Tikbalang


The Tikbalang is a creature of Philippine folklore said to lurk in the mountains and rainforests of the Philippines. It is a tall, bony humanoid creature with the head and hooves of a horse and disproportionately long limbs, to the point that its knees reach above its head when it squats down. In some versions, it is a transformation of an aborted fetus sent to earth from limbo.

Origins

As horses weren't native to the Philippines in the pre-Spanish era, the earliest written records about the tikbalang did not specify horse or animal morphology.
Documents from Spanish friars such as Juan de Plasencia's Customs of the Tagalogs describe the tikbalang as ghosts and spirits of the forests, associated with the terms multo and bibit.
Entries in early Spanish-Tagalog dictionaries defined tigbalang as "fantasma de montes", linking them strongly as nature spirits.
An offensive expression "tigbalang ca mandin!" was used by early Tagalogs to signify one as uncouth and uncivilized.
In historical dictionaries, they were likened to the tiyanac, while in some entries they were given the definition as "satyrs", "gnomes" or "goblins".

Horse-like appearance

Later on, as horses were brought from China and Japan through the Spanish colonial government, accounts of the tikbalang appearing horse-like slowly became the norm.
Juan Francisco de San Antonio's Cronicas describes the tikbalang as a malevolent entity living in the mountains, able to shapeshift into a variety of forms, including horses.
However, the very first document to actually describe the tikbalang as specifically having the appearance of a werehorse as it is more commonly known is Juan José Delgado's Biblioteca Histórica Filipina.
Delgado recounts an alleged incident wherein a young boy from the town of San Mateo, after having escaped an attempted abduction by the tikbalang, described the creature as follows:
a very tall and skinny black man, with a long face like a horse, the shins of his legs reaching above his head when squatting down... very long ears and nose and somewhat short horns on his forehead, very large and frightening eyes, and the mouth of a horse.

Delgado also mentions the name "unglo" being used by the Visayans to refer to the same creature as the tikbalang.

Superstitions

Tikbalangs or Tigbolan scare travelers, lead them astray and play tricks on them such as making them return to an arbitrary path no matter how far they go or turn. This is counteracted by wearing one's shirt inside out. Another countermeasure is to ask permission out loud to pass by or, not to produce too much noise while in the woods in order not to offend or disturb the tikbalang. The "tigbolan" is a ghost which assumes a variety of forms, and sometimes confers a similar gift upon a certain favored individual. A superstition popular with the Tagalogs of Rizal Province is that Tikbalangs are benevolent guardians of elemental kingdoms. They are usually found standing at the foot of large trees looking around for anyone who dares to bestow malignancy on their kingdom's territory.
A common saying has it that rain from a clear sky means "may kinakasal na tikbalang." This was potentially connected with a similar Spanish proverb that claimed a witch was getting married when there was rain on a sunny day, although many cultures have such sayings in which a trickster figure gets married.
In some versions, the tikbalang can also transform itself into human form or turn invisible to humans. They like to lead travelers astray.
Individual tikbalangs, even today among superstitious Filipinos, are thought to inhabit trees as guardians. Specific trees in pre-colonial Philippines were considered sacred, esp. the large ficus trees.
Tikbalang is generally associated with dark, sparsely populated, foliage-overgrown areas, with legends variously identifying their abode as being beneath bridges, in bamboo clumps or banana groves, and atop Kalumpang or Balite trees.
Account of Iluminado Cataytay from Barangay Sumilang, Quezon province, Philippines provides accurate information, as he witnessed from age of 4 up to his death in 1969.

Taming a tikbalang

By one account a tikbalang has a mane of sharp spines, with the three thickest of these being of particular importance. A person who obtains one of these spines can use them as an anting-anting to keep the tikbalang as his servant. The tikbalang must first be subdued, however, by leaping onto it and tying it with a specially-prepared cord. The would-be-tamer must then hang on while the creature flies through the air, fighting madly to dislodge its unwelcome rider until it is exhausted and acknowledges its defeat. Or you can look on his mane and you will see 3 golden hairs and if you pluck 3 of them before he/she eats you, they will serve you until you die.

In popular culture

  • In the 2015 documentary series, The Creatures of Philippine Mythology, the spread of Hinduism and the imagery of Hayagriva is tracked through Southeast Asia. It is speculated that Hayagriva influenced the present imagery of the horse-headed Philippine mythological spirit, the Tikbalang.
  • A tikbalang named Lusyo features prominently in The Mythology Class, a graphic novel written and illustrated by Filipino comic creator Arnold Arre.
  • Tikbalang Kung Kabilugan ng Buwan is a child-friendly telling of the Tikbalang mythos – written by Victoria Añonuevo, illustrated by Kora Dandan-Albano and released by Adarna House – intended to familiarize young Filipino audiences with Philippine Mythological creatures. In the story, a Tikbalang becomes lonely for lack of a playmate during the full moon, a time when Filipino children of generations past traditionally went out to play in the moonlight. In a search for a playmate, the Tikbalang leaves his home in the Kalumpang tree and encounters first a Kapre, then a Nuno, an Aswang, and a Tiyanak before he finally meets another Tikbalang as a suitable playmate.
  • A Tikbalang features as a fae in series 3, episode 10 of the SyFy supernatural drama Lost Girl.
  • A Tikbalang was featured as the deity itself, another as a racecar driver, and more as the fighters in the fighting scene in the Netflix's Singaporean anime-influenced streaming television series based on the Filipino comic series, Trese, that was released the day before the Philippines' Independence Day.
  • Tikbalang is the name of a unit in the wargame Infinity, where many of the war machines are given mythological names.
  • Tikbalang, along with other creatures are also appeared in 1978 adult animated film, Tadhana.
  • Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch from Mercury features a flight system called 'Tickbalang' that the series' mecha use for aerial transport.
  • Tikbalang is depicted in an adult animated short film Fly Aswang, directed by Mark Galvez.