Black Annis

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Black Annis is a bogeyman figure in English folklore. She is imagined as a blue-faced crone or witch with iron claws and a taste for human (especially child) flesh. She is said to haunt the countryside of Leicestershire, living in a cave in the Dane Hills.

She supposedly goes out onto the glens at night looking for unsuspecting children and lambs to eat, then hangs their skins around her waist. She would reach inside houses to snatch people, which was the professed reason why houses in that area had small windows. Legend has it that she used her iron claws to dig into the side of a sandstone cliff, making herself a home there which is known as Black Annis's Bower.[citation needed]

This legend is of disputed origin. Some say it is based on a Fifteenth century hermit named Agnes Scott, while others say it is much older and probably Celtic in origin, based on a Christian demonisation of a Celtic goddess known variously as Aine, Annis, Ana, Anu, Dana and Danu.[citation needed]

[edit] In popular culture

In his run on Doom Patrol, Scottish comics writer Grant Morrison made a monstrous figure with the same name one of the superpowered "alters" of his character Crazy Jane, who suffers from multiple personality disorder. This version of Black Annis is a blue-skinned, red-eyed, psychopath with sharp iron claws growing out of her knuckles.

Black Annis made a brief appearance in the short story "London Falling", which was published in the comic book 2000AD.

"Black Annis" is also the name of a song by Antje Duvekot. A different song of the same name, by Spiral Dance, is about Black Annis being misunderstood as an evil witch.

In the Dungeons & Dragons role playing game the annis hag is a powerful monstrous humanoid.

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