Alp-luachra
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In
Celtic mythology Celtic mythology is the body of myths belonging to the Celtic peoples.Cunliffe, Barry, (1997) ''The Ancient Celts''. Oxford, Oxford University Press , pp. 183 (religion), 202, 204–8. Like other Iron Age Europeans, Celtic peoples followed a ...
, a Joint-eater, Just-halver or Alp-luachra (Ireland) is a type of
fairy A fairy (also fay, fae, fey, fair folk, or faerie) is a type of mythical being or legendary creature found in the folklore of multiple European cultures (including Celtic, Slavic, Germanic, English, and French folklore), a form of spirit, ...
who sits invisibly and consumes half of their victim's food.Briggs, Katharine (1976). ''An Encyclopedia of Fairies''. New York: Pantheon Books. p. 243 When a person falls asleep by the side of a spring or stream, the Alp-luachra appears in the form of a newt and crawls down the person's mouth, feeding off the food that they had eaten. In Robert Kirk's ''Secret Commonwealth of Fairies'', this creature feeds not on the food itself, but on the "pith or quintessence" of the food. A man haunted by a joint-eater will never grow fat, because the pith or quintessence of the food is consumed by the fairy.. People who consume newts are thought to be plagued in this way. In Douglas Hyde's collection of folk tales, '' Beside the Fire'', a farmer, who was starving from an Alp-luachra, was eventually rid of the fairy. He was instructed to eat large amounts of
salted meat Salt-cured meat or salted meat is meat or fish preserved or Curing (food preservation), cured with salt. Salting (food), Salting, either with edible salt, dry salt or brine, was a common method of preserving meat until the middle of the 20th ce ...
and, when he could eat no more, lie still with his mouth open just above the surface of a stream. After having been driven to thirst by the salt, the offspring of the Alp-luachra, and eventually the Alp-luachra mother herself, jumped into the water. Hence, to rid one's self of an Alp-Luachra, one should eat a large quantity of salt beef, without drinking anything, and then lie by a running stream with their mouth wide open; after a long wait, the Alp-Luachra will become thirsty, and will jump into the stream to drink.


See also

* Tapeworm


References

Aos Sí Fairies Fantasy creatures Irish folklore Irish legendary creatures Legendary amphibians Tuatha Dé Danann Fictional parasites and parasitoids {{Celt-myth-stub