends, and they stayed some time, and then returned to their home in the west.