Supernatural Butter Stealing by The Dead Hand, Ireland 1970
How the hand of a dead person was used in the making of butter. In Irish folklore, a piseog is a superstitious belief or practice, or it can mean a charm or spell. Farmer, folklorist and raconteur Joe Flanagan from Lough Cutra, Gort in County Galway knows several piseogs for ways to steal butter. He thinks the most successful method is through an lámh marbh or the dead hand, used in conjunction with an incantation. There was special words that had to be said by the maker of the butter and he or she used the hand. The dead hand was procured at a wake. Those wanting to steal butter would amputate one of the corpse’s arms, wrap it up in paper and bring it home. The dead hand was then preserved or embalmed with chimney soot. The hand was valuable to these people, very valuable. When the time came to steal butter, they would stir the cream in their own butter churn with the dead hand. When the incantation was uttered their butter supply would be vastly enriched at the expanse of another person’s churning. Hundred percent they had it all taken. Joe Flanangan does not know the words that were used in this charm, but when used with the dead hand they were extremely important words. This edition of ‘Newsbeat’ was broadcast on 8 April 1970. The reporter is Cathal O’Shannon.

Billy Connolly on Northern Ireland, 1976

My First Night in IRELAND Was Pretty GRIM! 😟

Hidden Kinvara Series II - Smugglers Cove - The Claddagh in Kinvara

What a Performance! - Spike Milligan

1961: Should IRISH IMMIGRATION to BRITAIN be Restricted? | Panorama | World of Work | BBC Archive

Bus Ride Through The Streets of Dublin in 1965

1970: MANX ALIVE! - Life on the Isle of Man | Man Alive | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

The Oldest Fast Food Restaurant in London's East End

GDR - 1983 - West German Television in the GDR

ROLLING STONES Keith Richards interview Old Grey Whistle Test 1974 #rollingstones

Slade: The tragic story of Britain's biggest 70s band

What did you think of Éamon de Valera? Co. Clare, Ireland 1975

1976: BIG JIM's Big BOOZY Bike Trip to Braemar | Nationwide | Weird and Wonderful | BBC Archive

People Who Messed With The Royal Guard and Regretted It!

When Wild Animals Get Way Too Close 😱

Most Ridiculous Worker Mistakes Caught on Camera

“Utterly astonishing”: Sam McBride reacts as Jeffrey Donaldson found guilty | The BelTel

Land on the Vistula (1943/1960) – Agfacolor Film | Danzig, Marienburg, Thorn

When A Parrot Meets An Owl❤️🦜 Funniest Parrot Moments

