Wulver Explained

See also: Werewolf and Weredog.

The wulver or wullver is a kind of wolf-like humanoid creature in the folklore of the Shetland Islands of Scotland.[1] In modern times, the origin of the wulver has been disputed.

History

The wulver is said by the Shetland folklorist Jessie Saxby to be benevolent,[2] [3] although later accounts state that they became violent if provoked.[4] They were generally friendly to locals, however, and were known to share the fish they caught with them.[5] They were usually described as looking like furry people with the head of a wolf.[2] Some accounts claim they were never human to begin with. Saxby, in Shetland Traditional Lore writes:[6] In previous publications, Saxby spelled the word as "wullver."[7] [8]

Interpretations

After researching folklore traditions gathered primarily from Gaelic areas of Scotland,[9] an authority on congenital disorders, Susan Schoon Eberly, has speculated that the tale of the wulver may have its basis in humans suffering a medical condition; possibly Hunter syndrome, she suggests.[10] This theoretical basis of wulver lore has been criticised as not useful, or, especially, reliable, particularly given a lack of any surviving detailed description of the wulver; the malleable and shifting nature of oral traditions; and the existence of other, analogous, mythological creatures in many folklore traditions (suggesting that tales of such creatures are likely to spontaneously arise in many places).[11]

Others, such as Brian Smith, argue that the wulver is an entirely fictitious creation that was never part of Shetland folklore, contending the creature is solely the creation of Saxby. The proponents of this view argue that Saxby, whether intentionally or in error, misinterpreted the meaning of a name in her sources.[12] In this interpretation, Jakob Jakobsen and John Spence had mentioned a hill called Wulvers Hool in their writings, stating that it was named after a fairy. Saxby, not understanding that the word wulver was derived from an old Norse word for fairy, accidentally created the wulver as Shetland folklore, writing about it as if belief in such a creature had always existed.[12]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bane, Theresa. Encyclopedia of Fairies in World Folklore and Mythology . McFarland . 2013 . 978-1-4766-1242-3 . 346.
  2. Book: Allardice, Pamela. Myths, Gods and Fantasy: A Sourcebook. Prism Press. 1990. 1853270520. 224.
  3. Book: Briggs, Katherine Mary. A Dictionary of Fairies: Hobgoblins, Brownies, Bogies, and Other Supernatural Creatures. Pantheon books, New York. 1976. 0-394-40918-3. 445–446.
  4. Book: Narváez, Peter. The Good People: New Fairylore Essays. Garland Pub. 1991. 9780824071004. 243.
  5. News: 7 July 2016. Six ancient myths from the Scottish islands. The Scotsman.
  6. Book: Saxby, Jessia. Shetland Traditional Lore. Grant and Murray. 1932. 141.
  7. News: Saxby. Jessie. January 11, 1930. Trows and Their Kindred, Part II. The Shetland Times.
  8. Saxby. Jessie. 1905. Sacred Sites in a Shetland Isle. The Antiquary. 41. 138.
  9. Book: Black, Ronald. The Gaelic Otherworld: John Gregorson Campbell's Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland and Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and Islands. 2005.
  10. Eberly. Susan Schoon. 1988. Fairies and the Folklore of Disability: Changelings, Hybrids and the Solitary Fairy . Folklore . 99 . 1 . 58–77. 10.1080/0015587X.1988.9716425 . 1259568.
  11. Book: Schmiesing, Ann. Disability, Deformity, and Disease in the Grimms' Fairy Tales. Wanye State University Press. 2014. 978-0-8143-3841-4. 7.
  12. Web site: Smith. Brian. 18 May 2021. The real story behind the Shetland wulver . Shetland Museum Archives.