Skogsrå/Huldra/Hulder (Music: The land of eternal winter)

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  • Опубліковано 7 вер 2024
  • Music: Nordic folk music - The Land of Eternal Winter
    composed and arranged by Antti Martikainen
    Bandcamp anttimartikaine...
    / ajmartikainen
    Scandinavian folklore creature(Skogsrå,Huldra,Hulder)
    A hulder is a seductive forest creature found in Scandinavian folklore. (Her name derives from a root meaning "covered" or "secret"In Norwegian folklore, she is known as the skogsfru or skovfrue (meaning "Lady (read, counterpart of a Lord) of the forest")
    A hulder is a stunningly beautiful naked woman with long hair, and has an animal's tail. In Norway, she has a cow's tail, and in Sweden she may have that of a cow or a fox. Further in the north of Sweden, the tail can be entirely omitted in favor of her hollow or bark-covered back.
    She is known as the skogsrå (forest spirit or warden of the forest)
    or Tallemaja (pine tree Mary) in Swedish folklore, and Ulda in Sámi folklore. Her name suggests that she is originally the same being as the völva Huld and the German Holda.
    The hulder is one of several rå (keeper, warden), including the aquatic Sjörå (or havsfru), later identified with a mermaid, and the bergsrå in caves and mines who made life tough for the poor miners.
    The huldrer were held to be kind to charcoal burners, watching their charcoal kilns while they rested. Knowing that she would wake them if there were any problems, they were able to sleep, and in exchange they left provisions for her in a special place.
    In some traditions, the hulder lures men into the forest to have sexual intercourse with her, rewarding those who satisfy her and often killing those who do not. The Norwegian hulder is a lot less bloodthirsty and may simply kidnap a man or lure him into the underworld. She sometimes steals human infants and replaces them with her own ugly huldrebarn (changeling huldre children). In some cases, the intercourse resulted in a child, being presented to the unknowing father. In some cases, she forces him to
    marry her.
    Copyright Disclaimer: Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 15

  • @ainatonheim1914
    @ainatonheim1914 9 років тому +6

    I love this way of telling old norse stories. I hope to hear and see more of this :D And combined with wonderful music it is just perfect.

  • @GoyliathZiofister
    @GoyliathZiofister 9 років тому +1

    You always learn something new about the old norse, it's amazing

  • @willyustad6670
    @willyustad6670 4 роки тому +1

    In the forrest near Grangärde in the swedish "finn forrests" there is a clearing called "Skogsråns vidda" - the hulders clearing.
    I do not know wether they still keep the tradition up, but at least til the early 1990-s one Group of women met for a nightly dance on the midsummernight - not at that place but in the deep forrests near the border between Norway and Sweden, about ten miles from Grue in Norway.
    I was invited there in 1990, not as a participant but as a guest, because I had written a book touching on these sagas.
    And NO, of the thirteen dancing women at least nine definitively had no tails - and no clothing either…. The other four had very long skirts, so who knows -.
    A memory for life, anyway!

  • @BirkaViking
    @BirkaViking  9 років тому +7

    Skogsrå/Huldra/Hulder (Music: The land of eternal winter)

  • @sean_175energy7
    @sean_175energy7 9 років тому +1

    Great video / music, thank you my friend

    • @BirkaViking
      @BirkaViking  9 років тому +3

      Sean_175 Energy Thanks that you liked the video :-)
      Cheers from Sweden

  • @ThatSwedishGuy
    @ThatSwedishGuy 9 років тому +5

    Interesting stuff, keep it coming!

    • @BirkaViking
      @BirkaViking  9 років тому +1

      The Swede: Thanks that you liked the video :-)
      Cheers from Södermanland :-)

  • @sakurap95
    @sakurap95 4 роки тому +2

    Moral of the story: Respect women

  • @rattinox
    @rattinox 9 років тому +1

    Cosmic!!

    • @BirkaViking
      @BirkaViking  9 років тому

      rattinox: Thanks :-)
      Cheers from Sweden

  • @MrWildcountry
    @MrWildcountry 8 років тому

    Nice

  • @jrgenfromnorway4486
    @jrgenfromnorway4486 8 років тому +2

    i live in Norway