Home

Revenants

Revenant is a term for a person who has returned from death, typically to pursue a course of action they could not complete in life. The word comes from the French revenant, meaning "returned." In folklore, revenants may be corporeal undead or restless spirits, often pressed into service by unfinished business, vengeance, or a curse. They are usually linked to violent or untimely deaths and are believed to bear a visible mark or the same physical form as in life. In many traditions, revenants terrorize the living until they are laid to rest by specific rites.

Regional variants assign different motivations: some stories portray fallen enemies or wronged relatives returning to take

In modern usage, revenants appear in genres of fantasy and horror, often as beings with a singular

revenge;
others
describe
revenants
that
spread
disease
or
misfortune.
Practices
to
prevent
or
cure
revenance
include
proper
burial,
ensuring
the
soul
can
rest,
or
destroying
the
revenant's
body
or
grave
goods,
and
recitations
or
exorcisms;
in
some
regions,
offerings
or
religious
rites
are
performed
to
appease
the
dead.
purpose
or
oath
that
compels
their
return.
They
are
sometimes
equated
with
ghosts
but
are
commonly
distinguished
by
a
more
physical,
purposeful
return,
and
in
some
settings
function
as
the
undead
with
a
drive
similar
to
a
vow.
Scholars
view
revenants
as
a
cultural
construct
illustrating
fears
of
death,
vengeance,
and
unfinished
business.