Norwegian Folklore Trolls
They are mentioned in the edda 1220 as a monster with many heads.
Norwegian folklore trolls. By the way you ve got a couple of small typos in this paragraph. I enjoyed this fun article and am sharing it to my real scandinavia facebook page. Trolls are such an essential part of scandinavian culture and folklore. Troll in early scandinavian folklore giant monstrous being sometimes possessing magic powers.
It injects them into the natural spaces of the country. Troll norwegian and swedish trolde danish is a designation for several types of human like supernatural beings in scandinavian folklore. The troll obviously didn t want a while should be whole spring in his house and so they exchanged chores. Trolls and troll like figures are present in many fantasy and fairy tales books.
A troll is a being in norse mythology and scandinavian folklore in old norse sources beings described as trolls dwell in isolated rocks mountains or caves live together in small family units and are rarely helpful to human beings. Norwegian folk tales have featured stories about trolls for a very long time so these have become a part of norwegian heritage. You surely remember the three trolls of the jötar type that bilbo baggins had trouble with in the hobbit then there was the giant cave troll in the mine of moria frodo later struggled with in lord of the rings those trolls are stupid ugly and dangerous and turn into stone when exposed to sun. This is a reversion.
In later tales trolls often are man sized or smaller. In rather simplistic terms these may be said to represent the forces of good and evil. If exposed to sunlight they burst or turned to stone. These 10 most famous of the norse legends evoke images of mighty battles forces of nature and wicked beings.
Hostile to men trolls lived in castles and haunted the surrounding districts after dark. Norwegian folk tales breathe life into the glaciers and fjords where spirits dwell and trolls make their homes. Simultaneously grotesque and quaint norwegian fairy tales are anything but a nursery or children s story. In scandinavian folklore there are numerous races of beings the best known of which apart from human beings are the gods and the jötnar their nemesis.
Sometimes norwegian fairy tales are downright scary but in being so they are also gripping and exciting. The most famous tales from scandinavian folklore are stories of good versus evil and sinister creatures disguised as beautiful mortals. Trolls have a connection with norse mythology and in the 1830s two guys named asbjornsen and moe the norwegian version of the german grimm brothers travelled all around southern norway to gather folk tales and a. Later trolls became characters in fairy tales legends and ballads.
Between these two groups of beings are a range of creatures that come in all shapes and sizes. Later in scandinavian folklore trolls became beings in their own right where they live far from human habitation are not christianized and are considered.