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Black Shuck
Abraham Fleming, 1577, public domain
Bungay, Suffolk · England · United Kingdom
Folklore

Black Shuck

A legendary spectral black dog said to roam the coastline and countryside of East Anglia, England, with the earliest written account describing a fearsome 1577 incident at churches in Bungay and Blythburgh.

Field Guide Entry

Origin Story

The earliest detailed account comes from a 1577 pamphlet by Abraham Fleming, describing a black dog that burst into churches in Bungay and Blythburgh, Suffolk, during a violent storm, reportedly killing or injuring several parishioners. Scorch marks on the door of Blythburgh's church are still pointed to locally as the dog's claw marks.

Evidence & Claims

Black Shuck sightings have been reported across Norfolk and Suffolk for centuries since, typically describing a large, black, often headless or fiery-eyed dog seen along lonely roads, churchyards, and the coast, usually as an omen of misfortune.

Skeptical Explanations

Folklorists trace the legend to a broader pan-European tradition of spectral black dogs, likely reinforced over time by genuine encounters with large dogs, livestock, or seals along the coast, combined with a violent and well-documented real storm in 1577 that gave the legend a concrete, dated origin point.

Approximate Area

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The marker represents a general area, not an exact site.

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