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- Fairy_path abstract "According to folklore a fairy path (or 'passage', 'avenue', or 'pass') is a route taken by fairies usually in a straight line and between sites of traditional significance, such as fairy forts or raths (a class of circular earthwork dating from the Iron Age), \"airy\" (eerie) mountains and hills, thorn bushes, springs, lakes, rock outcrops, and Stone Age monuments. Ley lines and spirit paths, such as with corpse roads, have some similarities with these fairy paths. A fairy ring is also a path used by fairies, but in a circle, for dancing, as described by poet W. B. Yeats, \"...the fairies dance in a place apart, Shaking their milk-white feet in a ring,...\" The concept is usually associated with, but not limited to, Celtic folklore, especially that of Ireland.".
- Fairy_path thumbnail Fairy_Ring_0004.JPG?width=300.
- Fairy_path wikiPageExternalLink where_the_leylines_led.html.
- Fairy_path wikiPageExternalLink fairy_paths.htm.
- Fairy_path wikiPageExternalLink DaleJarvisTheHouseOnTheFairyPath.
- Fairy_path wikiPageID "12859220".
- Fairy_path wikiPageLength "13196".
- Fairy_path wikiPageOutDegree "56".
- Fairy_path wikiPageRevisionID "698512245".
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Aalborg.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Ankou.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Ballowall_Barrow.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Beedon.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Bretons.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Brosna,_County_Kerry.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Category:European_folklore.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fairies.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Category:Folklore.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Category:Irish_folklore.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Cornwall.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Corpse_road.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Crannog.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_language.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Elf.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Fairy.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Fairy_fort.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Fairy_ring.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Fallen_angel.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Folklore.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Folkton.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Gaelic_folklore.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Heaven.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Iron_Age.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Jutland.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Kalundborg.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Lassa,_Sweden.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Ley_line.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Metalsmith.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Nativity_of_St_John_the_Baptist.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Netherlands.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Odin.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Ringfort.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Småland.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Somerset.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink St_Just_in_Penwith.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Sundby,_Copenhagen.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Sweden.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Thisted.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Trod.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Troll.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Tumulus.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Tylwyth_Teg.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink W._B._Yeats.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Wikibooks:A_Researchers_Guide_to_Local_History_Terminology.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink Wild_Hunt.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink File:Fairy_Ring_0004.JPG.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink File:Fairychapeltoun.JPG.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLink File:Ängsälvor_-_Nils_Blommér_1850.jpg.
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fairy path".
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLinkText "Paths that the fairies travel".
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLinkText "fairies".
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLinkText "fairy path".
- Fairy_path wikiPageWikiLinkText "pixie-led".
- Fairy_path wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:EngvarB.
- Fairy_path wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fairies.
- Fairy_path wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Fairy_path wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:TOC_left.
- Fairy_path wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Fairy_path subject Category:European_folklore.
- Fairy_path subject Category:Fairies.
- Fairy_path subject Category:Folklore.
- Fairy_path subject Category:Irish_folklore.
- Fairy_path hypernym Route.
- Fairy_path type Road.
- Fairy_path comment "According to folklore a fairy path (or 'passage', 'avenue', or 'pass') is a route taken by fairies usually in a straight line and between sites of traditional significance, such as fairy forts or raths (a class of circular earthwork dating from the Iron Age), \"airy\" (eerie) mountains and hills, thorn bushes, springs, lakes, rock outcrops, and Stone Age monuments. Ley lines and spirit paths, such as with corpse roads, have some similarities with these fairy paths.".
- Fairy_path label "Fairy path".
- Fairy_path sameAs Q2962444.
- Fairy_path sameAs Chemin_des_fées.
- Fairy_path sameAs m.02x83ts.
- Fairy_path sameAs Q2962444.
- Fairy_path wasDerivedFrom Fairy_path?oldid=698512245.
- Fairy_path depiction Fairy_Ring_0004.JPG.
- Fairy_path isPrimaryTopicOf Fairy_path.