All Topics  
Changeling

 
Changeling

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Changeling



 
 
A Changeling is a creature found in Western European
Western Europe

Western Europe refers to the countries in the western most half of Europe. This concept has had different meanings, political and cultural as well as geographical issues have influenced the area....
 folklore
Folklore

Folklore is the body of expressive culture, including tales, music, dance, legends, oral history, proverbs, jokes, superstitions, customs, and so forth within a particular population comprising the traditions of that culture, subculture, or group ....
 and folk religion
Folk religion

Folk religion consists of beliefs, superstitions and rituals transmitted from generation to generation in a specific culture. It could be contrasted with an organized religion or historical religion in which founders, creed, theology and ecclesiastical organizations are present....
, it is typically described as being the offspring of a fairy
Fairy

A fairy is a type of mythological being or legendary creature, a form of spirit, often described as spirit#Metaphysical and metaphorical uses, supernatural or preternatural....
, troll
Troll

A troll is a fearsome member of a race of creatures from Norse mythology. Originally more or less the Nordic equivalents of giant , although often smaller in size, the different depictions have come to range from the fiendish giants ? similar to the ogres of England ? to a devious, more human-like folk of the wilderness, living underground...
, elf
Elf

An elf is a creature of Germanic mythology. The elves were originally thought of as a race of minor nature and fertility deity, who are often pictured as youthful-seeming men and women of great beauty living in forests and underground places and caves, or in wells and springs....
 or other legendary creature
Legendary creature

A legendary creature is a mythology or folklore creature ....
 that has been secretly left in the place of a human
Human

A human being, also human or man, is a member of a species of bipedalism primates in the family Hominidae . Mitochondrial DNA evidence indicates that modern humans originated in east Africa about 200,000 years ago....
 child. The apparent changeling could also be a stock, an enchanted piece of wood that would soon appear to grow sick and die.

A human child might be taken due to many factors: to act as a servant, the love of a human child, or malice
Malice

Malice may refer to:* Malice , a legal term describing the intent to harm* Malice or Jerry Tuite , American professional wrestler* Malice , half of the hip-hop duo Clipse...
.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Changeling'
Start a new discussion about 'Changeling'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


the Changeling, John Bauer, 1913
A Changeling is a creature found in Western European
Western Europe

Western Europe refers to the countries in the western most half of Europe. This concept has had different meanings, political and cultural as well as geographical issues have influenced the area....
 folklore
Folklore

Folklore is the body of expressive culture, including tales, music, dance, legends, oral history, proverbs, jokes, superstitions, customs, and so forth within a particular population comprising the traditions of that culture, subculture, or group ....
 and folk religion
Folk religion

Folk religion consists of beliefs, superstitions and rituals transmitted from generation to generation in a specific culture. It could be contrasted with an organized religion or historical religion in which founders, creed, theology and ecclesiastical organizations are present....
, it is typically described as being the offspring of a fairy
Fairy

A fairy is a type of mythological being or legendary creature, a form of spirit, often described as spirit#Metaphysical and metaphorical uses, supernatural or preternatural....
, troll
Troll

A troll is a fearsome member of a race of creatures from Norse mythology. Originally more or less the Nordic equivalents of giant , although often smaller in size, the different depictions have come to range from the fiendish giants ? similar to the ogres of England ? to a devious, more human-like folk of the wilderness, living underground...
, elf
Elf

An elf is a creature of Germanic mythology. The elves were originally thought of as a race of minor nature and fertility deity, who are often pictured as youthful-seeming men and women of great beauty living in forests and underground places and caves, or in wells and springs....
 or other legendary creature
Legendary creature

A legendary creature is a mythology or folklore creature ....
 that has been secretly left in the place of a human
Human

A human being, also human or man, is a member of a species of bipedalism primates in the family Hominidae . Mitochondrial DNA evidence indicates that modern humans originated in east Africa about 200,000 years ago....
 child. The apparent changeling could also be a stock, an enchanted piece of wood that would soon appear to grow sick and die.

A human child might be taken due to many factors: to act as a servant, the love of a human child, or malice
Malice

Malice may refer to:* Malice , a legal term describing the intent to harm* Malice or Jerry Tuite , American professional wrestler* Malice , half of the hip-hop duo Clipse...
. Most often it was thought that fairies exchanged the children. Changelings were said to feed on their mothers and to leave odd bruises in the back of their necks as a result. The feeding process could take weeks, until the mother was drained dry. Anything or anyone that prohibited the Changeling's nutrition
Nutrition

Nutrition is the provision, to cells and organisms, of the materials necessary to support life. Many common health problems can be prevented or alleviated with good nutrition....
 would be mercilessly killed. Some Norwegian tales tell that the change was made to prevent inbreeding, to give trolls and humans new blood, humans were given children with enormous strength as a reward. Simple charms, such as an inverted coat or open iron scissors left where the child sleeps, were thought to ward them off. The best way to get rid of a changeling is to threaten it with iron.

Identifying a changeling


Changelings would be identified by voracious appetite, malicious temper, difficulty in movement, and other unpleasant traits. Medieval chronicles recorded instances of this, which is one of the oldest known pieces of folklore about fairies. Changelings usually can be identified by a greenish tint to their skin. Changelings also hate shoes so they walk about barefoot as often as possible. They are very wise and possess vocabularies betraying vast intellect. Their hair is hopelessly tangled, no matter how many times you brush it, and grows very fast. It is said that if you cut a changeling's hair, it will have grown back the next morning. Their eyes and hair are usually earthen colors such as green and brown.

According to some legends, it is possible to detect changelings as they are much wiser than human children. When changelings are discovered in time, their parents must return them. In one tale of the Brothers Grimm
Brothers Grimm

The Brothers Grimm , Jakob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm , were Germans academics who were best known for publishing collections of folk tales and fairy tales and for their work in linguistics, relating to how the sounds in words shift over time ....
, there's an account of how a woman, who suspected that her child had been exchanged, started to brew beer
Beer

Beer is the world's oldest and most widely consumed alcoholic beverage and the third most popular drink overall after water and tea. It is produced by the brewing and Fermentation of starches, mainly derived from cereal?the most common of which is malted barley, although wheat, maize , and rice are widely used....
 in the hull of an acorn
Acorn

The acorn, or oak nut, is the nut of the oak tree . It is a nut , containing a single seed , enclosed in a tough, leathery shell, and borne in a cup-shaped cupule....
. The changeling uttered: "now I am as old as an oak
Oak

The term oak can be used as part of the common name of any of about 400 species of trees and shrubs in the genus Quercus , which are listed in the List of Quercus species, and some related genera, notably Lithocarpus....
 in the woods but I have never seen beer being brewed in an acorn"
, then disappeared.In Irish folk,tea brewed with foxglove will send the chaengling back.

Changelings are picky eaters unless offered something they like. They have pointed ears. They also grow slower than other humans. Compared to other children, Changelings tend to be extremely eccentric in personality and in clothing choices. As young adults, their strange traits will become harder and harder to conceal.

Purpose of a changeling

Some people believed that trolls would take unbaptized children. Once the child is baptized and therefore part of the Church
Roman Catholic Church

The Roman Catholic Church, officially known as the Catholic Church is the world's largest Christianity Ecclesia , representing over half of all Christians and one-sixth of the world population....
, the trolls can't take them. One belief is that trolls thought that being raised by humans was something very classy, and that they therefore wanted to give their own children a human upbringing.

Beauty in human children and young women, particularly blond hair, attracted the fairies.

In Scottish folklore, the children might be replacements for fairy children in the tithe to Hell
Teind

Teind is a Scots Language word for tithe meaning a tenth part of. In Scotland, a teind was a tithe derived from the produce of the land for the maintenance of the clergy....
; this is best known from the ballad of Tam Lin
Tam Lin

Tam Lin is the hero of a folklore legend originating from the Scottish Borders with England. The story revolves around fairy and mortal men....
.

Some folklorists believe that fairies were memories of inhabitants of various regions in Europe who had been driven into hiding by invaders. They held that changelings had actually occurred; the hiding people would exchange their own sickly children for the healthy children of the invaders.

In other folklore, the changelings are put in place of the child to feed off of the mother of the child. The kidnapped child then becomes the food source of the changlings mother. This is done for survival of their kind. Once the mother of the kidnapped child, and the changelings mother have drained the life from the mother and child, the changling and its mother begin to search for a new suitible food source.

Note: Some changelings might forget they are not human and proceed to live a human life. Changelings which do not forget, however, may later return to their fairy family, possibly leaving the human family without warning. As for the human child that was taken, he or she may stay with the fairy family forever.

Changelings in medieval folklore


Cornish

The Men-an-Tol
Mên-an-Tol

The M?n-an-Tol is a small formation of standing stones near the Madron-Morvah road in the Penwith area of Cornwall, United Kingdom . It is about 3 miles north west of Madron....
 stones in kernow / Cornwall are supposed to have a fairy
Fairy

A fairy is a type of mythological being or legendary creature, a form of spirit, often described as spirit#Metaphysical and metaphorical uses, supernatural or preternatural....
 or pixy
Pixie

Pixies are mythical creatures of folklore, considered to be particularly concentrated in the areas around Devon and Cornwall, suggesting some Celtic origin for the belief and name....
 guardian who can make miraculous cures. In one case a Changeling baby was put through the stone in order for the mother to get the real child back. Evil pixies had changed her child and the ancient stones were able to reverse their evil spell.

Ireland

In Ireland, looking at a baby with envy -- "over looking the baby" -- was dangerous, as it endangered the baby, who was then in the fairies' power. So too was admiring or envying a woman or man dangerous, unless the person added a blessing; the able-bodied and beautiful were in particular danger. Women were especially in danger in liminal states: being a new bride, or a new mother.

Putting a changeling in a fire would cause it to jump up the chimney and return the human child, but at least one tale recounts a mother with a changeling finding that a fairy woman came to her home with the human child, saying the other fairies had done the exchange, and she wanted her own baby. The tale of surprising a changeling into speech -- by brewing eggshells -- is also told in Ireland, as in Wales.

Belief in changelings endured in parts of Ireland until recent times; in 1895, Bridget Cleary
Bridget Cleary

Bridget Cleary was an Irish woman killed by her husband in 1895. Her death is notable for several peculiarities; the stated motive for the crime was her husband's belief that she had been abducted by fairies with a changeling left in her place; he claimed to have slain only the changeling....
 was killed by her husband who believed her to be a changeling.

Malta

The ritual impurity of the parturient mother and her child exposed them, according to traditional Maltese belief, to unusual danger especially during the first few days after birth. A changeling child (called mibdul, 'changed') was taken to St Julian's Bay, where a statue of the saint stands, and given a sand-bath. A cordial was also administered, in attempts to return the child.

Scandinavia

Since most beings from Scandinavian folklore
Scandinavian folklore

Scandinavian folklore is the folklore of Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Iceland, the Faroe, and the Finland Swedish.In Scandinavia the term 'folklore' is not often used in academic circles, instead terms such as Folketro or Folkesagn have been coined....
 are said to be afraid of iron
Iron

Iron is a chemical element with the symbol Fe and atomic number 26. Iron is a Group 8 element and period 4 element. Iron is lustrous and silvery in color....
, Scandinavia
Scandinavia

Scandinavia is a historical and geographical subregion in northern Europe that includes the Scandinavian Peninsula. It consists of the kingdoms of Norway, Sweden, and Denmark; some authorities also include Finland and some might even include Iceland....
n parents often placed an iron item such as a pair of scissors
Scissors

Scissors are hand operated cutting instruments, and for people without hands, there is also the option of using a specially designed foot operated style....
 or a knife
Knife

A knife is a handheld sharp-edged instrument consisting of a handle attached to a blade that is used for cutting. Knives were used at least Stone Age, as evidenced by the Oldowan tools....
 on top of an unbaptized infant's cradle. It was believed that if a human child was taken in spite of such measures, the parents could force the return of the child by treating the changeling cruelly, using methods such as whip
Whip

The word whip describes two basic types of tools:A long stick-like device, usually slightly flexible, with a small bit of leather or cord, called a "popper", on the end....
ping or even inserting it in a heat
Heat

In physics and thermodynamics, heat is any transfer of energy from one body or thermodynamic system to another due to a difference in temperature....
ed oven
Oven

An oven is an enclosed compartment for heating, baking or drying. It is most commonly used in cooking and pottery. Ovens used in pottery are also known as kilns....
. In at least one case, a woman was taken to court for having killed her child in an oven.

In one Swedish
Sweden

Sweden , officially the Kingdom of Sweden , is a Nordic countries on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe. Sweden has land borders with Norway to the west and Finland to the northeast, and it is connected to Denmark by the ?resund Bridge in the south....
 changeling tale, the human mother is advised to brutalize the changeling so that the trolls will return her son, but she refuses, unable to mistreat an innocent child despite knowing its nature. When her husband demands she abandons the changeling, she refuses, and he leaves her - whereupon he meets their son in the forest, wandering free. The son explains that since his mother had never been cruel to the changeling, so the troll mother had never been cruel to him, and when she sacrificed what was dearest to her, her husband, they had realized they had no power over her and released him.

In another Swedish fairy tale (which is depicted by the image), a princess
Princess

Princess, is the feminine form of prince . Most often, the term has been used for the consort of a prince, or her daughters.For many centuries, the title "princess" was not regularly used for a monarch's daughter, who might simply be called "Lady" or a non-English equivalent; Old English language had no female equivalent to "prince", "earl"...
 is kidnapped by trolls and replaced with their own offspring against the wishes of the troll mother. The changelings grow up with their new parents, but both find it hard to adapt: the human girl is disgusted by her future bridegroom, a troll prince
Prince

Prince, from the Latin root princeps, is a general term for a monarch, for a member of a monarch's or former monarch's family, and is a hereditary title in some members of Europe's highest nobility....
, whereas the troll girl is bored by her life and by her dull human future groom. Upset with the conditions of their lives, they both go astray in the forest, passing each other without noticing it. The princess comes to the castle
Castle

A castle is a defensive structure seen as one of the main symbols of the Middle Ages. The term has a history of scholarly debate surrounding its exact meaning, but it is usually regarded as being distinct from the general terms fort or fortress in that it describes a residence of a monarch or noble and commands a specific defensive territor...
 whereupon the queen
Queen regnant

A queen regnant is a qualifying reference to a female monarch possessing and exercising all of the monarchical powers of a ruler, in contrast to a "queen consort", who is the wife of a male reigning as monarch and who is without any official powers of state....
 immediately recognizes her, and the troll girl finds a troll woman who is cursing
Profanity

The original meaning of the adjective profane referred to items not belonging to the church, e.g. "The fort is the oldest profane building in the town, but the local monastery is older, and is the oldest sacred building," or "besides designing churches, he also designed many profane buildings"....
 loudly as she works. The troll girl bursts out that the troll woman is much more fun than any other person she has ever seen, and her mother happily sees that her true daughter has returned. Both the human girl and the troll girl marry
Marriage

Marriage is a social, spirituality, or law union of individuals. This union may also be called matrimony, while the ceremony that marks its beginning is usually called a wedding and the married status created is sometimes called wedlock....
 happily the very same day.

Scottish

Child ballad 40, The Queen of Elfan's Nourice
The Queen of Elfan's Nourice

"The Queen of Elfan's Nourice" or "The Queen of Elfland's Nourice" is Child ballad number 40, although fragmentary in form....
, depicts the abduction of a new mother, drawing on the folklore of the changelings. Although it is fragmentary, it contains the mother's grief and the Queen of Elfland's promise to return her to her own child if she will nurse the queen's child until it can walk..

Spain

In Asturias
Asturias

The Principality of Asturias is an autonomous communities of Spain within the kingdom of Spain, former Kingdom of Asturias in the Middle Ages....
 (North Spain) there is a legend about the Xana
Xana

The xana is a character found in Asturias mythology. Always female, she is a fairy nymph of extraordinary beauty believed to live in fountains, rivers, waterfalls or forested regions with pure water....
, a sort of nymph
Nymph

In Greek mythology, a nymph is any member of a large class of mythological entities in human form. They were typically associated with a particular location or landform....
 who used to live near rivers, fountains and lakes, sometimes helping travelers on their journeys. The Xanas were conceived as little female fairies with supernatural beauty. They could deliver babies, "xaninos," that were sometimes swapped with human babies in order to be baptized. The legend says that in order to distinguish a "xanino" from a human baby, some pots and egg shells should be put close to the fireplace; a "xanino" would say: "I was born one hundred years ago, and since then I have not seen so many egg shells near the fire!".

Wales

In Wales the changeling child (plentyn newid) initially resembles
Shapeshifting

Shapeshifting is a common theme in mythology and folklore, as well as in science fiction and fantasy. In its broadest sense, it is a :wikt:metamorphosis of a person or animal....
 the human it substitutes, but gradually grows uglier in appearance and behaviour: ill-featured, malformed, ill-tempered, given to screaming and biting. It may be of less than usual intelligence, but again is identified by its more than childlike wisdom and cunning.

The common means employed to identify a changeling is to cook a family meal in an eggshell
Brewery of Eggshells

Brewery of Eggshells is a Welsh fairy tale collected by Joseph Jacobs in his Celtic Fairy Tales....
. The child will exclaim, "I have seen the acorn before the oak, but I never saw the likes of this," and vanish, only to be replaced by the original human child. Alternatively, or following this identification, it is supposedly necessary to mistreat the child by placing it in a hot oven, by holding it in a shovel over a hot fire, or by bathing it in a solution of foxglove.

"Changelings" in the historical record

Real children were sometimes taken to be changelings by the superstitious, and therefore abused or murdered.

Two 19th century cases reflected the belief in changelings. In 1826, Anne Roche bathed Michael Leahy, a four-year-old boy unable to speak or stand, three times in the Flesk; he drowned the third time. She swore that she was merely attempting to drive the fairy out of him, and the jury acquitted her of murder. In the 1890s in Ireland
Ireland

Ireland is the List of islands by area in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world. It lies to the north-west of continental Europe and is surrounded by hundreds of islands and islet....
, Bridget Cleary
Bridget Cleary

Bridget Cleary was an Irish woman killed by her husband in 1895. Her death is notable for several peculiarities; the stated motive for the crime was her husband's belief that she had been abducted by fairies with a changeling left in her place; he claimed to have slain only the changeling....
 was killed by several people, including her husband and cousins, after a short bout of illness (probably pneumonia). Local storyteller Jack Dunne accused Bridget of being a fairy changeling. It is debatable whether her husband, Michael, actually believed her to be a fairy - many believe he concocted a 'fairy defence' after he murdered his wife in a fit of rage. The killers were convicted of manslaughter rather than murder, as even after the death they claimed that they were convinced they had killed a changeling, not Bridget Cleary..

Changelings in other countries

The ogbanje
Ogbanje

An Ogbanje is a term in Igbo mythology and was believed to be an evil spirit that would deliberately plague a family with misfortune, Its literal translation is "children who come and go"....
 (pronounced similar to "oh-BWAN-jeh") is a term meaning "child who comes and goes" among the Igbo people
Igbo people

Igbo people are an ethnic group living chiefly in southeastern Nigeria. They speak Igbo language, which includes various Igboid languages and dialects; today, a majority of them speak English language alongside Igbo as a result of British Empire....
 of eastern Nigeria
Nigeria

Nigeria, officially the Federal Republic of Nigeria, is a federation constitutional republic comprising States of Nigeria and one Federal Capital Territory, Nigeria....
. When a woman would have numerous children either stillborn or die early in infancy, the traditional belief was that it was a malicious spirit that was being reincarnated over and over again to torment the afflicted mother. One of the most commonly-proscribed methods for ridding one's self of an ogbanje was to find its iyi-uwa
Iyi-uwa

An Iyi-uwa is an object from Otu/Otwa or Igbo mythology that binds the spirit of a dead child to the world, causing it to return and haunt the mother....
, a buried object that ties the evil spirit to the mortal world, and destroy it.

Many scholars now believe that ogbanje stories were attempting to explain children with sickle-cell disease
Sickle-cell disease

Sickle-cell disease or sickle-cell anaemia is a life-long blood disorder characterized by red blood cells that assume an abnormal, rigid, sickle shape....
, which is endemic to West Africa
West Africa

West Africa or Western Africa is the westernmost region of the African continent. Geopolitically, the United Nations subregion of Western Africa includes the following 16 countries distributed over an area of approximately 5 million square km:...
 and afflicts around one-quarter of the population. Even today, and especially in areas of Africa lacking medical resources, infant death is common for children born with severe sickle-cell disease.

The similarity between the European changeling and the Igbo ogbanje is striking enough that Igbos themselves often translate the word into English as "changeling."

Aswangs
Aswang

An Aswang is a Philippine mythical creatures in Philippines folklore. The aswang is an inherently evil vampire-like creature and is the subject of a wide variety of myths and stories, the details of which often vary greatly....
, a kind of ghoul
Ghoul

A ghoul is a mythological monster from Arabian mythology that dwells in burial grounds and other uninhabited places. The English language word comes from the Arabic name for the creature: ????? ghul, which literally means "demon"....
 from the Philippines
Philippines

The Philippines, officially known as the Republic of the Philippines, is a country in Southeast Asia with Manila as its capital city. It comprises 7,107 islands in the western Pacific Ocean....
, are also sometimes said to leave behind duplicates of their victims made of plant matter. Like the stocks of European fairy folklore, the Aswang's wood duplicates soon appear to sicken and die.

Changelings in the modern world


Neurological differences

The reality behind many changeling legends was often the birth of deformed
Deformation

In materials science, deformation is a change in the shape or size of an object due to an applied force . This can be a result of tensile strength forces, compressive strength forces, Simple shear, bending or torsion ....
 or developmentally disabled children. Among the diseases with symptoms that match the description of changelings in various legends are spina bifida
Spina bifida

Spina bifida is a developmental birth defect involving the neural tube: incomplete closure of the embryonic neural tube results in an incompletely formed spinal cord....
, cystic fibrosis
Cystic fibrosis

Cystic Fibrosis is a Genetic disorder affecting the exocrine glands of the lungs, liver, pancreas, and intestines, causing progressive disability due to multisystem failure....
, PKU
Phenylketonuria

Phenylketonuria is an Dominance genetic disorder characterized by a deficiency in the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase . This enzyme is necessary to metabolize the amino acid phenylalanine to the amino acid tyrosine....
, progeria
Progeria

Progeria is an extremely rare genetic condition where symptoms resembling aspects of Senescence are manifested at an early age. About 1 in 8 million babies are born with this condition, and most affected children usually die at around age 13, although many have been known to live into their late teens and early twenties....
, Down syndrome
Down syndrome

Down syndrome, Down's syndrome, or trisomy 21 is a chromosomal disorder caused by the presence of all or part of an extra chromosome 21 ....
, homocystinuria
Homocystinuria

Homocystinuria, also known as Cystathionine beta synthase deficiency, is an inherited disorder of the metabolism of the amino acid methionine, often involving cystathionine beta synthase....
, Williams syndrome
Williams syndrome

Williams syndrome is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder caused by a deletion of about 26 genes from the long arm of chromosome 7. It is characterized by a distinctive, "elfin" facial appearance, along with a low nasal bridge; an unusually cheerful demeanor and ease with strangers; mental retardation coupled with unusual language skills; a...
, Hurler syndrome
Hurler syndrome

Hurler syndrome, also known as mucopolysaccharidosis type I , Hurler's disease or gargoylism, is a genetic disorder that results in the buildup of mucopolysaccharides due to a deficiency of alpha-L iduronidase, an enzyme responsible for the degradation of mucopolysaccharides in lysosomes....
, Hunter syndrome
Hunter syndrome

Hunter syndrome, or mucopolysaccharoidosis Type II, is a lysosomal storage disease caused by a deficient enzyme, iduronate-2-sulfatase . The syndrome is named after physician Charles A....
, and cerebral palsy
Cerebral palsy

Cerebral palsy is an umbrella term encompassing a group of non-progressive illness, non-Infectious diseases conditions that cause physical disability in Human development ....
. The greater proneness of boys to birth defect correlates to the belief that boy babies were more likely to be taken.

As noted, it has been hypothesized that the changeling legend may have developed, or at least been used, to explain the peculiarities of children who did not develop normally, probably including all sorts of developmental delays and abnormalities. In particular, it has been suggested that children with autism
Autism

Autism is a Neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by impaired social interaction and communication, and by restricted and repetitive behavior....
 would be likely to be labeled as changelings or elf-children due to their strange, sometimes inexplicable behavior. This has found a place in autistic culture
Sociological and cultural aspects of autism

Sociological and cultural aspects of autism come into play with recognition of autism, approaches to its support services and therapies, and how autism affects how we define personhood....
. Some high-functioning autistic adults have come to identify with changelings (or other replacements, such as aliens) for this reason and their own feeling of being in a world where they don’t belong and of practically not being the same species as the "normal" people around them. In the book The Stolen Child, Keith Donohue talks about the life of a changeling from the point of view of two boys, one of which was evidently autistic.

Changelings in popular culture

In Episode 12, Season 3
List of So Weird episodes

The following is an episode list for the Disney Channel Original Series So Weird. Over a period of three years and three seasons, So Weird has produced 65 total episodes....
 of So Weird
So Weird

So Weird is a television series shot in Vancouver that aired on the Disney Channel as a midseason replacement from January 18, 1999 to September 28, 2001....
, titled "Changeling", Annie and the boys are stuck babysitting a changeling.

The Star Trek
Star Trek: The Original Series

Star Trek is a science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry that aired from September 8, 1966 to September 2, 1969. Though the original series was titled simply Star Trek, it has acquired the retronym Star Trek: The Original Series to distinguish it from the spinoffs that followed, and from the Star Trek fi...
 episode "The Changeling", Captain Kirk
James T. Kirk

James Tiberius Kirk is a character in the fictional Star Trek media franchise. First portrayed by William Shatner as the principal protagonist in the Star Trek: The Original Series, Kirk also appears in the Star Trek: The Animated Series, the first seven Star Trek movies, and in numerous books, comics, and video games....
 and the crew of the USS Enterprise
USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)

The USS Enterprise is a starship in the Star Trek media franchise. The program depicts its crew's mission "to explore strange new worlds; to seek out new life and new civilizations; to boldly go where no man has gone before" under the command of Captain James T....
 must outwit Nomad, an indestructible planet-destroying space probe. Though the probe refers to itself as "Nomad", it is neither the same design nor programming as the original Earth
Earth

Earth is the third planet from the Sun. Earth is the largest of the terrestrial planets in the Solar System in diameter, mass and density. It is also referred to as the World and Wiktionary:Terra.Note that by International Astronomical Union convention, the term "Terra" is used for naming extensive land masses, rather...
-based deep space
Deep Space

Deep Space may refer to:In Star Trek:* Battle of Deep Space Nine, the first major battle of the Dominion War* Deep Space Nine, space station in the fictional Star Trek universe...
 probe.

In Episode 2, Season 3 of Supernatural
Supernatural (TV series)

Supernatural is an American drama-Horror fiction television series starring Jared Padalecki as Sam Winchester and Jensen Ackles as Dean Winchester, brothers who hunt demons and other figures of the paranormal....
, titled "The Kids Are Alright", Sam and Dean discover that many of the neighborhood children are actually changelings, following several mysterious deaths in the neighborhood. In this episode the changelings are controlled by a mother changeling who feeds on the kidnapped children.

In the 1980 movie The Changeling (film)
The Changeling (film)

The Changeling is a 1980 in film horror film directed by Peter Medak and starring George C. Scott and Trish Van Devere . The story is based upon events experienced by writer Russell Hunter while he was living in the Henry Treat Rogers Mansion of Denver, Colorado....
, George C. Scott's character investigates the mystery of a child ghost.

The trading card game Magic: The Gathering
Magic: The Gathering

Magic: The Gathering is a collectible card game created by mathematics professor Richard Garfield and introduced in 1993 by Wizards of the Coast....
 has a block named Lorwyn
Lorwyn

Lorwyn is the 66th Magic: The Gathering set, 43rd expert level set, and the first set in the Lorwyn Block, released in October 2007....
 which is based heavily on European folklore, and features changelings. In a nod to their shapeshifting abilities their cards can become any creature type, and include a card called , referring to how they are switched with children.

Multiple roleplaying games are also set in an environment featuring changelings, such as White Wolf's
White Wolf

White Wolf is a publisher of role-playing games, notably the World of Darkness.White Wolf may also refer to:...
 popular Changeling: The Dreaming
Changeling: The Dreaming

Changeling: The Dreaming was part of White Wolf, Inc.'s original "World of Darkness" role playing game line. Player characters are changelings, fairy souls reborn into human bodies, a practice begun by the fae to protect themselves as magic vanished from the world....
 and the recent Changeling: The Lost
Changeling: The Lost

Changeling: The Lost is the fifth supplementary role-playing game line set in the World_of_Darkness#World_of_Darkness_.28WoD.29_or_.28nWoD.29. It is published by White Wolf, Inc....
.

A changeling appeared in Mike Mignola
Mike Mignola

Mike Joseph Mignola is an United States comic book artist and writer, famous for creating the comic book series Hellboy for Dark Horse Comics....
's comic book short story Hellboy: The Corpse. A changeling also appeared in the first Courtney Crumrin
Courtney Crumrin

'Courtney Crumrin' is an independent comic book series written and illustrated by Ted Naifeh and released through Oni Press.The series is ongoing and consisted of 12 comics compiled into three books entitled Courtney Crumrin and the Night Things, Courtney Crumrin and the Coven of Mystics, and Courtney Crumrin in the Twilight Kin...
 mini-series.

In the 2006 film, Pan's Labyrinth
Pan's Labyrinth

Pan's Labyrinth is a 2006 in film Spanish films of 2006 Spanish language fantasy film written and directed by Mexico film-maker Guillermo del Toro....
, the young heroine of the story is implied to be a changeling. Whether she is indeed magical or simply a child with an active imagination is left to interpretation of the viewer, but many "real world" elements of the story are only explainable through magic.

In Tithe: A Modern Faerie Tale by Holly Black, the protagonist is revealed to be a faerie changeling. In a later book, Kay returns her human counterpart to her mother.

Jim Morrison wrote and performed the song "The Changeling" that was released as the first track on the final album LA Woman prior to his death.

Jim Butcher's series "The Dresden Files" contains characters called changelings who are children of humans and fairies or humans and trolls. The characters must choose which of their parents to take after, and seem more likely to lead supernatural lives due to their awareness of the magical world.

In 1982, Toyah released the album The Changeling.

The metaphoric meaning of Changeling is the foundation of the 2008 film of the same name starring Angelina Jolie
Angelina Jolie

Angelina Jolie is an American film actor and a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador for the UNHCR. She has been cited as one of the world's most beautiful women and her off-screen life is widely reported....
 and directed by Clint Eastwood
Clint Eastwood

Clinton "Clint" Eastwood, Jr. is an American actor, film director, film producer and composer. He is known for his tough guy, anti-hero acting roles in Action films and western films, particularly in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s....
. The film is based on the true story of a mother whose child was kidnapped and then replaced with an impostor by the Los Angeles Police Department (hence the "Changeling" metaphor) in order to cover up their incompentence in finding the missing child.

Literary uses

The changeling theme has frequently appeared in literature, especially in the genres of fairy tale and fantasy. Notable 20th and 21st century appearances of changelings in literature include the following:
  • Outside Over There a children's story by Maurice Sendak
    Maurice Sendak

    Maurice Bernard Sendak is an American writer and illustrator of children's literature who is best known for his book Where the Wild Things Are, published in 1963....
    , in which goblins replace Ida's baby sister with a changeling made of stone.
  • The Stolen Child
    The Stolen Child

    "The Stolen Child" is a poem by William Butler Yeats, published in 1889 in The Wanderings of Oisin and Other Poems.The poem was written in 1886 in literature and is considered to be one of Yeats' more notable early poems....
     a poem by William Butler Yeats
    William Butler Yeats

    File:William Butler Yeat by George Charles Beresford.jpgWilliam Butler Yeats was an Irish people poet and dramatist and one of the foremost figures of 20th century in literature....
    , is about a boy replaced by a changeling. The poem was the inspiration for the 2006 novel of the same name by Keith Donohue
    Keith Donohue

    Keith Donohue is an United States novelist. His acclaimed 2006 novel The Stolen Child, about a changeling, was inspired by the William Butler Yeats poem of the same name....
    .
  • The Changeling (1916), poem by Charlotte Mew (1869-1928). Written from the point of view of a changeling.
  • The Broken Sword (1954) by Poul Anderson
    Poul Anderson

    Poul William Anderson was an American science fiction author who wrote during a Golden Age of Science Fiction of the genre. Anderson also authored several works of fantasy....
     A mortal child is exchanged for a changeling. Although near identical in appearance to the original, the changeling is a moody loner prone to fits of the berserker
    Berserker

    Berserkers were Norsemen warriors who wore coats of wolf or bear skin and were commonly understood to have fought in an uncontrollable rage or trance of fury, hence the modern word berserk....
    gang.
  • Changeling (1981) by Roger Zelazny
    Roger Zelazny

    Roger Joseph Zelazny was an United States writer of fantasy and science fiction short story and novels. He won the Nebula award three times and the Hugo award six times , including two Hugos for novels: the serialized novel ...And Call Me Conrad and the novel Lord of Light ....
    . Novel describing the adventures of both changelings, maladapted in their respective new worlds.
  • The Iron Dragon's Daughter
    The Iron Dragon's Daughter

    The Iron Dragon's Daughter is a 1993 novel by writer Michael Swanwick that combines fantasy and science fiction. The dark and nihilistic tale follows Jane, a changeling girl who slaves at a dragon factory, building part-magical, part-cybernetic monsters that are used as jet fighters; until she crosses paths with an old, rusted dragon na...
     (1993) by Michael Swanwick
    Michael Swanwick

    Michael Swanwick is an United States science fiction author. Based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, he began publishing in the early 1980s....
    . Jane, the heroine, is a changeling who was stolen by the fairies to work in a factory.
  • The Moorchild
    The Moorchild

    The Moorchild is a novel by Eloise McGraw, centering on the life of a changeling girl in Ireland and drawing heavily from Irish people and European folklore about changelings, leprechauns and fairy....
     (1997) by Eloise McGraw
    Eloise McGraw

    'Eloise Jarvis McGraw' was an author of Children's literature and young adult novels. She also wrote an adult novel called Pharaoh . She was awarded the Newbery Honor three times in three different decades, for her novels Moccasin Trail , The Golden Goblet , and The Moorchild ....
    . The central protagonist of this Newbery Honor-winning novel is an inept fae who is forced to become a changeling.
  • Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister
    Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister

    Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister is a novel by Gregory Maguire, retelling the tale of Cinderella through the eyes of her "ugly stepsisters." In 2002, the book was produced into a TV movie of the same name, directed by Gavin Millar....
     (1999) by Gregory Maguire
    Gregory Maguire

    Gregory Maguire is an United States author. He is the author of the novels Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West, Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, and many other novels for adults and children....
    . Clara is believed to be a changeling.
  • Tithe : A Modern Faerie Tale
    Tithe : A Modern Faerie Tale

    Tithe: A Modern Faerie Tale is a young adult fantasy novel by Holly Black, author of the Spiderwick Chronicles. It was first published in 2002 by Simon & Schuster....
     (2002) by Holly Black
    Holly Black

    Holly Black n?e Riggenbach is an American writer and editor, best known for authoring Spiderwick, a series of children's fantasy books she created with illustrator Tony DiTerlizzi....
    . The protagonist, Kaye, discovers that she is a changeling glamoured to look like a human.
  • Low Red Moon (2003), "So Runs the World Away", "The Dead and the Moonstruck" (both in To Charles Fort, With Love
    To Charles Fort, With Love

    To Charles Fort, With Love is a short-story collection by fantasist Caitlin R. Kiernan, published by Subterranean Press in 2005. As the author explains in the preface, many of these stories were inspired by the writings of Charles Fort , and many of them have a Lovecraftian flavor....
    , 2005), and Daughter of Hounds
    Daughter of Hounds

    Daughter of Hounds is a 2007 dark fantasy novel by Caitl?n R. Kiernan about the existence of a secret subterranean race of ghouls, set in New England....
     (2007) by Caitlín R. Kiernan
    Caitlin R. Kiernan

    Caitl?n Rebekah Kiernan is the author of many science fiction and dark fantasy works, including six novels, many comic books, more than one hundred published short stories, novellas, and Vignette s, and numerous scientific papers....
    . Changelings are referred to as the Children of the Cuckoo and are raised to serve a subterranean race of werewolf-like creatures called the ghul or the Hounds of Cain.
  • The War of the Flowers
    The War of the Flowers

    The War of the Flowers is a fantasy novel by Tad Williams about a Rock and roll who is drawn into a magical world while reading a book....
     (2003) by Tad Williams
    Tad Williams

    Robert Paul "Tad" Williams is the author of several fantasy and science fiction novels, including Tailchaser's Song, the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn series, the Otherland series, and The War of the Flowers....
    . Theo is revealed to be a changeling.
  • The Stolen Child (2006) by Keith Donohue. Alternates viewpoints between a changeling in his new life, and the stolen boy Henry Day's new life as a changeling.
  • Stones Unturned (2006), third book in The Menagerie
    The Menagerie (books)

    The Menagerie is a dark fantasy novel series written by Christopher Golden and Thomas E. Sniegoski. The Menagerie is made up of legendary characters, each with his or her own powers and mystical, mythical origins....
     series by Christopher Golden
    Christopher Golden

    Christopher Golden is an United States author of horror fiction, fantasy, and Thriller novels for adults, teens, and young readers....
     and Thomas E. Sniegoski
    Thomas E. Sniegoski

    Thomas E. Sniegoski is a novelist, comic book writer and pop culture journalist....
    . Principal character Danny Ferrick is a changeling.
  • Faery Baby (2006) by Lin Spicer. The main character Faery Baby is swapped with a human child as she experiences 'failure to thrive'. Her name is later turned to Fae. Her parents were Titania and Oberon who reluctantly switched her.
  • In The Witch's Boy by Michael Gruber, an ugly baby boy by the name of Lump was left at a witch's doorstep calling it "the devil's boy." the witch raised the boy as her own and it was almost the reverse process of the changeling.
  • Poison (2006) by Chris Wooding
    Chris Wooding

    Chris Wooding is a United Kingdom writer born in Leicester, England and now living in London. His first book, Crashing, which he wrote at the age of nineteen, was published in 1998 when he was twenty-one....
    . The main character, Poison, sets out on a journey to find her little sister Azalea, who is swapped for a changeling.
  • Changelings (2006) by Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough. The two main characters, Ronan and Murel, are both changelings who are able to transform into seals.
  • Faerie Tale by Raymond E. Feist (1988) The discovery of a fairie mound in upstate New York leads to dangerous contact between the human and fairie worlds, including a changeling exchange.


See also

  • Fairy
    Fairy

    A fairy is a type of mythological being or legendary creature, a form of spirit, often described as spirit#Metaphysical and metaphorical uses, supernatural or preternatural....
  • Brood parasite
    Brood parasite

    Brood parasites are organisms that use the strategy of brood-parasitism, a kind of kleptoparasitism found among birds, fish or insects, involving the manipulation and use of host individuals either of the same or different species to raise the young of the brood-parasite....
  • Korrigan
    Korrigan

    In Brittany Celtic mythology, a Korrigan is a fairy or dwarf-like spirit. The word means "small-dwarf". Their name change according to the place....
  • Abiku
    Abiku

    Abiku in Yoruba mythology, abi, "that which possesses iku," "death"; hence, "predestined to death" is a word used to mean the spirits of children who die before reaching puberty; a child who dies before twelve years of age being called an Abiku, and the spirit, or spirits, who caused the death being also called Abiku.....


External links