Irish Central

Some fun facts about Leprechaun­s, Ireland's most famous legend

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IrishCentr­al Staff

Belief in leprechaun­s and other magical creatures was once widespread in Ire‐ land - here are some facts about Ire‐ land's most famous mythical creature! In Ireland, leprechaun­s serve as a moral‐ ity tale figure, whose legend warns against greed and the folly of trying to get rich quick.

Luchorpán

According to the book "The Element En‐ cyclopedia of Magical Creatures" by Jo‐ hn and Caitlin Matthews, the leprechaun legend can be traced back to eighthcent­ury tales of water spirits called "lu‐ chorpán," meaning small body. The leg‐ end eventually evolved into a mischie‐ vous household fairy said to haunt cel‐ lars and drink heavily. Leprechaun­s are shoemakers. Some re‐ searchers claim that the word lep‐ rechaun came from the Irish 'leath bhro‐ gan,' meaning shoemaker, said to be the sprites' main vocation.

While the Irish banshee can be identified by a mournful wail, leprechaun­s are rec‐ ognized by the tap-tap-tapping of a tiny cobbler hammer, driving nails into shoes, that announces they are near. In his collection of Irish fairy and folk tales, W.B. Yeats offered an 18th-cen‐ tury poem by William Allingham titled "The Lepracaun; Or, Fairy Shoemaker." It describes the tapping sound of the sprite:

"Lay your ear close to the hill.

Do you not catch the tiny clamour, Busy click of an elfin hammer, Voice of the Lepracaun singing shrill As he merrily plies his trade?"

Wishes

If you happen to come across a lep‐ rechaun, be sure to hold on to him. Ac‐ cording to Irish legends, people lucky enough to capture a leprechaun can barter his freedom for three wishes. But dealing with a leprechaun can be a tricky propositio­n.

In her encycloped­ia "Spirits, Fairies,

Leprechaun­s, and Goblins," folklorist Carol Rose offers a typical tale of lep‐ rechaun trickery: "a man managed to get a leprechaun to show him the bush in the field where his treasure was located. "Having no spade [shovel], the man marked the tree with one of his red garters, then kindly released the sprite and went for a spade. Returning almost instantly he found that every one of the numerous trees in the field sported a red garter!"

What do leprechaun­s look like?

The 1825 book "Fairy Legends" noted that "Leprechaun­s seem to be entirely male and solitary. They are often de‐ scribed as bearded old men dressed in green and wearing buckled shoes. Sometimes they wear a pointed cap or hat and may smoke a pipe." Leprechaun­s weren't always dressed in green. Early tales of the creatures re‐ ported red clothing.

One of the most recognizab­le lep‐ rechauns in popular culture is Lucky the Leprechaun, the mascot of the General Mills breakfast cereal Lucky Charms. On the other end of the pop culture spectrum, you have the homicidal Lub‐ dan from the "Leprechaun" hor‐ ror/comedy film series.

And of course, one of the most famous mascots in US sports is the Leprechaun who cheers on the Fighting Irish at the University of Notre Dame. *Originally published in2013.Updated in2024.

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