The Victorian Fear of the Changeling
The nineteenth century did not invent the faery.
But it did inherit its anxieties.
In rural communities, particularly in Ireland and parts of Britain, the changeling belief persisted well into the Victorian era. A sickly child, a withdrawn wife, a sudden alteration of temperament — these were not always understood as illness. They were sometimes understood as substitution.
The fair folk, it was believed, did not always steal out of malice.
They stole out of necessity.
A strong infant might be taken to strengthen a waning court. A gifted musician might vanish because talent had been noticed elsewhere. What remained behind was not always monstrous.
Sometimes it was simply… wrong.
Victorian modernity did not erase these fears. Industrialization, urbanization, and the advance of medicine coexisted uneasily with older explanations. Superstition did not disappear; it adapted.
Folklore was never meant to comfort.
It was meant to explain what could not otherwise be endured.















