The Faoladh wasn’t a monster hunting villages The Faoladh was never meant to be feared like later werewolves. In early Irish tradition, the Faoladh was a guardian of the wild and the people, a wolf-being bound to warriors, borders, and liminal places. It protected travellers, defended territory, and stood watch where civilisation met the untamed world. Unlike later folklore shaped by fear and superstition, the Faoladh was not evil. It did not hunt the innocent or spread curses. Its power had purpose. Its violence had limits. The wolf form symbolised vigilance, loyalty, and restraint — the kind of strength that protects rather than destroys. To the early Irish, the wild was dangerous, yes, but it was also necessary. The Faoladh embodied that balance. Only much later were such figures recast as monsters, when anything wild, uncontrollable, or outside the rules became something to fear. So the question remains: Was the Faoladh ever a monster — or did it become one only after people forgot what it was guarding? 💬 Hero or threat? Guardian or warning? #legends #ancient #werewolf #stories #myths
