Author Topic: Global Mythologies  (Read 33341 times)

Fen Shen

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #45 on: April 07, 2015, 06:03:37 AM »
This reminds me also of Klaus Störtebeker, the pirate from the baltic sea. He was finally caught and sentenced to death. According to legend, he asked the mayor to release his men if he could walk past them after being beheaded. He was granted the wish and managed to walk headlessly past eleven of his men before the executioner made him trip. However, all of his men were executed.
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wolfie

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #46 on: April 07, 2015, 03:17:43 PM »
Most mythologies I know are heavily christianised, so the stories are probably if a mythology at all, incorporated in local saint's lives.

One name buzzes through my head though, 'de bokkenrijders' (Goat riders), no idea what it is about, though.

One other local aspect I'd like to mention is Zwarte Piet. Whether or not it is racist is a different discussion entirely, but the same concept of disguising a person and harassing the local community is present in other forms in Europe as well, as Knecht Ruprecht and Père Fouettard in Germany and in France. Most, of not all of these iterations I know of are connected to Saint Nicholas, somehow.
This concept reaches furhter, though. I believe there is a Bulgarian/ Hungarian (forgot which one) tradition where the youngstes dress up in a very elaborate monster costume making them look a bit like the monsers from 'where the wild things are'. Anyone got more info on this phenomenon? Considering the variation on the same theme and the wide spread I'd reckon this might be a pre-christian tradition having been absorbed into saint's traditions.

Hello fellow Dutchie, 'Bokkenrijders' are a legend about ghosts/demons riding trough the sky at night. It comes from general fear of the devil I think. There is a similar European folk myth called 'the Wild Hunt' in which ghosts travel trough the sky and steal souls or something like that. (many variations, bad stuff happens) But Bokkerijders is also the name of a gang (Zuid-Limburg according to google) which used the legend to scare people so they could rob them. Somebody wrote a childerens book about it which I read, they made the gang Robinhood 2.0 stealing from the rich and giving to the poor.

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snotra

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #47 on: April 18, 2015, 01:52:24 PM »
I'm currently reading a book about Brabant, one of the provinces of the Netherlands. Several terms pass by, such as De Lange Wapper, a very large entity one can hardly see because of his immense size, which only appears on dark overcast nights on roads. He is so large he is standing on either side of the road. Those who happen to walk under his legs have all sorts of terrible misfortune happening to them, or just disappear altogether in the night. The lovely thing about this is that Antwerpen proposed a few years ago to make a very long bridge across the city to improve traffic circulation. For entirely different reasons the project was shot down and the remains of it burned, proverbially speaking. It wasn't very popular.

Then there is de Flodder, a sort of water creature that jumps travellers in the night, giving them an especially heavy burden out in the wilderness.
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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #48 on: April 18, 2015, 02:10:47 PM »
I was raised with Native American myths, and stories. I'm not very good at recanting them through text, but my favorite was the story of how grandfather buzzard(?) Formed the two mountain ranges in America.
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Aprillen

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #49 on: April 18, 2015, 03:51:09 PM »
In Sweden, we have a lot of folklore mythology, some of which probably overlaps with Norwegian mytholgy. A fair part of it is very old, and a fair part of it is also very modernised and somewhat romanticised. F.ex., the image of what trolls look like has been heavily shaped by artist John Bauer, who was active in the first two decades of the 20th century. This image of his is iconic:

In older stories, however, trolls are described as looking very similar to humans, to the point of fooling them until they "spotted their tail". They were magical creatures -- the Swedish word for "magic" is "trolldom". They were often thought to live in a mountain deep in the woods. They were pointedly not Christian (which has led to some speculation that they were originally people who held to the old ways and the old religion and were reviled and demonised by the converts.) They were famous for enthralling and stealing away young women, or  your baby, exchanging it for one of their own. But trolls are not the only mythological creatures.

Vättar were smaller nature spirits that could be evil, or neutral until crossed, or very mischievous, but sometimes they lived on your farm and if you paid them respect, they could protect it and help out especially with the animals. There was a custom to put out a bowl of porridge and/or milk to them on Christmas eve.

There was also näcken, a dangerous water spirit that lived in streams and  lured people to their deaths. In latter years he was often portrayed as a naked man playing the most beautiful music. Fiddlers could supposedly make a deal with näcken to get almost magically good at playing, with stories of how people couldn't stop dancing as long as they played, similar to American myths of blues musicians making a deal with the Devil at the crossroads. In some regions/versions, he appears as a horse (Bäckahästen)instead.

Then there was skogsrået, a forest lady that lured men deep into the woods until they were lost and couldn't find their way back, whereupon she would turn into a tree or reveal herself to be part tree, or hollow, or some such.

Älvor were the etheral misty spirits who danced on meadows or forest clearings at dawn, and could turn your mind until you got sick and died, or became their slave.

In Scanian and Danish mythology there is the mara, who is a normal woman in daytime, but who turns into a spirit at night that haunts people's sleep and give them nightmares. (That is what your baby girl will turn into if you use magic to ensure a painless childbirth --  a Christian spin on the tale, obviously. A baby boy would turn into a werewolf.) If your horse has dreadlocks in its mane in the morning, it was probably ridden by a mara in the night. In other parts of the country, the mara could be anything from a bodiless spirit to any kind of animal.

There are other creatures too -- the Forest Man, the demonic pig that roams graveyards at night, the little people underground, various spirits of the wrongfully dead etc. The big boulders that can be found in the middle of nowhere, actually deposited there by the retreating inland ice of the latest Ice Age, were thought to be thrown by giants trying to hit churches (whose ringing of bells they found most annoying). Most of these mythological entities were nature spirits or forest creatures, personifications of the wild untamed natural state, as opposed to the safe and protected civilised areas of farms and buildings and churches and cold iron. Some of them had a strong sexual element. It was generally considered very dangerous to meet or even see a magical creature or entity, something that could make you sick, physically as well as mentally, for days or weeks afterwards, if you even survived it. Many of the myths and legends were heavily romanticised in the latter part of the 19th century, during the cultural period we call nationalromantiken, the Nationalistic Romantic era, and were heavily bowdlerised and "cute-ified".   

Sorry for the wall of text. :)
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Laufey

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #50 on: April 18, 2015, 04:29:13 PM »
Aprillen: one of the awesomest things is when mythologies overlap. Like the Finnish Näkki that only shares a similar name and the habit of luring people in to drowning with the Näcken, but in Finland it's more of a shapeshifter. It can look like a beautiful young man or a woman, or a floating log, or a water bird, all depending on the human it's hunting, but its real shape is said to be an ugly old woman with long, brown, curved talons that she sinks into her victims when they come near enough. According to some tales this is how you can tell her victims, you check them for any cuts on their skin.

There's also Vetehinen which is more similar to Näcken in that it also plays enchanting music and you may be able to learn it from him. However, Vetehinen also likes to drown people so you have to be careful around him...

Iceland has a Nykur, a beautiful, gray horse that tries to make you ride it but if you do it'll run into the nearest body of water and drown you, reminds me of Bäckahästen a bit.

The Icelandic Álfar are a varied bunch. Some are human friendly as long as you don't steal from them or otherwise cross them, some may even need your help in times of difficult childbirth (a human's touch apparently helps a lot). Then there are those of them that try to lure you in their abodes underground, those that take human lovers, leaving halfling babies in their wake, those that want absolutely nothing to do with humans and those that are downright dangerous. The worst ones hunt and kill humans for a bit of fun - one typical scenery is a band of álfar attacking a human house at Christmas and slaughtering everyone they find.

As for trolls... Icelandic ones are pretty awful. They view humans as little more than food, although some female trolls habitually kidnap young men and, um, not sure how much I should say since this is a child friendly forum... for some reason the male trolls are not interested in human females in the same way though. Trolls in Iceland also have a variety called Nátttröll/Náttröll that turns into stone in daylight.
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Aprillen

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #51 on: April 18, 2015, 06:01:11 PM »
The trolls-turning-into-stone thing is interesting. We have that too, but sometimes sunlight will make them, well, explode, or just burst like a balloon. (Wow, that sounds so much more gory and horrible when I write it in English...)

I'm reminded of how in English mythology trolls are made of stone, whereas in the Nordic countries they are generally flesh and blood, although magical in nature.

It's also interesting that Icelandic trolls kidnap young men but leave the women alone. In Swedish mythology there are examples of both, although it's mostly done with deception, bribery or magical enthralment, rather than brute force. That might be due to bowdlerisation, though. :)
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Sharion

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #52 on: April 18, 2015, 06:40:04 PM »
This concept reaches furhter, though. I believe there is a Bulgarian/ Hungarian (forgot which one) tradition where the youngstes dress up in a very elaborate monster costume making them look a bit like the monsers from 'where the wild things are'. Anyone got more info on this phenomenon? Considering the variation on the same theme and the wide spread I'd reckon this might be a pre-christian tradition having been absorbed into saint's traditions.

Like the monsters "Where wild thing are"?
If you're thinking of this, it's called "busójárás" ("busówalking") in Hungary; it's the burial of winter, chasing it's demons away, and welcoming the spring. I heard this originally came here from Croatia, though.
I don't know how the people of old times thought of it all: nowdays it's mostly a tourist-attraction, not kept everywhere.

As for "Zwarte Piet", I think this is the one that's called "krampusz". It's supposed to be a devil-like creature, sometimes accompanying to Santa ("Mikulás", or "Télapó" - as in "Father/Grandpa Winter") carrying birch rods, which it supposedly uses to beat bad children. He's also said to put charcoal into their shoes, instead of the presents Santa usually gives to good children.
« Last Edit: April 18, 2015, 06:54:23 PM by Sharion »
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snotra

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #53 on: April 19, 2015, 07:34:21 AM »
Like the monsters "Where wild thing are"?
If you're thinking of this, it's called "busójárás" ("busówalking") in Hungary; it's the burial of winter, chasing it's demons away, and welcoming the spring. I heard this originally came here from Croatia, though.
I don't know how the people of old times thought of it all: nowdays it's mostly a tourist-attraction, not kept everywhere.

As for "Zwarte Piet", I think this is the one that's called "krampusz". It's supposed to be a devil-like creature, sometimes accompanying to Santa ("Mikulás", or "Télapó" - as in "Father/Grandpa Winter") carrying birch rods, which it supposedly uses to beat bad children. He's also said to put charcoal into their shoes, instead of the presents Santa usually gives to good children.
That's indeed what I was referring to. I'm not very good with names falling outside of my standard language set.
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Sharion

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #54 on: April 19, 2015, 09:20:34 AM »
I'm not very good with names falling outside of my standard language set.

Which is already an impressive set. :) I also have trouble with remembering all the different names an entity can get in other languages, not to mention the variations of it's character.
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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #55 on: April 19, 2015, 01:58:43 PM »
In the States, local folklore tends to be something of a mix between the First Nations mythology and whatever European nationalities settled in the area later. A lot of First Nation mythology and general knowledge has been lost, though, due to it not being considered worthy of documentation (similar to Aboriginal culture in Australia.)

I was raised in Texas, and one of the best known local tales involves the jackalope. It's a large rabbit with horns on its head. The name is a portmanteau of "jackrabbit" and "antelope". Jackalopes are fast and fearsome critters, and are so dangerous that hunters must wear stovepipes on their legs for protection. Mostly, the stories are tongue-in-cheek. Imagine the deadly rabbit from 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail', but with antlers and slightly less bloodthirsty.

La Chupacabra is another good southwest story. The name translates from Spanish as "goat sucker" and chupacabras are monsters which mutilate and drain the blood of livestock, especially goats. A lot of people claim to have killed a chupacabra, and the dead animal is usually a dog, coyote, or other critter with severe malnutrition and/or mange (sadly.)

Now I live in Seattle, where the local monster is Sasquatch, also known as Big Foot. It's a type of huge humanoid creature running around in the woods, the local variant of a yeti.

Then you have all your 'urban legends'. The Woman in White is the ghost of a mother, tormented by the death (or murder) of her children. Same thing as La Llorona (the weeping woman.) There's also Bloody Mary. If you go into the bathroom by yourself with a candle and say "Bloody Mary" three times, she'll appear in the mirror and kill you. This is a popular game during slumber parties, where your jerk friends will wait outside the bathroom and scream. There are several tales of the ghosts of serial killers on the road, trying to hitchhike. And just about every town has a slew of local ghost stories.

These and other American urban legends inspired the first several seasons of 'Supernatural', at least for the monster of the week. I know they did Bloody Mary in the first season, and the Woman in White was the pilot episode.
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daItrick

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #56 on: April 19, 2015, 02:20:07 PM »
*raises hand*
I have a myth!
It's folklore from the Canary Islands!
This myth is about a little island named San Borondón (derivated from Saint Brendan, an Irish monk) can be seen and unseen. What I mean? Canary people think that there's an 8th island instead of 7 because a few of people can see another island in the middle of the sea.
I was one of them. I looked to the sea and I saw it. This was like 2 or 3 years ago but I still remember it.
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« Last Edit: April 19, 2015, 02:31:39 PM by RealRedCloudYT »
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princeofdoom

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #57 on: April 19, 2015, 02:21:00 PM »
@Meghan: Jackalopes (or their stories) are also in Southern California, or at least the desert-y portions. But I think Californian jackalopes must be a bit more docile than their Texan cousins. Still meaner than normal jackrabbits...

My grandmother, who was of Pennsylvania Dutch and Irish decent, had a lot of little sayings that were sort of superstitions too? Like "Cold hands, warm heart," meaning that someone with cold hands when you shake hands is a nice person. I think as more of a polite way to break an awkward handshake. I'm not sure why else you'd say that.

About the clothing inside out thing, I remember reading that it's bad luck if you put it back right in Russia UNLESS someone gives you a small punch. The reasoning was that it would confuse the spirits/demons/the bad luck into thinking the bad luck already happened to you. I think it's interesting how cultures have similar ideas but with little changes or completely reversals of meaning.
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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #58 on: April 20, 2015, 08:02:45 AM »
I've lived in New England most of my life, and I have to say the myths are pretty dire.
In one, it says if you meet your double they will tell you that you will die in a set number of days. Some others are Champ, Lake Champlain's version of the Nock less monster. there is a whole store dedicated to Champ also Lake Bomoseen's many sightings and stuff, I've been by Rabbit island many times.one time I saw a bunny, I think https://urbanpostmortem.wordpress.com/2012/12/05/left-behind/ <--- link to Bomoseen Sightings
Honestly, explore that site if you want to go into details, it's pretty cool!
But yeah, some New Englanders like creepy death doubles, some like creepy Rabbit Islands. It all depends on who you ask!
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Cliodna

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Re: Global Mythologies
« Reply #59 on: August 17, 2015, 09:46:12 AM »
Sorry for necroposting, but this thread was incredibly fascinating so I wanted to contribute. I enjoyed reading about the myths of various places. I didn’t know that Hiisi had attained negative connotations from christianity, nor about hungarian mythology, nor the seashell room and this thread finally made me understand about dreaming and dreamtime. The island that can be seen and unseen and the meeting your double thing were also pleasantly spooky.

We had a rather similar situation to the finns regarding our native religion. The estonian people had no united country and no written language. The oldest written accord that goes into any detail regarding the place is Henry of Latvia’s „Chronicles of Livonia“ (Läti Hendriku Liivimaa kroonika) which narrated the christianisation crusades. So it might not have been the most unbiased accord on pagan worship, that’s what I’m getting at. So all-in-all there’s very little known about the pre-christian era religion, especially when it comes to the old gods (or their lack, thereof).

As for bunyips, näcken, necken and other such creatures – estonians have the „näkk“ or „näkineid“ (näkk-maiden). It was dangerous to swim in bodies of water with a näkk living in them and sometimes you could spy them combing their hair or washing themselves on the shore.
„Hiis“ is still the estonian word for „holy grove“ and has managed to survive until present time with no negative connotations to my knowledge. Which is not to say, that christianity did not change the way we saw the world. A lot of the magic that some stories tell about – such as becoming an animal or building a kratt, was changed around so that you would have to sell your soul to the Devil to do that. The Devil also took over the role of an antagonist in pretty much every cautionary tale that had originally featured malevolent spirits or other such supernatural creatures.
The finnish „haltija“ also make an appearance. In estonian the word for them is „haldjas“ (which has, in the modern time, become our word for elves and fairys). To a foreigner I would describe them as a mix between a „soul“, a „fae“ and a „guardian spirit“ that you had to respect and give offerings to. I would say that to our ancestors the line between the living and the unliving world was a lot blurrier, so in a sense everything had a soul or an entity living inside it. Oh, and somewhat similar to finnish the root-word for „haldjas“ has birthed the word „haldaja“ which means „owner“ or „caretaker“.

One possible myth-fragment that I remember is the creation of the world, which was said to have been hatched from an egg along with the sun, the moon and sometimes other celestial bodies. This has survived in various folk songs across the country, though I reckon it is unknown whether it was ever regarded as anything more than just a pretty story. Heres an example (with someones translation in the comments), though it has some choir-song undertones.
edit Found another version of the creation-song. I've heard this one before, on a ren-fair. I find it interesting how the lyrics can concentrate on completely different aspects yet the point of the song still remain the same.

Hm. One of my favorite folkloric creatures is the one known as kratt or tulihänd. Well, the former is a bit different from the latter, but only marginally so.
A kratt is essentially a golem made out of household items – sheafs of wheat, broomsticks, maybe a bucket or a turnip for a head, that sort of thing. You give it life by reciting a particular spell or by making a deal with the devil in exchange for your soul. Once alive the kratt will do your bidding, never tiring or resting, demanding to have more work whenever it is done with it’s current load. However, once you run out of jobs to give the kratt grows angry and kills you.
A tulihänd (firetail) is very similar to a kratt, but their specialty lies in stealing treasures for it’s master. Falling stars were said to be tulihänds flying across the sky.
The only way to get rid of a kratt was to give it an impossible task to carry out, such as building a ladder using nothing but bread or emptying a pond with a sieve. An especially cunning individual would even find a way to cheat the Devil – by for example sneakily signing the contract with redcurrant juice instead of blood (though that might just be from a book called „Rehepapp“ as opposed to real folklore).

There are also creatures known as koerakoonlane, meaning „dog-snouted“, though I’ve seen the word „cynocephali“ used in foreign literature, which is what I shall call them. They are the sort of monsters that people might have heard of in passing, but who aren’t really talked about much nowadays, which is a shame because I find them fascinating.
It is generally agreed upon that their stories stem from folk memories of raiders or foreigners – cossacks, russians, semigallians.
The cynocephali are said to be large in stature, part-dog and part-human. Which parts are which is a subject of regional variation, with the most common being a dogs head on a human body. They are gentle to each-other but upon sighting a human are right at it’s throat. In fact, towards humans their only response seems to be to kill, pillage and rob, often kidnapping the people they caught to eat them in their homeland. You could not hide in the woods or your house from them, as they were said to track you down by your scent. Once the cynocephalies showed up only running for the reeds was said to help, as flowing water would carry a human’s scent away. Eisen’s „Estonian mythology“ offers the most detailed account on cynocephali-related beliefs I have ever encountered, including that apparently the smell of birdcherry trees would mask a human’s scent as well. It’s a great book, but has never been translated to english to my knowledge. I’m kinda wondering if it would infringe on any copyrights if I attempted to translate parts of it myself.

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People, who read this: do you also have some more known (and possibly "alive") superstitions you deem as worthy of mentioning? (Although, I'd be glad for reading about "dead" customs as well.)
Killing a spider brings bad luck. There’s a species of orb-weaver spiders that have a cross-pattern on their back – those bring good luck.
When I was on a school trip as a kid an old lady on Manija island yelled at me not to sit on the edge of a closed-off well because otherwise I would die of drowning (not due to that particular well, but somewhere down the line).
In the olden times you were not supposed to say the word for „wolf“, otherwise the wolf would hear you calling and come. Sort of a speak-of-the-devil business. So the people made up these roundabout ways of talking about the animal, some of which became folksy or lyrical synonyms. We’d have „hunt“ as the default word, but also susi (except in Southern-Estonia, where susi was the default word), kriimsilm (streaky-eye?), hallivatimees (gray-coat-man?), metsakutsa (forest-doggie) and võsavillem (thicket...something). 
« Last Edit: August 19, 2015, 04:02:22 AM by Cliodna »
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