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Cù-Sìth
The fairy hound of Scotland. A massive dark green dog, the size of a bull, with a coiled tail. It barks three times—if you hear the third bark before reaching safety, you die of terror.
Ancient - Present
Scotland
150+ witnesses
The Cù-Sìth (fairy dog) is a mythological hound from Scottish Highland folklore, a harbinger of death.
The Legend
According to documented folklore:
The Cù-Sìth:
- Is a massive fairy hound
- Hunts silently
- Barks only three times
- The third bark kills
- A death omen
Appearance
The Cù-Sìth appears as:
- Size of a young bull
- Dark green shaggy fur
- Coiled or braided tail
- Huge paws
- Glowing eyes
The Three Barks
Its deadly bark:
- The first bark is distant
- The second closer
- Before the third, reach safety
- Or die of terror
- No escape if heard
Purpose
The Cù-Sìth:
- Hunts for the fairy realm
- Takes souls to the Otherworld
- Particularly hunts women
- Nursing mothers especially
- To provide milk for fairy children
Behavior
How it hunts:
- Usually silent
- Moves in straight lines
- Leaves no tracks
- Only barks when closing in
- Cannot be outrun
Related Creatures
Similar to:
- Cŵn Annwn (Welsh)
- Black Shuck (English)
- Barghest (Yorkshire)
- Hellhounds worldwide