Showing posts with label Iceland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iceland. Show all posts

Thursday, December 21, 2023

The Yule Lads, Iceland's 13 Santa's.

     




Iceland does not have a Santa Clause instead they have Christmas troll's .


The 13 Yule Lads  take turns to visit kids on the 13 nights leading up to Christmas


Instead of a Christmas stocking hung by the fire place children in Iceland keep one of their shoes on the windowsill where the Yule Lad will either leave candy or old  potatoes  depending on whether the kids have been good or bad.


The Yule Lads were originally either some what violent or just normal  pranksters depending on the region or who was telling the story. 

Iceland outlawed frightening children's stories in the 1700s after that the Yule Lads took on a more Santa like roll and are now a type of Christmas Troll's.


 They all have special name, that describes their favorite kind of mischievous behavior. 


Their names are:


Stekkjastaur- Sheep-Cote Clod


Giljagaur - Gully Gawk


Stúfur - Stubby


Þvörusleikir - Spoon Licker


Pottaskefill - Pot Scraper


Askasleikir - Bowl Licker


Hurðaskellir - Door Slammer (he loves waking people up by slamming doors)


Skyrgámur - Skyr Gobbler


Bjúgnakrækir - Sausage Swiper


Gluggagægir - Window Peeper


Gáttaþefur - Doorway Sniffer


Ketkrókur - Meat Hook


Kertasníkir - Candle Beggar


They are the children of  Grýla and Leppalúði




Two trolls you don't want to meet, especially Grýla.  You should also try to avoid their family pet the Yule Cat as it has been known to eat people.. Grýla is also well known for kidnapping and eating kids.



The Yule Lads live I northern Iceland in Myvatn at Dimmuborgir in an natural volcanic cave. They spend most of the summer sleeping there and seldom ever leave until winter.

The name of the cave translates to Dark Cities or Dark Fortress.





It seems at one point in the far past there were around 70 children of Grýla but these 13 are all that's left, or at least the ones most remembered.


Hope you've been good this year, you Really don't want Grýla showing up 👹


Have a great Christmas and New Year

🎄⛄







Friday, October 7, 2022

Fjorulalli: The Shore Laddie .

 

 

 

                                             .......   ICELAND CRYPTID: The Shore Laddie.....
 

 Shore Laddie
 
The Shore Laddie, also known as the Fjorulalli or Beach Walker,
is a ram-sized creature found along the coasts of the Westfjords of Iceland.

It is sometimes said too resemble a large otter, others describe it as sheep/ram like in appearance and very hairy.

The Fjorulalli has brownish-grey fur  with mussels and barnacles growing on it,
a feature which lends it its distinctive scrape or “jingle” when it walks.

If you hear this jingle sound the creature may be near by.

In some reports the Shore Laddie has webbed feet and in other accounts it has hooves,
however which version is the most accurate is anyones guess.


The Shore Laddie is the most commonly sighted cryptid in Iceland.

This cryptid is most active during sheep breeding season and is thought to be responsible for impregnating some ewes and creating deformed lambs.

Fjorulalli has been sighted as far back as the 1700's.

Many believe it to be a  herbivore ( plant eater) although  the cryptid  has also been accused of feeding on sheep and even women, especially pregnant ones.

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Alleged enconters.....

“One early winter evening in Bjarnarhöfn by Breidafjordur, six men went out to see whether missing sheep had returned to the farm. They observed something moving by the shed and rushed to grap hold of the sheep and take it inside. When they came closer they realised that this was no sheep. They formed a circle around the creature which then took off towards the sea, pursued by the men, including my narrator. It ran as quickly as a dog and escaped into the ocean. It had a short, round head but otherwise resembled a dog rather than sheep. It had a hump on its back and jumped frequently as it ran.”

 

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The Shore Laddie is is rarely seen and its temperament can be very different with each new sighting, it may be timid and run immediately one time or somewhat aggressive the next.

Keep your eyes peeled on your next beach trip in Iceland you may just spot the Laddie..


Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Fairy Lore: The Fairy shoe of the Beara Peninsula.







                     Image result for leprechaun shoe ireland





Every now and then a strange  artifacts comes to light thats makes you ask maybe there is some truth to all those old fairy sightings maybe the little people really do exist

one such item is this incredible little shoe....
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There are many strange and fascinating stories of little people from every corner of the  world but some of the most well know come from the United Kingdom Ireland, Scotland and England… 

However many other cultures seem to have very similar story's that would suggest  the existence of a possible  hidden race of tiny people… and although they were presumably wingless, judging by the relics found so far, they would be so small, they could indeed look just like modern representations of fairies!... 

One such artifact a  very tine worn-in, shoe made of mouse leather … found by a sheep farmer on an ancient trail within the Beara Peninsula in Ireland in 1824. 

Could this really be a leprechauns shoe or maybe a fairy ?

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Crofton Croker wrote (84, 1824): A paragraph recently appeared in a Kilkenny paper stating, that a labourer, returning home in the dusk of the evening, discovered a Leprehaune at work, from whom he bore away the shoe which he was mending; as a proof of the veracity of his story it was further stated, that the shoe lay for the inspection of the curious at the newspaper office. The most prominent feature in the vulgar creed.

Are you aware that, on this side of the channel  we have so little doubt of the existence of fairies, that it is no uncommon occurrence to see shoes of fairy manufacture publicly advertised in the newspapers? If I tell you, that while crossing a field, in the purple light of the morning, the attention of a peasant was arrested by the sound of a shoemaker’s hammer; and that, upon leaving the path to discover the cause, he disturbed an elfin cobbler, who it seems was at his trade betimes, and mending his brogues by the side of the ditch; that the spirit of the air, anxious to escape from the prying eyes of mortal wight, leapt from the bank, and, in his haste, dropped both shoe and hammer: if I go on to tell you, that this story is most gravely related, and that the editor informs the public, that both shoe and hammer were carried to such a house, in such a street, in a certain town, in the county of Roscommon, and may there be viewed by any curious or incredulous persons; you will, I think, acknowledge that my tale has at least a better foundation than many which are related to our disadvantage, and but too readily swallowed by the credulity of our English friends (Blake 1825 118-119).
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 The amount of work it would take to create this tiny shoe,  especially with the size of our hands would have been very difficult especially in the early 1800's, the farmer was amazed to find that the shoe clearly shows signs of wear, particularly at the heel, in fact, although tiny, this shoe had indeed been well worn-in by someone no bigger than an average pencil... 

The farmer eventually gave the shoe to the local doctor, and from there it was passed to the Somerville family, the current whereabouts of the shoe is unknown, although it is rumored to be in Munster, in Ireland. 

At one point it was even  examined by scientists at Harvard University, they found it was indeed hand stitched, using tiny stitches, and well-crafted tiny eyelets, it was also  shown to be made from mouse skin. 

The belief in fairies, or tiny humans, is known as the “fairy faith” it is still found throughout Europe and the UK to this day.
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 In some parts of the world,  Iceland for instance fairy faith is still very strong, artifacts left or given by these tiny people have been documented on several occasions. 
 ......


The fairy woman’s cloth of Bursta-fijall, is but one example of a gift from these tiny beings, According to the legend attached to the tiny, unique relic, the wife of the district police superintendent and public prosecutor at the farm of Bursta-fijall in Vopnaf-jordur, in the east of Iceland, received this cloth as payment from a fairy woman whom she had midwifed. 

The cloth is now in the National Museum in Rekjavik. Thor Magnusson, who is the president’s Custodian of Antiquities says, ‘Certainly it’s a unique cloth, There are some other ‘gifts’ too up and down the Atlantic coast of Europe including the flag of MacLeod, kept today at Dunvegan Castle… Stolen from a group of tiny warriors… 

In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the flag was believed to bring luck to the clan, MacLeod even brought a picture of the flag on bombing raids in the Second World War… 

Arguably the  most famous object is known as the “Luck of Eden Hall,” a cup that was won fairly from fairies, by a member of the Musgrove family. 

                                     2012-03 V&A Museum 023 | THE LUCK OF EDENHALL Goblet about 1… | Flickr
                                   
                                                          Luck of Eden Hall

Today the cup stands, in the Victoria and Albert Museum. The cup, which is astoundingly beautiful, is surprisingly, of “eastern origins.” Although many of the things mentioned could, and have been put down to elaborate, yet entertaining hoaxes… 

The fairy or Leprechaun shoe found in the remotes of Ireland, is one of those extremely rare artifacts, that does indeed seem authentic… 

keep your eyes peeled you never know what may turn up next .....













Saturday, December 14, 2019

Christmas: Yule Monsters / Christmas Monsters






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                                           ..... Merry Christmas everyone...

                  ...Christmas Monsters.....
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Gryla is a character of Icelandic folklore: a giantess with an appetite for the flesh of mischievous children, who she cooks in a large pot.

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Gryla the giantess
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 Gryla was originally mentioned as being a giantess  in the 13th century compilation of Norse myths and legends by Prose Edda but there are is no specific connection to Christmas until the  17th century.

The oldest poems about Gryla describe her as a beggar who would walk around asking parents to give her their disobedient children.

Her plans can be thwarted by giving her food or by chasing her away. Originally, she lived in a small cottage, but in later poems she appears to have been forced out of town and into a cave.

Modern day myths about  Gryla say that she has the ability to detect children who are misbehaving year-round.

During Christmas time, she comes from the mountains to search the nearby towns for her next gruesome meal.

According to Iclandic folklore, Gryla has been married three times. Her third husband Leppaludi is said to be living with her in their cave in the Dimmuborgir lava fields, with the big black Yule Cat and their sons. Leppaludi is lazy and mostly stays at home in their cave. Gryla supposedly has dozens of children with her previous husbands, but they are rarely mentioned nowadays


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Gryla's Sons the Yule lads
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the Yule Lads can be found in the 17th-century poem, Poem of Gryla. Gryla had appeared in older tales as a  troll but had not been linked to Christmas before. Gryla is described as a hideous being who is the mother of the gigantic Yule Lads who are a vicious menace to children.

Early on the number and description of Yule Lads varied depending on location, with each individual Lad ranging from a simple prankster's to a homicidal monster's.

 They were used to frighten children into being good  like the boogyman..


In the late 18th century a poem mentions there being 13 of them. In the mid-19th century, author Jon Arnason  drew inspiration from the Brothers Grimm and began collecting folktales. His 1862 collection is the first mention of the names of the Yule Lads.

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---The Yule Cat---
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The Yule Cat is her pet: a huge and vicious cat who hunt's the snowy countryside during Christmas time (Yule) looking for  people too eat he usually targets people who have not received any new clothes to wear before Christmas Eve.


This odd trait is connected to the culture and traditions of the region.

Sheep husbandry was an important part of the farm life in Iceland, after the autumn shearing of sheep, all members of the family worked hard to process wool. As a rule, the work was completed just in time for Christmas time, and those who worked hard received a new item of clothing to wear
So to encourage children to there chores and work , there  parents scared them with story's of the Yule Cat .


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===La Befana======
=the Christmas Witch==
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La Befana and The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated January 6 with a national holiday in Italy, and the tradition of La Befana are a big part of Italian Christmas celebrations. Epiphany commemorates the 12th day of Christmas when the three Wise Men arrived at the manger bearing gifts for Baby Jesus. The traditional Christmas holiday season in Italy lasts through Epiphany.

La Befana is a witch from Italian folklore: she travels on her magic broom, to every house in Italy bringing gifts. Climbing down the chimneys, she brings candy to the children that were good and black coal to the children that were naughty.

kids in Italy  look forward to the arrival of the red-suited Babbo Natale on Christmas Eve.
 She is an old witch who arrives in early January. For Italians, La Festa dell’Epifania on January 6th is as significant a holiday as Christmas Day; especially for Italian children!


According to the Italian legend, La Befana, a witch, refused to join the Wise Men on their journey to see the baby Jesus. When she regrets her decision, she sets out to bring gifts to the Child but never finds him. Instead, she leaves gifts for other children. Italian children leave out their shoes or put up stockings for the Befana to fill on January 5th, Epiphany Eve.

So according to legend every Epiphany Eve, the old, tattered and soot-covered Befana flies around the world on a broomstick and comes down chimneys to deliver candy and presents to children who have been good during the year.

However just like Santa  la Befana will leave a lumps of coal to the bad kids.  Knowing that all kids can’t be perfect year-round, some shops in Italy sell carbone or black rock candy that actually looks like pieces of coal… that way even teh naoughty kids can still have a treat on the holidays.



Unlike Santa Claus, La Befana has been an Italian tradition since the XIII century and comes from Christian legend rather than pop culture or corporate merchandising
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==Frau Perchta=========
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Frau Perchta, (Berchta) previously known as a goddess in Southern Germanic paganism in the Alpine countries. Her name means “the bright one”.



Perchta seems to have a dual nature – she is alternately described as kind or violent, and physically as wizened, old, and ugly or a tall and beautiful young woman,  white as snow and dressed in all white

The days leading up to the winter solstice, Perchta would enter homes in search for the good kids who would receive a small silver coin in their shoe; while the bad kids would have their stomachs slit open and innards pulled out and replaced with stones and straw.

In many old descriptions, Perchta had one large foot, sometimes called a goose foot or swan foot. some believe the strange foot symbolized her being a higher being who is capable of shape shift  into an animal form.

The Brother's Grimm reconted a simmilar story called Frau Holle,

They  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.



 
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.




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I'll have one more post next week and that will be it for 2019, thank you to all who enjoy these posts Happy New Year and have a Merry Christmas.! :D