Yule cat | |
First Attested: | (by Jón Árnason, 1862) |
Country: | Iceland |
The Yule cat (Icelandic: Jólakötturinn, in Icelandic pronounced as /ˈjouːlaˌkʰœhtʏrɪn/, also called Icelandic: Jólaköttur|italic=no and Christmas cat[1]) is a huge and vicious cat from Icelandic Christmas folklore that is said to lurk in the snowy countryside during the Christmas season and eat people who do not receive new clothing before Christmas Eve. In other versions of the story, the cat just eats the food of people without new clothes. Icelandic: Jólakötturinn|italic=no is closely associated with other figures from Icelandic folklore, considered the pet of the ogress Icelandic: [[Grýla]]|italic=unset and her sons, the Yule Lads.
The first definitive mention of the Yule cat is from an 1862 collection of folklore by Jón Árnason, . It was described as an evil beast that would either eat those who did not get new clothes for Christmas, or eat their "Christmas bit" (an extra portion of food given to residents of a farm). Jón gave no source for either story.[2] [3]
Two theories have since been proposed for the origin of the story.[3] In one theory, folklorist Árni Björnsson points to a footnote by Jón which uses the figure of speech "to dress the cat".[4] From this footnote and the lack of any written sources about the Yule cat prior to Jón's writings, Árni concluded that the phrase was the source from which Jón created the monster.[5] [6] In another theory, archaeologist Guðmundur Ólafsson connects the Yule cat to various entities that, in other European traditions, accompanied Saint Nicholas. Guðmundur noted that sources for any kind of folklore in history were typically scarce, so the lack of written sources on the Yule cat did not carry much significance.[3] [7]
The Yule cat was traditionally used as a threat and incentive for farmworkers to finish processing the wool collected in the autumn before Christmas. Those who took part in the work were rewarded with new clothes, but those who did not would get nothing and thus would be prey for the Yule cat.[8]
The establishment of the Yule cat as part of classic Icelandic Christmas folklore came in 1932, when Jóhannes úr Kötlum published his poetry collection Icelandic: {{ill|Jólin koma|is (Christmas is Coming). One of the poems, Icelandic: Jólakötturinn, centered on the eponymous man-eating monster which subsequently became a common part of Christmas festivities and decorations in Iceland.
While the poem did not associate Icelandic: Jólakötturinn|italic=no with Icelandic: [[Grýla]]|italic=no, Icelandic: [[Leppalúði]]|italic=no, or the Yule Lads, the characters were also featured in the collection. This commonality led to connections in later stories. By the middle of the 20th century, Icelandic: Jólakötturinn|italic=no was considered the pet of Icelandic: Grýla|italic=unset and her sons. In some later stories, Icelandic: Jólakötturinn|italic=no is so disobedient that only Icelandic: Stúfur|italic=unset, the smallest Yule Lad, is able to direct it, and he rides the cat across the countryside.[9]
composed several songs based on Jóhannes's poems, including one based on Icelandic: Jólakötturinn, around 1970.
In 2008, the English-language online newspaper The Reykjavík Grapevine published an article about the Yule cat;[10] this has been considered partially responsible for the Yule cat gaining international recognition, and the story of the Icelandic: Jólaköttur was repeated and expanded upon in various other articles.[3] [11]
In 2018, the city of Reykjavík set up a 5m (16feet) tall iron sculpture of the Yule cat as a Christmas decoration in the city's central square.[3] [12]
In December 2023, a film about the Yule cat titled Icelandic: Þið kannist við... (You Know..., localized into English as Krampuss) was released in Iceland.[13]