Place names Yorkshire place names Many
topographical features, especially in
North Yorkshire, are named "
Hobs". Dickins provides dozens of attested hob place-names across Northern England, many associated with barrows, springs, or moorlands.
Scotland – England Notable people •
Hobhouse is a rare English family name, belonging originally to a Somerset family. • The Scottish national hero
Robert the Bruce was known as King Hobbe by his English enemy.
Modern popular culture • The 1958 TV serial
Quatermass and the Pit, and the
later film version, centre around the fictional Hobbs Lane (formerly called Hob's Lane), the significance of the name becoming apparent as the plot unfolds. • In
Jim Butcher's
The Dresden Files, hobs are eyeless creatures who burn in light. They serve the Queen Mab of the Winter Court of the Sidhe. • In
Lionhead Studios' video games
Fable,
Fable II, and
Fable III some of the minor adversaries are creatures known as "hobbes". They are created from children who misbehave and are captured by hobbes. • In
J. K. Rowling's
Harry Potter series,
house-elves (such as Harry's friend Dobby) appear to be a type of hob, doing household tasks for human masters and driven from their households if given gifts of clothing (in what most house-elves see as a type of shameful expulsion, but the eccentric Dobby – and several human observers – consider an
emancipation from slavery). • The Hob appearing in
The Years of Longdirk by
Ken Hood is considerably different from the traditional depiction, being a powerful spirit which is amoral, neither good nor bad, but which has considerable destructive powers it can use if provoked. In Hood's fantasy world, "Hob" and "
Imp" are two names for much the same kind of being. • In ''The Hob's Bargain'' by
Patricia Briggs, the Hob is a powerful creature, possibly the last of his kind, who bargains to help protect a local village from a necromancer in exchange for a mate. The heroine who brought the Hob to the village agrees to his bargain in exchange for his help. • In
Moonshine, the second novel of the Cal Leandros novels by
Rob Thurman, the villain is "Hobgoblin" or "the Hob", the oldest of the race of immortal creatures known as pucks. In this series, the pucks all look alike, with curly brown hair, green eyes, and "foxlike" faces. Unlike his fellow puck,
Robin Goodfellow, the Hob sees humans merely as toys and tools, beings which are utterly beneath him. • In
An Elder Scrolls Novel: The Infernal City, hobs are used as kitchen slaves. • In
Richard Dawson's 2017 album
Peasant, a song titled "Hob" tells the story of a family's encounter with a hobthrust. • In
Travis Baldree's book
Legends & Lattes, the main character hires a hob as a carpenter in her coffee shop, noting that they are disparagingly referred to as 'pucks' by humans and are not often seen in cities. ==See also==