Site icon Ancient Pages

Chonchon ‘Tue Tue’ Bird With Human Head Brought Bad Omens To Places It Haunted In Beliefs Of Mapuche Indians

A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com - Chonchon (Spanish: ‘chonchón’) is a mythical, terrifying bird from the beliefs of the Araucanian (Mapuchen) people who mostly inhabit the Central Valley of Chile, south of the Biobío River. A smaller group lives in Neuquén province, west-central Argentina.

The chonchon legend - still remembered today - tells about the ancient belief that certain people can willingly become this creature.

The Chonchon or Tue-Tue is a bird that brings bad omens and bad luck to the places it haunts.

It refers to a sorcerer who used magic lotion on his neck that makes his head detach from his body and fly everywhere to make his terrifying tricks of evil, especially on dark nights.

The person ('a kalku', a Mapuche sorcerer) has the ability to transform and emit its fateful tue-tue cry.

This is a preview of our premium article available only to members of Ancient Pages.

Become a member to read more -  Click here

If you are already a member and have logged in to your account, you can access the article here

See also:

Mikoshi-Nyudo: Evil, Bald-Headed And Long-Necked Yokai Goblin In Japanese Folklore

Noppera-bo: Odd Intimidating Human-Like Faceless Yokai In Japanese Folklore

Strange Ancient And Medieval Encounters With Unusual Beings Reported And Documented

Explore -  Our Library Of Ancient And Unexplained Mysteries

Exit mobile version