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Mythology in the Low Countries

The mythology of the modern-day Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg has its roots in the mythologies of pre-Christian (e.g. Gaulish (Gallo-Roman) and Germanic) cultures, predating the region's Christianization under the influence of the Franks in the Early Middle Ages.[1] At the time of the Roman Empire and in the Early Middle Ages, some of the resident peoples of the Low Countries' included:

Old Dutch mythology can mean the myths specifically told in Old Dutch language. However, many of the myths in this language are ancient and part of larger movements across Europe, such as Roman mythology that spread through the Roman Empire, and Continental Germanic mythology. Pre-Christian traditions of the veneration of trees (particularly the oak, see Donar's oak), springs and woods native to the Low Countries survived in Christianized guise into the Middle Ages. Sources for the reconstruction of pre-Christian traditions include the accounts of the Anglo-Saxon missionaries to the region, medieval and modern folklore and legend, and local toponymy.

Pre-Christian traditions edit

Deities edit

 
A tribute to pagan mythology illustrated in Emilia, Arcite, and Palamon worship at the shrines of the Gods - from the Théséide, circa 1460-70 by Flemish artist Barthélemy d'Eyck.

From ancient regional mythology, most names of ancient gods and goddesses in this region come from local tribal lore, particularly in the North. Many of the deities are the same as eastern Germanic Deities: Wodan is Dutch for Odin, the god of war and leader of the Wild Hunt. The Wild Hunt was retold in Dutch with Wodan leading under different guises: Gait with his dogs; Derk with his dogs; Derk with his boar; the glowing horse; Henske with his dogs.).[4] Donar is Dutch for Thor, the god of thunder.

In Dutch the days of the week are named for Germanic gods, a custom derived from parallel Roman practice. Note that the following days were named through Roman influence, because the Romans found them to be (roughly) equivalent to their Roman deities:[5]

  1. maandag (Monday) named after Máni - compared to "dies Lunae" (Luna's day)
  2. dinsdag (Tuesday) named after Tyr - compared to "dies Martis" (Mars' day)
  3. woensdag (Wednesday) after Wodan - compared to "dies Mercurii" (Mercury's day)
  4. donderdag (Thursday) is named after Donar - compared to "dies Jovis" (Jupiter's day)
  5. vrijdag (Friday) after Frîja - compared to "dies Veneris" (Venus' day).

However other ancient deities are Druidic, Celtic and Gallo-Roman in nature, particularly in the south and throughout Flanders: Erecura, the goddess of the earth, Rosmerta, goddess of fertility, and the deities mentioned by Saint Eligius in Flanders (Jupiter, Neptune, Orcus, Diana, and Minerva).

Finally some deities were regional or specific to one clan: Arduinna was the Celtic goddess of the Ardennes forest. Nehalennia was a goddess of travellers in Zeeland, where over 160 stone votives depicting her image were located in the sea.[6] Vagdavercustis was an ancient goddess of the Batavians mentioned on an altar near Cologne. Tanfana is another more mysterious goddess recorded in the 1st century AD.

Other beings edit

The Dutch words witte wieven and wittewijven in Dutch dialects means "white women". They were spirits of the women who died of heartbreak after their men had been untrue to them. They would live on in the mists and appear when it was night and misty. They would attack men who were untrue to their women by getting them lost in the mists.[7]

Nature spirits: The following beings may have originated as deities or supernatural beings in mythology, and later recharacterized as nature spirits during the Middle Ages; The Dutch like other Germanic people believed in elves, the Dutch words for them are elfen, elven, and alven. The moss maidens, who appear in Old Dutch and Southern Germanic folklore were known as tree spirits or wood elves, often chased in the Dutch version of the Wild Hunt. The Kabouter was the Dutch name for the kobold (gnome), a household spirit and earth spirit who usually lived underground.

Mythological heroes edit

The first epic heroes, kings and leaders of The Low Countries, considered mythological, in the sense of supernatural and foundational, include:

Mythological objects edit

Objects considered magical or sacred in the Low Countries (7th century) included: Oak trees, springs and wooded groves had sacred and medicinal powers.

Corn dollies ("vetulas") were thought to hold the spirit of the corn in harvest rituals. Amulets and charms were worn on the head or the arms ("phylacteries") for protection and veneration of the gods and goddesses.

Neolithic ground axes were collected, thought to be Donar's lightning. Farmers hung these axes in their homes to protect against lightning strike, in accordance with the belief that 'lightning never strikes the same place twice'.

Missionary accounts edit

 
Old publication of Karel ende Van Elegast, 12th century Dutch story of an "elf-guest" or "elf-spirit" who supports the Christian King Charlemagne.

After the influence of Christian missionaries, the original mythologies were lessened in power, and for the most part adapted into folklore and legends, often made diminutive. The witte wieven for example became ghosts haunting sacred sites. However sacred beliefs and practices continued, often incorporated with Christianity. In a good example, the 12th century poem from the Netherlands Karel ende Elegast (Charlemagne and elf guest), an elven being[citation needed] is described as the hero who befriends and helps the Christian king Charlemagne in the forest. The Bishop of Utrecht Arnold II van Hoorn, 1372-1375, noted the Flemish people still believed in wearing amulets and charms ("phylacteries"); he defined them as amulets worn on the head or arms, sometimes made out of books or scripture. In the Hieronymous Bosch painting, Cure of Folly, 1475-1480, the woman balancing a book on her head is thought to be a satire of the people wearing phylacteries.[8]

The written biographies of the Christian missionaries to the Netherlands, sermonizing against pre-Christian beliefs, are coincidentally some of the earliest written accounts of the myths that existed in the region. The missionary texts written by the incoming Christian missionaries in the 7th century and 8th century recorded details of the pre-Christian myths of the native culture, although the missionaries showed religious hostility to them as pagan beliefs. The main missionaries of the Netherlands were Willibrord, Bonifatius and Saint Eligius.

Willibrord edit

Willibrord (658 – 739), appointed Bishop of Utrecht, came to the Netherlands in 690, and was the first Anglo-Saxon missionary to preach Christianity there. The Christian Franks had just reoccupied and taken control of the lands from the Frisian tribes. The vita of Willibrord records he went on a missionary journey to an island called Fositesland (most think this was Helgoland occupied by ethnic Frisians), between Friesland and Denmark. Willibrord found it had sanctuaries and shrines dedicated to the Scandinavian gods Fosite, son of Balder and Nanna. He found the land was extremely sacred to the native people. A sacred well existed, and people drank its spring water only in silence. Willibrord slew the sacred cattle he found there, and baptized three people in the well within a few days of arriving.

Willibrord took other mission trips on the Dutch mainland where he witnessed that the people considered clearings in woods, springs and wells sacred to their mythology and religion. Willibrord tried to erase their pagan shrines and landmarks. He built a church in a sacred heathen clearing in the forest, destroyed a sacred forest in Heiloo and renamed heathen wells as Christian wells. Many wells were renamed in his name.

In 714, the Frisian King Radboud drove Willibrord and his priests out of the area. Willibrord returned about 719 after the Frankish troops had taken control of the area and the King Radboud had died. Willibrord continued to dismantle pre-Christian sanctuaries.[9]

Bonifatius edit

Bonifatius (672–753), also known as Boniface, was the next missionary among the Frisians and Saxons. He arrived on a missionary trip to the Netherlands in 716, specifically going to Dorestad, modern-day Wijk bij Duurstede. When he arrived, Bonifatius found that the Frisians had restored and rebuilt their fana delubrorum, the heathen temples, after Willibrord had been driven out. King Radboud allowed Bonifatius to spread Christian messages but he found the natives had a pantheon of gods and were not that impressed with Christianity. He left the same year.

In 719 Rome appointed Bonifatius to convert "the savage people of Germania". Bonifatius joined Willibrord in Utrecht to receive a three-year missionary training, then in 721 travelled east of the Netherlands into Hesse, Germany. Bonifatius undertook a final preaching mission in Friesland in June 753 when he was attacked and killed by a group of Frisians with unknown (legend says resentful) intentions.[9]

Saint Eligius edit

One of the best glimpses of late Druidic practices in the territory of the modern day Flanders region comes from the Vita Eligii (Life of Saint Eligius) (588 to 660) (written by Saint Ouen). Eligius was the Christian missionary to the people of the Low Countries in the 7th century. Ouen drew together the familiar admonitions of Eligius to the people of Flanders. Eligius in his sermons denounced "pagan customs" that the people followed. In particular, he denounced many Roman deities and Druidic mythological beliefs and objects:

"I denounce and contest, that you shall observe no sacrilegious pagan customs. For no cause or infirmity should you consult magicians, diviners, sorcerers or incantators. ..Do not observe auguries ... No influence attaches to the first work of the day or the [phase of the] moon. ... [Do not] make vetulas [a type of corn dolly], little deer or iotticos or set tables [for the house-elf] at night or exchange New Year gifts or supply superfluous drinks [a Yule midsummer custom]...No Christian. .. performs solestitia [solstice rites?] or dancing or leaping or diabolical chants. No Christian should presume to invoke the name of a demon, not Neptune or Orcus or Diana or Minerva or Geniscus... No one should observe Jove's day in idleness. ... No Christian should make or render any devotion to the gods of the trivium, where three roads meet, to the fanes or the rocks, or springs or groves or corners. None should presume to hang any phylacteries from the neck of man nor beast. ..None should presume to make lustrations or incantations with herbs, or to pass cattle through a hollow tree or ditch ... No woman should presume to hang amber from her neck or call upon Minerva or other ill-starred beings in their weaving or dyeing. .. None should call the sun or moon lord or swear by them. .. No one should tell fate or fortune or horoscopes by them as those do who believe that a person must be what he was born to be."[10]

 
Dikke Boom: this is the largest oak tree in the Netherlands today. The Dutch thought oak trees sacred.

Procopius edit

Procopius in the 540s records a belief and/or funerary rite observed at the mouths of the Rhine involving the passage of the dead to the island of Brittia (Great Britain).

Folklore edit

In 1918, William Elliot Griffis wrote down and translated Dutch folk tales, and published the book, Dutch Fairy Tales for Young Folks. Among them, the story of The Legend of the Wooden Shoe, clearly begins with fragments of Druidic mythology in the ancient Netherlands retold for children:

"In years long gone, too many for the almanac to tell of, or for clocks and watches to measure, millions of good fairies came down from the sun and went into the earth. There, they changed themselves into roots and leaves, and became trees. There were many kinds of these, as they covered the earth, but the pine and birch, ash and oak, were the chief ones that made Holland. The fairies that lived in the trees bore the name of Moss Maidens, or Tree 'Trintjes,' which is the Dutch pet name for Kate, or Katharine...."[11]

The story outlines the following traditional beliefs in Holland: Wodan (mentioned here as "God of Sun") is the deity the Dutch shared with other Germanic people, and is the Dutch name for Odin. Wednesday is named after him; Holland is from the phrase Holt Land which means "Land of Many Trees". The tale says the land was once covered with forests and people lived in the trees for a "thousand years" until they became an agricultural people. In fact, the trees kept the land firm otherwise it would melt or disappear under water and floods. Eyck is ancient Dutch word for oak (the modern spelling is 'Eik')that has become a popular Dutch surname. There is notable ambiguity in the tale if the Moss Maiden and Trintje were tree fairies, or a wood elf and tree elf, respectively. As elves, they communicate the trees' promise to humans to "stand upside down" for the Dutch people. The oak trees in particular were the mythical life giving and medicinal tree and had many mythical purposes:

"Under its branches, near the trunk, people laid their sick, hoping for help from the gods. Beneath the oak boughs. ..wives joined hand in hand around its girth, hoping to have beautiful children. Up among its leafy branches the new babies lay, before they were found in the cradle by the other children. To make a young child grow up to be strong and healthy, mothers drew them through a split sapling or young tree. Even more wonderful, as medicine for the country itself, the oak had power to heal. The new land sometimes suffered from disease called the val [or fall]. When sick with the val, the ground sunk. Then people, houses, churches, barns and cattle all went down, out of sight, and were lost forever, in a flood of water."[11]

In this legend, the Kabouter and the elves show mankind how to turn the trees into piles to drive into them upside down into the ground and thus to make the land firm to build on, later how to make wooden shoes. Note that historically, Dutch land was low and prone to flooding, hence the land would sometimes flood and wipe out towns and villages, and the flooding was worse when forests were cut down to make way for agricultural and pastoral lands.

Landmarks and toponymy edit

Many regional legends exist in the Low Countries about the origins of natural landmarks such as hills, bodies of water, springs, wells, forests and the sea, that attribute creation to the ancient gods. Other legends tell where different witte wieven lived on as spirits in the Middle Ages, which are probably recharacterized stories of sacred sites. Many nice examples were collected in the book Veluwsche Sagen by Gustaaf van de Wall Perné (1877-1911). The Veluwsche Sagen was a historically researched collection of Dutch "sagas" from the legends and folk almanacs in the province of Gelderland:

The creation of the Uddeler- and Bleeke Lake(s): This myth concerns a battle that allegedly took place between Donar the God of Thunder with the winter giants and the "Midgaardslang" (a giant snake monster) who strategically align against him. The giants throw hail down, while the snake climbs into a tall oak tree and blows poison into the air. Donar attacks, riding through the air on "his billy-goat wagon", the sky blazes and the earth trembles because of his "never missing thunderhammer." Donar strikes the snake on his head with such force on the head that not only was the monster crushed, the mighty thunderhammer went seven miles deep into the earth. The snake dies. However, in the attack the snake's poison scorches and stuns Donar. Donar crashes down, with his "steerless goats" and wagon onto the Donderberg (meaning Donar's hill or "Thunder-hill") in Dieren. Then the earth sank into the sea, the seagod blew a horn and a big black ship came to collect Donar's body. When the floodwaters receded, two lakes mark the spot that are "as deep as the world, the Uddelermeer or "Lake of Uddel" (Uttiloch), and the Godenmeer (God's lake)..." Later the legend continues that Thor's hammer surfaced from the depths. The grave of Midgaardslang became overgrown with the forest nearby, until in 1222 a bright flame shot out of the pool and the ghost of the snake wriggled up and fled north. The forest was burned and a moor near the lake remains where the forest once was.[12]

Perné notes that Donar was worshipped at the Godenmeer (lake of the Gods), although the translator thinks that the lake Godenmeer may be a Christian version of Wodenmeer, a lake originally dedicated to Wodan.[13]

Monuments edit

 
Carved stone votive for Nehalennia in Domburg, Zeeland, the Netherlands

An ancient stone altar dating from around the 2nd century CE found at Cologne (Köln), Germany is dedicated to the goddess Vagdavercustis. Vagdavercustis was most likely a native Germanic or Celtic goddess, who may have had a link with trees or woods.[14] There is some evidence that Vagdavercustis was worshipped by the Batavians between present-day Netherlands and Cologne.[15]

Another ancient stone altar has also been found in Ubbergen, on the Hengstberg (Stallion-hill). It has the following inscription: "Mercurius Friausius (or Eriasus)". Mercurius is Latin for the Roman god Mercury, the Roman equivalent of Wodan. Friausius is suggested to refer to his wife Frigg.[16]

In the now flooded sites of Domburg and Colijnsplaat, on the East Scheldte Estuary, there are the remains of temples each dedicated to a deity Nehalennia. Over 160 carved stone votives with her image have been dredged up at those sites and several inscriptions in Latin thank her for safe passage on the seas.[17]

In Empel there is the remains of a temple to Hercules Magusanus. This was the Romans' Latin name for the supreme god of the Batavians, Donar. Stone votives and broken weapons as symbolic offerings are at the location.[18]

List of toponyms edit

Holland: This place name derives from the words Holt Land which means "Land of Many Trees", "Forest Land." According to the tradition (The Legend of the Wooden Shoe), the trees were filled with good spirits, and kept the land firm otherwise it would melt or disappear under water and floods.[11]

Eyck names: The popular Dutch names, Eyck and Van Eyck, mean "oak" and "of the oak", respectively. Oak trees were venerated in Druidic religion and mythology.[11]

Many other place names in Netherlands have ancient mythological meanings, some named after Pre-Christian deities or reflecting other myths of the ancient people:[19]

  • Donderbergen - translates to "Donar's hills" or "Thunder hills", once dedicated to Donar (located in Dieren).
  • Elst - name is derivative of the word "Heliste", which means sanctuary.
  • Godenmeer - translates "God's lake" or "Woden's lake" (see legend of the Uddelermeer, Uddeler- and Bleeke Lake).
  • Godsberg/Godensbergen - translates "God's hill"/"Gods' hills", once dedicated to Wodan (hills located in Hattem and Ruurlo).
  • Helsbergen - translates "Hel's hills", once dedicated to Hel (in Rheden).
  • Heilige Berg - translates "Holy Hill" (in Roekel).
  • Hemelse bergen - translates "Heavenly hills", once dedicated to Heimdal (in Arnhem, Nunspeet, Oosterbeek).
  • Hennendal - translates "Valley of the Dead" (near Hummelo).
  • Holland - translates "Land of Hel", land of the Germanic goddess Hel or Holle.
  • Manebergen - translates "Moon hills", once a sacrificial place for the Moon.
  • Materberg - translates "mother-goddess hills".
  • Paasbergen - translates "Easter hills", once dedicated to spring, Ostara (hills with this name located in Arnhem, Ede, Ermelo, Lochem, Lunteren, Terborg / Wisch, Oldenzaal / Losser).
  • Nijmegen - derivative of "Novio Magusanus". Magusanus was the Roman name of Donar. Nijmegen was the heart of the Batavian cult of the god Donar. Nijmegen had two temples dedicated to Donar.
  • Poppestien - translates "baby stone" is a big flat stone. According to legend, it delivered babies (in Bergum).
  • Willibrordsdobbe - the name of a natural well on the island, named after Willibrord, but seen by the locals as a holy well. Note according to history, Willibrord renamed the sacred pagan wells in his own name (on the island of Ameland).
  • Wittewievenbult - translates "White Women hill". Local legend holds that some witte wieven appear on Christmas Eve every year and dance on this hill (near the village of Eefde).
  • Wittewijvenkuil - translates "White Woman Pit", is a pit between two hills near the village. Local legend holds that three witte wieven lived there (near the village of Barchem).
  • Wodansbergen - translates "Wodan's hills", once dedicated to Wodan.
  • Woensdrecht - town named after Wodan.
  • Woensel - former town, now city district in Eindhoven, named after Wodan: either Wodan's sale (hall) or Wodan's loo (forest).
  • Woezik - translates "Wodan's oak". Several Wodans-oaks were known (in Wolfheze).
  • Wrangebult - translates "Thorn-hedge-hill". A "wrange" was a plaited hedge of thorns which was sometimes created around a holy place. Local legend holds it was a heathen sacrificial hill (in Hummelo).
  • Zonnebergen - translates "Sun hills", once a sacrificial place for the Sun (hills with this name located in Gorssel, Oosterbeek, Vorden, Wageningen).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Meijer, 1971.
  2. ^ per Tacitus (1st century CE) and Caesar (1st century BCE), and Willibrord (658 – 739).
  3. ^ Tacitus (1st century CE) and Caesar(1st century BCE) noted Celtic culture; Saint Eligius (588 to 660) noted both Celtic and Gallo-Roman deities.
  4. ^ Bissette, Elizabeth. Ghost Riders in the Sky. 2007
  5. ^ Reginheim, Donar (Thor) in Dutch Folklore, 2002.
  6. ^ Lendering, 2006.
  7. ^ Reginheim "Witte wieven", 2007.
  8. ^ Skemer 2006:24.
  9. ^ a b Reginheim, 2002.
  10. ^ McNamara's translation of the Vita Eligii.
  11. ^ a b c d Griffis, 1918 in Legend of the Wooden Shoe.
  12. ^ Perné, "The Veluwsche Sagen - Saga 2", as translated by Reginheim.
  13. ^ Reginheim, "The Veluwsche Sagen", 2002.
  14. ^ Reginheim, Forgotten Gods. 2003
  15. ^ Religiöse Kulte im römischen Köln: Vagdavercustis 2005-12-02 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Reginheim, "Map of Heathen Sanctuaries", 2002
  17. ^ Green, Miranda (1998). Animals in Celtic Life and Myth. London, UK: Routledge, 1998. p 200-201.
  18. ^ "Empel, The sanctuary of Magusanus..." [1]. File retrieved 10-02-07.
  19. ^ Reginheim, "Map of Heathen Sanctuaries," "Heathen Sanctuaries" and "Heathen History of Achterhoek": 2002.

References edit

  • Encyclopedia Mythica.
  • Griffis, William Elliot. Dutch Fairy Tales For Young Folks. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., 1918. (English). Available online by SurLaLane Fairy Tales. File retrieved 2-24-2007.
  • Lendering, Jona. Nehalennia, July 2006. File retrieved 9-21-2007.
  • McNamara, Jo Ann, translator. Vita Eligii (The Life of St. Eligius), in English. Available online by Northvegr Foundation, copyright 2005. File retrieved 2-24-2007.
  • Meijer, Reinder. Literature of the Low Countries: A Short History of Dutch Literature in the Netherlands and Belgium. New York: Twayne Publishers, Inc., 1971.
  • Magusanus, Joris. English translation by Ansuharijaz. Online: Reginheim, 2002. File retrieved 06-02-2007.
  • Magusanus, Joris. , noting the primary sources were the Vita Willibrordi by Alcuin, and Vita Bonifatii by Willibrord. English translation by Ansuharijaz. Online: Reginheim, 2002. File retrieved 2-24-2007.
  • Grimsma, Boppo. English translation by Ansuharijaz. Online: Reginheim, 2002. File retrieved 2-24-2007.
  • Ansuharijaz. Online: Reginheim, 2002. File retrieved 2-24-2007.
  • Magusanus, Joris. English translation by Ansuharijaz. Online: Reginheim, 2002. File retrieved 2-24-2007.
  • Ansuharijaz. Online: Reginheim, 2003. Files retrieved 2-24-2007.
  • Ansuharijaz. English translation by Ansuharijaz. Online: Reginheim, 2002. File retrieved 03-08-2007.
  • Skemer, Don C. Binding Words Textual Amulets in the Middle Ages. PA: Penn State Press, 2006. pp. 24, 135-136. ISBN 0-271-02722-3.
  • Thistelton-Dyer, T.F. The Folk-lore of Plants, 1889. Available online by Project Gutenberg. (moss people) File retrieved 3-05-07.

Further reading edit

  • Bos, J. M., Archeologie van Friesland, Stichting Matrijs, Utrecht, 1995
  • Bruijn, A.G. Geesten en Goden in Oud Oldenzaal (Ghosts and gods in Old Oldenzaal). 1929. Oldenzaal: Electr. drukkerij J. Verhaag. (In Dutch)
  • Derolez, R.L.M., De Godsdienst der Germanen, Roermond, 1959
  • Dykstra, W., Uit Friesland's Volksleven, Van Vroeger en Later, tweede deel, 1895
  • Halbertsma, H., Het heidendom waar Luidger onder de Friezen mee te maken kreeg, in: Sierksma, Kl. (red.), Liudger 742-809, Muiderberg 1984
  • Halbertsma, Herrius (2000). Frieslands oudheid: het rijk van de Friese koningen, opkomst en ondergang (in Dutch and English) (New ed.). Utrecht: Matrijs. ISBN 9789053451670.
  • Laan, K. ter: Folkloristisch woordenboek van Nederland en Vlaams België, 1949, Den Haag: G.B. van Goor zonen's uitgeversmij N.V.
  • Schuyf, J., Heidens Nederland, Zichtbare overblijfselen van een niet-christelijk verleden, Stichting Matrijs, Utrecht, 1995
  • Teenstra, A. (red.): Nederlandse volkskunst, 1941, Amsterdam: N.V. uitgevers-maatschappij Elsevier.
  • van de Walle Perné, Gustaaf (1877-1911). Veluwsche sagen. (Arnhem: Gysbers and van Loon) (In Dutch)
  • van der Molen, S.J. Ta in "Fryske Mythology", yn De Frije Fries, diel 53 (1973).
  • Vries, J. de, Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte, band II, Berlin, 1957.
  • Vries, J. de: Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte, 1970: Berlijn: Walter de Gruyter & Co.
  • de Weerd, Henk. Gooise legenden. 1960. (uitgeverij C. de Boer jr., Hilversum)

External links edit

  • Vita Eligii (The Life of St. Eligius), in English -

mythology, countries, this, article, about, christian, legends, countries, legends, after, christianization, folklore, countries, mythology, modern, netherlands, belgium, luxembourg, roots, mythologies, christian, gaulish, gallo, roman, germanic, cultures, pre. This article is about pre Christian legends of the Low Countries For legends after Christianization see Folklore of the Low Countries The mythology of the modern day Netherlands Belgium and Luxembourg has its roots in the mythologies of pre Christian e g Gaulish Gallo Roman and Germanic cultures predating the region s Christianization under the influence of the Franks in the Early Middle Ages 1 At the time of the Roman Empire and in the Early Middle Ages some of the resident peoples of the Low Countries included Germanic tribes north of the Rhine River with a lot of exceptions like the Eburones or the Celtic Nervii 2 Low Franconians Frisii and later in the same area the Frisians Tubanti Canninefates Batavians the decidedly more Celtic and Gallo Roman Belgae tribes of Gallia Belgica south of the Rhine also mainly but with many exceptions 3 Old Dutch mythology can mean the myths specifically told in Old Dutch language However many of the myths in this language are ancient and part of larger movements across Europe such as Roman mythology that spread through the Roman Empire and Continental Germanic mythology Pre Christian traditions of the veneration of trees particularly the oak see Donar s oak springs and woods native to the Low Countries survived in Christianized guise into the Middle Ages Sources for the reconstruction of pre Christian traditions include the accounts of the Anglo Saxon missionaries to the region medieval and modern folklore and legend and local toponymy Contents 1 Pre Christian traditions 1 1 Deities 1 2 Other beings 1 3 Mythological heroes 1 4 Mythological objects 1 5 Missionary accounts 1 5 1 Willibrord 1 5 2 Bonifatius 1 5 3 Saint Eligius 1 6 Procopius 2 Folklore 3 Landmarks and toponymy 3 1 Monuments 3 2 List of toponyms 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksPre Christian traditions editMain article Continental Germanic mythology Deities edit nbsp A tribute to pagan mythology illustrated in Emilia Arcite and Palamon worship at the shrines of the Gods from the Theseide circa 1460 70 by Flemish artist Barthelemy d Eyck From ancient regional mythology most names of ancient gods and goddesses in this region come from local tribal lore particularly in the North Many of the deities are the same as eastern Germanic Deities Wodan is Dutch for Odin the god of war and leader of the Wild Hunt The Wild Hunt was retold in Dutch with Wodan leading under different guises Gait with his dogs Derk with his dogs Derk with his boar the glowing horse Henske with his dogs 4 Donar is Dutch for Thor the god of thunder In Dutch the days of the week are named for Germanic gods a custom derived from parallel Roman practice Note that the following days were named through Roman influence because the Romans found them to be roughly equivalent to their Roman deities 5 maandag Monday named after Mani compared to dies Lunae Luna s day dinsdag Tuesday named after Tyr compared to dies Martis Mars day woensdag Wednesday after Wodan compared to dies Mercurii Mercury s day donderdag Thursday is named after Donar compared to dies Jovis Jupiter s day vrijdag Friday after Frija compared to dies Veneris Venus day However other ancient deities are Druidic Celtic and Gallo Roman in nature particularly in the south and throughout Flanders Erecura the goddess of the earth Rosmerta goddess of fertility and the deities mentioned by Saint Eligius in Flanders Jupiter Neptune Orcus Diana and Minerva Finally some deities were regional or specific to one clan Arduinna was the Celtic goddess of the Ardennes forest Nehalennia was a goddess of travellers in Zeeland where over 160 stone votives depicting her image were located in the sea 6 Vagdavercustis was an ancient goddess of the Batavians mentioned on an altar near Cologne Tanfana is another more mysterious goddess recorded in the 1st century AD Other beings edit The Dutch words witte wieven and wittewijven in Dutch dialects means white women They were spirits of the women who died of heartbreak after their men had been untrue to them They would live on in the mists and appear when it was night and misty They would attack men who were untrue to their women by getting them lost in the mists 7 Nature spirits The following beings may have originated as deities or supernatural beings in mythology and later recharacterized as nature spirits during the Middle Ages The Dutch like other Germanic people believed in elves the Dutch words for them are elfen elven and alven The moss maidens who appear in Old Dutch and Southern Germanic folklore were known as tree spirits or wood elves often chased in the Dutch version of the Wild Hunt The Kabouter was the Dutch name for the kobold gnome a household spirit and earth spirit who usually lived underground Mythological heroes edit The first epic heroes kings and leaders of The Low Countries considered mythological in the sense of supernatural and foundational include Tuisto Tuisco the mythical ancestor of all Germanic tribes Mannus ancestor of a number of Germanic tribes son of Tuisto Ing Ingwaz Yngvi founder of the Ingaevones tribe son of Mannus Istaev founder of the Istvaeones tribe son of Mannus Redbad King of the Frisians Folcwald hero of Frisian tribes Finn Frisian hero of Frisian tribes Frisian lord son of Folcwald Merovech semi legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty Mythological objects edit Objects considered magical or sacred in the Low Countries 7th century included Oak trees springs and wooded groves had sacred and medicinal powers Corn dollies vetulas were thought to hold the spirit of the corn in harvest rituals Amulets and charms were worn on the head or the arms phylacteries for protection and veneration of the gods and goddesses Neolithic ground axes were collected thought to be Donar s lightning Farmers hung these axes in their homes to protect against lightning strike in accordance with the belief that lightning never strikes the same place twice Missionary accounts edit Further information Christianization of the Germanic peoples and Druidry nbsp Old publication of Karel ende Van Elegast 12th century Dutch story of an elf guest or elf spirit who supports the Christian King Charlemagne After the influence of Christian missionaries the original mythologies were lessened in power and for the most part adapted into folklore and legends often made diminutive The witte wieven for example became ghosts haunting sacred sites However sacred beliefs and practices continued often incorporated with Christianity In a good example the 12th century poem from the Netherlands Karel ende Elegast Charlemagne and elf guest an elven being citation needed is described as the hero who befriends and helps the Christian king Charlemagne in the forest The Bishop of Utrecht Arnold II van Hoorn 1372 1375 noted the Flemish people still believed in wearing amulets and charms phylacteries he defined them as amulets worn on the head or arms sometimes made out of books or scripture In the Hieronymous Bosch painting Cure of Folly 1475 1480 the woman balancing a book on her head is thought to be a satire of the people wearing phylacteries 8 The written biographies of the Christian missionaries to the Netherlands sermonizing against pre Christian beliefs are coincidentally some of the earliest written accounts of the myths that existed in the region The missionary texts written by the incoming Christian missionaries in the 7th century and 8th century recorded details of the pre Christian myths of the native culture although the missionaries showed religious hostility to them as pagan beliefs The main missionaries of the Netherlands were Willibrord Bonifatius and Saint Eligius Willibrord edit Willibrord 658 739 appointed Bishop of Utrecht came to the Netherlands in 690 and was the first Anglo Saxon missionary to preach Christianity there The Christian Franks had just reoccupied and taken control of the lands from the Frisian tribes The vita of Willibrord records he went on a missionary journey to an island called Fositesland most think this was Helgoland occupied by ethnic Frisians between Friesland and Denmark Willibrord found it had sanctuaries and shrines dedicated to the Scandinavian gods Fosite son of Balder and Nanna He found the land was extremely sacred to the native people A sacred well existed and people drank its spring water only in silence Willibrord slew the sacred cattle he found there and baptized three people in the well within a few days of arriving Willibrord took other mission trips on the Dutch mainland where he witnessed that the people considered clearings in woods springs and wells sacred to their mythology and religion Willibrord tried to erase their pagan shrines and landmarks He built a church in a sacred heathen clearing in the forest destroyed a sacred forest in Heiloo and renamed heathen wells as Christian wells Many wells were renamed in his name In 714 the Frisian King Radboud drove Willibrord and his priests out of the area Willibrord returned about 719 after the Frankish troops had taken control of the area and the King Radboud had died Willibrord continued to dismantle pre Christian sanctuaries 9 Bonifatius edit Bonifatius 672 753 also known as Boniface was the next missionary among the Frisians and Saxons He arrived on a missionary trip to the Netherlands in 716 specifically going to Dorestad modern day Wijk bij Duurstede When he arrived Bonifatius found that the Frisians had restored and rebuilt their fana delubrorum the heathen temples after Willibrord had been driven out King Radboud allowed Bonifatius to spread Christian messages but he found the natives had a pantheon of gods and were not that impressed with Christianity He left the same year In 719 Rome appointed Bonifatius to convert the savage people of Germania Bonifatius joined Willibrord in Utrecht to receive a three year missionary training then in 721 travelled east of the Netherlands into Hesse Germany Bonifatius undertook a final preaching mission in Friesland in June 753 when he was attacked and killed by a group of Frisians with unknown legend says resentful intentions 9 Saint Eligius edit One of the best glimpses of late Druidic practices in the territory of the modern day Flanders region comes from the Vita Eligii Life of Saint Eligius 588 to 660 written by Saint Ouen Eligius was the Christian missionary to the people of the Low Countries in the 7th century Ouen drew together the familiar admonitions of Eligius to the people of Flanders Eligius in his sermons denounced pagan customs that the people followed In particular he denounced many Roman deities and Druidic mythological beliefs and objects I denounce and contest that you shall observe no sacrilegious pagan customs For no cause or infirmity should you consult magicians diviners sorcerers or incantators Do not observe auguries No influence attaches to the first work of the day or the phase of the moon Do not make vetulas a type of corn dolly little deer or iotticos or set tables for the house elf at night or exchange New Year gifts or supply superfluous drinks a Yule midsummer custom No Christian performs solestitia solstice rites or dancing or leaping or diabolical chants No Christian should presume to invoke the name of a demon not Neptune or Orcus or Diana or Minerva or Geniscus No one should observe Jove s day in idleness No Christian should make or render any devotion to the gods of the trivium where three roads meet to the fanes or the rocks or springs or groves or corners None should presume to hang any phylacteries from the neck of man nor beast None should presume to make lustrations or incantations with herbs or to pass cattle through a hollow tree or ditch No woman should presume to hang amber from her neck or call upon Minerva or other ill starred beings in their weaving or dyeing None should call the sun or moon lord or swear by them No one should tell fate or fortune or horoscopes by them as those do who believe that a person must be what he was born to be 10 nbsp Dikke Boom this is the largest oak tree in the Netherlands today The Dutch thought oak trees sacred Procopius edit Procopius in the 540s records a belief and or funerary rite observed at the mouths of the Rhine involving the passage of the dead to the island of Brittia Great Britain Folklore editMain article Folklore of the Low Countries In 1918 William Elliot Griffis wrote down and translated Dutch folk tales and published the book Dutch Fairy Tales for Young Folks Among them the story of The Legend of the Wooden Shoe clearly begins with fragments of Druidic mythology in the ancient Netherlands retold for children In years long gone too many for the almanac to tell of or for clocks and watches to measure millions of good fairies came down from the sun and went into the earth There they changed themselves into roots and leaves and became trees There were many kinds of these as they covered the earth but the pine and birch ash and oak were the chief ones that made Holland The fairies that lived in the trees bore the name of Moss Maidens or Tree Trintjes which is the Dutch pet name for Kate or Katharine 11 The story outlines the following traditional beliefs in Holland Wodan mentioned here as God of Sun is the deity the Dutch shared with other Germanic people and is the Dutch name for Odin Wednesday is named after him Holland is from the phrase Holt Land which means Land of Many Trees The tale says the land was once covered with forests and people lived in the trees for a thousand years until they became an agricultural people In fact the trees kept the land firm otherwise it would melt or disappear under water and floods Eyck is ancient Dutch word for oak the modern spelling is Eik that has become a popular Dutch surname There is notable ambiguity in the tale if the Moss Maiden and Trintje were tree fairies or a wood elf and tree elf respectively As elves they communicate the trees promise to humans to stand upside down for the Dutch people The oak trees in particular were the mythical life giving and medicinal tree and had many mythical purposes Under its branches near the trunk people laid their sick hoping for help from the gods Beneath the oak boughs wives joined hand in hand around its girth hoping to have beautiful children Up among its leafy branches the new babies lay before they were found in the cradle by the other children To make a young child grow up to be strong and healthy mothers drew them through a split sapling or young tree Even more wonderful as medicine for the country itself the oak had power to heal The new land sometimes suffered from disease called the val or fall When sick with the val the ground sunk Then people houses churches barns and cattle all went down out of sight and were lost forever in a flood of water 11 In this legend the Kabouter and the elves show mankind how to turn the trees into piles to drive into them upside down into the ground and thus to make the land firm to build on later how to make wooden shoes Note that historically Dutch land was low and prone to flooding hence the land would sometimes flood and wipe out towns and villages and the flooding was worse when forests were cut down to make way for agricultural and pastoral lands Landmarks and toponymy editMany regional legends exist in the Low Countries about the origins of natural landmarks such as hills bodies of water springs wells forests and the sea that attribute creation to the ancient gods Other legends tell where different witte wieven lived on as spirits in the Middle Ages which are probably recharacterized stories of sacred sites Many nice examples were collected in the book Veluwsche Sagen by Gustaaf van de Wall Perne 1877 1911 The Veluwsche Sagen was a historically researched collection of Dutch sagas from the legends and folk almanacs in the province of Gelderland The creation of the Uddeler and Bleeke Lake s This myth concerns a battle that allegedly took place between Donar the God of Thunder with the winter giants and the Midgaardslang a giant snake monster who strategically align against him The giants throw hail down while the snake climbs into a tall oak tree and blows poison into the air Donar attacks riding through the air on his billy goat wagon the sky blazes and the earth trembles because of his never missing thunderhammer Donar strikes the snake on his head with such force on the head that not only was the monster crushed the mighty thunderhammer went seven miles deep into the earth The snake dies However in the attack the snake s poison scorches and stuns Donar Donar crashes down with his steerless goats and wagon onto the Donderberg meaning Donar s hill or Thunder hill in Dieren Then the earth sank into the sea the seagod blew a horn and a big black ship came to collect Donar s body When the floodwaters receded two lakes mark the spot that are as deep as the world the Uddelermeer or Lake of Uddel Uttiloch and the Godenmeer God s lake Later the legend continues that Thor s hammer surfaced from the depths The grave of Midgaardslang became overgrown with the forest nearby until in 1222 a bright flame shot out of the pool and the ghost of the snake wriggled up and fled north The forest was burned and a moor near the lake remains where the forest once was 12 Perne notes that Donar was worshipped at the Godenmeer lake of the Gods although the translator thinks that the lake Godenmeer may be a Christian version of Wodenmeer a lake originally dedicated to Wodan 13 Monuments edit nbsp Carved stone votive for Nehalennia in Domburg Zeeland the Netherlands An ancient stone altar dating from around the 2nd century CE found at Cologne Koln Germany is dedicated to the goddess Vagdavercustis Vagdavercustis was most likely a native Germanic or Celtic goddess who may have had a link with trees or woods 14 There is some evidence that Vagdavercustis was worshipped by the Batavians between present day Netherlands and Cologne 15 Another ancient stone altar has also been found in Ubbergen on the Hengstberg Stallion hill It has the following inscription Mercurius Friausius or Eriasus Mercurius is Latin for the Roman god Mercury the Roman equivalent of Wodan Friausius is suggested to refer to his wife Frigg 16 In the now flooded sites of Domburg and Colijnsplaat on the East Scheldte Estuary there are the remains of temples each dedicated to a deity Nehalennia Over 160 carved stone votives with her image have been dredged up at those sites and several inscriptions in Latin thank her for safe passage on the seas 17 In Empel there is the remains of a temple to Hercules Magusanus This was the Romans Latin name for the supreme god of the Batavians Donar Stone votives and broken weapons as symbolic offerings are at the location 18 List of toponyms edit Holland This place name derives from the words Holt Land which means Land of Many Trees Forest Land According to the tradition The Legend of the Wooden Shoe the trees were filled with good spirits and kept the land firm otherwise it would melt or disappear under water and floods 11 Eyck names The popular Dutch names Eyck and Van Eyck mean oak and of the oak respectively Oak trees were venerated in Druidic religion and mythology 11 Many other place names in Netherlands have ancient mythological meanings some named after Pre Christian deities or reflecting other myths of the ancient people 19 Donderbergen translates to Donar s hills or Thunder hills once dedicated to Donar located in Dieren Elst name is derivative of the word Heliste which means sanctuary Godenmeer translates God s lake or Woden s lake see legend of the Uddelermeer Uddeler and Bleeke Lake Godsberg Godensbergen translates God s hill Gods hills once dedicated to Wodan hills located in Hattem and Ruurlo Helsbergen translates Hel s hills once dedicated to Hel in Rheden Heilige Berg translates Holy Hill in Roekel Hemelse bergen translates Heavenly hills once dedicated to Heimdal in Arnhem Nunspeet Oosterbeek Hennendal translates Valley of the Dead near Hummelo Holland translates Land of Hel land of the Germanic goddess Hel or Holle Manebergen translates Moon hills once a sacrificial place for the Moon Materberg translates mother goddess hills Paasbergen translates Easter hills once dedicated to spring Ostara hills with this name located in Arnhem Ede Ermelo Lochem Lunteren Terborg Wisch Oldenzaal Losser Nijmegen derivative of Novio Magusanus Magusanus was the Roman name of Donar Nijmegen was the heart of the Batavian cult of the god Donar Nijmegen had two temples dedicated to Donar Poppestien translates baby stone is a big flat stone According to legend it delivered babies in Bergum Willibrordsdobbe the name of a natural well on the island named after Willibrord but seen by the locals as a holy well Note according to history Willibrord renamed the sacred pagan wells in his own name on the island of Ameland Wittewievenbult translates White Women hill Local legend holds that some witte wieven appear on Christmas Eve every year and dance on this hill near the village of Eefde Wittewijvenkuil translates White Woman Pit is a pit between two hills near the village Local legend holds that three witte wieven lived there near the village of Barchem Wodansbergen translates Wodan s hills once dedicated to Wodan Woensdrecht town named after Wodan Woensel former town now city district in Eindhoven named after Wodan either Wodan s sale hall or Wodan s loo forest Woezik translates Wodan s oak Several Wodans oaks were known in Wolfheze Wrangebult translates Thorn hedge hill A wrange was a plaited hedge of thorns which was sometimes created around a holy place Local legend holds it was a heathen sacrificial hill in Hummelo Zonnebergen translates Sun hills once a sacrificial place for the Sun hills with this name located in Gorssel Oosterbeek Vorden Wageningen See also editGallia Belgica Nordwestblock Salian Frankish MythologyNotes edit Meijer 1971 per Tacitus 1st century CE and Caesar 1st century BCE and Willibrord 658 739 Tacitus 1st century CE and Caesar 1st century BCE noted Celtic culture Saint Eligius 588 to 660 noted both Celtic and Gallo Roman deities Bissette Elizabeth Ghost Riders in the Sky 2007 Reginheim Donar Thor in Dutch Folklore 2002 Lendering 2006 Reginheim Witte wieven 2007 Skemer 2006 24 a b Reginheim 2002 McNamara s translation of the Vita Eligii a b c d Griffis 1918 in Legend of the Wooden Shoe Perne The Veluwsche Sagen Saga 2 as translated by Reginheim Reginheim The Veluwsche Sagen 2002 Reginheim Forgotten Gods 2003 Religiose Kulte im romischen Koln Vagdavercustis Archived 2005 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Reginheim Map of Heathen Sanctuaries 2002 Green Miranda 1998 Animals in Celtic Life and Myth London UK Routledge 1998 p 200 201 Empel The sanctuary of Magusanus 1 File retrieved 10 02 07 Reginheim Map of Heathen Sanctuaries Heathen Sanctuaries and Heathen History of Achterhoek 2002 References editEncyclopedia Mythica Griffis William Elliot Dutch Fairy Tales For Young Folks New York Thomas Y Crowell Co 1918 English Available online by SurLaLane Fairy Tales File retrieved 2 24 2007 Lendering Jona Nehalennia July 2006 File retrieved 9 21 2007 McNamara Jo Ann translator Vita Eligii The Life of St Eligius in English Available online by Northvegr Foundation copyright 2005 File retrieved 2 24 2007 Meijer Reinder Literature of the Low Countries A Short History of Dutch Literature in the Netherlands and Belgium New York Twayne Publishers Inc 1971 Magusanus Joris Donar Thor in Dutch folklore English translation by Ansuharijaz Online Reginheim 2002 File retrieved 06 02 2007 Magusanus Joris Willibrord and Bonifatius noting the primary sources were the Vita Willibrordi by Alcuin and Vita Bonifatii by Willibrord English translation by Ansuharijaz Online Reginheim 2002 File retrieved 2 24 2007 Grimsma Boppo Dutch Legends Friesland Heathen Sanctuaries English translation by Ansuharijaz Online Reginheim 2002 File retrieved 2 24 2007 Ansuharijaz Heathen History of the Achterhoek Online Reginheim 2002 File retrieved 2 24 2007 Magusanus Joris Map of Heathen Sanctuaries and Veluwsche Sagen English translation by Ansuharijaz Online Reginheim 2002 File retrieved 2 24 2007 Ansuharijaz Forgotten Gods Online Reginheim 2003 Files retrieved 2 24 2007 Ansuharijaz Witte wieven English translation by Ansuharijaz Online Reginheim 2002 File retrieved 03 08 2007 Skemer Don C Binding Words Textual Amulets in the Middle Ages PA Penn State Press 2006 pp 24 135 136 ISBN 0 271 02722 3 Thistelton Dyer T F The Folk lore of Plants 1889 Available online by Project Gutenberg moss people File retrieved 3 05 07 Further reading editBos J M Archeologie van Friesland Stichting Matrijs Utrecht 1995 Bruijn A G Geesten en Goden in Oud Oldenzaal Ghosts and gods in Old Oldenzaal 1929 Oldenzaal Electr drukkerij J Verhaag In Dutch Derolez R L M De Godsdienst der Germanen Roermond 1959 Dykstra W Uit Friesland s Volksleven Van Vroeger en Later tweede deel 1895 Halbertsma H Het heidendom waar Luidger onder de Friezen mee te maken kreeg in Sierksma Kl red Liudger 742 809 Muiderberg 1984 Halbertsma Herrius 2000 Frieslands oudheid het rijk van de Friese koningen opkomst en ondergang in Dutch and English New ed Utrecht Matrijs ISBN 9789053451670 Laan K ter Folkloristisch woordenboek van Nederland en Vlaams Belgie 1949 Den Haag G B van Goor zonen s uitgeversmij N V Schuyf J Heidens Nederland Zichtbare overblijfselen van een niet christelijk verleden Stichting Matrijs Utrecht 1995 Teenstra A red Nederlandse volkskunst 1941 Amsterdam N V uitgevers maatschappij Elsevier van de Walle Perne Gustaaf 1877 1911 Veluwsche sagen Arnhem Gysbers and van Loon In Dutch van der Molen S J Ta in Fryske Mythology yn De Frije Fries diel 53 1973 Vries J de Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte band II Berlin 1957 Vries J de Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte 1970 Berlijn Walter de Gruyter amp Co de Weerd Henk Gooise legenden 1960 uitgeverij C de Boer jr Hilversum External links editVita Eligii The Life of St Eligius in English full version Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mythology in the Low Countries amp oldid 1186567708, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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