Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1999, Side 127

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1999, Side 127
BRÓÐIR ORMSINS OG FISKAR SUM KONGAR 131 man Johan Olof Broman (1912-54: 651, 676-677) reports from Hálsingland about the belief in eel-mothers. In 1736, Johan Duræus writes from Ydre in Óstergotland that some people claim that there are eel-mothers, which are similar to rotten timber, with many holes on them, from where this fish should generate; I have nev- er seen it,’ he adds sceptically (Norrby, 1950: 157). According to the Swede Jacob Gabriel Gyllenborg (1770: 41), the peas- antry talked about ‘... a strange creature, called the Eel-Mother, which is covered with holes on all sides, from where small eel juveniles emerge; and when this gener- ation takes place, the grand Eel-Mother tumbles up on the beaches, where the sun during summertime is hottest in the water; the small eel juveniles, in large number, come out in the free water, where they as other fishes, forage and grow. When you ask them how this Eel-Mother was created, and why it never can be observed by others, the answer is that there are very few of them, and according to some people, that such a creature in the beginning was creat- ed by God to take care of the reproduction of the eels’. According to a later folk-life record from Óstergotland in Sweden, an Eel-Mother reigns in an eel’s nest (ULMA 91:21). The motif of an eel-mother has been used by the Danish author H.C. An- dersen in his short story ‘En historie fra Klitteme’ (1860). It is part of the traditional folk taxonomy to categorise fish in accordance with hu- man social stmctures and kinship systems. According to this world-view, it was natur- al that the eel had a mother who was re- sponsible for its reproduction, and that the strange eel was regarded as a relative to the snakes, and, therefore, was called the Brother of the Snake. In a record from Himmerland, the eel has even been regard- ed as the matemal uncle to the viper (Hugormens morbroder) in Denmark. Also in Finland, there are records that the peasantry had regarded the eel as related to the snakes. It was so similar to snakes that many fishermen preferred to throw it back into the water when caught, according to a record from Bjorkoby parish in Ósterbotten (Svanberg, 1999; SLS 656a). The notions about the eel as the brother of the snake are found in areas of the Nordic countries where the eel traditional- ly has been despised as food. In northem Sweden, many areas in Finland, Norway and the Faroe Islands, the eel has tradition- ally not been considered a fish and has not been eaten. ‘The inhabitants do not eat them’, Jørgen Landt (1800: 275) writes in his description of the Faroe Islands. The Norwegian Fredric Grøn (1942: 150) re- ports that the peasant’s distmst of the eel has endured into modem times. Only towns people have leamed to appreciate eel, he continues. It must, therefore, have been a question of social belonging, where- in peasants have been reluctant to eat eel and townspeople, and more socially ad- vanced people, have been able to enjoy it. In the Faroe Islands, Danish immigrants have consumed eel, while the local popula- tion has mistmsted it into modem times. The prejudices against eel as food are also found in other parts of Europe. For in- stance, in Scotland the natives have dis-
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