This is a list of
legendary creatures. Creatures of modern invention are not included. Only creatures with English Wikipedia articles should be included.
Species or entirely unique, individual monsters are included, not individuals of a particular species. For example, Pegasus should not be included, as he is an individual of (and the progenitor of) the pterippus species, while Scylla is included as she is a one-of-a-kind monster.
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- Baba Yaga (Slavic) - Forest spirit and hag
- Bagiennik (Slavic) - Malevolent water spirit
- Bahamut (Arabian) - Giant fish
- Bashe (Chinese) - Elephant-swallowing serpent
- Bai Ze (Chinese) - Sheep-like animal
- Bake-kujira (Japanese) - Ghost whale
- Bakeneko (Japanese) - Magical cat
- Bakezōri (Japanese) - Animated straw sandal
- Bakhtak (Iranian) - Night demon
- Baku (Japanese) - Dream-devouring, tapir-like creature
- Bakunawa (Philippine) - Sea serpent that causes eclipses
- Balaur (Romanian) - Multi-headed dragon
- Bannik (Slavic) - Bathhouse spirit
- Banshee (Irish) - Death spirit
- Barbegazi (Swiss) - Dwarf with giant, snowshoe-like feet
- Bardi (Trabzon) - Shapechanging death spirit
- Barghest - Yorkshire black dog
- Barnacle Geese (Medieval folklore) - Geese which hatch from barnacles
- Barong (Balinese) - Tutelary spirit
- Basajaun (Basque) - Ancestral, megalith-building race
- Basan (Japanese) - Fire-breathing chicken
- BasCelik (Serbian) - A powerful and very evil winged man whose soul is not held by his body and can be subdued only by causing him to suffer dehydration
- Basilisco Chilote (Chilota) - Chicken-serpent hybrid
- Basilisk (Medieval Bestiaries) - Multi-limbed, venomous lizard
- Batibat (Philippine) - Female night-demon
- Batsu (Chinese) - Drought spirit
- Baubas (Lithuanian) - Malevolent spirit
- Baykok (Ojibwa) - Flying skeleton
- Bean Nighe (Irish) - Death spirit (a specific type of Banshee/Bean Sídhe)
- Behemoth (Jewish) - Primal, gigantic land animal
- Bendigeidfran (Welsh) - Giant king
- Bennu (Egyptian) - Heron-like, regenerative bird, equivalent to (or inspiration of) the Phoenix
- Berehynia (Slavic) - Water spirit
- Bergrisar (Norse) - Mountain giant
- Bergsrå (Norse) - Mountain spirit
- Bestial beast (Brazilian) - Centauroid specter
- Betobeto-san (Japanese) - Invisible spirit which follows people at night, making the sound of footsteps
- Bhūta (Buddhist and Hindu) - Ghost of someone killed by execution or suicide
- Bi-blouk (Khoikhoi) - Female, anthropohagous, partially invisible monster
- Bies (Slavic) - Demon
- Binbōgami (Japanese) - Spirit of poverty
- Bishop-fish (Medieval Bestiaries) - Fish-like humanoid
- Biwa-yanagi (Japanese) - Animated biwa
- Black Annis (English) - Blue-faced hag
- Black Dog (British) - Canine death spirit
- Black Shuck - Norfolk, Essex, and Suffolk black dog
- Blemmyae (Medieval Bestiary) - Headless humanoid with face in torso
- Bloody Bones (Irish) - Water bogeyman
- Bodach (Scottish) - Malevolent spirit
- Bogeyman (English) - Malevolent spirit
- Boggart (English) - Malevolent household spirit
- Boginki (Polish) - Nature spirit
- Bogle (Scottish) - Malevolent spirit
- Boi-tatá (Brazilian) - Giant snake
- Bolla (Albanian) - Dragon
- Bonnacon (Medieval Bestiaries) - Bull-horse hybrid with flaming dung
- Boobrie (Scottish) - Roaring water bird
- Bozaloshtsh (Slavic) - Death spirit
- Brag (English) - Malevolent water horse
- Brownie (English and Scottish) - Benevolent household spirit
- Broxa (Jewish) - Nocturnal bird that drains goats of their milk
- Bokkenrijders (Dutch) - Damned bandits
- Bugbear (English) - Bearlike goblin
- Buggane (Manx) - Ogre-like humanoid
- Bukavac (Serbia) - Six-legged lake monster
- Bukit Timah Monkey Man (Singapore) - Forest dwelling immortal primate
- Bunyip (Australian Aboriginal) - Horse-walrus hybrid lake monster
- Buraq (Islamic) - Human-headed, angelic horse
- Buruburu (Japanese) - Spirit which causes the shivers
- Byangoma (Hindu) - Fortune-telling birds
- Bysen (Scandinavian) - Diminutive forest spirit
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- Cabeiri (Greek) - Smith and wine spirits
- Cacus (Roman) - Fire-breathing giant
- Cadejo (Central America) - Cow sized dog-goat hybrid in two varieties: benevolent and white, and malevolent and black
- Caipora (Tupi) - Fox-human hybrid and nature spirit
- Caladrius (Medieval Bestiary) - White bird that can foretell if a sick person will recover or die
- Calydonian Boar (Greek) - Giant, chthonic boar
- Camahueto (Chilota) - One-horned calf
- Cambion (Medieval folklore) - Hybrid between a human and an incubus or succubus
- Campe (Greek) - Dragon-human-scorpion hybrid
- Candileja (Colombian) - Spectral, fiery hag
- Canotila (Lakota) - Little people and tree spirits
- Caoineag (Scottish) - Death spirit (a specific type of Banshee/Bean Sídhe)
- Capa (Lakota) - Beaver spirit
- Căpcăun (Romanian) - Large, monstrous humanoid
- Carbuncle (Latin America) - A small creature with a jewel on its head
- Catoblepas (Medieval Bestiary) - Scaled buffalo-hog hybrid
- Cat Sidhe (Scottish) - Fairy cat
- Cecaelia - Modern term for mermaid-like, human-octopus hybrid
- Ceffyl Dŵr (Welsh) - Malevolent water horse
- Centaur (Greek) - Human-horse hybrid
- Cerastes (Greek) - Extremely flexible, horned snake
- Cerberus (Greek) - Three-headed dog that guards the entrance to the underworld
- Cercopes (Greek) - Mischievous forest spirit
- Ceryneian Hind (Greek) - Hind with golden antlers and bronze or brass hooves
- Cetan (Lakota) - Hawk spirit
- Chakora (Hindu) - Lunar bird
- Chamrosh (Persian) - Dog-bird hybrid
- Chaneque (Aztec) - Little people and nature spirits
- Changeling (European) - Non-human humanoid child (fairy, elf, troll, etc.) substituted for a kidnapped human child
- Charybdis (Greek) - Sea monster in the form of a giant mouth
- Chepi (Narragansett) - Ancestral spirit that instructs tribe members
- Cherufe (Mapuche) - Volcano-dwelling monster
- Chibaiskweda (Abenaki) - Ghost of an improperly buried person
- Chichevache (Medieval folklore) - Human-faced cow that feeds on good women
- Chickcharney (Bahaman) - Bird-mammal hybrid
- Chimaera (Greek) - Lion-goat-snake hybrid
- Chindi (Navajo) - Vengeful ghosts that cause dust devils
- Chinthe (Burmese) - Temple-guarding feline, similar to Chinese Shi and Japanese Shisa
- Chitauli (Zulu) - Human-lizard hybrid
- Chōchinobake (Japanese) - Animated paper lantern
- Chollima (Korean) - Supernaturally fast horse
- Chonchon (Mapuche) - Disembodied, flying head
- Chrysaor (Greek) - Son of the gorgon Medusa, imaged as a giant or a winged boar
- Chukwa (Hindu) - Giant turtle that supports the world
- Churel (Hindu) - Vampiric, female ghost
- Ciguapa (Dominican Republic) - Malevolent seductress
- Cihuateteo (Aztec) - Ghosts of women that died in childbirth
- Cikavac (Serbian) - Bird that serves its owner
- Cinnamon bird (Medieval Bestiaries) - Giant bird that makes its nest out of cinnamon
- Cipactli (Aztec) - Sea monster, crocodile-fish hybrid
- Cirein cròin (Scottish) - Sea serpent
- Cluricaun (Irish) - Leprechaun-like Little people that are permanently drunk
- Coblynau (Welsh) - Little people and mine spirits
- Cockatrice (Medieval Bestiaries) - Chicken-lizard hybrid
- Cofgod (English) - Old English term meaning "cove-god"
- Colo Colo (Mapuche) - Rat-bird hybrid that can shapeshift into a serpent
- Corycian nymphs (Greek) - Nymph of the Corycian Cave
- Cretan Bull (Greek) - Monstrous bull
- Crinaeae (Greek) - Fountain nymph
- Criosphinx (Ancient Egypt) - Ram-headed sphinx
- Crocotta (Medieval Bestiaries) - Monstrous dog-wolf
- Cuco (Latin America) - Bogeyman
- Cucuy (Latin America) - Malevolent spirit
- Cuegle (Cantabrian) - Monstrous, three-armed humanoid
- Cuélebre (Asturian and Cantabrian) - Dragon
- Curupira (Tupi) - Nature spirit
- Cu Sith (Scottish) - Gigantic fairy dog
- Cŵn Annwn (Welsh) - Underworld hunting dogs
- Cyclops (Greek) - One-eyed giants
- Cyhyraeth (Welsh) - Death spirit
- Cynocephalus (Medieval Bestiaries) - Dog-headed humanoid
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- Gaasyendietha (Seneca) - Dragon
- Gagana (Russian) - Bird with iron beak and copper talons
- Ga-gorib (Khoikhoi) - Anthropophagous monster
- Gagoze (Japanese) - Demon who attacked young priests at Gangō-ji temple
- Gaki (Japanese) - Ghosts of especially greedy people
- Gallu (Mesopotamian) - Underworld demons
- Galtzagorriak (Basque) - Diminutive, demonic servants
- Gamayun (Russian) - Prophetic bird with human head
- Gana (Hindu) - Attendants of Shiva
- Gancanagh (Irish) - Male fairy that seduces human women
- Gandaberunda (Hindu) - Double-headed bird
- Gandharva (Hindu) - Male nature spirits, often depicted as part human, part animal
- Gangi-kozō (Japanese) - Fish-eating water-monster
- Garappa (Japanese) - Kappa from Kyūshū
- Gargouille (French) - Water dragon
- Garmr (Norse) - Giant, ravenous wolf
- Garuda (Hindu) - Human-eagle hybrid
- Gashadokuro (Japanese) - Giant, malevolent skeletons
- Gaueko (Basque) - Wolf capable of walking upright
- Ged (Heraldic) - The fish pike
- Genie (Arabian) - Elemental spirit
- Genius loci (Roman) - Spirit that protects a specific place
- German (Slavic) - Male spirit associated with bringing rain and hail
- Geryon (Greek) - Giant with three heads, six arms, three torsos and (in some sources) six legs
- Ghillie Dhu (Scottish) - Tree guardian
- Ghost - Disembodied spirits, specifically of those that have died
- Ghoul (Arabian) - Earth genie. Also a shapeshifting desert anthropophagus
- Giant (mythology)
- Giant animal (mythology)
- Gichi-anami'e-bizhiw (Ojibwa) - Bison-snake-bird-cougar hybrid and water spirit
- Gidim (Sumerian) - Ghost
- Gigantes (Greek) - Race of giants that fought the Olympian gods, sometimes depicted with snake-legs
- Gigelorum (Scottish) - Smallest animal
- Girtablilu (Akkadian) - Human-scorpion hybrid
- Glaistig (Scottish) - Human-goat hybrid
- Glashtyn (Manx) - Malevolent water horse
- Gnome (Alchemy) - Diminutive Earth elemental
- Goblin (Medieval) - Grotesque, mischievous little people
- Gog (English) - Giant protector of London
- Gold-digging ant (Medieval Bestiaries) - Dog-sized ant that digs for gold in sandy areas
- Golem (Jewish) - Animated construct
- Gorgon (Greek) - Fanged, snake-haired humanoids that turn anyone who sees them into stone
- Goryō (Japanese) - Vengeful ghosts, usually of martyrs
- Gremlin (Folklore) - Goblins that sabotage airplanes
- Griffin (Heraldic) - Lion-eagle hybrid
- Grigori (Christian) - Fallen angels
- Grim (English and Scandinavian) - Tutelary spirits of churches
- Grindylow (English) - Malevolent water spirit
- Grine (Moroccan) - Genie duplicate of a person. Lives in a parallel world
- Gualichu (Mapuche) - Malevolent spirit
- Gud-elim (Akkadian) - Human-bull hybrid
- Guhin (Japanese) - Anthropomorphic bird
- Gulon (Germanic) - Gluttonous dog-cat-fox hybrid
- Gumiho (Korean mythology)- A demon fox with thousands of tails. Believed to possess an army of spirits and magic in its tails.
- Gwyllgi (Welsh) - black dog
- Gwyllion (Welsh) - Malevolent spirit
- Gytrash (Lincolnshire and Yorkshire) - black dog
- Gyūki (Japanese) - Bull-headed monster
H
- Hacker (Scandinavian) - Primitive little people
- Hadhayosh (Persian) - Gigantic land animal
- Haetae (Korean) - Dog-lion hybrid
- Hag (Many cultures worldwide) - Wizened old woman, usually a malevolent spirit with this specific form, or a goddess in disguise
- Haietlik (Nuu-chah-nulth) - Water serpent
- Hai-uri (Khoikhoi) - Male, anthropophagous, partially invisible monster
- Hakutaku (Japanese) - Sheep-like animal
- Hākuturi (Māori) - Nature guardian
- Half-elf (Norse) - Hybrid of a human and an elf
- Haltija (Finnish) - Spirit that protects a specific place
- Hamadryad (Greek) - Oak tree nymph
- Hamingja (Scandinavian) - Personal protection spirit
- Hamsa (Buddhist, Hindu, and Jainism) - Mystical bird
- Hanau epe (Rapa Nui) - Long-eared humanoid
- Hantu Demon (Philippine) - Demon
- Hantu Raya (Malay) - Demonic servant
- Harionago (Japanese) - Humanoid female with barbed, prehensile hair
- Harpy (Greek) - Death spirit with the form of a bird with a human head
- Haugbui (Norse) - Undead who cannot leave its burial mound
- Havsrå (Norse) - Saltwater spirit
- Headless Mule (Brazilian) - Fire-spewing, headless, spectral mule
- Hecatonchires (Greek) - Primordial giants with 100 hands and fifty heads
- Heikegani (Japanese) - Crabs with human-faced shells, the spirits of the warriors killed in the Battle of Dan-no-ura
- Heinzelmännchen (German) - Household spirit
- Helead (Greek) - Fen nymph
- Hellhound (Many cultures worldwide) - Dog from underworld
- Hercinia (Medieval Bestiaries) - Glowing bird
- Herensuge (Basque) - Dragon
- Hesperides (Greek) - Nymph daughters of Atlas
- Hiderigami (Japanese) - Drought spirit
- Hieracosphinx (Ancient Egypt) - Falcon-headed sphinx
- Hihi (Japanese) - Baboon monster
- Hiisi (Finnish) - Nature guardian
- Hippocamp (Etruscan, Greek, and Phoenician) - Horse-fish hybrid
- Hippogriff (Medieval Bestiaries) - Hybrid of a griffon and horse, that is a lion-eagle-horse hybrid
- Hitodama (Japanese) - Ghosts of the newly dead, which take the form of fireballs
- Hitotsume-kozou (Japanese) - One-eyed little people
- Hob (English) - House spirit
- Hobgoblin (Medieval) - Friendly or amusing goblin
- Hōkō (Japanese) - Dog-like tree spirit from China
- Homa (Persian) - Eagle-lion hybrid, similar to a griffon
- Hombre Caiman (Colombian) - Human-alligator hybrid
- Hombre Gato (Latin America) - Human-cat hybrid
- Homunculus (Alchemy) - Diminutive, animated construct
- Hone-onna (Japanese) - Skeletal ghost that take the form of a young woman to seduce men
- Hō-ō (Japanese) - Rooster-swallow-fowl-snake-goose-tortoise-stag-fish hybrid
- Hoopoe - A near passerine bird common to Africa and Eurasia that features in many mythologies in those continents
- Horned Serpent (Native American) - Serpentine rain spirit
- Hotoke (Japanese) - Deceased person
- Houri (Islamic) - Heavenly beings
- Hrímþursar (Norse) - Frost Giant
- Huaychivo (Mayan) - Human-deer hybrid
- Huldra (Norse) - Forest spirit
- Huli jing (Chinese) - Nine-tailed fox spirit
- Huma (Persian) - Regenerative fire bird
- Humbaba (Akkadian) - Lion-faced giant
- Hundun (Chinese) - Chaos spirit
- Hyakume (Japanese) - Creature with a hundred eyes
- Hydra (Greek) - Multi-headed water serpent/dragon
- Hydros (Medieval Bestiary) - Snake whose poison causes the victim to swell up
- Hydrus (Medieval Bestiary) - Snake from the Nile River that would kill crocodiles from the inside
- Hyōsube (Japanese) - Hair-covered kappa
- Hyōtan-kozō (Japanese) - Gourd spirit
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- Paasselkä devils (Finnish) - Spectral fire
- Pamola (Abenaki) - Weather spirit
- Panes (Greek) - Human-goat hybrids descended from the god Pan
- Panis (Hindu) - Demons with herds of stolen cows
- Panlong (Chinese) - Water dragon
- Panotti (Medieval Bestiaries) - Humanoid with gigantic ears
- Panther (Medieval Bestiaries) - Feline with sweet breath
- Parandrus (Medieval Bestiaries) - Shapeshifting animal whose natural form was a large ruminant
- Pard (Medieval Bestiaries) - Fast, spotted feline believed to mate with lions to produce leopards
- Pardalokampoi (Etruscan) - Fish-tailed panther
- Patagon (Medieval folklore) - Giant race reputed to live in the area of Patagonia
- Patasola (Latin America) - Anthropophagous, one-legged humanoid
- Patupairehe (Māori) - White-skinned nature spirits
- Pech (Scottish) - Strong little people
- Pegaeae (Greek) - Spring nymph
- Pelesit (Malay) - Servant spirit
- Peluda (French) - Dragon
- Penanggalan (Philippine) - Vampires that sever their heads from their bodies to fly around, usually with their intestines or other internal organs trailing behind
- Peng (Chinese) - Giant bird
- Penghou (Chinese) - Tree spirit
- Peri (Persian) - Winged humanoid
- Peryton (Allegedly Medieval folklore) - Deer-bird hybrid
- Pesanta (Catalan) - Nightmare demon in the form of a cat or dog
- Peuchen (Chilota and Mapuche) - Vampiric, flying, shapeshifting serpent
- Phoenix (Phoenician) - Regenerative bird
- Piasa (Native American) - Winged, antlered feline
- Piatek (Armenian) - Large land animal
- Pictish Beast (Pictish stones) - Stylistic animal, possibly a dragon
- Pillan (Mapuche) - Nature spirit
- Pim-skwa-wagen-owad (Abenaki) - Water spirit
- Piru (Finnish) - Minor demon
- Pishacha (Hindu) - Carrion-eating demon
- Pita-skog (Abenaki) - Serpentine rain spirit
- Pixie (Cornish) - Little people and nature spirits
- Pixiu (Chinese) - Winged lion
- Pi yao (Chinese) - Horned, dragon-lion hybrid
- Plakavac (Slavic) - Vampire created when a mother strangles her child
- Pok-wejee-men (Abenaki) - Tree spirit
- Polevik (Polish) - Little people and field spirits
- Pollo Maligno (Colombian) - Cannibalistic chicken spirit
- Polong (Malay) - Invisible servant spirit
- Poltergeist (German) - Ghost that moves objects
- Pombero (Guaraní) - Wild man and nature spirit
- Ponaturi (Māori) - Grotesque, malevolent humanoid
- Pontianak (Malay) - Undead, vampiric women who died in childbirth
- Poukai (Māori) - Giant bird
- Preta (Buddhist, Hindu, and Jainist) - Ghosts of especially greedy people
- Pricolici (Romanian) - Undead wolf
- Psoglav (Serbia) - Dog-headed monster
- Psotnik (Slavic) - Mischievous spirit
- Pterippus (Greek) - Winged horse
- Púca (Welsh) - Shapeshifting animal spirit
- Púki (Icelandic - malevolent little person
- Puck (English) - House spirit
- Putz (German) - house spirit
- Pugot (Philippine) - Headless humanoid
- Puk (Frisian) - house spirit
- Pūķis (Latvian) - Malevolent house spirit
- Pygmy (Greek) - Little people
- Pyrausta (Greek) - Insect-dragon hybrid
- Python (Greek) - Serpentine dragon
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- Saci (Brazilian) - One-legged nature-spirit
- Sagari (Japanese) - Horse's head that dangles from trees on Kyūshū
- Sakabashira (Japanese) - Haunted pillar, installed upside-down
- Salamander (Alchemy) - Fire elemental
- Samebito (Japanese) - Shark demon
- Samodiva (Slavic) - Nature spirit
- Sandwalker (Arabian) - Camel-stealing, giant arthropod
- Sânziană (Romanian) - Nature spirit
- Sarimanok (Philippine) - Bird of good fortune
- Sarngika (Hindu) - Bird spirit
- Sarugami (Japanese) - Wicked monkey spirit which was defeated by a dog
- Satori (Japanese) - Mind-reading humanoid
- Satyr (Greek) - Human-goat hybrid and fertility spirit
- Sazae-oni (Japanese) - Shapeshifting turban snail spirit
- Sceadugenga (English) - Shapeshifting undead
- Scitalis (Medieval Bestiaries) - Snake which mesmerizes its prey
- Scorpion Man (Mayan and Sumerian) - Human-scorpion hybrid
- Scylla (Greek) - Human-snake-wolf hybrid with a snake's tail, twelve wolf legs, and six long-necked wolf heads
- Sea-bee (Heraldic) - Fish-tailed bee
- Sea monk (Medieval folklore) - Fish-like humanoid
- Sea monster (Worldwide) - Giant, marine animals
- Sea serpent (Worldwide) - Serpentine sea monster
- Sea-Wyvern (Heraldic) - Fish-tailed wyvern
- Seko (Japanese) - Water spirit which can be heard making merry at night
- Selkie (Faroese, Icelandic, Irish, and Scottish) - Human-seal shapeshifter
- Senpoku-Kanpoku (Japanese) - Human-faced frog which guides the souls of the newly deceased to the graveyard
- Seps (Medieval Bestiaries) - Snake with highly corrosive venom
- Serpent (Worldwide) - Snake spirit
- Serpopard (Ancient Egypt) - Serpent-leopard hybrid
- Setotaishō (Japanese) - Warrior composed of discarded earthenware
- Shachihoko (Japanese) - Tiger-carp hybrid
- Shade (Worldwide) - Spiritual imprint
- Shahbaz (Persian) - Giant eagle or hawk
- Shang-Yang (Chinese) - Rain bird
- Shedim (Jewish) - Chicken-legged demon
- Shedu (Akkadian and Sumerian) - Protective spirit with the form of a winged bull or lion with a human head
- Shellycoat (English, Scottish and German, as schellenrocc) - Water spirit
- Shen (Chinese) - Shapeshifing sea monster
- Shenlong (Chinese) - Weather dragon
- Shibaten (Japanese) - Water spirit from Shikoku
- Shikigami (Japanese) - Child-sized servant spirit
- Shiki-ōji (Japanese) - Child-sized servant spirit
- Shikome (Japanese) - Underworld hag
- Shin (Japanese) - Giant clam which creates mirages
- Shiro-bōzu (Japanese) - White, faceless spirit
- Shirouneri (Japanese) - Animated mosquito netting or dust cloth
- Shiryō (Japanese) - Spirit of a dead person
- Shisa (Japanese) - Lion-dog hybrid
- Shishi (Chinese) - Protective animal
- Shōjō (Japanese) - Red-haired sea-sprites who love alcohol
- Shōkera (Japanese) - Creature that peers in through skylights
- Shtriga (Albanian) - An evil or dangerous witch
- Shunoban (Japanese) - Red-faced ghoul
- Shuten-dōji (Japanese) - Oni
- Sídhe - (Irish and Scottish) - Ancestral or nature spirit
- Sigbin (Philippine) - Goat-like vampire
- Silenoi (Greek) - Bald, fat, thick-lipped, and flat-nosed followers of Dionysus
- Simargl (Slavic) - Winged dog
- Simurgh (Persian) - Dog-lion-peacock hybrid
- Singa (Batak) - Feline animal
- Sint Holo (Choctaw) - Serpentine rain spirit
- Siren (Greek) - Human-headed bird
- Sirin (Slavic) - Demonic human-headed bird
- Sirrush (Akkadian) - Dragon with aquiline hind legs and feline forelegs
- Sisiutl (Native American) - Two-headed sea serpent
- Si-Te-Cah (Paiute) - Red-haired giants
- Sjörå (Norse) - Freshwater spirit
- Sjövættir (Norse) - Sea spirit
- Skin-walker (Native American and Norse) - Animal-human shapeshifter
- Skogsrå (Scandinavian) - Forest spirit
- Skookum (Chinook Jargon) - Hairy giant
- Skrzak (Slavic) - Flying imp
- Sky Women (Polish) - Weather spirit
- Sluagh (Irish and Scottish) - Restless ghost
- Sodehiki-kozō (Japanese) - Invisible spirit which pulls on sleeves
- Sōgenbi (Japanese) - Fiery ghost of an oil-stealing monk
- Soragami (Japanese) - Ritual disciplinary demon
- Soraki-gaeshi (Japanese) - Sound of trees being cut down, when later none seem to have been cut
- Sorobanbōzu (Japanese) - Ghost with an abacus
- Sōtangitsune (Japanese) - Fox spirit from Kyoto
- Soucouyant (Trinidad and Tobago) - Vampiric hag who takes the form of a fireball at night
- Spectre (Worldwide) - Terrifying ghost
- Sphinx (Greek) - Winged lion with a woman's head
- Spiriduş (Romanian) - Little people
- Spriggan (Cornish) - Guardians of graveyards and ruins
- Sprite (Medieval folklore) - little people, ghosts or elves
- Strigoi (Romanian) - Vampire
- Strix (Roman) - Vampiric bird
- Strzyga (Slavic) - Vampiric undead
- Stuhać (Slavic) - Malevolent mountain spirit
- Stymphalian Bird (Greek) - Metallic bird
- Suangi (New Guinea) - Anthropophagous sorcerer
- Succubus (Medieval folklore) - Female night-demon
- Sudice (Slavic) - Fortune spirit
- Sunakake-baba (Japanese) - Sand-throwing hag
- Sunekosuri (Japanese) - Small dog- or cat-like creature that rubs against a person's legs at night
- Suppon-no-yūrei (Japanese) - Ghost with a face like a soft-shelled turtle
- Surma (Finnish) - Hellhound
- Svartálfar (Norse) - "swart-elves", Cavern spirit
- The Swallower (Ancient Egyptian) - Crocodile-leopard-hippopotamus hybrid
- Swan maiden (Worldwide) - Swan-human shapeshifter
- Sylph (Alchemy) - Air elemental
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- Yacumama (South America) - Sea monster
- Yadōkai (Japanese) - Malevolent, nocturnal spirit
- Yagyō-san (Japanese) - Demon who rides through the night on a headless horse
- Yaksha (Buddhist, Hindu, and Jainism) - Male nature spirit
- Yakshi (Keralite) - Vampire
- Yakshini (Buddhist, Hindu, and Jainism) - Female nature spirit
- Yakubyō-gami (Japanese) - Disease and misfortune spirit
- Yale (Medieval Bestiaries) - Antelope- or goat-like animal with swiveling horns
- Yallery-Brown (English) - Nature spirit
- Yamaarashi (Japanese) - Porcupine spirit
- Yama-biko (Japanese) - Echo spirit
- Yama-bito (Japanese) - Savage, mountain-dwelling humanoid
- Yama-chichi (Japanese) - Monkey-like mountain spirit
- Yama-inu (Japanese) - Dog-like mountain spirit
- Yama-oroshi (Japanese) - a Radish-grater spirit
- Yama-otoko (Japanese) - Mountain giant
- Yamata no Orochi (Japanese) - Gigantic, eight-headed serpent
- Yama-uba (Japanese) - Malevolent, mountain-dwelling hag
- Yama-waro (Japanese) - Hairy, one-eyed spirit
- Yanari (Japanese) - Spirit which causes strange noises
- Yaoguai (Japanese) - Animalistic demon
- Yara-ma-yha-who (Australian Aboriginal) - Diminutive, sucker-fingered vampire
- Yatagarasu (Japanese) - Three-legged crow of Amaterasu
- Yato-no-kami (Japanese) - Serpent spirits
- Yerkes (Mexico-Paricutin)
- Yeth hound (English) - Headless dog
- Yilbegän (Turkic) - Either a dragon or a giant
- Yobuko (Japanese) - Mountain dwelling spirit
- Yofune-nushi (Japanese) - Sea monster
- Yōkai (Japanese) - Demon
- Yomotsu-shikome (Japanese) - Underworld hag
- Yong - Korean dragon
- Yōsei (Japanese) - Nature spirit
- Yosuzume (Japanese) - Mysterious bird that sings at night, sometimes indicating that the okuri-inu is near
- Yowie (Australian Aboriginal) - Nocturnal human-ape hybrid, also Yahoo
- Ypotryll (Heraldic) - Boar-camel-ox-serpent hybrid
- Yukinko (Japanese) - Childlike snow spirit
- Yuki-onna (Japanese) - Snow spirit
- Yūrei (Japanese) - Ghost
- Yuxa (Tatar) - 100-year-old snake that transforms into a beautiful human
Z
See also
References
External links