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Piuchén

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Pihuicheñ of the Mapuche[1]

The Piuchén (Peuchén, Pihuchén, Piwuchén) or Piguchen (Piguchén), from Mapuche: piwichen for “to dry people” (transliterations: Pihuichéñ, Pihuichen, Pihuichén, Pihuychen) is a vampiric creature from the Mapuche mythology and Chilote mythology known in much of Chile.

This blood-sucker often assumes the guise of a flying snake, or a large lizard with bat wings, that emits strange whistling sounds or hisses that stun or kill its enemy or prey. It is also described as a avian-piscine-human composite, or a shapeshifter taking on the form of animals.

The lore may have derived from encounters with the common vampire bat.

Nomenclature

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The name Piuchén (Piuchénes) derives from Mapuche Piwichen (also styled piwicheñ, pihuicheñ) for "mythic bird, bat" or "flying serpent".[2] The piwichen may further break down into piwn 'to dry' + ché 'people'.[3]

Some forms are: pihuichén given by Rodolfo Lenz [es],[5][2] peuchén by Francisco Cavada [es];[6][2] Andrés Febrés gave the form Pihuychén,[7] which had been misprinted.[2][9][6]

Another linguist suggests onomatopoeic simulation of the bird-call of the pidén (Pardirallus sanguinolentus, species of rail).[10]

Legend

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In the mythology of the Mapuche, the original creature known as the Pihuichen[a] generally assumes the form of a winged serpent. It flies off at night, sucking the blood of animals and humans asleep in the forest. It prefers the season when the roble tree sprouts, and is considered a forest spirit. In hot heat, the creature remains clinging to the bark of a tree, so that the dribbling blood may be found underneath.[13]

One source differentiates between the Mapuche Pihuichen[11] and the later Piguchen.[14]

Appearance

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In various versions with local variations, it may be a serpent with feathered wings[15] (as told in Vichuquén[4][14]), or alternatively a large lizard with bat wings.[16]

The Pihuchén is a black winged snake about 0.5 metres (1.6 ft) in length, with a bristly body, according to the lore in the vicinity of Santiago, whose cattle fell victim.[17][18] The informant stated the bristles were deadly poison upon contact with skin, making (live) capture an impossible task, hence the eradication by fire without handling the beast.[17]

The creature enjoys incredible longevity,[19][20] and in old age, the winged serpent may transform into a rooster-sized bird,[11] or a young turkey sized bird.[4][21] Others say it transforms in its old age into a bug-eyed a huge frog with squat broad wings inadequate for long-distance flying, covered in fine down feathers (as told in Talagante).[4][22]

In another telling from Ovalle in the Coquimbo Region, the Piuchén "has a parrot's beak and wings, a toad-like body and a snake-like tail".[24][21] An actual specimen supposedly caught in the Coquimbo area was deduced to be a vampire bat (cf. § Fauna identification), nevertheless, the myth about it ascribed reptilian-avian-mammalian features to it.[25]

The abbot Juan Ignacio Molina also wrote a paragraph on the "winged quadruped, or a kind of large bat".[26] A later lexicographer remarked that Molina had been deceived by a gift of some dead rare animal claimed to be a piuchén, and the abbot only described such cadaver in detail.[16]

Its ability to shapeshift into human, plant, or animal in certain instances has also been claimed.[19]

Behavioral traits

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It reputedly makes a strange whistling sound[15] (noun: silbidos, verb: silba), some say it emits the shrilly whistle three times to announce its presence.[27] Others considered its hiss and gaze capable of killing prey,[16][7] or the gaze may paralyze the victim and the creature then leisurely feeds on the blood of the stupefied victim.[15] Besides the deadly gaze, some claim the creature is born from the egg of a red rooster or from the corpse of a brujo witch doctor punished for a blunder.[2] (cf. basilisk from an egg and mandrake growing by the gallows).

The claim that it seeks sheep blood when humans are not found, according to one source[15] is contradicted by the opinion of Vicuña Cifuentes that the creature prefers animal blood over human.[22][29] Herders are said to blame the monster for their sheep and goat found slaughtered overnight.[15][b] According to some, the Piuchén takes the hearts of its victims without leaving a mark on the body.[failed verification][30]

Richard Longeville Vowell, a volunteer in the Thomas Cochrane campaign in Chile c. 1820,[31] is the attributed author of an 1831 memoir which described the pehüechèn [sic], which he was convinced was a bat. Nevertheless he reported the lore around it, as told by the huasos of Aconcagua Valley [es][c] who loved fantastic stories. Most of them could swear to at least knowing a relative or friend who has slaughter the beast in the act of attacking (and presumably in the process of killing ) sheep. The superstition among them was that they could suck blood at a distance, merely by hovering above, and their shrieks were held to be dangerous.[32]

Habitat

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As for the aboriginal notion of a forest spirit, one source associates the beast with the forest of "Chilean larch" ("bosque de alerces"),[10] i.e., forest of the Chilean larch or "false larch". The piuchén is so powerful it effortlessly knocks down this Chilean larch (alerces), the tique [es], or other huge trees, according to Chilote lore (of the Chiloé Archipelago).[19]

The black, bristled piguchén dwelled in the mountain range (presumably Andes mountains) and would go to Santiago or San Bernardo to feast on cattle.[17][18]

In Chilote folklore, the creature is described as a protean composite creature, part human, snake, bird, and fish, and covered with all sorts of things such as grass, bushes, and twisted horn-like protrusions (and also resembling a frog and a bat), preferring to dwell in lakes and rivers, haunting the local Lake Huillinco. It allegedly can raise gigantic waves that cause nearby boats to sink. And it exudes some sort of irritant from its body that causes rashes.[19]

Other sources say the creature's habitat occurs in marshy terrain or at the bottom of lagoons.[2]

(See further in § Combatting against).

Combatting against

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Some say it is a green snake that dwells in the heart of trees.[34] Its presence can be tracked because it leaves a trail of bloody urine it excretes,[34] which may also be found dribbling beneath the tree it uses as lair (as told in Melipilla).[4][21]

As aforementioned, the Santiago area informant claimed that the beasts poisoned bristles made live capture impossible.[17][35] Thus, to kill a Pihuchén living in a Tree hollow (hueco), it is suggested the hole be plugged with hefty cloth then to set the tree on fire.[17][18]

Mapuche belief was that the Pihuichéñ coordinated its attacks with the machi (herbal healer), and they were in alliance,[11] but it is also claimed that only the machi alone can defeat the creature , as he or she can counteract the hypnosis with herbal cures.[15]

Superstition in Ovalle recommends waving a white flag or whistling in a bottle to ward the creature off, and adds that adding white goat to one's flock diminishes the chance of being attacked.[24][21] In Macul, Santiago Province, the old saying was that grouping the goats in sixes within the herd will protect them from the creature.[34] Another informant (probably around the rim of Greater Santiago) swore blowing an ox horn (cuerno de buey, cf. erkencho) would scare it away and protect the herd of cattle.[17]

Fauna identification

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The lore of the blood-sucking creature may well have derived from an actual vampire bat species. The bat of scientific name Desmodus dorbinyi [sic] (recté D. dorbignyi [36]) was given in older literature for the animal associated with myth.[25]

According to modern zoologists, this species name is a disused synonym of Desmodus rotundus, the common vampire bat,[37] also known by the Spanish vernacular "Piuchén".[36]

Parallels

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Floridor Pérez notes some parallel with the "goat-sucker" Chupacabra that he claims had devastated livestock especially in Chile's Cuarta Region (Coquimbo Region) into the 20th century.[11] He wonders if the Piguchén might have been the precursor of the Chupacabra.[38]

See also

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Explanatory notes

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  1. ^ Pihuichéñ used by Guevara (1908), changed to Pichuichen in Vicuña (1915), reverted to Pihuichéñ in Perez (2004).[11] For pronunciation, note piwichen orthography.
  2. ^ Cf. Vowell (1831)'s tract.
  3. ^ East of Quillota and north of Santiago.

References

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  1. ^ Guevara (1908), Fig. 42.1 Pihuicheñ on p. 323
  2. ^ a b c d e f Carvajal Lazo, Herman (2021). "Piuchénes". Los topónimos indígenas del Norte Chico (in Spanish). Editorial Universidad de La Serena. pp. 124–125. ISBN 9789567052882.
  3. ^ Augusta, Félix José de [in Spanish] (1916). "piwən, piwichen and ché". Diccionario araucano-español y español-araucano: Araucano-español (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: Imprenta universitaria. pp. 185 and 18.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Vicuña Cifuentes, Julio [in Spanish] (1915). "XXIX. El Piguchén". Mitos y supersticiones recogidos de la tradición oral chilena (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: Imprenta Universitaria. pp. 80–82.
  5. ^ Lenz Diccionario[4]
  6. ^ a b c Cavada, Francisco Javier [in Spanish] (1914). "Peuchén". Chiloé y los chilotes: estudios de folk-lore y lingüistica de la provincia de Chiloé (república de Chile) accompañados de un vocabulario de chilotismos y precedidos de una Breve reseña histórica del archipiélago ... Revista de folklore chileno 5 (in Spanish). Imprenta universitaria. p. 386.
  7. ^ a b Febrés (1882)[8] apud Cavada [es] with the spelling emended to Pihuychén (var. Piuchéng, Piguchén). Febrés gloss stated "It whistles as it flies, and whoever sees it dies ("vuela cuando silba, ye el que la ve se muere"),[6] but Guevara citing Febrés truncates this to saying it brings death to whoever sees it fly (Febrés menciona el ... Pimuychen causadaba la muerte al que la veia volar).[28]
  8. ^ a b Fébres, André (1882) Diccionario araucano-español s.v. "Pimuychen"
  9. ^ As "Pimuychen",[8]
  10. ^ a b Valenzuela, Pedro Armengol (1918) Glosario etimológico Tomo 2, s.v. "Piuchén, piuché", p. 215
  11. ^ a b c d e f Pérez, Floridor [in Spanish] (2004). "El Pihuicheñ Mapuche". Mitos y leyendas de Chile (in Spanish). Ilustraciones de Andrés Jullian. Providencia: Zig-Zag. ISBN 978-956-12-2648-7.
  12. ^ Guevara, Tomás (1908). "Capitulo XIV. Concepciones míticas". Psicolojía del pueblo araucano. Historia de la civilización de Araucanía (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: Impr. Cervantes. pp. 320–322, fig. 42.
  13. ^ Guevara, Tomás Psicolojía (1908)[12] and Historia I: 231 paraphrased by Vicuña Cifuentes[4]
  14. ^ a b Pérez (2004) "El Piguchén"
  15. ^ a b c d e f DK (2024). "El Peuchen: vampiric whistler". Supernatural Creatures: Mythical and Sacred Creatures from Around the World. Penguin. p. 164. ISBN 9780593958315."
  16. ^ a b c Romàn, Manuel Antonio (1916). "Piguchén". Diccionario de chilenismos y de otras voces y locuciones viciosas (in Spanish). Vol. 4. Santiago de Chile: La Revista católica. pp. 274–275.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Laval, Ramón Arminio [in Spanish] (1923). "El Piguchen". Cuentos populares en Chile: recogidos de la tradición oral. Santiago: Cervantes. p. 235. Informant: Francisco 2.º Vásquez, 1911. (* The 2.º presumably means he is a different source from the 15 year-old also named Francisco Vásquez)
  18. ^ a b c Plath (2022) "Como Matar al Pihuchén"
  19. ^ a b c d Quintana Mansilla, Bernardo (1987) [1972]. "El Piuchen". Chiloé mitológico: mitos, pájaros agoreros, ceremonias mágicas de la provincia de Chiloé (in Spanish). S/N. p. 45. Also "El Peuchén" online
  20. ^ Cf. also Cavada (1914)'s gloss of Peuchén as "Hombre o animal de gran longevidad".
  21. ^ a b c d Plath (2022) "La Cueva del Piuchén", version of Agustín Billa Garrido. This seems to be a collection of rehashes of other sources, slightly altered.
  22. ^ a b Vicuña Cifuentes, also noticed in Chamberlain, Alexander F. (1910) "The Chilian Folk-Lore Society and Recent Publications on Chilian Folk-Lore, etc.", p. 389, Journal of American Folklore 23. The material was presented in a 1910 Congress of Americanists, pre-publication, by Vicuña Cifuentes.
  23. ^ a b Vicuña Cifuentes (1915), glossary, VI. El Caleuche, p. 339
  24. ^ a b Silvestre, José (19 February 1904). "Algo de mitología zoológica en Ovalle". El Obrero., quoted by Vicuña Cifuentes [es].[23]
  25. ^ a b Latcham, Ricardo E. (1915) "Sobre algunos mitos zoologicos chilenos" quoted by Vicuña Cifuentes [es].[23] Floridor Pérez [es] attributes the identification of D. dorbinyi of the Coquimbo Region to some "naturalist".[11]
  26. ^ Molina, Juan Ignacio (1782) Saggio sulla storia naturale del Chili, p. 228 apud Vicuña Cifuentes[4]
  27. ^ Silvestre (1904).
  28. ^ Guevara (1908), p. 320.
  29. ^ The Piguchén "It feeds on the blood of mules. (Coinco)"; "sucks the blood of animals. (Vichuquén)"; "a snake that devours sheep, mainly black ones, for which it shows particular predilection. (Coihueco de Chillán)".[4]
  30. ^ Pérez, Floridor (2016). "Mitos y leyendas de Chile". Santiago de Chile: Empresa Editora Zig-Zag, S.A.
  31. ^ Baeza, Andrés (2019). Contacts, Collisions and Relationships: Britons and Chileans in the Independence Era, 1806-1831. Oxford University Press. p. 81. ISBN 9781786941725.
  32. ^ Vowell, Richard Longeville (1831). "Chapter XXIV. § Pehuechen". Campaigns and Cruises, in Venezuela and New Grenada, and in the Pacific Ocean: From 1817 to 1830. Vol. 1. William D. Mahoney. London: Longman and Company. p. 425.
  33. ^ Plath, Oreste (2022). "El Pihuchén (Piuchén-Piguchén-Pihuychén)". In Karen Plath Müller Turina (ed.). Geografía del mito y la leyenda chilenos (in Spanish). Fondo de Cultura Económica. ISBN 9789562892698.
  34. ^ a b c Version of José Santos González Vera apud Plath.[33]
  35. ^ Cf. Silvestre (1904) on Ovalle fauna and lore. He does not attribute poison, but wrote: "This animal is famous and harmful, but it has not been possible to hunt it".
  36. ^ a b Mann Fischer, Guillermo [in Spanish] (1978). "Familia Desmontidae". Los pequeños mamíferos de Chile : Marsupiales, quirópteros, edentados y roedores. Gayana. Zoología 40 (in Spanish). Universidad de Concepción. p. 41.
  37. ^ "Desmodus rotundus (id=1004880)". ASM Mammal Diversity Database. 1.13. American Society of Mammalogists. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  38. ^ Pérez (2004), in the preceding chapter, "El Chupacabras: moderna clonación del Piguchen".

Bibliography

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