|
|
1. |
Celtic Fairy Tales
-
By Joseph Jacobs (1892), e-text from the Internet Sacred Text Archive.
|
|
|
2. |
Celtic Folklore: The People of the Mounds
-
Articles on Celtic fairy lore and the Otherworld, published in Dalriada Magazine 1993.
|
|
|
3. |
Celtic Well
-
E-mail list for those interested in studying the evidence for ancient, medieval, and modern Celtic religious practices and beliefs.
|
|
|
4. |
Fairy Legends and Traditions
-
By Thomas Crofton Croker (1825), e-text from the Internet Sacred Text Archive.
|
|
|
5. |
Folklore of the Gaels of Ireland and the Highlands
-
Collection of Celtic folkbeliefs and superstitions.
|
|
|
6. |
Manx Fairy Tales
-
By Sophia Morrison (1911), e-text from a Manx Note Book.
|
|
|
7. |
More Celtic Fairy Tales
-
By Joseph Jacobs (1892), e-text from the Internet Sacred Text Archive.
|
|
|
8. |
Myths and Tales
-
Seven short tales from Scottish folklore.
|
|
|
9. |
Northumbrian Folk Tales
-
Traditional folk tales, songs, poems and rhymes from the northeast of England.
|
|
|
10. |
Scottish Fairy and Folk Tales
-
By Sir George Douglas (1901), at sacred-texts.com.
|
|
|
11. |
The Secret Common-Wealth
-
Robert Kirk's 17th century monograph devoted to Celtic fairy lore, at sacred-texts.com.
|
|
|
12. |
The Welsh Fairy Book
-
By W. Jenkyn Thomas (1907), e-text from the Internet Sacred Text Archive.
|
|
|
13. |
English Fairy Tales
-
By Flora Annie Steel (1918), e-text from the Baldwin Project.
|
|
|
14. |
Grim and Havelock
-
Dedicated to the legend of Grim and his foster-son Havelok, Danish founders of the British town of Grimsby.
|