In a land rich in legend, myth and fable, the phantom washerwomen of the night stand out as one of the most striking and baleful characters in the folklore of Brittany; spectral women doomed to spend eternity labouring over their laundry from sunset to sunrise, terrifying unfortunate and unwary souls in the darkness.
Across the length and breadth of rural Brittany, there are many tales that feature the washerwomen of the night (known as kannerezed noz in Breton or lavandières de la nuit in French) and there are often quite marked differences in the, sometimes contradictory, characteristics attributed to them.
All accounts agree that the washerwomen – there are usually three of them, all tall and unnaturally strong – are condemned to forever haunt the washing places and wash their linen at night to atone for past misdeeds. Sometimes the washerwomen are the spirits of women once known in the locality, at other times, anonymous ghosts. Depending on the tale, they work noisily in silence or sing loudly, stopping only to address a passer-by, often by name, to ask for help in wringing out the washing. Although the women toil every night, some tales say that they can only be seen during the nights of the full moon or just on the night before All Hallows’ Day.

The washerwomen of the night mainly appear only to men, particularly the drunkards who meander their way home from the tavern at night following the path which runs alongside the river or past the wash-house. If an unwary man stops to help these washerwomen wring their sheets, they are inevitably found in the morning with broken bones and enveloped in this white shroud.
Anne Plumptre (Narrative of a Three Years’ Residence in France, 1810) relating some superstitions prevalent in Brittany during her stay, recounted that:
“There are a set of washerwomen called ar cannerez noz, the nocturnal singers, who wash their linen always at night, singing old songs and tales all the time: they solicit the assistance of people passing by to wring the linen; if it be given awkwardly, they break the person’s arm; if it be refused, they pull the refusers into the stream and drown them.”
Rural washing points and communal wash-houses, known as lavoirs in France, were, of necessity, sited near a river or spring at the periphery of a village, sometimes at quite a distance from the nearest house. The lavoir was an important part of women’s lives and carried a significant social function; a woman-only domain, each with its own traditions and hierarchy. For instance, the spot nearest the captured water source was customarily reserved for the oldest washerwoman.

Pierre-Jakez Hélias (The Horse of Pride, 1975) recounts in his memoir of rural Brittany between the World Wars: “For the women, the big wash was a chore of great importance. Like all the really serious jobs, it lasted for three days, which corresponded to Purgatory, Hell and Paradise, in that order.” Soaking and drying were usually done at home but the hard tasks of scrubbing, paddling, rinsing and wringing took place in the communal lavoir.
Most of the structures that remain today were built between the 17th and early 20th centuries although some are hundreds of years older. With the coming of piped mains water and drainage, the lavoirs gradually fell into disuse in the early 1960s but the structures remain a familiar sight throughout rural Brittany today.

In some tales, the washerwomen of the night are harbingers of death as the time and manner of one’s death is always known to the washerwomen; others imbue them with the power to grant wishes but only to those who answer the three questions they pose truthfully. If a question is answered dishonestly, the washerwomen will know and violently strangle the liar between their wet sheets.
Most commonly, the phantom washerwomen are held to be the spirits of women expiating at night, the sins committed during their lifetime. Such sins seem to vary by locality and encompass a very broad range of socio-religious transgressions; from working at night or during the sacred days of rest to murdering children.
Walter Evans-Wentz (The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries, 1911) quotes a description of the washerwomen given to him by Goulven Le Scour:
“The lavandières de nuits were heard less often than the korrigans but were much more feared. It was usually towards midnight that they were heard beating their linen in front of different washing-places, always some way from the villages. According to the old folk of the past generation, when the phantom washerwomen would ask a certain passer-by to help them to wring sheets, he could not refuse, under pain of being stopped and wrung like a sheet himself. And it was necessary for those who aided in wringing the sheets to turn in the same direction as the washerwomen; for if by misfortune the assistant turned in an opposite direction, he had his arms wrung in an instant. It is believed that these phantom washerwomen are women condemned to wash their mortuary sheets during whole centuries; but that when they find some mortal to wring in an opposite direction, they are delivered.”
In many accounts from Lower Brittany, they are the ghosts of women who were once washerwomen who skimped on cleaning agents and instead used rough stones to scrape clean the laundry in their charge, damaging the clothes and linen of those who mostly had little enough to spare. To punish them for their greed, they were sentenced to eternally wash clothes that were cursed to remain forever dirty.

Some versions of the old tales say that the washerwomen of the night were the souls of washerwomen who had contravened the religious precepts surrounding Sunday rest, an observance that was followed quite strongly in the wake of the Catholic Counter-Reformation; as a result they were sentenced to work for eternity. Such prohibitions against working also applied to Childermas, New Year’s Day, Good Friday and Ascension Day; defying these prohibitions was said to bring death upon oneself within the year.
In central Brittany, the horrifying washerwomen were often thought of as the damned souls of women who had murdered their own children. The 19th century folklorist Paul Sébillot noted that, in some tales of the phantom washerwomen, the laundry that they presented to passers-by, sometimes contained the body of a screaming, bleeding newborn baby. To the author George Sand (Rustic Legends, 1858), they represented the ‘most sinister of visions of fear’, and she described them thus:
“The real washerwomen are the souls of infanticide mothers. They incessantly beat and twist something that looks like wet linen but which, when seen closely, is nothing but a child’s corpse. Each has their own, if she has been a criminal several times. We must beware of observing or disturbing them; for, even if you were six feet tall with muscles in proportion, they would seize you, beat you in the water and twist you no more and no less than a pair of stockings.”

While some stories identify the washerwomen of the night with the souls of the dead who were buried in a dirty shroud, others claim that they are in fact the spirits of widows who had buried their husbands in a filthy shroud; consigned to wash these shrouds until the appearance of a Christian saviour. It was sometimes believed the washerwomen were souls trapped in purgatory undergoing penance for having wilfully brought on an abortion by their work or for having strangled their own baby and it is interesting to note that the belief that the washerwomen had no power over mothers with young children was quite widespread.
Muttering a prayer and making the sign of the cross were said to offer protection for those people that ventured abroad at night and happened across the washerwomen. Ignoring them, even if one was the tormented spirit of a close relative, was sometimes not enough to avoid their deathly clutches; they were known to give chase but were unable to do so over freshly ploughed fields.
The origins of the tales of the phantom washerwomen of the night are lost to us but we should guard against immediately jumping to the assumption that they were merely Christian homilies about the need to respect the Holy Days, being dutiful to one’s family or not staying overlong in a tavern et cetera. In some tales, the washerwomen serve as both a warning and a lament but other tales are simply spooky fireside stories, perhaps first told to explain the unfamiliar nocturnal noises carried on the night wind.
The concept of ghostly night-women exists in other parts of France as well as in the old folklore of many Celtic nations. Whatever their genesis, they are perchance another reflection of water’s timeless association with the mystical.
If I was doomed to do laundry forever, I probably would be rather scary as well. 😉
I am enjoying learning about Brittany! Great blog!
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Haha me too! Thank you for your kind words – much appreciated!
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Interesting story – and odd. Funny to find a ghost story about washer women. Not that I don’t find the idea of a big wash day unnerving.
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Thank you, I’m pleased you found it so.
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I wonder what of it all really happened.
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It would be fascinating to know!
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I believe in spirits, coz why not, but some of this stuff doesn’t make sense, but I know some legends to be facts and some crazy stuff has actually happened so you never know…
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I think it’s quite likely that each little area had their own version of the tale which was embellished differently down the ages, long before being set on paper. Tracing those back to the primary source is probably impossible now but some argue it could be Morrigan or even Morganna.
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Very cool! I vaguely remember reading a fiction book that talked about this…now I’m going to have to figure that out!
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I’m glad to liked it. I think that these ladies have featured in a book and I’d be interested to know which book it was, if you remember. Many thanks!
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An interesting legend. It would be fascinating to know the true story behind it!
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Isn’t it? I agree, it would be wonderful to uncover the origins of so many old legends although perhaps we’d be disappointed after stripping away the mystery?
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For some reason, call me crazy, I now want to visit Brittany just to see for myself!
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You’re not crazy 🙂 It’s a fascinating corner of France with some wonderful places to see and absorb hereabouts 😉
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Fascinating stuff! I think my wife often feels she’s doomed to an eternity of washing, given how often our 4-year-old has to change her clothes…
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Thank you! Haha, yes, it seems never ending 😉
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You could always help her feel less doomed by doing some of it yourself 😉
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Believe me, I do 🙂
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I don’t know if this is related in any way, but apparently doing laundry this way was actually quite dangerous. Embankments were often steep and slippery and the voluminous wool clothing women wore would get sodden and drag them down into the water, while also making it difficult to get out again. Drownings were common, even in relatively shallow water. I can see why these spirits would be angry.
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That’s an interesting thought and one I’d not considered. I’ve not come across any old washing points that had particularly steep sides but I’ll now be keeping a keen eye out! Thanks for taking the time to read and comment!
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I imagine steep is relative when you’re wearing heavy skirts (and probably clunky shoes) and carrying loads of laundry. I always enjoy your posts 🙂
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Thank you! I’m pleased you enjoy reading them!! Haha, that’s very true! Yes, I doubt there was precious little grip with those wooden clogs 😉
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I never would have thought doing laundry was potentially deadly, but history was a dangerous place.
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Fascinating tale. Almost like the sailors and the mermaids, where the sailors fall under the mermaid’s (siren’s) spell and drown. Thanks for sharing. Allan
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Thank you!! I am very pleased that you enjoyed it 🙂 Stay Safe!
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Awesome post! I especially love the picture of the lavoir!
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Thank you so very much! There are lots of abandoned lavoirs in this part of Brittany 😉
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Maybe I’ll get to come over there one day and see one with my own eyes. 😀
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Do so! 🙂
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😀
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I never thought Brittany has such interesting tales! I love folklore and a bit of ancient ghost stories, so keep them coming! ❤
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Thank you so much! I am glad that you enjoyed it. This story is one that has always struck me as fascinating 😉
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lots of myths but little of time.
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True! 😉
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You have such fascinating, well-researched stories!
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Thank you! That is so kind of you to say so! 🙂
Stay well 🙂
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History and myths presented lucidly. Reading it makes it very clear that the research is stupendous.
And one small point I wish to make. Wherever one lives on this earth some things are the same. I realised that on reading about the washing places and the women folks backbreaking work.
Thanks again for a beautiful article.
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Many thanks indeed!! Agreed, the lot of the humble was a sad reality that was shared across all societies and cultures!
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Doomed to haunt drunken men as they pass by for cheating people out of doing a good job with their laundry? This is a peculiar folklore. Part of me wants to laugh at it and part of me thinks a serial killer got away with a lot! Maggie
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Haha, I know what you mean! 😉 Despite the variations, it is deliciously tightly targeted – drunk men are in danger but ladies with babies quite safe!
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Excellent article, as always, Colin! I like your concluding remarks about not jumping to assumptions about the origins of the tales of the phantom washerwomen of the night. I’ve come from a world where less fortunate women wash clothes to support their families. For many years, before I could afford a washing machine, I washed our towels, bedding, and clothing by hand. In those early days when clothing was so voluminous, it must’ve been a very heavy and time-consuming task for the women in a family. (I imagine washerwomen developed toned biceps and strong hands.) No wonder they got together in groups to make their burden lighter! Happy the household that could afford to hire a washerwoman to do the task! With this in mind, I can well understand why spending an eternity as a washerwoman would become a punishment worthy of hell.
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Thank you very much! I am pleased that you liked it! Yes, washing in a river or spring-fed lavoir must have been a significant undertaking! Little wonder that it was not done often. 😉
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The initial idea was so bizarre to me that it made me laugh. What an interesting article! I love stories about folklore around the world. Your writing makes these stories come alive. Whew! Mostly men see them, so I am probably off the hook. Hope all is well with you. Have you gotten your keyboard fixed?
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Ha, yes it is a peculiar one, isn’t it? I am glad that you enjoyed the read and am thankful to you for doing so!
Sadly, no new keyboard and today was my first access to the internet since Monday! Hope that things are faring better with you! Stay well. 🙂
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Super!
It is very interesting to see this difference in mentality between Western and Eastern Europe. It is probably due to the Church, with a much harsher attitude towards the people of the West, which led to the retreat into the mystical and the supernatural. And in the east there are stories with fairies, witches and ghosts, but the perception is more humorous, aphoristic.
Lo! 🙂
😉
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Many thanks!! 🙂 I am glad that you liked it! I agree, I am sure that the diligence and approach of local churchmen had a profound and lasting impact on our folklore and they lessons drawn from such. 😉
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😉 🙂
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😉
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How fabulous, I love the way the lavoirs have been preserved in the villages and demonstrate another era when women came together to do their work. And to discover these washerwomen haunt those spaces and are often seen by wayward men making their way home – priceless! I can just imagine it, the long shadows, a kind of village meeting place after dark, perfect for apparitions. 👻
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Yes, they are a joy to see! Some have had their roofs restored while the ones on the edges of villages are cleared of weeds and had the stonework re-pointed!
Ha, yes, lonely sites that would excite the imagination on a winter’s night! 😉
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Exactly, I love it!
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🙂
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Washerwomen of the night didn’t sound too scary at first, and then I got to the version of the infanticide mothers. Goodness, now THAT kind of “clothes wringing” is frightening! Another interesting post.:-)
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Thank you!! 🙂 Haha, agreed, it is quite a scary image – in context, at night! 😉
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I am so grateful for the modern washing machine. Laundry was such a laborious task and not that long ago, even in my Mother’s Day the machines were rudimentary at best. The muscle power and time commitment along with the strong products that took the skin off hands – yep, no thanks, I’ll push a button any day.
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Haha, yes – I totally agree 😉
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Maybe they are the lost souls of the wives who beat their drunk husbands to death for coming home drunk, hence the reason that drunk husbands see the apparitions. Great tales. Thanks for sharing. Have a great weekend. Allan
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Thank YOU for reading! Yes, I think there must be some truth in your suggestion! 😉
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Magical! another interesting article from you. Thank you.
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🙂 Hehe, thank you – I am very glad that you liked it! 🙂
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Why does Brittany have so many spooky stories?
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Haha, it does have quite a few, doesn’t it? 😉
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Yet another of your marvelous spooky and historically fascinating posts. Love it.
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Thank you so much! 🙂 I am happy that you enjoyed it! 🙂 Stay well!
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Thanks for sharing another set of interesting haunting tales. The margin of difference between that which we think we know and understand and that which we find hard to explain is extremely tenuous. It is this uncertainty and ambiguity that seem to fire the imagination with the possibility of
the existence of such ‘beings’. Great read!
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You are most welcome! Thank you for taking the time to read it Goff! 🙂 I agree, that realm of uncertainty provided a very fertile ground for those with imagination! 😉
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Certainly so.🤙
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🙂
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😎
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Goodness me. Brittany begins to sound like a really spooky place!
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Haha, yes, when the wind blew across the moors, imaginations ran wild in the dark! 😉
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beautiful story ,i believe in your story
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Thank you very much! I am happy that you enjoyed it! 🙂
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Haunting and terrifying, these poor women doomed to launder forever, scaring those who stop. Let’s certainly hope there are no penalties we have to endure forever because of missteps in our lives!
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Haha, yes, it is certainly a fate best avoided! 😉
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Those washerwomen look very Filipino…as they still exist in my wife’s country…but I remember seeing some in my parents’ village in Southern Italy back in the 70s
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Agreed, they are almost as timeless as they are universal! 😉
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Unfortunately in the Philippines they pollute the rivers with their soap…😂😂😂😉
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Hmm 😦
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I well remember helping my Nana laboriously wash her way through Monday, hoping desperately for good weather and grateful for my help with the mangle. It doesn’t surprise me that the task of the lavoir became a superstition or part of folklore. Drunk men certainly deserve to be frightened by the idea of being strangled by sheets! Love the idea of communal lavoirs – it would make the day go so much faster with gossip included… There is a hilarious Glasgow play called “The Steamie” (the local word for public washhouse) set in the 1950’s that I think you would enjoy.
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Yes, I remember the mangle but, thankfully, not the frozen fingers! 😉
I shall have google The Steamie – thanks for the tip! 🙂
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🥰
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😉
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Apparently, in medieval times, if you ever wanted to get real gossip you would go down to the washers as they would know all kinds of secrets: washing the emissions of people’s affairs and when young girls became women, that kind of thing. So, on one hand, no wonder the washer women were treated with such fear!
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Ha, yes that makes much sense! 😉
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😉
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What an interesting legend! Thanks for sharing.
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You are very welcome! Thank you for reading! 🙂
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Such interesting history and tales!
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I am very happy that you thought so! 🙂
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The washerwoman of the night is an interesting character to have choices to present staggering thoughts which are funny and spooky as hell.
His acts of ‘wrung like a sheets’ made me to remember the Aladdin magic carpet scene, although the rest of the actions were scaremongers. I wonder where do you get such stories?
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I am glad that you enjoyed these tales. Some are quite vivid and certainly designed to scare! Haha, the stories are garnered from several accounts written in the 19th century.
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These old tales sound like something people would believe in Texas. Now. Today, lol
I’d pretty much almost rather be burned in eternal hellfire than spend my afterlife wringing out dirty laundry for my punishment ! ! ! Truly diabolical. 🙂
I love the photo of the women dressed, neck to toes, in those dark, heavy dresses, complete with hats, as they bend over and scrub in the water. I can’t even imagine how hot they must have been !!!
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Haha, there is a spooky kind of modern urban legend to some of these tales, isn’t there?
Agreed! It must have been serious drudgery! 😦
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lol … the women are little scary ✌️
I have not heard this one before.
And that’s one way to have alot of kids… always have small children and they won’t have power lol
What were the families of France like? Many children?
Also is quite interesting that the women are scarier than the men.
🤔
My mother always always always drilled it into my head to always wear clean clothes and underwear … just in case you ever in any kind of accident or emergency – everything is clean and tidy lol 🙌
Funny with the laundry and cleaning
Very cool stories! Would make good camp ⛺️ stories 😮 …gives me images of the girl from The Ring 😮😮
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Ha, yes, that might offer some comfort to a lady pregnant with her fifth child! Families here were traditionally large – for a whole heap of reasons 🙂
Yes, it’s noteworthy that while men always laid claim to mastery of the household but the women were no passive fools!!
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Hahaha… I am Irish ☘️ … they also traditionally large for many reasons lol … “Irish twins” is also really a thing lol
You reminded me of my grandparents with that lol
He used to totally act like the King of the world lol ❤️
But behind the scenes – she ruled the roost lol ❤️ she just let him look like ruler of the world lol ❤️
My mom was more “let my dad just be King” lol 😘✌️❤️
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Haha that sounds about right! 😉
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👌👌👌✒️❤️❤️❤️ perfect story🌹🌹🌹
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Thank you!! I am very happy that you thought so! 🙂
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A far more communal time, when people could talk while doing chores. It’s sad to lose that, but it also was hard work. I wonder if the tales were cautionary to drunken husbands? Just a thought.
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Yes! 🙂 I suspect that a great many of these tales were woven for that very reason! 😉
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Ghostly washerwomen, how specific. I’m picturing them moaning over some passed-out drunk, “I’ll never get that stain out!”
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Haha, yes, you can almost hear their curse on the wind! 😉
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I am enjoying learning about Brittany! Great Post!
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Many thanks for saying so! I am pleased to have piqued your interest in this little corner of the world! 🙂
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Welcome. I love your posts and have started following you.
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Again, many thanks! 🙂
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OMG this is my nightmare come true! With 4 kids I am never finished with laundry!!! haha
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Haha, thank heavens for the washing machine!! 😉
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Very interesting. I was surprised to read that some lavoirs were in use until the 1960s. Washerwoman seems like perhaps the hardest profession a woman might choose. Makes my back ache just lucking at the images. Another excellent post that transports the reader to a different time and place. Thanks.
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Yes, they survived in use here for longer than one might have thought but gradually disappeared as more villages were connected to mains water. Thankfully, so many of the structures still remain – even if a little overgrown nowadays! 🙂
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Scary and interesting
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I am glad that you thought so! 😉 Stay well! 🙂
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