Mormo Explained
Mormo (Mormō) was a female spirit in Greek folklore, whose name was invoked by mothers and nurses to frighten children to keep them from misbehaving.
The term mormolyce (Greek, Modern (1453-);: μορμολύκη; pl. mormolykeia Greek, Modern (1453-);: μορμολύκεια), also spelt mormolyceum (Greek, Modern (1453-);: μορμολυκεῖον mormolukeîon), is considered equivalent.
Etymology
The name mormo has the plural form mormones which means "fearful ones" or "hideous one(s)", and is related to an array of words that signify "fright".
The variant mormolyce translates to "terrible wolves", with the stem -lykeios meaning "of a wolf".[1]
Description
The original Mormo was a woman of Corinth, who ate her children then flew out; according to an account only attested in a single source. Mormolyca (as the name appears in Doric Greek: Greek, Modern (1453-);: μορμολύκα) is designated as the wetnurse (Greek, Modern (1453-);: τιθήνη) of Acheron by Sophron (430 BC).
Mormo or Moromolyce has been described as a female specter, phantom, or ghost by modern commentators. A mormolyce is one of several names given to the female phasma (phantom) in Philostratus's Life of Apollonius of Tyana.[2]
Mormo is glossed as equivalent to Lamia and mormolykeion, considered to be frightening beings, in the Suda, a lexicon of the Byzantine Periods.[3] Mombro (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Μομβρώ) or Mormo are a bugbear (Greek, Modern (1453-);: φόβητρον phóbētron), the Suda also says.[4]
"Mormo" and "Gello" were also aliases for Lamia according to one scholiast, who also claimed she was queen of the Laestrygonians, the race of man-eating giants.
Bugbear
The name "Mormo" or the synonymous "Mormolyceion" was used by the Greeks as a bugbear or bogey word to frighten children.
Some of its instances are found in Aristophanes.[5] [6] The poet Erinna, in her poem The Distaff, recalls how her and her friend Baucis feared Mormo as children.[7]
Mormo as an object of fear for infants was even recorded in the Alexiad written by a Byzantine princess around the First Crusade.
Modern interpretations
A mormo or a lamia may also be associated with the empusa, a phantom sent by the goddess Hekate.
Popular entertainment
- The Horror at Red Hook by H. P. Lovecraft (1925), describes an inscription to Hecate, Gorgo, and Mormo, found in the raid of Red Hook.
- According to Anton LaVey, in The Satanic Bible, Mormo is the "King of the Ghouls, consort of Hecate".
- Mormo is an evil witch in the 2007 film adaptation of the Neil Gaiman novel Stardust. In the story, she is one of a triune of magically powerful sisters, the others being named Lamia and Empusa. In the book, the characters were not named.
- In the film The God Makers Ed Decker claims Mormons are followers of Mormo.
- "To Switch a Witch", season 3 episode 4 of Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!, describes a symbol on a gravestone as "the Mark of Mormo, a witch's sign".
References
Bibliography
- Book: Fontenrose, Joseph Eddy . Joseph Eddy Fontenrose . Python: A Study of Delphic Myth and Its Origins . University of California Press . 1959 . 9780520040915.
- Book: Ogden, Daniel . . . Drakon: Dragon Myth and Serpent Cult in the Greek and Roman Worlds . Oxford University Press . 2013-02-28. 9780199557325 .
- Book: Ogden, Daniel . . . Dragons, Serpents, and Slayers in the Classical and Early Christian Worlds: A Sourcebook . Oxford University Press . 2013-05-30 . https://books.google.com/books?id=bFwWDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA99 . 99– . 10 Lamia, Slain by Eurybatus and Others. 9780199925117 . * Smith, William; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London (1873). "Mormo"
- Stannish . Steven M. . Doran . Christine M. . Magic and Vampirism in Philostratus's Life of Apollonius of Tyana and Bram Stoker's Dracula . Preternature: Critical and Historical Studies on the Preternatural . 2 . 2 . 2013 . 113–138 . 10.5325/preternature.2.2.0113 . 10.5325/preternature.2.2.0113. 191692706 .
Notes and References
- Web site: Lamia & Empusa (empousa) . theoi . 2018-01-25.
- Philostratus, Life of Apollonius 4.25, quoted by
- "", Suda On Line, tr. Richard Rodriguez. 11 June 2009.
- "", Suda On Line, tr. David Whitehead. 27 July 2009.
- Aristophanes. Archanians, 582ff. "Your terrifying armor makes me dizzy. I beg you, take away that Mormo (bogey-monster)!"
- Aristophanes. Peace, 474ff. "This is terrible! You are in the way, sitting there. We have no use for your Mormo's (bogy-like) head, friend."
- Book: Snyder, Jane McIntosh. The Woman and the Lyre: Women Writers in Classical Greece and Rome. SIU Press. Carbondale. 1991. 9780809317066. 94 - 95.