Showing posts with label babaylan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label babaylan. Show all posts

Monday, September 30, 2024

Kaliwa and Kanan in Filipino oral mythology

 



In Philippine mythology, the terms Kaliwa and Kanan are often used as euphemisms to describe the moral alignment of mythical creatures and practitioners of magic. These terms categorize beings and magic users into two broad groups: Kaliwa, sometimes called Itim representing those associated with evil or harmful magic, and Kanan, sometimes called Puti referring to those who embody goodness and benevolence. This duality highlights the ongoing struggle between good and evil forces in Filipino folklore, a tradition still alive and vibrant today.

The Kaliwa: Evil Beings and Dark Magic Users



The term Kaliwa, in mythology meaning "left," is used to refer to malevolent beings and practitioners of dark magic. It encompasses a wide variety of fearsome creatures, spirits, and sorcerers whose powers are often employed to harm or deceive humans. Some of the most infamous beings in the Kaliwa group include:

1. Aswang:

Aswang


The Aswang is the most feared creature in Philippine folklore. It is a term used for various supernatural beings known for their malicious intent, shape-shifting abilities, and predatory nature. They often prey on the vulnerable, such as pregnant women and children. Variants of Aswang include:

  • Manananggal: A winged creature that can sever its upper body to fly in search of human prey, particularly pregnant women.
  • Tiktik: A bird-like creature that assists the Aswang in locating its victims by producing eerie sounds.
  • Sigbin: A creature that resembles a cross between a dog and a goat, said to walk backward and feed on the blood of its victims.
  • Gabunan
  • Bangkilan
  • Bonggo
  • Wak-wak
  • Ekek
  • Bal-Bal
  • Ebwa
  • Abwak
  • Asbo
  • Awok
  • Wak-wak
  • Uwak-uwak
  • Kiwig
  • Mangalo
  • Yawa
  • Iwig
  • Kiwig
Bangkilan

Gabunan


2. Dalaketnon:

Dalaketnon

Dalaketnon


The Dalaketnon are coined as evil Engkantos (enchanted beings) who inhabit large trees, especially balete or dalakit trees. They are often depicted as handsome beautiful yet dangerous creatures who use their charm to deceive and abduct humans, dragging them into their mystical world where time passes differently. Humans taken by Dalaketnon are often enslaved or never seen again.

3. Manbabarang:



A Manbabarang is a sorcerer who practices a form of dark magic involving the use of insects or other creatures to bring sickness and death to their enemies. They use malevolent spirits and hexes to possess or curse their victims, causing immense suffering.

4. Manlalason:



The Manlalason specializes in poison magic. They use toxic substances and enchantments to harm or kill others. Their methods involve slow-acting poisons that bring about sickness, suffering, and death.

5. Mangkukulam:



A Mangkukulam is a witch or sorcerer skilled in casting curses and hexes. They are feared for their ability to cause illness or misfortune through ritualistic practices, using wax dolls or incantations to harm their victims.

6. Mansisilat:



The Mansisilat is a master of deception and illusions. They use their magic to manipulate the minds of their targets, creating confusion, fear, and destruction. They are known to use their powers to tear apart relationships, families, and communities.

These beings and practitioners of dark magic often strike fear into the hearts of the people, with many stories serving as warnings to avoid disrespecting nature, disobeying elders, or wandering alone at night.

7. Tamawo:

Tamawo


The Tamawo are a race of  albino-like enchanted beings in Philippine mythology, often linked to the darker side of the supernatural. They are said to have fair or pale skin the Tamawo are often depicted as dangerous and deceptive, using their allure to lure humans, especially those who are greedy or disrespectful towards nature, into their domain. They are notorious for abducting humans, particularly women and children, taking them into their otherworldly homes, where time flows differently. In some stories, those who are taken by the Tamawo rarely return, and if they do, they are forever changed

8. Pangantohan (Dark Soothsayers):



The Pangantohan are a form of soothsayers or fortune tellers in Philippine mythology, but unlike benign seers, they are often associated with the Kaliwa, as they use their powers for selfish or harmful purposes. These practitioners have the ability to foresee the future, manipulate destiny, or divine hidden knowledge, but they are feared because their insights frequently lead to misfortune, curses, or other ill events.

Often sought by those who want to harm others or gain an unfair advantage, the Pangantohan are masters of dark omens, foretelling disaster or death and offering ways to cause or avoid such fates—for a price.

9. Engkantong Itim: 

Dark skinned, dark souled Engkanto who cause harm and misfortune sometimes called Ituman or Engkanto Negro 

Itim na Engkanto - Mga engkanto na nagpapakita bilang mga anino o mga itim na nilalang. Mga maligno na mapanakit at mapaminsala. Sila ay tinatawag na Engkanto Negro o mga itim na elemento. Nagpapkita sa mga tao at nanahan Ang mga engkantong itim sa malalaking bahay. Mapanakit at nakakatakot. Ang mga itim na Espiritu ay minsan sumasapi sa mga taong kanilang napupusuan. Ang mga tunay nilang katawan ay nasa Mundo ng mga engkanto tanging mga anino lamang nila ang nanahan sa mundo ng mga tao.










The Kanan: Benevolent Beings and Healers




In contrast, the Kanan, meaning "right," refers to benevolent creatures and practitioners of good magic. They embody the protective, healing, and nurturing aspects of Filipino mythology. These beings are often invoked for blessings, protection, and healing, standing as defenders of the people against the forces of darkness.


Diwata surrounded by Lambana

Diwata and Lambana


1. Diwata:


Diwata
Diwata

The Diwata are powerful nature spirits, god and goddesses. They are often likened to dryads or high fairies, governing forests, rivers, and mountains. Diwata can be both kind and wrathful, depending on how humans treat their domain. They protect the natural world and are known for their wisdom, beauty, and magical abilities. They often aid those who show respect for the environment and seek their blessings.

  • Lambana: A smaller variant of the Diwata, the Lambana are small fairies that serve as protectors of nature. They are often seen flitting around flowers and trees, granting good fortune and blessings to those they favor.

Lambana



2. Mangagamot:

The Mangagamot is a traditional healer who uses a combination of herbs, prayers, and rituals to heal ailments. Their knowledge of medicinal plants and spiritual healing practices makes them invaluable members of their communities. Unlike their dark counterparts, the Mangagamot's powers are used for the well-being of others, curing illnesses and expelling evil spirits.

3. Albularyo:

The Albularyo is another form of folk healer who blends herbal medicine and magic. They are often the first people approached for healing ailments, spiritual cleansing, or protection from evil spirits. Albularyos are highly respected in Filipino communities for their ability to treat physical and supernatural afflictions.

4. Manunugis:



The Manunugis is a hunter of evil spirits and dark creatures. They specialize in tracking down Aswangs, malevolent Engkantos, and other Kaliwa beings. Using special incantations, blessed weapons, and protective talismans, the Manunugis protect their communities from harm by banishing or destroying the evil forces they encounter.


5. Mahomanay:

Mahomanay


The Mahomanay are nature spirits portrayed as good Engkanto known for their elf-like appearance and their deep connection to the natural world. These male spirits have pale skin and long black hair, and they are often seen wearing simple, flowing garments that blend seamlessly with the forests and natural environments they protect. Like the Diwata, the Mahomanay are guardians of nature, particularly concerned with the well-being of animals and the preservation of forests.

Mahomanay


The Mahomanay are believed to be kind-hearted and benevolent, often coming to the aid of animals in distress or protecting ecosystems from harm caused by humans. They are revered as keepers of balance in nature, and those who show respect for the environment might be blessed with their favor. However, those who destroy nature or harm animals may find themselves on the wrong side of the Mahomanay’s protective powers.

6. Tahamaling 

Tahamaling


The Tahamaling are female Engkanto known for their fierceness and striking  red complexion. Guardian of forest and its animals. The Tahamaling is the female counterpart of the gentle Mahomanay. But more aggressive in protecting her domain. Some stories suggest she grants people with good intentions a Mutya imbued with magical powers connected to animals. 


Tahamaling

7. Abyan 

Engkanto Abyan o Puting Engkanto


Puting Engkanto 

The  Albino-like Engkanto Abyan are often depicted as childlike and benevolent. Elderly Abyan seem like teenagers compared to humans in appearance but ancient when it comes to wisdom. They help good people and grant blessings, power to those who want to do good. Often they are Gabay or Engkanto allies of Manunugis and Antingero.

Engkantong Abyan

8. Babaylan (Spiritual Leaders and Healers):

The Babaylan are highly revered spiritual leaders, shamans, and healers in Philippine culture, aligned with the Kanan because of their profound connection to the divine and their role in maintaining the balance between the physical and spiritual worlds. These powerful women (and in rare cases, men) serve as intermediaries between humans and the spirits, performing vital roles such as healing, conducting rituals, and communicating with ancestral spirits, gods, and nature spirits.

The Babaylan have the ability to invoke the Diwata, call upon protective spirits, and channel the energies of nature to heal the sick, bless crops, and protect their communities from harm. They also play a crucial role in cleansing and purifying spaces, driving away malevolent spirits from the Kaliwa such as Aswangs and Tamawo, and maintaining the spiritual equilibrium of their people.

The Babaylan's rituals often involve prayers, dance, and sacrifices to appease the gods and ensure the welfare of their communities. Their wisdom, handed down through generations, reflects a deep understanding of nature, medicine, and the cosmos, further cementing their position as figures of light and good within the Kanan. Today, the legacy of the Babaylan continues to thrive, as they are recognized as custodians of traditional Filipino spirituality and protectors of cultural identity.

9. Antingero (Charm Makers and Keepers of Mystical Talismans):

The Antingero are individuals who create and wield anting-anting, or mystical amulets, believed to bring protection, strength, and good fortune. They align with the Kanan because they use their knowledge of charms and talismans for benevolent purposes, helping individuals defend themselves against the forces of the Kaliwa. Anting-anting are traditionally imbued with sacred powers, passed down through rituals, prayers, and chants, invoking blessings from the Diwata, Babaylan, or other protective spirits.

These amulets can be used to ward off evil entities such as the Aswang, Tamawo, and other malevolent forces. The Antingero also assist in giving protection during times of battle or danger, enhancing their wearers’ physical or spiritual abilities. Anting-anting can come in the form of medallions, written prayers, or even herbs and stones enchanted with powerful prayers and rituals.

The Antingero, through their work, preserves ancient knowledge of Filipino mysticism and spirituality. They act as defenders against the dark forces of the Kaliwa, ensuring their communities remain safe and spiritually fortified.

These Kanan creatures and practitioners work in harmony with nature, protecting humans from illness, misfortune, and malevolent spirits. Their roles as healers, protectors, and guides offer a vital counterbalance to the threats posed by the dark forces of the Kaliwa.


Kaliwa and Kanan in Modern Philippine Culture



Philippine mythology, despite centuries of colonization and the spread of Christianity, continues to thrive in modern times, especially in rural areas where traditional beliefs are still widely practiced. The Kaliwa and Kanan dichotomy remains a significant part of Filipino folklore, influencing how people view the moral spectrum of supernatural forces.

Even today, stories of Aswangs, Diwatas, Mangkukulams, and Albularyos persist, passed down through oral traditions, popular media, and even urban legends. Many Filipinos still consult Albularyos and Mangagamots for traditional healing, while others hold festivals and rituals to honor the Diwata and seek protection from the Kaliwa.

The Kaliwa and Kanan duality is a reflection of the Filipino understanding of balance—between good and evil, darkness and light. It speaks to a worldview where supernatural forces are ever-present, and the choices individuals make, whether in magic or morality, ripple through the natural and spiritual worlds.



Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Bikol Animism

People and Powers

  • asog: ritualist, priest/ess (what Westernized society would now consider a feminine male assigned at birth person)
  • balyan: ritualist, priest/ess (what Westernized society would now consider a female assigned at birth person)
  • parabawi: an exorcist, referring to anyone who drives evil spirits out of the body so that good spirits may return
  • parabulong: anyone who administers medicine
  • himara/maghimara: to predict the future by observing external movements, such as that of a wheel moving slowly, fast, etc.
  • hula: prediction; maghula / hulaan to augur, forecast, foresee, foretell, predict
  • hukloban/hokloban/hodoban: witch doctor, malicious sorcerer who killed men and animals, and demolished houses
  • matanda: a wise old ruler
  • nuom: clairvoyant; seeing in mind’s eye/imagining something that comes true
  • parapalad: fortuneteller
  • pintakasi: defender, patron, patron saint
  • sabong: pasabong: an omen, pagpasabong: clairvoyance, ESP, ipasabong: to be clairvoyant
  • sarawat: masarawat: describing someone who loves plants
  • sunat: a high priest/ess (gender unknown) responsible for ordaining the asog and the balyan
  • tagohalim/tagohalin/taguhalin: shapeshifting sorcerer
  • tagolainan: a sorcerer.
  • tuyaw: magtuyaw/tuyawon: to prophesy, paratuyaw: a prophet

Spiritual Concepts

  • gagamban: hell
  • kamburagan (Kamurayan): paradise/heaven
  • liwat na pagkamundag: reincarnation, rebirth
  • pagkamundag uli: reincarnation, rebirth

Ritual/Palihon

  • Palihon/paliyon/polion is the general term for rituals, beliefs, and taboos, and their preservation.
  • To Whom: 
    • Rituals are done for the anito and/or gugurang, and sometimes for the tawong-lipod. 
    • Anito/diwata are generally ancestor spirits out in nature. 
    • Gugurang are generally ancestor spirits of the household that come along with a person, but in later folklore began to be seen as a single deity inside Mount Mayon.
    • Batala/bathala are a set of special gods/spirits that watch over a village or clan. 
    • The tawong-lipod are general invisible spirit beings, like giants, elves, dwarves, etc.
    • To hold a festival or ritual for the anito is called a maganito or anitoan. The anito/diwata are represented by carved wooden statues called ladawan or lagdong. The lagdongan is also the name of the basket that carries the ladawan/lagdong. 
  • By Whom:
    • Most ritual is presided by a balyan and/or an asog. 
    • The sunat is the head spiritualist who initiates the asog and balyan. 
    • There are also other ritualists, called the parabawi/santiguar, that deal specifically in exorcisms.
  • Where:
    • The anito have houses/temples called muog/moog that are built in open fields or in the branches of trees. 
    • The gugurang have a temple of bamboo, reeds, and coconut fronds called gulang-gulang or golanggolang. 
  • How:
    • An altar called a salagnat/salangat is created out of bamboo in which food is offered to the anito/diwata/gugurang. 
    • The food/banquet of the maganito is called the gamit. 
    • If you are sacrificing a chicken, it is called a hanggot. 
    • If you are sacrificing a pig it is called socob/sokob. 
    • Songs called suragi/sorague are done for the anito/diwata/gugurang. 
    • Prayers called adyi and pamibi are done for the anito/diwata/gugurang . 
    • After the balyan/asog says prayers, it is customary to say ahom, in agreement. 
    • A ceremonial dance called a dumago was also performed. 
    • The balyan/asog usually wears a a circlet with a golden nugget or wreath of leaves/flowers called tubaw/tabao. There may also be worn golden balls as ornamentation, called matambacao/matambakaw. 
    • The balyan/asog also use banay, the topmost fronds of the anahaw palm, during ceremony.
  • General Rituals: 
    • The tubas is a washing/bathing ritual. 
    • Gabas is to ask numbers from the spirits.
  • Thanksgiving: 
    • The atang is a specific ritual where a sacrifice of one-tenth of the harvest is offered as a sign of thanksgiving to the gugurang. This is later eaten by the participants in the ritual.
  • Blessings and Coming-of-Age: 
    • The yocod/yukod is in honour of the anito to bless a favoured child and protect them from the aswang. Children process around the inside of a dwelling. 
    • The baguet is a coming-of-age ritual where a pig that was raised since the birth of a child is sacrificed and eaten by the child-now-adult as a community, with special alcoholic drinks. 
    • Tagay is a wedding ceremony in which the drinking of liquor forms part of the celebrations. When pronounced differently, tagay is also a ritual in which food is offered to the tawong-lipod to ask for a rich harvest, a full catch, a successful hunt, or the removal of spells placed on an individual by the tawong-lipod itself.
  • Prevention: 
    • The duol is a ritual where the whole tribe fasts in prayer and sacrifice to the anito to ward off evil or stop a disaster. 
    • The halya is a ritual done during the eclipse to ward off the bakunawa by using balalong, bamboo or hollowed tree trunks, that are beaten with sticks. Halya is also done during the full moon in honour of the gugurang to continue to ward off the bakunawa. There is also chanting during this ritual. At the climax of the halya, roasted water buffalo or boar is eaten, which is called the sumsom. In later folklore, Halya/Haliya became the name of a masked goddess of the moon.
    • The hidhid is a ritual that can be done to have the aswang stop a storm or a plague using a chewed up betel nut mixture. It was also known as a form of exorcism when there was a public calamity.
  • Rituals for the Sick: 
    • The hidhid is in honour of the aswang to counter its influence over a sick person. The balyan chews up a betel nut mixture and touches the person on the head with it. 
    • Olad is a spirit feast/ritual performed for the sick. 
    • Ole is a ritual to heal the sick. 
    • Paypay is to use the banay to fan the sick as part of curing them. 
    • Posao/pusaw is a ritual where lemon/citrus leaves wet with water are squeezed in the eyes of the sick. 
    • Tigay are chants and songs of the balyan to help cure the sick. 
    • Sacom/sakom is when you call the soul of the sick person back to their body and use banay to do it. 
    • Lagaylay is a dance that the parabawi, an exorcist, gets the afflicted to perform to get an evil spirit to leave someone’s body.
  • Rituals for the Dead: 
    • Statues and figures that are carved in honour of the dead are called parangpan/paraparangpan or tatawo. 
    • Basbas is when you wash the body of the dead with the water-softened leaves of lukban/pomelo/citrus/lemon. 
    • Katumba is the loud prayers and songs sung during the purification rites of the dead. 
    • The ayay is when you cover the graves of the dead with cooked rice or rice mixed with dirt.
    • Duol is also done after the death of a relative, where you abstain from certain foods.
    • The taroc/tarok is a ritual in which a banay is carried into a battle of vengeance and if the enemy is defeated placed on the grave of the relative who has been avenged. 
    • Hugot is when a slave is sacrificed and the entrails are offered to the aswang to prevent it from eating a newly dead chief or other important person. 
    • The kataposan is the ceremony held nine days after someone’s death. 
    • The actual funeral ceremony is called pasaka, and when you partake of the funeral feast on the day of the burial in honour of the dead, that is called lalala. 
    • Lalawan is when you mourn the dead by dressing in mourning clothes, cutting the hair, or holding a special ceremony. 
    • Binangonan/Binagnonan is when you speak to the dead in ceremony. 
    • Uraw is the ceremony to resurrect the dead with incantations. 
    • Makatagi is to be influenced by the positions of the dead.

Spells & Charms

An anting is the name of a physical charm or talisman. Munay is a general ointment.

  • aguatiempo: a potion which replaces drinking water of sick people in the belief that it will hasten the effect of medicine which has been administered
  • barat: the wind from the west; bolt; a needle-like wooden or metal peg which is an accessory to a small idol in human shape possessing movable joints and having many holes; if the barat is inserted into a chosen spot on the idol; after an incantation mumbled by the mambabarat the victim is supposed to suffer at the spot pierced by the peg; mambabarat a sorcerer who uses a barat
  • hinaw: a charm created by the balyan capable of identifying a thief; maghinaw to divine by using such a charm; maghinaw/hinawon to suspect of thievery by such divination
  • huklob: root (used by witch doctors in their ceremonies); maghuklob / huklobon to enchant, bewitch; hukloban witch doctor
  • kabal: an amulet which has the power of making its possessor invulnerable to the bolo and the spear, rendering these weapons dull, or suspending them in air upon attack; generally a circular piece of copper with a hole in the center, or a bit of shell roughly carved into the shape of anito noted for particularly admired exploits
  • laaw: root used as a charm which if brought into contact with an enemy can cause sickness or inflammation maglaaw /laawan to charm or bewitch with this root
  • lumay: love potion, maglumay / lumayon to give someone a love potion so that he or she will fall in love with you; makalumay/malumay to be affected by a love potion
  • mutya: pearl, jewel, gem, precious stone, anything someone holds dear, something beloved
  • pamaghat: a medicinal mixture of tree roots and alcohol, given to nursing mothers
  • pato: a root or charm which causes someone to who steals from you to fall ill or die
  • tagalpo: a herb carried by hunters and used to charm wild game so that they will not flee; a magic formula which, if thought of mentally, can turn a hostile attitude into cordiality, or an enemy into a friend; a type of hypnotism
  • tagohalim/tagohalin/taguhalin: Someone who makes charms/spells through shapeshifting or saying words; a root that was used in spells to aid in flying or shapeshifting into animals (cats or dogs); a plant from which an extract is derived enabling a man to fly, or to change himself into a dog or cat or other animal
  • tagohopa/tagahupa/tagolmay/tagulmay: A species of grass from whose roots may be prepared a brew capable of depriving a man of his will-power.
  • tagulipod: a plant possessing roots which, when eaten, may render a man invisible at will
  • tambal: antidote, snake medicine, tambalan: one proficient in such treatment
  • tauac/tawak: A charm which can be protect someone from a poisonous insect or snake bite; the charm is affected by pricking the person with something serving as an antivenom

Omens/Pasabong

  • barubarita/baribarito: the name of the singing of a haya/sayasaya, a bird, in which hearing the sound was a bad omen.
  • didit: the cricket, if the cricket’s chirping awakens someone during the night, a relative or someone close to that person will die
  • kuro-kuro/korokoro: bird; also a messenger of the buggo whose cooing indicates that the aswang  is coming to devour the entrails of a baby or someone who is sick; cooing followed by a muffled sound, such as that of distant thunder, announces the impending death of someone in another tribe
  • patyanak: if the wailing of a tiny black bird is heard at night by a pregnant woman but not by others who are with her, this could indicate that she will have a miscarriage
  • yasaw/yassau: a creature which hides in the shadows of trees on moonlit nights, if it is seen at the same time a cry resembling that of an infant is heard or imagined, the aswang is on the prowl and someone is going to die

Taboos, Oaths/Vows, and Curses

  • Bawal/Palihon/Taboo
    • ngasa: a superstition/taboo that holds if one’s fields or crops are particularly successful in comparison with those of others, death or misfortune will soon be visited on someone in the town, or the crops themselves will be lost
    • puhon: an ancient belief which holds that if a slave or person of low birth were to drink from a glass or eat from a plate of someone of high rank in the community, the abdomen of the slave or person of low birth would swell with air
    • sibol/sido/siro: An ancient ritual and taboo to not go to the house where sick and wounded are healing. 
    • sibong: A ritual/taboo/curse where those who get tattooed without earning it through battles or other ways, become sick and die.
  • Panata/Vow
    • matay: may I die; an oath taken whereby one swears to take his own life if he is not telling the truth
  • Curse/Tukso
    • karaw: a sickness inflicted by sorcery; magkaraw / karawan to curse; to put a curse on
    • ratak: to put a spell on, to charm or enchant, maratakan: to fall sick or have one’s wounds infected due to the evil medicine of a sorcerer, pagratak: witchcraft, sorcery
  • All words to describe witchcraft/sorcery/bewitchment/enchantment
    • aswangon/maaswang: to be bewitched, enchanted, put under a spell; magaswang/aswangon: to betwitch, enchant
    • babalo: enchantment; magbabalo/babaloon: to bewitch, charm, enchant, put a spell on; sound of a rooster crowing
    • barang: similarity; magbarang/barangon to bewitch, to cast a spell on someone; makabarang/mabarang to be bewitched, fall under a spell
    • dagon: to go ask a witch or sorcerer to hurt a sick person and/or eat his entrails.
    • himalo/maghimalo/himaloon: to bewitch, enchant
    • maibanan/yba/iba: to be bewitched, damage/enchantment by a sorcerer or demon.
    • lagaylay: enchanted, bewitched; lagaylayon: to be enchanted or bewitched
    • rawraw: to cast a spell over; pagrawraw: witchcraft, sorcery
    • usog: mausog: to be bewitched

Spirits & Otherwordly Beings

  • Benevolent:
    • Katambay are personal guardian spirits that watch over an individual.
    • Anito/Diwata are generally ancestor spirits out in nature. 
    • Gugurang are generally ancestor spirits of the household that come along with a person, later thought to be a single spirit that is Chief Spirit of the Bikol people
    • Batala/bathala are a set of special gods/spirits that watch over a village or clan.
    • Dawani is the legendary first woman of the world believed to have designed and woven the rainbow; hablon nin dawani: rainbow
    • Magnindan: spirit that helps fisherpeople
    • Okot: A dwarf/elf good spirit that spoke through whistling
    • Arapayan, Nagini/Naguined/Naguinao, and Makbarubak/Macbarubac are the three spirits that, when invoked with crocodile teeth and coconut oil mixed together, has the power to kill another
  • Harmful:
    • aguahan: A witch that eats human flesh. A sorcerer that is cursed or gives curses.
    • anananggal: a two piece witch that is capable of detaching its upper portion from the waist; the upper portion then flies in search of saliva to drink and human flesh to feast on
    • anduduno: a vampire that finds delight and nourishment in inhaling the odour and sucking the blood for a woman in labour, the sick and the dying; it assumes the shape of a huge bat and sucks from the back of a victim by means of a long, thread-like tongue
    • aswang: a devil or witch said to eat human flesh, though in later folklore was seen as a single deity (Asuang) inside Mount Malinao
    • bakunawa: a grotesque dragon that swallows the moon during eclipses, an event which is believed to bring bad luck
    • Bongan: malicious demon dwarf
    • bunggo/bonggo: ferocious “priests” whose eyes flash fire, consuming whatever is within the range of their heat. They wandered the woods and were possible descendants of Asuang.
    • buri: a one-eyed, three-throated creature inhabiting the swamps of a particular section of Bikol called in old records Punong
    • cacac/cacag/kakak: A witch. The song of a hen when she wants to lay an egg. Also the song of a witch who is flying and/or moaning by a sick person’s house.
    • daguit: To snatch something; to have something snatched by witches. Mananaguit: A bird of prey, or an aswang/witch that snatches humans.
    • hingnasuan: A witch that eats human flesh.
    • irago: the daughter of aswang, a serpent which can appear or vanish at will taking any form pleasing to its victims, often that of an envious woman with a sexy voice; same as uryol
    • kapri: a legendary giant; an evil spirit
    • lakaw: a ground witch
    • laki: a monster with the hoofs and mane of a horse and the face of a repulsive man with the wide protruding lips which entirely cover its face when it laughs; brushing against the invisible laki or simply being near it, could produce rashes curable by whipping the affected part with the long strand of a woman’s hair; same as unglo
    • layog: a witch that flies upright with its arms outstretched and its eyes gazing at the full moon; it snatches its victims from behind, between the legs, then carries them aloft by the ankles; it eats the flesh and laps the saliva of the tuberculous and can be found clinging to the rafters under the house of the victim
    • mampak: monster
    • mumo: bogeyman
    • pupo/popo: a hot-tempered, vengeful spirit who, by touching the head of a child with its hand, causes the child to grow weaker and weaker until it dies, or keeping the child a child forever
    • rabot: a master liar; also an ugly half-man and half ferocious wild beast that can transform its enemies into rocks by magic
    • silag: A witch that tears into the body of anyone dressed in white, feeding on the entrails and liver, causing the victim to die
    • tambaluslos: a small forest creature said to lead people astray; when it laughs, its lips open to cover its whole face
    • yasaw/yassau: a creature which hides in the shadows of trees on moonlit nights, if it is seen at the same time a cry resembling that of an infant is heard or imagined, the aswang is on the prowl and someone is going to die; the yasaw may be transformed into a laki
  • Neutral:
    • daro-anak: an ancient beast, usually a serpent or a wild boar, that has grown enormously large and, weary of its big size and old age, has plunged into the sea to become a sea monster or a small island
    • duende: dwarf, elf, goblin
    • ikogan: a spirit creature resembling a hairy man with a tail
    • mapangilaw: a giant who wears a vine for a belt 
    • isaw/issau: apparition, phantom, elf, dwarf
    • Kalapitnan: god/spirit of bats
    • liktin: elf, dwarf
    • luwok: elf
    • mangindara: merperson; person of the waters
    • patyanak: the fusion of an untimely discharged human fetus and a tiny black bird whose mournful wailing resembles that of an infant
    • sarimaw: tiger; a tiger’s tooth; a brutally fierce monster with crossed bulging eyes which appears unexpectedly before the guilty, tearing them pitilessly apart with its sharp claws
    • tandayag: a large serpent which is said to have gone to the sea and changed into a whale; also applied to a large eel which has undergone the same transformation; referring to things that are very old or very large
    • tawong-lipod: a general term for invisible creatures including giants, elves, etc.
    • tupong-tupong: a human-like creature which can stretch or shrink to take the shape of whatever it is next to
    • apo: grandparents; ancestors; respectful title; imp; small human-like creature living in little earth mounds and possessing magical powers capable of turning people into animals such as toads, snakes; tabi apo means excuse me apo and said when spitting, throwing a stone in the dark, etc. in case by chance one hits the apo

Sources:

  • Bikol-English Dictionary / diksionariong bikol - ingles by Malcolm Warren Mintz and Jose Del Rosario Britanico
  • Vocabulario de la Lengua Bicol by Marcos de Lisboa
  • Diccionario Mitologico de Filipinas by Fernando Blumentritt
  • Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas by Miguel de Loarca