Half Greek Half Asian Baby Half Italian Half Greek Babies

The following is a list of hybrid entities from the sociology record grouped morphologically based on their constituent species. Hybrids not institute in classical mythology but developed in the context of modernistic pop culture are listed in a separate section. For actual hybridization in zoology, see Hybrid (biology).

Partly human [edit]

Upper part man [edit]

Human-ungulate hybrids [edit]

Taur-hybrids (centauroid) [edit]

Taurs are a course of mythological horse people with physically humanoid upper part and iv-legged animate being lower office.

  • Anggitay – A strictly-female animal that has the upper torso of a human with the lower body of a equus caballus.
  • Centaur – A fauna that has the upper body of a human with the lower trunk of a horse.
  • Onocentaur – A animal that has the upper body of a human with the lower body of a donkey.
  • Ipotane – A human with the hindquarters of a horse.
  • Minotaur – A animate being that has the body of a human being with the caput and tail of a bull.
Human-caprine animal hybrids [edit]

Satyr men, satyr women, and satyr children.

Goat people are a class of mythological beings who physically resemble humans from the waist up, and had goat-similar features unremarkably including the hind legs of goats. They autumn into various categories, such as sprites, gods, demons, and demigods.[1]

  • Faun – An ancient Roman nature spirit with the body of a man, only the legs and horns of a goat.[2] [3] Originally they differed from the Greek satyrs considering they were less ofttimes associated with drunkenness and ribaldry and were instead seen equally "shy, woodland creatures".[iv] Starting in the first century BC, the Romans ofttimes conflated them with satyrs and, after the second century Advertisement, the ii are virtually indistinguishable.[two] [3] [iv]
  • Glaistig – A Scottish fairy or ghost who tin can take the course of a goat-man hybrid.[5] [6]
  • Krampus — A Germanic mythical figure of obscure origin. It is oft depicted with the legs and horns of a goat, the body of a man, and animalistic facial features.
  • Pan – The god of the wild and protector of shepherds, who has the body of a human, just the legs and horns of a goat. He is ofttimes heard playing a flute.
  • Satyr – Originally an ancient Greek nature spirit with the body of a human being, just the long tail and pointed ears of a horse.[2] [3] From the beginning, satyrs were inextricably associated with drunkenness and ribaldry, known for their dear of wine, music, and women.[2] [3] [7] By the Hellenistic Period, satyrs gradually began to be depicted every bit men with the horns and legs of goats, likely due to conflation with Pan.[2] [3] They were eventually conflated with the Roman fauns and, since roughly the 2d century AD, they have been indistinguishable from each other.[2] [3] [4]
    • Silenos - A tutor to Dionysus who is virtually identical to satyrs and normally indistinguishable, although sometimes depicted as more elderly.[vii] [3]

Human-bird hybrids [edit]

A medieval delineation of a harpy as a bird-woman

  • Alkonost – A creature from Russian folklore with the caput of a woman with the body of a bird, said to make cute sounds that make anyone who hears them forget all that they know and not want anything more ever over again.
  • Gamayun – A Russian creature portrayed with the head of a adult female and the body of a bird.
  • Inmyeonjo – A human face with bird body creature in aboriginal Korean mythology.
  • Harpy – A half-bird, half-woman creature of Greek mythology, portrayed sometimes equally a woman with bird wings and legs.
  • Kinnara – Half-human, half-bird in subsequently Indian mythology.
  • Lamia – Adult female with duck anxiety.
  • Lilitu – A woman with bird legs (and sometimes wings) found in Mesopotamian mythology.
  • Siren – Half-bird, half-woman animal of Greek mythology, who lured sailors to their deaths with their singing voices.
  • Sirin – Half-bird, half-human creature with the head and chest of a adult female from Russian sociology. Its bird half is more often than not that of an owl'south trunk.
  • Uchek Langmeidong - A half-adult female and one-half-hornbill creature in Manipuri folklore, depicted equally a girl who was turned into a bird to escape from her stepmother'southward torture in the absence of her begetter.

Human-fish hybrids [edit]

  • Atargatis – Homo face up, fish body.
  • Auvekoejak – A hirsuite merman from Inuit sociology of Greenland and northern Canada.
  • Ceasg – A Scottish mermaid.
  • Ichthyocentaurs – Creatures that have the torsos of a man or woman, the front legs of a horse, and the tails of a fish.
  • Jengu – A h2o spirit
  • Matsya – An avatar of Lord Vishnu that is half-human being half-fish.
  • Merfolk – A race of half-human, one-half-fish creatures. The males are called Mermen and the females are chosen Mermaids.
  • Sirena – A mermaid from Philippine sociology.
  • Siyokoy – Mermen with scaled bodies from Philippine folklore. It is the male counterpart of the Sirena.
  • Triton - A Greek God and the son of Poseidon who has the aforementioned description as the Merman. Some depictions have him with two fish tails.

Human-ophidian hybrids [edit]

  • Draconcopedes (snake-feet) – "Snake-feet are large and powerful serpents, with faces very like those of human maidens and necks ending in serpent bodies" as described by Vincent of Beauvais.[eight]
  • Echidna – A one-half-woman and half-snake monster that lives within a cave.
  • Fu Xi – A god said to accept been fabricated by Nu Wa.
  • Ketu – An Asura who has the lower parts of a snake and said to accept iv arms.
  • Lamia – Like a mermaid but with the lower torso similar that of a snake and is usually female. This is non exist confused with the Greco-Roman Lamia, who's a child-eating monster or after, a dark-haunting spirit.
  • Nāga – A term referring to human/serpent mixes of all kinds.
  • Nü Wa – A woman with the lower torso of a serpent in Chinese folklore.
  • Nure-onna – A creature with the head of a adult female and body of a serpent.
  • Tlanchana – An aquatic deity that is part woman and office serpent.
  • Zhuyin – A creature with the face up of a human and the body of a snake.
  • Orochimaru - A human being the has the abilities and tin can become a ophidian with a human being head.

Other hybrids [edit]

  • Adlet – A man with domestic dog legs.
  • Bes – An Egyptian god with the hindquarters of a lion.
  • Kurma – Upper-half human, lower half tortoise.
  • Kusarikku – A demon with the head, artillery, and torso of a human and the ears, horns, and hindquarters of a bull.
  • Manticore - A creature with the face of a man, the body of a lion, the wings of a bat or a dragon and the tail of a scorpion
  • Nandi – Some Puranas describe Nandi or Nandikeshvara as bull-faced, with a homo body that resembles that of Shiva in proportion and aspect.
  • Penghou – A animate being with the face of a human and the body of a dog.
  • Scorpion Man – Half-man half-scorpion.

Human-headed, complex body (ofttimes with parts from multiple animals) [edit]

Assyrian lamassu dated 721, BCE Oriental Establish Museum, University of Chicago.

  • Avatea – A Mangaian god that has the right half of a man and the left one-half of a fish.
  • Bai Ze – A creature from Chinese mythology with the head of a human and the trunk of a cattle with 6 horns and nine optics.
  • Buraq – A fauna from Arabic iconography that has the head of a man and the trunk of a winged horse.
  • Hatuibwari – A dragon-like creature with the head of a human with four eyes, the body of a serpent, and the wings of a bat.
  • Kamadhenu – A bovine creature with the head of a human, the body of a cow, the wings of a pigeon, and the tail of a peacock.
  • Lamassu – A deity that is frequently depicted with a human caput, a balderdash's body or lion's body, and an hawkeye'southward wings.
  • Meduza – A sea beast from Russian sociology with the caput of a maiden and the torso of a striped brute, having a dragon tail with a snake's mouth and elephant legs with the aforementioned snake mouths.
  • Sphinx – A animate being with the head of a human or a cat, the body of a lion, and occasional wings of an eagle.

Human with animal head [edit]

Ganesha, with Elephant's head

Horus, with Falcon's head

  • Abraxas – A god-similar Gnostic creature with many unlike types of portrayals, many of which as dissimilar types of hybrids.
  • Anubis – The jackal-headed Egyptian God.
  • Baphomet – Traditionally depicted as an anthropomorphic animate being with goat's head
  • Bastet – The cat-headed Egyptian Goddess.
  • Bird goddess – Vinca figures of a woman with a bird head
  • Capelobo - A beast from Brazilian folklore with the head of an anteater, the torso of a human, and the legs of a goat.
  • Chi You – A brute from Chinese mythology with the head of a bull, the body of a human and the ears and hindquarters of a behave.
  • Cuca - A animal from Brazilian folklore and female person analogue of the Coco that is depicted every bit a witch with the head of an alligator. It volition catch and eat children that disobey their parents.
  • Cynocephalus – A dog-headed fauna.
  • Daksha – His caput was replaced by a goat's caput after a beheading.
  • Ganesha – An elephant-headed God.
  • Hayagriva – A equus caballus-headed avatar.
  • Heqet – The frog-headed Egyptian God.
  • Horse-Face – A horse-headed guardian or type of guardian of the Underworld in Chinese mythology.
  • Horus, Monthu, Ra, and Seker – Each of these Egyptian Gods has the head of a falcon or hawk.
  • Karasu-tengu – A crow-type Tengu.
  • Karura – A divine beast of Japanese Hindu-Buddhist mythology with the head of a bird and the torso of a human.
  • Khepri – The dung beetle-headed Egyptian God.
  • Khnum – The ram-headed Egyptian God.
  • Kuk – Kuk'south male form has a frog head while his female form has a snake head.
  • Maahes, Pakhet, Sekhmet, and Tefnut – Each of these Egyptian Gods has the head of a lion.
  • Meretseger – The cobra-headed Egyptian Goddess.
  • Minotaur – A brute with the head of a bull and the body of a human being. Some depictions take it besides sporting the tail and/or hindquarters of a bull.
  • Nandi – Some Puranas depict Nandi or Nandikeshvara as bull-faced, with a human body that resembles that of Shiva in proportion and attribute.
  • Narasimha – A Hindu deity with a lion-like face.
  • Ox-Head – An ox-headed guardian or type of guardian of the Underworld in Chinese mythology.
  • Pratyangira – A Hindu Goddess having the head of a panthera leo.
  • Sekmet – The lioness-headed Egyptian Goddess.
  • Fix – The dog-headed Egyptian God.
  • Sobek – The crocodile-headed Egyptian God.
  • Taweret – The hippopotamus-headed Egyptian Goddess.
  • Tikbalang - A tall Filipino horse-headed man.
  • Thoth – The ibis-headed Egyptian God.
  • Varaha – A boar-headed avatar.
  • Zhu Bajie – A pig-headed major grapheme of the novel Journey to the Due west.

Human with added brute parts [edit]

  • Winged
    • Angel – Humanoid creatures who are more often than not depicted with bird-similar wings. In Abrahamic mythology and Zoroastrianism mythology, angels are often depicted every bit benevolent angelic beings who deed every bit messengers between God and humans.
    • Fairy – A humanoid with insect-similar wings.
    • Mothman – A humanoid moth.
    • Seraph – An elite angel with multiple wings.
    • Winged genie – A humanoid with bird wings.
  • Legs
    • Anansi - A West African god, besides known as Ananse, Kwaku Ananse, and Anancy. In the Americas he is known as Nancy, Aunt Nancy and Sis' Nancy. Anansi is considered to be the spirit of all noesis of stories. He is besides one of the nigh important characters of West African and Caribbean sociology. Anansi is depicted in many different ways: sometimes he looks similar an ordinary spider, sometimes he is a spider wearing clothes or with a homo face, and sometimes he looks much more than like a human with spider elements, such as 8 legs.
    • Drakaina – A female species from Greek mythology that is draconian in nature, primarily depicted every bit a woman with dragon features.
  • Horned
    • Cernunnos – An ancient Gaulish/Celtic God with the antlers of a deer.
    • Hathor – An Egyptian goddess with cow horns.
    • Horned God – A god with horns.
    • Bat – An Egyptian goddess with the horns and ears of a cow.
  • Snake-haired
    • Gorgon – Each of them has snakes in place of their hair; sometimes as well depicted with a snake-like lower body.

Part animal, office human (transitioning between the two) [edit]

Garuda conveying his master Vishnu. Garuda has an eagle's head, wings and legs

  • Garuda – A creature that has the caput, wings, and legs of an hawkeye and body of a man.
  • Pamola - A creature from Abenaki mythology with a man body, the head of a moose, and wings and feet of an hawkeye that protects Maine's tallest mountain.
  • Selkie – A seal that becomes a man by shedding its skin on land.
  • Werecat – A creature that is part true cat, part human, or switches between the ii.
  • Werewolf – A fauna that becomes a wolf/human being-similar beast during the nights of full moons, simply is man otherwise.

Not-man [edit]

Quadrupeds with the wings of a bird [edit]

  • Peryton – A deer with the wings of a bird.
  • Winged Cat – A cat with the wings of a bird.
  • Winged horse – A equus caballus with the wings of a bird. *Pegasus is the name of the winged equus caballus, not the species
  • Winged Lion – A lion with the wings of a bird.

2 kinds of fauna parts [edit]

Detail of the embroidered dress of an Apkallu, showing a pair of four-legged winged animals. From Nimrud, Iraq. 883-859 BCE. Ancient Orient Museum, Istanbul

'Gajasimha', Museum of Cham Sculpture

  • Allocamelus – A Heraldic creature that has the head of a donkey and the body of a camel.
  • Cockatrice – A mix between a chicken and a reptile.
  • Cerberus – A Greek mythological dog that guarded the gates of the underworld, nigh always portrayed with three heads and occasionally having a mane of serpents, as well as the front half of 1 for a tail.
  • Criosphinx – A Sphinx that has the head of a ram.
  • Feathered serpent - A Mesoamerican spirit deity that possessed a ophidian-like body and feathered wings.
  • Gajamina – A creature with the head of an elephant and body of a fish.
  • Gajasimha – A fauna with the head of an elephant and the trunk of a king of beasts.
  • Griffin – A animate being with the front quarters of an eagle and the hind quarters of a lion.
  • Gye-lyong – A creature with the head of a craven and the body of a dragon.
  • Hieracosphinx – A blazon of Sphinx that had a falcon head.
  • Hippalectryon – A creature with the front half of a horse and the rear one-half has a rooster's wings, tail, and legs.
  • Hippocampus (or Hippocamp) – A Greek mythological creature that is half-equus caballus half-fish.
  • Hippogriff – A beast with the forepart quarters of an eagle and hind quarters of a horse.
  • Longma – A winged horse with dragon scales.
  • Merlion – A creature with the caput of a lion and the body of a fish.
  • Ophiotaurus – A creature that has the upper torso of a bull and the lower torso of a serpent.
  • Capricorn – A brute that is one-half-goat half-fish, and identified with the constellation Capricornus.
  • Serpopard – A brute that is part-snake and part-African leopard.
  • Shug Monkey – A creature that is part-monkey and part-dog.
  • Skvader – A Swedish creature with the forequarters and hind-legs of a hare and the dorsum, wings and tail of a female forest bickering.
  • Tatzelwurm – A animal with the face of a cat and a serpentine body.
  • Ushi-oni – A Yōkai with the head of a bull and the trunk of a spider.

Three kinds of animate being parts [edit]

  • Ammit – An Egyptian brute with the head of a crocodile, the front end legs of a king of beasts, and the back legs and hindquarters of a hippopotamus.
  • Chalkydri – Creatures with twelve angel wings, the torso of a lion, and the head of a crocodile mentioned in 2 Enoch[10]
  • Chimera – A Greek mythology animate being with the head and front end legs of a panthera leo, the head and back legs of a goat, and the head of a ophidian for a tail. Said to be able to breathe fire from lion'southward mouth.
  • Jackalope – A jackrabbit with the horns of a whitetail deer.
  • Sharabha – A Hindu mythological creature having the caput of a king of beasts, the legs of deer, and the wings of bird.
  • Simurgh – A griffin-like creature of Farsi mythology with the caput of a canis familiaris, the torso of a king of beasts and the wings of a hawk.
  • Wyvern – A animal with a dragon's head and wings, a reptilian trunk, 2 legs, and a tail often ending in a diamond- or arrow-shaped tip.

Four kinds of animal parts [edit]

  • Enfield – A Heraldic animate being with the head of a pull a fast one on, the forelegs and sometimes wings of an eagle, the body of a king of beasts, and the tail of a wolf.
  • Hatsadiling – A mythical animal with the head and torso of a panthera leo, torso and tusks of an elephant, the comb of a rooster, and the wings of a bird.[11]
  • Monoceros – A creature with the head of a deer, the body of a horse, the feet of an elephant, and the tail of a pig.
  • Nue – A Japanese Bubble with a monkey head, tiger legs, dog body, and the forepart half of a snake for a tail.
  • Questing Beast – A creature with the caput and tail of a serpent, the anxiety of a deer, the torso of a panthera leo, and the haunches of a leopard.
  • Tarasque – A French dragon with the caput of a lion, six curt legs similar to that of deport legs, the torso of an ox, the shell of a turtle, and a scorpion stinger-tipped tail.
  • Wolpertinger – A creature with the caput of a rabbit, the antlers of a deer, and the legs and wings of a bird.
  • Yali – A Hindu creature with the head of a panthera leo, the tusks of an elephant, the trunk of a true cat, and the tail of a ophidian.
  • Ypotryll – A Heraldic creature with the tusked caput of a boar, the humped trunk of a camel, the legs and hooves of an ox or goat, and the tail of a snake.

Five or more kinds of animal parts [edit]

Navagunjara, has limb representing eight animals, including a man paw.

  • Alebrije – A brightly colored creature from Mexican mythology.
  • Baku – A Japanese creature with the caput of an elephant, the ears of a rhino, the legs of a tiger, the torso of a behave and the tail of a moo-cow.
  • Calygreyhound – A mythical creature described as having the head of a wildcat, the torso of a deer or antelope, the claws of an eagle as its forefeet, ox hooves, antlers or horns on its head, the hind legs of a lion or ox and its tail similar a panthera leo or poodle.
  • Fenghuang – A Chinese creature with the head of a aureate pheasant, the body of a standard mandarin duck, the tail of a peacock, the legs of a crane, the rima oris of a parrot and the wings of a eat.
  • Kotobuki - A Japanese Bubble with the head of a rat, the ears of a rabbit, the horns of an ox, the comb of a rooster, the beard of a sheep, the neck of a Japanese dragon, the mane of a horse, the back of a wild boar, the shoulders and belly of a South Red china tiger, the arms of a monkey, the hindquarters of a dog, and the tail of a ophidian.
  • Navagunjara – A Hindu fauna with the head of a rooster, neck of a peacock, dorsum of a bull, a snake-headed tail, 3 legs of an elephant, tiger and deer or horse, fourth limb beingness a man hand holding a lotus.
  • Pulgasari [ko]/Bulgasari - see Pulgasari for mod rendering
  • Pyinsarupa – A Burmese creature made of a bullock, carp, elephant, horse and the dragon.
  • Qilin – A Chinese animate being with the head of a dragon, the antlers of a deer, the scales of a fish, the hooves of an ox, and the tail of a lion. The Japanese version is described as a deer-shaped dragon with the tail of an ox.

Mod fiction [edit]

The post-obit hybrid creatures announced in modern fiction:

  • Beast (Beauty and the Beast): The Animate being, from the Disney movie Beauty and the Creature, has the head structure and horns of a bison, the arms and body of a comport, the eyebrows of a gorilla, the jaws, teeth, and mane of a lion, the tusks of a boar, and the legs and tail of a wolf.
  • Cecaelia – Half-human, one-half-octopus. Ursula, from Disney'south The Little Mermaid, is a cecaelia.[ citation needed ]
  • Cheetaur – One-half-man, half-cheetah. They are featured in the Quest for Celebrity video games.[ citation needed ]
  • Cervitaur – A deer-blazon centaur. This description was too used for the Golden Hind from Hercules: The Legendary Journeys.
  • Dracotaur – One-half-man, half-dragon. It debuted in Dungeons & Dragons. It also has a counterpart in the form of the Dragonspawn from the Warcraft franchise. Dragoon from the Monster Rancher franchise also fits this description due to it being a fusion of a Dragon and a Centaur.[ citation needed ]
  • Drider – Half-Drow one-half-spider. It debuted in Dungeons & Dragons.
  • Gnoll – Vicious hybrid with human-like torso and hyena-like head. It debuted in Dungeons & Dragons and was also featured in World of Warcraft. Inspired from simply non resembling the gnoles conceived by Lord Dunsany.[12] Considered one of the "five main "humanoid" races" in AD&D by Paul Karczag and Lawrence Schick.[13]
  • Gorilla conduct – A creature with the head, body, and legs of a gorilla, and the teeth and arms of a bear. It debuted in Dungeons & Dragons.
  • Gwazi – A creature with the head of a tiger and the torso of a king of beasts. This is the mascot of the defunct roller coaster located at the Busch Gardens amusement park in Tampa, Florida.
  • Jackalote - A hybrid of a jackal and a coyote. They appear in The Christmas Chronicles two where Belsnickel created them through an unknown method and so that they would pull his sleigh.
  • Jaquin – A brute that resembles a jaguar with the wings and feathers of macaws. It is featured in Elena of Avalor.[ citation needed ]
  • Kalidahs - Half tiger, half bear creatures first appearing in the book The Wonderful Magician of Oz by 50. Frank Baum.
  • ManBearPig – one-half human, half bear, half hog. Debuted in the animated television serial, Due south Park.
  • Miga - A mythical sea creature that is one-half-killer whale, half-Kermode bear who is 1 of the mascots of the 2010 Winter Olympics.
  • Owlbear – A creature that is half-acquit half-owl. It debuted in Dungeons & Dragons.
  • Posleen – A crocodile-headed reptilian centaur from Legacy of the Aldenata.
  • Sumi – An animal guardian spirit with the wings of a Thunderbird and the legs of an American black deport who is ane of the mascot of the 2010 Winter Paralympics.
  • Unitaur – A unicorn-type centaur.[ citation needed ]
  • Ursagryph – A creature with the head, claws, and wings of an hawkeye and the torso of a deport. The Predacon Darksteel from Transformers Prime Beast Hunters: Predacons Rising transforms into a mechanical Ursagryph.
  • Vampire-werewolf hybrid – These half-vampire one-half-werewolf hybrids had been shown in various media appearances like AdventureQuest (equally a Werepyre), AdventureQuest Worlds (also as a Werepyre), Axe Cop (as a Wolvye), Supernatural, The Elder Scrolls, The Vampire Diaries, the Underworld franchise (as a Lycan-ascendant vampire hybrids and a Lycan-Corvinus strain hybrid), and Werewolf: The Apocalypse.
  • Vinicius – Role-cat, part-monkey, function-bird from Rio 2016.
  • Wemic – Half-man, half-lion. It debuted in Dungeons & Dragons. It also has a analogue in the form of the Liontaur from the Quest for Glory video games.
  • Wereape - One-half-human, half-ape. They have been featured in Dungeons & Dragons, Forgotten Realms and The Wereworld Serial. They come up in different varieties.
    • Weregorilla - A gorilla-type wereape. Two appeared in The Wereworld Serial and a monster mask of a weregorilla was advertised in episode i of Creepshow.
    • Wereorangutan - An orangutan-type wereape. Ane appeared in The Wereworld Series.
  • Wolftaur – Half-human, one-half-wolf. Information technology debuted in Dungeons & Dragons. Some depictions of this animate being also have wolf heads like Celious from the Monster Rancher franchise (who is depicted as a fusion of a Tiger and a Centaur) and AdventureQuest 3D (as a Lychimera).[ citation needed ]
  • Zoras - Half-human being, half-fish. Appear in most games in The Legend of Zelda franchise.

References [edit]

  1. ^ Nathan Robert Brown (30 September 2014). The Mythology of Grimm: The Fairy Tale and Folklore Roots of the Popular Telly Show. Penguin Publishing Grouping. pp. 195–. ISBN978-0-698-13788-ii.
  2. ^ a b c d east f Riggs, Don (2014). "Faun and Satyr". In Weinstock, Jeffrey Andrew (ed.). The Ashgate Encyclopedia of Literary and Cinematic Monsters. New York City, New York and London, England: Ashgate Publishing. pp. 233–236. ISBN978-1-4094-2563-two.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Hansen, William F. (2004). Classical Mythology: A Guide to the Mythical World of the Greeks and Romans. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 279–280. ISBN978-0-xix-530035-two.
  4. ^ a b c Miles, Geoffrey (2009) [1999]. Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Disquisitional Anthology. New York Metropolis, New York and London, England: Routledge. p. thirty. ISBN978-0-203-19483-six.
  5. ^ Rev. J. Grand. Campbell, "Superstitions of the islands and Highlands of Scotland", Scottish Celtic Review iv (1885), pp155, 157, noted in J. Grand. McKay, "The Deer-Cult and the Deer-Goddess Cult of the Ancient Caledonians" Sociology 43.two (June 1932), pp. 144–174). p. 152.
  6. ^ Sue Weaver (16 April 2011). The Backyard Caprine animal: An Introductory Guide to Keeping and Enjoying Pet Goats, from Feeding and Housing to Making Your Ain Cheese. Storey Publishing, LLC. pp. 142–. ISBN978-ane-60342-699-ii.
  7. ^ a b West, Martin Litchfield (2007). Indo-European Poetry and Myth. Oxford, England: Oxford Academy Press. p. 293. ISBN978-0-19-928075-ix.
  8. ^ Franklin-Brown, Mary (2012). Reading the earth : encyclopedic writing in the scholastic age. Chicago London: The Academy of Chicago Press. p. 258. ISBN9780226260709.
  9. ^ Fritscher, Jack (2004). Popular Witchcraft: Directly from the Witch'due south Rima oris. Popular Press. p. 23. ISBN0-299-20304-ii. The pig, goat, dog, ram — all of these creatures are consistently associated with the Devil.
  10. ^ Platt, Rutherford (1926). The Lost Books of the Bible and the Forgotten Books of Eden. Entry: The Book of the Secrets of Enoch affiliate XII
  11. ^ Stratton, Carol (2004). Buddhist Sculpture of Northern Thailand. Serindia Publications, Inc. ISBN9781932476095.
  12. ^ Forest, Richard W. (2014). "Dungeons & Dragons, Monsters in". In Weinstock, Jeffrey (ed.). The Ashgate Encyclopedia of Literary and Cinematic Monsters. Ashgate Publishing.
  13. ^ Schick, Lawrence (1991). Heroic Worlds: A History and Guide to Role-Playing Games. Prometheus Books. p. 92. ISBN0-87975-653-5.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hybrid_creatures_in_folklore

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