Traditional tales from Cornwall, with maps for stories' locations

Cornwall’s myths get a map — and a climber solves Chair Ladder mystery

TLDR: Mazed maps 150+ Cornish folk tales to real locations, turning legends into a clickable road trip. An early commenter—an enthusiastic climber—celebrated that one tale explains Gwennap Head’s “Chair Ladder,” setting an upbeat tone and hinting this map could revive interest in how folklore shaped place names.

Cornish legends just went full treasure map, and the first person to plant a flag is a climber. With Mazed pinning 150+ folk tales to real locations—witches on the wild north coast, saints and mermaids in the south, giants on the moor, and those mischievous piskeys everywhere—commenter steve_gh burst in with the feel-good take: a story finally explained why Gwennap Head’s sea cliffs are called Chair Ladder. Cue the collective “aha!” energy.

The site itself is delightfully chaotic: animations, illustrations, community performances, even puppet retellings, all celebrating Cornwall’s old droll storytellers. There’s a kid-friendly bedtime toggle for the spookier bits, and a built-in catchphrase begging to go viral: if you’re “MAZED BY THE PISKEYS,” cure it by turning your pockets inside out. The vibe? Wholesome folklore meets real-world adventure.

No flame wars yet—just coastal nerds and lore lovers high-fiving across the comments. Expect playful debates between “piskey truthers” and map geeks about which legends belong where, and a flood of “I finally know what that place name means” revelations. For now, the loudest mood is wonder: stories stitched back to the land, and one climber’s mystery neatly solved by a fairy-touched map.

Key Points

  • Mazed hosts and retells more than 150 traditional Cornish folk tales.
  • Each tale on Mazed is linked to a map showing its specific location in Cornwall.
  • The stories feature regional themes such as witches and wreckers (north coast), saints and mermaids (south), giants (moor), and piskeys.
  • Mazed celebrates historical droll storytellers and folklorists and presents tales via animations, illustrations, and community performances.
  • The site offers a bedtime story filter for young children and invites users to retell and adapt the stories.

Hottest takes

“Explains why Gwennap Head’s sea cliffs are called Chair Ladder” — steve_gh
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