Brown effigy on red plinth with information plaque of El Basilisco mythical monster, Plaza de Armas, Ancud, Chiloe island, Chile


In Chilote mythology, El Basilisco is a snake with a cockerel's head, which turns people to stone with its gaze. At night it enters houses, sucking the breath from sleeping inhabitants, so they waste away and shrivel up into skeletons. Burning down the house is the only way to be rid of it. Chiloe Island's isolation from the mainland, with self-reliance on the sea and land, has produced a rich combination of myth and folklore that intrigues visitors. The 1993 renovation of Ancud's Plaza de Armas featured the effigies of several Chilote monsters.


Size: 2320px × 4018px
Location: Plaza de Armas, Ancud, Chiloe Island, Chile
Photo credit: © robert harrison / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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