Black Annis – Leicester
Black Annis [also called Black Anna, Black Anny, Black Agnes and Cat Anna or Cat Annis] is a blue faced hag who haunts the Dane Hills of Leicestershire in central England. She is very tall with tattered hair and long, yellow or white fangs. Some say that she has only one eye. She lived in a cave called Black Annis’ Bower, which she scraped out of the rock with her own sharp fingernails. In front of the cave was an oak where she hid in order to dash out and ambush lambs and young children who wandered too far from home, drink their blood, eat their flesh and hang their skins up in her cave to dry. She wore a skirt sewn from the skins of her human prey. Children around Leicester used to warn each other not to go our after dark, lest Black Annis should get them!
Until just after the First World War, her bower existed on a small natural outcrop on the Dane Hills, west of the city towards Glenfield. [It now lies under the Dane Hills housing estate.] A secret tunnel was reputed to join it to Leicester Castle. Black Annis also haunts the gateway of the castle, travelling in a secret underground tunnel from the Dane Hills, and sleeping in the castle cellars.
Black Annis is said to be the crone who confronted King Richard III on his way to the nearby Battle of Bosworth [1585]. His spurs struck a stone pillar on Leicester’s Bow Bridge and the hag declared that it would be his head that hit the post on the way back. After losing the battle, his naked body was thrown across the saddle of a horse and his head, hanging down as low as the stirrups, hit that very stone.[1] A tablet was put on the re-rebuilt bridge in the nineteenth century saying "his head was dashed and broken as a wise-woman had foretold, who before Richard’s going to battle being asked of his success said that where his spur struck his head would be broken".
Though she may have lost her bower, legends of Black Annis still had the power to frighten people in 1941, when an evacuee related the following story to the folklorist Ruth Tongue. [3] Three children collecting fire-wood began to get frightened as dusk fell, knowing that Black Annis only emerged after dark as ‘daylight would turn her to stone’. Sure enough, they heard a snuffling and, looking through the hole in their witch-stone [a naturally holed stone] saw Black Annis. Dropping their bundles of faggots, they fled as fast as they could. Black Annis stumbled on the dropped sticks, and cut her legs so badly that the blood flowed down them. Mumbling to herself, she caught up with them before their cottage door. Just as she was about to lay her hands on them, their father emerged with his axe, and hit her full in the face with it. She ran off shrieking ‘Blood! Blood!’ but just then the Christmas bells began to peal and she fell down dead.
In Leicester it was rumoured that Black Annis’s howling could be heard as far as five miles away and, when she ground her teeth the sound was so loud that all the people had time to lock and bar their doors. Precautions had to be taken against her attentions, and witch-herbs were tied above the windows to stop her reaching inside and grabbing the babies. This was why Leicester cottages only had one small window. She appeared in a Victorian Melodrama called ‘Black Anna’s Bower, or The Maniac of the Dane Hills’ a tale about the murder of the landlady of ‘The Blue Boar’.
At the Dane Hills every Easter Monday [known as Black Monday] the Mayor and the dignitaries set off for a ‘hare hunt’ at noon. Actually, the object of the hunt was a dead cat, soaked it in aniseed [the Cat Annis?], and tied it to the tail of a horse for a drag hunt, dragged from the Bower, through Leicester’s streets to the Mayor’s door. In later years, the hunt gave way to an annual event known as the Dane Hills Fair.
Black Annis may be connected with the other crone-like Annies and Annises found throughout Britain, such as the Scottish Gentle Annie (or Gentle Annis). Many hags are described as ‘blue faced’ such as Scotland’s Cailleach Bheur. These hags were once winter goddesses, their faces blue with cold, who brought in the time of cold, dissolution and death. It is likely that Black Annis is a crone aspect of Anu, or Danu, and that the bower was once the cave womb where she was worshipped. Some think she may be a local version of Brighid or Brigantia, or the dark mother goddess who took the souls of human children into her care. The Dane Hills [possibly from Danu] may have been the centre of her cult. If Black Annis was a winter hag, she would have had a summer form as a lovely maiden which is lost to us. However, her husband may have been Leicester’s Bel [‘Bright’], for whom the Bel fires are lit at Beltane [May Day]. Bel was a giant who boasted that he could reach Leicester in three large leaps. He mounted his sorrel mare at Mountsorrel and took one leap to Wanlip. The next leap burst the mare’s heart and harness at Birstall and the last leap, which was too much for horse and rider, killed them. They were buried at Belgrave, just north-east of the Dane hills.
Black Annis is the crone goddess who brings the winter; the dark lady holds the souls of the dead in her embrace. However, the wheel turns, and in the spring she transforms into the bright maiden, and her underworld tomb becomes the womb of rebirth. The hag goddess presides over the winding down of the year, dissolution, decay and conclusion
POEM
Where down the plains the winding pathway falls
From Glenfieldville to Leicester’s ancient walls
Nature or art with imitative power
Far in the glen hath placed Black Annis’ bower
Yea, though the false truth of former days
Foul not the path where falsehood artful lay
Black Annis held her solitary reign
The dread and wonder of the neighbouring plain
Tis said the soul of mortal man recoiled
To view Black Annis eye so fierce and wild
Vast talons foul with human flesh there grew
And features livid blue glared in her visage
Whilst her obscene waist,
Warm skins of human victims close embraced
JOHN HEYRICK 1742-97
Re: Black Annis – Leicester
This is incredible. I’ve been discussing Black Annis on another website. I found a Canadian book on pdf file that has a character named Anu Dubh….which is said was Black Annis. It also posed a link to Aine, the Irish goddess of spring.
I’ve also read pros and cons on the Danu/Anu connection.
Re: Black Annis – Leicester
Hi!
I’m glad to see that you found my post helpful. It sounds like you’re really interested in Black Annis.
I’ve also been researching the connection Danu/Anu. I’ve not come up with any definite conclusion but the more I read about her the more she seems like Nature/Earth Goddess but in the end it’s only theory.
Re: Black Annis – Leicester
I like Black Annis stories…that they have survived amazes me.
I do not hold that Danu is an earth goddess….I believe she’s the mother of all rivers. I found something very interesting. Danu in the IndoAryan religion (Hindu but older)..she is cut open and all rivers come from her body…and her children are the enemies of the Aryans. It was like reading the old Balor story on the Danann were acting the part of the Fomorii.
I think the ancient Europeans were influenced by the Egyptians into believing the earth was masculine and the sun traveled in a sky boat. Plus one of our presidents, Thomas Jefferson, has descendents and when the did an mtDNA test on him…it trailed back to a woman whose closest ancestors or kinsmen were in Egypt…and Thomas was a Welshman.
Still….I’m in love with old UK beliefs. Many I wish we still had.
Re: Black Annis – Leicester
Now that’s interesting. I’ve been looking more in the UK’s aspect of Black Annis and her connections and UK Folklore as whole but it looks like it’ll be worth finding out more about it in other cultures and countries.
Re: Black Annis – Leicester
Are you familar with the American author Laurell K Hamilton?
Black Annis was/is a character in her Merry Gentry series. I’ve been able to figure out that she is being used as one of the hags in the Bride myth of Scotland…and as an incarnation of Aine. I am waiting to find out if she’s really dead or not.
I’m not allowed to discuss mythology on her boards….used to…but now I’m not. Ms. Hamilton is Dianic Wiccan and it does get a wee bit frustrating sometimes since I am more Celtic pagan. heheheheeh
Re: Black Annis – Leicester
Unfortunately I’ve not familiar with Laurell K Hamilton. I think I’ll have to check her out. I’m glad to see that Black Annis has reached America though. I wasn’t expecting many People outside of Leicester, England (my home town) to have heard of her.
Re: Black Annis – Leicester
Laurell K Hamilton is a very good author, I am sure I must most if not all of her books. Check out the Anita Blake vampire hunter books to.
Re: Black Annis – Leicester
I went to the Library after I read these comment and borrowed an Anita Blake book. I couldn’t find the first book in the series but I picked up ‘The Killing Dance’ instead (for some reason as it’s not the first in the series) and I put a hold on ‘A Kiss of Shadows’ from the Merry Gentry series, so, I get it next when the book is returned.