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The Tylwyth Teg - Fair Folk of Wales are among the most feared and complex beings in Welsh folklore — the “Fair Family” said to dwell in mist, hills, lakes, and ancient paths across Wales. This episode of The Candlelight Historian explores the dark folklore of the Tylwyth Teg, their names, customs, changelings, time distortion, and why ordinary people feared encounters with them for centuries. Also check: • The Book That Ignited Witch Trials Across ... Imagine a mountain path at twilight. Not a road. Not a village. A high track between valleys, where mist coils around the heather and sound carries too far. The air feels wrong. The path seems longer than it should be. And somewhere — faintly — music drifts on the wind. In Welsh tradition, they were never called lightly. Names were chosen carefully. Flattering names. The Tylwyth Teg. Across Wales — from the Brecon Beacons to Snowdonia, from Carmarthenshire to the valleys of Glamorgan — these beings were not fairy-tale sprites. They were a hidden people, believed to live alongside humanity, bound by ancient rules and unforgiving laws. They abducted children. They led travellers astray. They bent time itself. This episode of The Candlelight Historian descends into the folklore of Wales’s liminal places - misty mountains, fairy rings, floating islands, burial mounds, sacred lakes, and ancient trees where the boundary between worlds thinned. From changelings left screaming in cradles… To music that stole years in a single dance… From fairy gold that turned to shells… To cattle that walked back into the lakes from which they came… We trace how belief in the Tylwyth Teg shaped daily behavior — how iron was placed across cradles, why certain paths were avoided at dusk, and why silence was often the only defence. Why were they called “fair” when they were feared? Why did mothers flatter their children’s abductors? Why did time behave differently in their presence? And why did belief in them survive industrial Wales? Drawing on medieval poetry, nineteenth-century folklore collections, dialect records, and oral testimony, this episode follows the Tylwyth Teg across Wales — alongside the Ellyllon, Coblynau, Gwyllion, and the Ladies of the Lakes — to uncover a belief system rooted in landscape, danger, and memory. This is not a story of castles or kings. It is the folklore of shepherds and miners. Of mothers guarding cradles. Of travellers who never came home. Of mist — and what walks within it. Light a candle… and mind the paths you take. Some doors do not close behind you. About This Channel: The Candlelight Historian explores the forgotten corners of British and Irish history — folklore, witchcraft, dark medicine, and the fears that shaped ordinary lives. All episodes are grounded in historical sources, archaeology, and documented belief. #TylwythTeg #WelshFolklore #britishfolklore #FairFolk #DarkHistory #Changelings #FairyLore #HiddenBeliefs #CelticFolklore #CandlelightHistorian #forgottenfears