Showing posts with label Holda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holda. Show all posts

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Frau Perchta, Christmas Witch.

 


Frau Perchta


Frau Perchta was also known as Berchta, or Bertha, and has also been called “Spinnstubenfrau” or “Spinning Room Lady.”
 

She is often depicted with a beaked nose made of iron, dressed in rags, sometimes  carrying a cane, and usually resembles a  old woman.


In some descriptions, she has two forms; she may appear as either a beautiful young woman with skin and hair as white as snow, or as elderly and haggard.

In the Tyrol she appears as little old woman with a very wrinkled face, bright lively eyes, and a long hooked nose; her hair is disheveled, her garments  tattered and torn.





In many old descriptions, Perchta had one large foot, sometimes called a goose foot or swan foot.

Grimm thought the strange foot symbolized her being a higher being who could shapeshift to animal form. He noticed that Bertha with a strange foot exists in many languages (Middle German "Berhte mit dem fuoze", French "Berthe au grand pied", Latin "Berhta cum magno pede",  Italian " Berta dai gran piè", title of a medieval epic poem of Italian area): "It is apparently a swan maiden's foot, which as a mark of her higher nature she cannot lay aside...and at the same time the spinning-woman's splayfoot that worked the treadle".


Perchta had many different names depending on the era and region: Grimm (The Brothers Grimm) listed the names Perahta and Berchte as the main names
followed by Berchta in Old High German, as well as Behrta and Frau Perchta.

In Baden, Swabia, Switzerland and Slovenian regions, she was often called Frau Faste (the lady of the Ember days) or Pehta or 'Kvaternica',
in Slovene. Elsewhere she was known as Posterli, Quatemberca and Fronfastenweiber.


Percht and other variations, was once known as a goddess in Alpine paganism in the Upper German and Austrian regions of the Alps. Her name may mean
 "the bright one" Perchta may also come from an  Old High German verb pergan, meaning "hidden" or "covered



She also bears a resemblance to the Scandinavian goddess Frigga, and both of them share a common trait: spinning, specifically, and domestic neatness  general.




Other legends equate Frau Perchta with the legend of the Wild Hunt, and say that she flies through the night sky followed by an army of lost souls,  including the demonic-looking Perchten, her army of servants who are almost identical in appearance to Krampus.

The only difference is that Krampus rides abroad at St. Nicholas Eve while the Perchten travel  closer too Epiphany, and the last three Thursdays before Christmas, also known as Berchtl nights or Knocking nights.


Also among her army of the night are the souls of unbaptized children. Legend has it if you hear the wind and thunder roaring and rumbling through the  mountains on the Berchtl nights, you’re really hearing the sounds of Perchta leading the Wild Hunt.







Another one of Frau Perchta’s names is Holle, a winter goddess who’s name means “shining” or “bright” — hence her association with Epiphany, the “Shining Night” on which the star of Bethlehem shone down.

 

 

 
Her dual nature is expressed in the fact that there are both “Evil” or “Ugly” Perchten and “Pretty” Perchten, both of whom you might find in a typical “Perchtenlauf” or Perchten run in the Alpine regions of Europe.

                                                 File:Perchtenmasken Salzburg.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

In Austria, particularly Salzburg, where she is said to wander through Hohensalzburg Castle in the dead of night,  the Perchten are still a traditional part of  holidays and festivals (such as the Carnival Fastnacht). The wooden  masks made for the festivals are today called Perchten.

In the Pongau region of Austria large processions of Schönperchten ("beautiful Perchten") and Schiachperchten ("ugly Perchten") are held every winter.

Beautiful masks are said to encouraging financial windfalls, and the ugly masks are worn to drive away evil spirits.


Other regional variations include the Tresterer in the Austrian Pinzgau region, the stilt dancers in the town of Unken, the Schnabelpercht or Schnabelperchten  ("trunked Percht") in the Unterinntal region and the Glöcklerlaufen ("bell-running") in the Salzkammergut.

A number of large ski-resorts have turned the tradition into a tourist attraction drawing large crowds every winter. 

She's Coming To Rip Out Your Organs And Replace Them With Garbage – Merry  Christmas From Frau Perchta!
 

 

In southern Austria, in Carinthia there is  a male form of Perchta called  Quantembermann, in German, or Kvaternik, in Slovene (the man of the four Ember days).

Grimm thought that her male counterpart or equivalent is Berchtold.

Regional variations of the name include Berigl, Berchtlmuada, Perhta-Baba, Zlobna Pehta, Bechtrababa, Sampa, Stampa, Lutzl, Zamperin, Pudelfrau,  Zampermuatta and Rauweib.

                     Perchta: Evil Witch Of The Alps - An Old Tradition That Still Continues -  Ancient Pages

Perchta was the upholder of cultural taboos, such as the prohibition against spinning on holidays.

In  Bavaria and Austria folklore, Perchta was said to roam the countryside at midwinter, and to enter homes during the twelve days between Christmas and Epiphany (especially on the Twelfth Night).

She would know whether the children and young servants of the household had behaved well and worked hard all year.

If they had, they might find a small silver coin the next day, in a shoe or pail.


If they had not, she would slit their bellies open, remove their stomach and guts, and stuff the hole with straw and pebbles.
                                              The Myth of Frau Perchta – The Storied Imaginarium


She is manly focused on whether or not  girls had spun the whole of their allotted portion of flax or wool during the year.

 
She would also slit people's stomachs open and stuff them with straw if they ate something on the night of her feast day, other than the traditional meal of fish and gruel.



There was even a  cult dedicated to Perchta, the followers would leave food and drink's for Frau Percht and her followers in the hope of receiving wealth and good fortune, it was later condemned in Bavaria in the Thesaurus pauperum (1468) and by Thomas Ebendorfer von Haselbach in De decem praeceptis (1439).






Later canonical and church documents characterized Perchta as synonymous with other leading female spirits: Holda, Diana, Herodias, Richella and Abundia


According to Jacob Grimm and Lotte Motz, Perchta is Holda's southern cousin or equivalent, as they both share the role of "guardian of the beasts"  and appear during the Twelve Days of Christmas, when they oversee spinning.


Grimm says Perchta or Berchta was known "precisely in those Upper German regions where Holda leaves off, in Swabia, in Alsace, in Switzerland, in Bavaria and Austria."



Perchta is  a "rewarder of the generous, and the punisher of the bad, particularly lying children".



Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Demons of Love: The Huldra


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In some legends she is very friendly if approached properly and may even offer advice such as where the best fishing location or hunting spot can be found.

In others she is dangerous, often luring in  young men and killing them.
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In Nordic mythology the  Huldra is a type of forest nymph / spirit she is very seductive in nature and often described as a beautiful young  woman  with long flowing hair.

The hair cover's a large hollow area on her back like a old hollow tree...



                            Image result for huldra

Art by tobiee on deviantart  https://www.deviantart.com/tobiee/art/huldra-283184638
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In most versions she has look's just like any normal human woman, the only way to tell something is different is her  tail usually said to resemble a cow's tail and sometimes a fox's.. that can be seen stinking out from the bottom of her dress.

 In Norway, she has a cow's tail, in Sweden she usually doesn't have a tail and in other story's she has  a fox tail. just depends on what version of the myth you hear.....


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There is a similar creature in  Germany called a holda
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                                                  Fox tail Huldra

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In the norther area's of Sweden, the tail is often left out of the story in favor of her hollow or bark-covered back.
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                                                     Image result for huldra
                                             --------- Hollow Back / cow  or fox tail------------
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Being a forest dwelling creature the hulder is also  associated with hunting; if she take's a liking to a huntsman she may blow down the barrel of his  rifle, causing it never to miss a shot.

Other's she doesn't not like are often loose there minds and spend the rest of there life as a lunatic, if she doesn't just kill them.

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 In most versions of the huldra legend she is a seductress.
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The Huldra will lure men into the forest to have sexual intercourse with her, she will reward those who satisfy her and she will kill those who don't.

The Norway the huldra  is  somewhat less violent most of the time and may just kidnap a man or lure him into the other realm of the Hilda Folk / Hidden Folk.

She has also been know kidnap human infants and replaces them with her own huldrebarn (huldre children similar to fairy changelings).

Sometimes the relationship between the huldra and the man she charmed would result in a child, being presented to the unknowing father.

In some cases, she forces him to marry her afterwards.

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In Norway back in the1980's an elderly man from Valdres claimed he had a child with the hulderpeople on Norwegian radio.
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Sometimes she marries a local village man, but when this happens, the glamour leaves her when the priest lays his hand on her, or when she enters the church reviling to all preset that she was not human.

Some tales  leave out this that part, and only relate how her  marriage to a Christian man will cause her to lose her tail, but not her looks, and let the couple live happily ever after.

However if she is treated badly it will not end will for the abuser!

Haldra's are very strong !

She can straighten  out a horseshoe with her bare hands, sometimes while it is still glowing hot from the forge or even lift up a tree trunk.
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If betrayed, a hulder will punish a man.

In one old tale  from Sigdal, A man betrayed her trust and she avenged her pride on a young braggart she had sworn to marry, on the promise that he would not tell anybody of her. The boy instead bragged about his bride for a year, and when they met again, she beat him around the ears with her cow's tail. He lost his hearing and his wits for the rest of his life.


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The hulder were said to be kind to charcoal burners, watching their charcoal kilns while they rested.

Knowing that she would wake them if there were any problems, they were able to sleep, and in exchange they left provisions for her.

A boy in Tiveden went fishing, but he had no luck. Then he met a beautiful lady, and she was so stunning that he felt he had to catch his breath. But, then he realized who she was, because he could see a fox's tail sticking out below the skirt. As he knew that it was forbidden to comment on the tail to the lady of the forest, if it were not done in the most polite manner, he bowed deeply and said with his softest voice, "Milady, I see that your petticoat shows below your skirt". The lady thanked him gracefully and hid her tail under her skirt, telling the boy to fish on the other side of the lake. That day, the boy had great luck with his fishing and he caught a fish every time he threw out the line. This was the hulder's recognition of his politeness -----
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 Norway and other area's of Scandinavia have many famous places named after the Huldra.

Ulddaidvárri in Kvænangen, Troms (Norway) means "Mountain of the Hulders" in North Sámi.

Hulderheim is located southeast on the island Karlsøya in Troms, Norway. The name means "Home of the Hulder"

Hulderhusan is an area on the southwest of Norway's largest island Hinnøya, the name of which means "Houses of the Hulders"

 Huldremose (Hulder Bog) is a bog located on Djursland, Denmark famous for the discovery of the Huldremose Woman, a bog body from 55BC

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So the next time you visit Scandinavian be wary of any beautiful young women you meet on the hiking trail, you may come face to face with a Huldra....