2eio7!2021 Fylgia - Wikipedia
‘WIKIPEDIA
Fylgja
In Norse mythology, a fylgja (plural fylgjur) is a supernatural being or spirit which accompanies a
person in connection to their fate or fortune.!4)
Contents
Description
See also
References
Sources
Further reading
Description
‘The word fylgia means "to accompany" similar to that of the Fetch in Irish folklore. It can also mean
“afterbirth of a child"(@! meaning that the afterbirth and the fylgja are connected. In some instances,
the fylgja can take on the form of the animal that shows itself when a baby is born or as the creature
that eats the afterbirth. In some literature and sagas, the fylgjur can take the form of mice, dogs,
foxes, cats, birds of prey, or carrion eaters because these were animals that would typically eat such
afterbirths.2)
Other ideas of fylgjur are that the animals reflect the character of the person they represent, akin to a
totem animal. Men who were viewed as a leader would often have fylgja to show their true character.
This means that if they had a "tame nature’, their fylgja would typically be an ox, goat, or boar. If they
had an "untame nature" they would have fylgjur such as a fox, wolf, deer, bear, eagle, falcon, leopard,
lion, or a serpent./3]
‘The animal fylgja is 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.(41
Fylgjur may also "mark transformations between human and animal") or shape shifting. In Egil's
Saga, there are references to both Egil and Skallagrim transforming into wolves or bears, and there
are examples of shape shifting in the Saga of King Hrolf Kraki, where Bodvar Bjarki turns into a bear
during a battle as a last stand. These transformations are possibly implied in the saga descriptions of
berserkers who transform into animals or display bestial abilities.[5]
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. However, when fylgjur appear in the form of women, they are
then supposedly guardian spirits for people or clans (zttir). According to Else Mundal, the women
fylgja could also be considered a dis, a ghost or goddess that is attached to fate.[61
Gabriel Turville-Petre cites multiple instances where an evil wizard or sorcerer's fylgja is a fox,
because the image is sly and hiding something, or an enemy's fylgja is a wolf.2] In The Story of
Howard the Halt [Hérvardar saga fsfirdings], the character Atli has a dream about eighteen wolves
hitpsien wikipedia orgvekiFygja 182siorrea2t Fylaia- Wikipaia
running towards him with a vixen as their leader. As it turns out, the dream presages that Atli will be
attacked by an army with a sorcerer at the front.!7!
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. An example of such
an occurrence would be in Gisli Surrson's Saga where the main character, Gisli, is visited by two
beautiful women, one who is trying to bring good fortune and one that is trying to edge him towards
violence. These two women could represent the women ancestors of family ties, such as the ties
between his wife Aud and his sister Thordis, relating to the idea of the Hamingja and Dis.{8)
See also
= Anima and animus
= Augoeides
= Daemon
= Dis
= Familiar spirit
= Fetch (folklore)
= Luonto
= Norns
= Totem
= Valkyrie
= Vérér
References
1. Else Mundal, "Fylgjur- guardian spirits and ancestral mothers" (http://freya.theladyofthelabyrinth,
com/?page_id=14). “Fyigjemotiva i norron litteratur’ (Universitetsforlaget, Oslo, 1974). Retrieved
June 1, 2019
2. Turville-Petre, G. (1958). Dreams in Icelandic Traditions. Folklore Enterprises. pp. 93-11.
3. Andrén, Anders; Jennbert, Kristina; Raudvere, Catharina (2006). Old Norse religion in long-term
perspectives; The heroized dead (https://archive.org/details/oldnorsereligion2004andr). Nordic
Academic Press. pp. 137 (https://archive.org/details/oldnorsereligion2004andr/page/n130)-138.
4, Brink, Stefan (2008). The Viking World (https://archive.org/details/vikingworld0Obrin). London
Routledge. pp. 239 (https://archive.org/details/vikingworld0Obrin/page/n263). ISBN 978-0-415-
33315-3.
5. "Bodvar Bjarke" (http://runeberg.org/nfbc/0468.html). Nordisk familjebok. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
6. Mundal, Else (1974). Fylgjemotiva i norrfin litterat. Oslo.
7. "The Story of Howard the Halt - Icelandic Saga Database" (http://sagadb.org/havardar_saga_isfir
dings.en). sagadb.org. Retrieved 2015-11-21
"Gisla Saga" (https:/www.snerpa.is/nevisl/gisl htm). s
~
2019
Sources
= Kellog, Robert (Introduction); Smiley, Jane (Introduction) (2001) The Sagas of Icelanders
(Penguin Group) ISBN 0-14-100003-1
= Orchard, Andy (1997) Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend (Cassell) ISBN 0-304-34520-2
= Simek, Rudolf translated by Angela Hall (2007) Dictionary of Northern Mythology. (D.S. Brewer)
ISBN 0-85991-513-1
= Pulsiano, Phillip (1993) Supernatural Beings in Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (Taylor &
Francis) ISBN 0824047877
hitpsien wikipedia orgvrkiFygia 282eio7!2021 Fylgia - Wikipedia
= Mundal, Else; translated by Hedin Branner (1974) Fylgjemotiva i norrfin litteratur
(Universitetsforlaget, Oslo) ISBN 9788200089896
Further reading
= Tunille-Petre, G. (1958) Dreams in Icelandic Traditions (https:/www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs!10.1
080/0015587X.1958.9717130) (Folklore Enterprises; pp. 93-71)
= Andrén, Anders; Jennbert, Kristina; Raudvere, Catharina (2006) Old Norse religion in long-term
perspectives (https://trove.nla. gov. au/work!199029916?q&versionId=218041314) (Chicago:
Nordic Academic Press; pp. 137-138)
= The Story of Howard the Halt (https:/www.sagadb.org/havardar_saga_isfirdings.e) (Icelandic
Saga Database)
= Jochens, Jenny (1996) Old Norse Images of Women (https://academic.oup.com/ahriarticle-abstra
ct/104/3/97 1/52443?redirectedFrom=fulltext) (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania)
= Connor Finn; The Secret of Snow. (Fictional novel involving fylgja)
= William Friesen, 'Fylgjur in Icelandic Saga (https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/scanstud.87.2.02
55)’, Scandinavian Studies, 87 (2015), 255-80, doi:10.5406/scanstud,87.2.0255 (https://doi.org/1
0.5406%2F scanstud.87.2.0255).
= Zuzana Stankovitsova, ‘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 Arman Jakobsson (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 245-62
ISBN 9781501513862 (cf, Zuzana Stankovitsova, “Eru petta mannafylgjur’: A Re-Examination of
fyigiurin Old Norse Literature (https://skemman is/bitstream/1946/20343/1/ZS_fylgjur_MIS.pdf)"
(unpublished MA thesis, University of Iceland, 2015))
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