Fylgja
In
They can appear to a person in one sleep as dream-women, or appear while awake, often as a disembodied spiritual form of an enemy.Etymology
The word fylgja means "to accompany".[2] The term fylgja is typically translated into English as "fetch", a similar being from Irish folklore.[3]
The term
Description
The fylgia is a ghost who associates with (or, for a lack of better word, stalks or shadows) a particular individual,[5] and may be characterized as a "guardian spirit".[6][1] However, contrary to its name meaning 'follower', it generally moves ahead, making some sort of "contact" with the individual before they arrive at some key spot.[5] And yet the fylgja will follow after the individual when that person is near death.[7]
A fylgia is sometimes associated with a particular family or clan, and is then called an ættarfylgja (pl. ættarfylgjur 'family followers'). And a closely related type of fylgia is the "dream woman", as appears in Gísla saga (Cf. § Sleep and dreams below).[8] It is contended that the Icelandic mar or mara (the folkloric "[night]mare") is a dream fylgja which has strayed from its assigned host and visiting the dreams of others, which tend to be more sinister than when visiting its usual host or ward.[9]
The fylgja is said to take on either an animal form or a female human form, and this is due to a conflation of two distinct types of spirits, according to Else Mundal; the term fylgja, she argues, was first associated with the animal spirit, then later applied to the woman-spirit type.[1]
Placenta origins
The Icelandic word fylgja can also mean "placenta" or "afterbirth of a child"[4] and the folkloric supernatural connection made between child and afterbirth may be the origins of the fylgja as a concept.[10] According to some, the fylgja takes on the form of whatever animal that first showed itself and consumed the newborn baby's afterbirths, hence, such creatures take on the forms of such carnivores, as mice, sheep, dogs, foxes, cats, and raptors, birds of prey, or carrion eaters.[4]
Animal forms
Thus, while the fylgja usually was a lady ghost, in the shape of women, it sometimes took on the shape of animals (also female animals according to Mundal[1][a]). The animal fylgja typically came in the form of a dog, but also as various other land or even sea creatures,[11]
The particular animal type that the fylgja takes on may reflect the character of the person they represent, akin to a
The animal fylgja is also said to appear in front of its owner, often in dreams, and offer portents of events to come. As such it is a representation of the future itself, not the character of a person. Like a person's fate the fylgja is not changeable, nor can it improve or act on its own.[14]
Fylgjur may also "mark transformations between human and animal"
Else Mundal has argued that the animal fylga and the woman-ghost type fylgja are of different origins, and the solitary animal fylga is actually that individual's alter ego present since birth, which perishes together when that person dies. [17]
Occurrences
Fylgjur usually appear in the form of an animal or a human and commonly appear during sleep, but the sagas relate that they could appear while a person is awake as well, and that seeing one's fylgja is an omen of one's impending death. When fylgjur appear in the form of women, they are then supposedly guardian spirits for people or clans (
Sleep and dreams
Fylgjur commonly appear during sleep.
In Gísla saga, the title hero Gísla Surrson is visited upon by two beautiful fylgjur, one bearing good omen, and the other one ill-boding and trying to edge him towards violence. These two are dream-women (draumkona), as already described, and mentioned as an example of Norse fetches by several authorities.[8][18] These two women could represent the women ancestors of Gisli's family ties, such as the ties between his wife Aud and his sister Thordis, relating to the idea of the Hamingja and Dís.[citation needed] The good 'dream-woman' and the bad here are also difficult to distinguish from the dísir according to Carolyne Larrington.[19][b]
It is hardly surprising in medieval context that a dream message should have prognosticating context, giving warning about the person's fate. Both Andy Orchard and Rudolf Simek note parallels between the concept of the female guardian hamingja—a personification of a family's or individual's fortune—and the fylgja.[21][22]
In another saga example, Atli of Otradalr dreams of a
A rare or even uniquely surviving case of the horse-fylgja occurs in Vatnsdæla saga.
Waking appearances
The sagas also relate that they could appear while a person is awake as well, and that seeing one's fylgja is an omen of one's impending death.
Thus in Hallfreðar saga, its protagonist Hallfreðr vandræðaskáld ("the troublesome-poet") had a vision of a woman clad in armour whom he recognized to be his own fylgjukona and he perceived that her appearance signified his imminent death aboard the ship.[27]
Folktales
Skotta and móri
In Jón Árnason's classification, he placed the "fylgja" branch of stories under the broader class of "draugr" ('ghost' or "goblin stories" [28]); and under this "fylgja" branch (fylgjur or "followers"[6]) he collected many stories of ghosts which were of the female skotta and male móri types.[29] However, modern commentators have distinguished the móri and the skotta as wicked ghosts, which are separate from the fylgja.[31]
The name skotta is explained from their odd habit of wearing the faldur, the woman's headdress Icelandic national costume: instead of wearing it curved forward as she is supposed to, she wears a brown-red[c] faldur curled backward like a tail (skott, "tail"). She also wears red stockings and sucks her fingers, but, otherwise, she is dressed properly and conducts herself normally.[32][33][34]
Just as the skotta favored wearing a brown[ish] faldur, the male móri were also characterized by their wearing brown (mór) clothing, hence this particular appellation. Though the móri was also known by other names such as lalli, or goggur or by other kennings.[32][35]
See also
- Anima and animus
- Augoeides
- Daemon
- Dís
- Familiar spirit
- Fetch (folklore)
- Luonto
- Norns
- Totem
- Valkyrie
- Vörðr
Notes
References
- ^ a b c d e Mundal (1974), Summarized and translated @ Kvilhaug, Maria (handle:Lady of the Labyrinth). "Fylgjur – guardian spirits and ancestral mothers". Bladehoner. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
- ^ ISBN 9780810116467.
- ^ ISBN 9780192596284.
- ^ JSTOR 1258718.
- ^ ISBN 9781412825771.
- ^ a b Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), p. lxxix.
- ^ Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), p. lxxxii.
- ^ a b Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), pp. lxxix–lxxx.
- ^ Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), p. lxxx.
- ^ Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), pp. lxxx–lxxxi.
- ^ Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), pp. lxxxi–lxxxii.
- ^ Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), p. lxxxi.
- ^ a b Andrén, Anders; Jennbert, Kristina; Raudvere, Catharina (2006). Old Norse religion in long-term perspectives; The heroized dead. Nordic Academic Press. pp. 137–138.
- ISBN 978-0-415-33315-3.[dead link]
- ^ "Bodvar Bjarke". Nordisk familjebok. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
- JSTOR 40918612.
- ^ Mundal (1974), reviewed in English by Brønner.[16]
- ^ Turville-Petre (1958), p. 100.
- ISBN 9780044409922.
- ^ Jón Árnason (1862), p. 354.
- ISBN 0-304-34520-2
- ISBN 0-85991-513-1
- ^ "The Story of Howard the Halt - Icelandic Saga Database". Icelandic Saga Database. Retrieved 2015-11-21.
- ^ Kelchner (1935), p. 20.
- ^ Kelchner (1935), p. 21.
- ^ Kelchner (1935), pp. 20–21.
- ISBN 9781107632349.
- ^ Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), p. lxviii.
- ^ Jón Árnason (1862), "2. Flokkur Draguasögur". "3. Grein. Fylgjur", pp. 354–404
- ISBN 9780190625030.
- ^ Dempsey (2017), p. 28[30] quoting Swatos & Gissurarson (1997), p. 48[5]
- ^ a b Jón Árnason (1862), p. 359.
- ^ Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), p. lxxxiii.
- ISBN 9783862828265.
- ^ Jón Árnason, Powell (tr.) & Magnússon (tr.) (1866), p. lxxxiii–lxxxiv.
Bibliography
- Jón Árnason (1862). "2. Flokkur Draguasögur / 3. Grein. Fylgjur". Íslenzkar Þjóðsögur og Æfintýri. Vol. 1. Leipzig: J. C. Hinrichs. pp. 354–404.
- Eiríkr Magnússon. London: Longman, Green, and Co. pp. lxxxix–xc.
- Kelchner, Georgia Dunham (1935), Dreams in Old Norse Literature and their Affinites in Folklore, Cambridge University Press
- Mundal, Else (1974), Fylgjemotiva i norrøn litteratur (in Norwegian), Oslo: Universitetsforlaget
Further reading
- Andrén, Anders; Jennbert, Kristina; Raudvere, Catharina (2006) Old Norse religion in long-term perspectives (Chicago: Nordic Academic Press; pp. 137–138)
- The Story of Howard the Halt[permanent dead link] (Icelandic Saga Database)
- Jochens, Jenny (1996) Old Norse Images of Women (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania)
- Connor Finn; The Secret of Snow. (Fictional novel involving fylgja)
- William Friesen, 'Fylgjur in Icelandic Saga', Scandinavian Studies, 87 (2015), 255–80, .
- Zuzana Stankovitsová, 'Following up on Female fylgjur: A Re-examination of the Concept of Female fylgjur in Old Icelandic Literature', in Paranormal Encounters in Iceland 1150-1400, ed. by Miriam Mayburd and Ármann Jakobsson (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 245–62 ISBN 9781501513862 (cf. Zuzana Stankovitsová, '“Eru þetta mannafylgjur”: A Re-Examination of fylgjurin Old Norse Literature' (unpublished MA thesis, University of Iceland, 2015)).